BOSTON (CAP) - Fresh on the heels of Google's Nexus 7 tablet
computer, another tablet getting ready to enter the crowded market
promises to offer some of the convenience of competitors' products at a
fraction of the price.
"Fred's Tablet" will be available online and at select retail outlets -
primarily Richdale convenience stores - for $29.99, a full $170 less
than the Nexus 7 or Amazon's Kindle Fire, according to the tablet's
designer, Fred Prywatki.
"We're trying to show that families can get a fun, useful tablet at an
affordable price if they're just willing to forgo a few of the bells and
whistles," said Prywatki, whose tablet is being distributed by Prywatki
Electrics, a wholly owned subsidiary of Prywatki's primary business,
Prywatki Kia of Pittsfield.
Fred's Tablet will boast a 4-inch, 3-color screen - "red, blue and one
other, I think it was yellow," said Prywatki - and weighs in at a
"manageable" 4 1/2 pounds. It runs on four "D" batteries and boasts a
five-hour battery life "as long as you don't do anything too fancy,"
Prywatki said.
Though it only features 1GB of storage - enough for about 150 songs or
300 photos, but not both - it's expandable by hooking it up to an
external hard drive via a USB cable (sold separately). It does not
feature WiFi technology, but does come with a "wicked long cord" to plug
into your modem, said Prywatki, and it eschews a touch screen in favor
of a plastic knob, not unlike an Etch-A-Sketch.
As for apps, Fred's Tablet will run any of the standard applications
available for the Dandroid operating system. "It's just like Android,
but with a D," noted Prywatki. Popular games available include Pimple Run, Where's My Wafer? and Angry
Turds.
"That last one is NSFW," he warned.
News of Fred's Tablet has been met with skepticism on several fronts,
especially given the outcome of Prywatki's most high-profile previous
endeavor, Fred's Museum of Science in Woburn, Mass., which closed after three
months in 2008. It took Prywatki several years to settle lawsuits
with victims of bee stings and falling apples, and one family that was
trapped for over three hours under a Barney the Purple Dinosaur costume
that fell off its pedestal in the paleontology cubicle.
[Read the rest at CAP News.]
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