Getting hands-on with
the iPad mini could just as easily be called a "hand-on" since it's so
easy to hold one-handed, and tap with the other. The first thing you
notice when you pick it up is just how thin and light it is. With a
smooth aluminum back, you feel like you could flip it like a coin, or
spin it on your palm. It's as thin as a pencil and as light as a
legal-size pad of paper - both nearly insignificant feeling objects. You
can grip the iPad mini with a couple of fingers on the bottom, or even
stretch your hand across the back like you're holding an iPhone 5 or iPod touch. It's 5.3 inches (13.5 centimeters) wide, and feels nicely balanced at 7.87 inches (20cm) high. It's
just 0.68 pounds (308 grams), slightly heavier at 0.69 pounds (312
grams) if you opt for the cellular version. We were so tempted to just
start flipping it in the air like a pancake, that's how light it feels.
This makes it even better as an e-reader than the larger iPad models,
since you can hold the iPad mini in one hand for much longer before
feeling fatigued.
The aluminum back meets the glass front at a
super-shiny, diamond-polished chamfer reminiscent of the one on the new
iPhone. The white version is stunning, with a matte silver back, and the
black version's charcoal aluminum back matches the black iPhone 5
perfectly. The iPad mini has an 4:3 aspect ratio, different than the 16:9 ratio preferred by the Google Nexus 7 and Amazon Kindle Fire HD. The wider screen (holding it in portrait orientation) gives you more room for content.
Apple's
Phil Schiller gleefully compared the iPad mini's 7.9-inch screen to the
Nexus 7's 7-inch screen, pointing out how the iPad mini's viewing area
is 40 percent larger when you hold it in portrait, and a whopping 67
percent larger in landscape orientation. The iPad mini's 1024x768-pixel screen is 163 pixels per inch, the same pixel density as an iPhone 3GS. It's also the same pixel dimensions as iPad 2
and the original iPad, so all of the existing iPad apps can run
natively, no scaling or waiting for developers to push out updates.
In
our testing, we noticed that typing on the smaller onscreen buttons and
keys will take a bit of getting used to. They're smaller than on the
large iPad, of course, but still tappable.
The buttons you're
aiming at aren't any smaller than they'd be on an iPhone or iPod touch,
but since they appear on a larger screen than either of those devices
have, they feel even smaller.
Everything down to the app icons on
the Home screen are smaller than on the big iPad, even as they float in
a 4x5 grid with generous space around them. At
one point, an Apple rep demonstrating the iPad mini had to try a few
times to hit a Back button at the top-left of the interface, but to be
fair, he was holding the iPad mini a fair distance from his body so
journalists could see and photograph him using it.
The thin
bezels on either side of the screen (when held in portrait) give you
enough of an area to grip while still minimizing how far your fingers
will have to stretch to reach the screen's edges. The screen is bright
and bold, with deep blacks and sharp text although it's not quite Retina
quality.
We tested the front camera's 720p FaceTime calling over
Wi-Fi to see if looked much sharper than on an iPad 2. (The front
camera also takes 1.2-megapixel stills, and the rear camera takes
5-megapixel stills and records 1080p video.)
The call streamed
without lag and we could even hear each other over the crowd noise, but
due to the poor lighting, the image still looked grainy, not like the
glamour shots Apple uses in its advertising.
The iPad mini we
played with was Wi-Fi only - like its bigger sibling as well as the
iPhone 5 and new iPod touch, it has dual-band 802.11n at 2.4GHz and
5GHz, plus Bluetooth 4.0. The LTE version (a $130 extra) will work with
20 carriers around the world.
Its dual-core A5 chip might be the
same as in the $399 iPad 2 (introduced in 2011 and still on sale)
although it's possible Apple added more RAM, since the iPad mini
supports Siri, and the iPad 2 (which has 512MB of RAM) doesn't. Naturally,
the small iPad mini sports Apple's new Lightning connector, which can
be inserted facing either direction and locks into place with a
satisfying click. Apple's Lightning adapters will let you connect a VGA
display or projector ($49), a digital display or projector with HDMI
($49), a USB camera ($29), or an SD card ($29), and Apple also offers a
$29 Lightning to 30-pin adapter and spare Lightning to USB cables for
$19 (one cable comes with the iPad mini).
Preorders begin this
Friday, Oct. 26. iPad mini starts at $329 for 16GB Wi-Fi only. 32GB and
64GB versions are $429 and $529, and you can add LTE cellular for $130
extra.
Wi-Fi versions start shipping Nov. 2, and the LTE versions
two weeks later. Its size and weight let it compete with smaller
e-readers, while its power and access to the full ecosystem of iPad apps
make it a capable, extremely portable tablet, too.
Early verdict
The
smaller touch targets take some getting used to on the iPad mini,
although they're not any smaller than on an iPhone. What's more, $329
for the 16GB Wi-Fi only version is significantly more than the 16GB
Kindle Fire HD ($199), or 16GB Google Nexus 7 ($249).
However, the
iPad mini runs native apps, has a whopping 10 hours of battery life,
and is extremely light and portable. It's also comfortable to hold for
long periods of time and won't lead to wrist fatigue when you're
watching a movie. The 4:3 aspect ratio also allows you to fit more on
the screen when you're reading or surfing the web, which is a boon for
7-inch tablet fans.