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Title:
iPad
Object name(s):
Tablet computer
Brief description:
First generation Apple iPad with battery, power cord, detachable plug head, box (in two parts) and instructions.
Collection:
Victoria and Albert Museum
Associated concept:
Electrical appliances
Associated concept:
Product design
Associated concept:
Entertainment & Leisure
Current reproduction location:
https://framemark.vam.ac.uk/collections/2011EY5819/full/!100,100/0/default.jpg
Location type:
Thumbnail
Dimension:
Height
Dimension measurement unit:
mm
Dimension value:
243
Dimension:
Width
Dimension measurement unit:
mm
Dimension value:
190
Dimension:
Thickness
Dimension measurement unit:
mm
Dimension value:
13
Dimension:
Width
Dimension measured part:
screen
Dimension measurement unit:
in
Dimension value:
9.7
Dimension:
Weight
Dimension measurement unit:
g
Dimension value:
680
Material:
plastic
Material:
aluminium
Material:
glass
Material:
electrical components
Object history note:
Purchased in a brand new condition by the V&A in February 2011, shortly before the launch of the iPad 2 (acquisition registered file no. 2011/145).
Object history note:
The first tablet computer produced by Apple was the Newton MessagePad, which became available in 1993. The MessagePad was described in 1992 by then Apple CEO John Sculley as a ‘Personal Digital Assistant’ (PDA), a capable electronic Filofax. The iPad, however, is not specifically designed for business. Rather, it is a convenient meeting-point between a smartphone and a laptop computer which allows its user to easily experience audio-visual media on a platform more conveniently-sized, and lighter, than a laptop. On a related note, the designer of the iPad, Jonathan Ive, designed the MessagePad 110, the second generation of Apple’s Newton products. In 2002, Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates speculated that tablet computers would be the most popular form of computers sold in America within 5 years, a claim that did not come to fruition. However, in 2010 Apple sold over 3 million iPads within the first 80 days after release and by the launch of the iPad 2 they had sold more than 15 million. It is a policy of Apple to promptly remove from the market earlier versions of their products as soon as a newer version is made available. The first generation iPad was available for only 11 months: 3rd April 2010 (USA release date) until 2nd March 2011. The iPad 2 was launched in the USA on 11th March 2011. Additionally, Apple only supports updates to older versions of their operating system for a limited time after the discontinuation of the hardware for which it was designed. The iPad was initially shipped with the iPhone’s OS 3.2 software, which could only be upgraded until the release of iOS 5.1.1 in May 2012. Since then, first generation iPad users have not been able to update their operating systems to newer versions. Like the iPhone, the iPad is controlled by a multi-touch display and virtual onscreen keyboard; the lack of external controls means that the operating system needs to be intuitive and responsive – easily navigated by young and old alike. Its functionality works best for consuming and interacting with information, rather than creating it; web surfing, watching video and sending e-mail. The iPad also boasts a 10-hour battery life. In a press release accompanying the launch of the iPad, Steve Jobs called the computer a ‘magical and revolutionary device… [that] creates an entirely new category of devices’.
Object name:
Tablet computer
Object number:
W.2:1 to 7-2011
Object production date:
2010
Date - association:
made
Date - earliest / single:
2010-01-01
Date - latest:
2010-12-31
Object production organisation:
Apple
Organisation's association:
designers
Object production organisation:
Foxconn
Organisation's association:
manufacturers
Object production person:
Ive, Jonathan
Person's association:
designer
Object production place:
Shenzhen
Place association:
made
Place note:
probably
Object status:
Mass produced
Physical description:
First generation Apple iPad with battery, power cord, detachable plug head, box (in two parts) and instructions.
Reproduction number:
2011EY5819
Reproduction number:
2011EY5820
Responsible department/section:
FWK
Technique:
Plastics, glass, aluminium, electrical components
Text reason:
Collections online record
Text:
This first generation iPad was purchased by the V&A in a brand new condition shortly before the launch of the iPad 2. It was designed by British-born Jonathan Ive, Senior Vice-President of Design at Apple. It is controlled by a multi-touch display and virtual onscreen keyboard; the lack of external controls means that the operating system needs to be intuitive and responsive – easily navigated by young and old alike. Its functionality works best for consuming and interacting with information, rather than creating it; web surfing, watching video and sending e-mail. The iPad is an innovative design, both in terms of its hardware and its software, which reinvigorated the flagging market for tablet computers. Indeed, Apple sold more than 15 million iPads by the time of the launch of the iPad 2 in April 2011, only 11 months after the original first came on the market.
Text reason:
Summary description
Text:
[Gallery 76] 9. TABLET COMPUTER: ‘IPAD’ 2010 The iPad was designed to be a convenient meeting point between a smartphone and a laptop computer. Its function is disguised until the iPad is activated by pressing the only front button. However, the intuitive features of the device led to its use by a large number of consumers, providing access to global networks on an unprecedented scale. USA Designed by Jonathan Ive for Apple Inc., California Manufactured by Foxconn in China Plastics, glass and aluminium Museum no. W.2-2011
Text date:
2015
Text reason:
Gallery label text

Persistent shareable link for this record: https://museumdata.uk/objects/9a40c4ba-bfd4-38b7-af8a-ae7559e5a9e3

Use licence for this record: CC BY-NC

Attribution for this record: https://museumdata.uk/objects/9a40c4ba-bfd4-38b7-af8a-ae7559e5a9e3, Victoria and Albert Museum, CC BY-NC

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