playbook at the Eaton's Centre right now!
Downstairs in Sears Electronic dept. They are doing some testing for sears rollout and the RIM representative has a preprod unit he's showing customers. VERY cool. Full report later but get down there this evening. TORONTO of course.
Posted from my CrackBerry at wapforums.crackberry.com
More on the Playbook at Sears
Apologies for the brevity of the initial post. I had a 90 minute commute and wanted to get the info out ASAP so the forum members could get to see it. I found out from a friend who was involved in setting up the network Sears will use to set it up that he was there ("David in a black RIM shirt") and since I was in the store, headed right down and took an initial look. I managed to spend about 15 minutes (as much time as I wanted) with the device. David wasn't that knowledgeable about the device and was clear that this was a preproduction device without all of the preloaded SW and features. It did have Need4Speed and Doc's to Go and some icons for things like Bing, Hotmail, Adobe Reader, etc. I didn't think to get to every screen but I played with the camera (very cool), ran N4S alongside full video movie, picture app, and about 4 other apps that I could see. I was very impressed with the responsiveness.
I've been developing my app to get the "free" BB and so have spent a lot of time with the simulator... this thing is SO much more responsive than that... I loaded it up as much as I thought I could and couldn't see any noticeable degradation in performance. It did have a few bugs with picture orientation (some app screens were upside down) but landscape/portrait worked fine. I suspect there was a bug in an app (don't remember which one) that wasn't responding to orientation changes. At one point I had about 12 apps open.
The swipe from the top left corner brings up the system menu and it looked to be fully populated. I saw tether but didn't notice bridge. It did look like the setup menu Kevin showed in a previous "tutorial". The background is now orange bubbles in the version I looked at (vs the Green background we saw in the sims).
David told me that this was only one of 30 devices out in public in Canada (which I assume includes the ones that Balsalie carries around). It was stamped with stickers on the back saying it was preproduction but other than that looked exactly like the ones in the videos we've seen. Overall the fit/finish was excellent and I was struck by the fact that it didn't seem much heavier than my Torch. I've spent a fair bit of time with my sister's iPad and this thing seems a LOT lighter. Using my sister's iPad is a two handed affair (one to hold, one to use) where this thing is definitely like the Torch... you hold it in portrait mode and can bang away with your thumb.
Stupidly (in retrospect), I didn't try the keyboard (other than to pull it out and push it back in with the swipe gesture and watch it come up as I clicked in an entry field) so I can't comment on how the typing 'feels' or whether it has left/right biased inputs like the Torch does (i.e. where you have to press further left on the buttons than you'd think if you were typing with your right hand). I've grown to quite like that "feature" but am not sure its really necessary on the PB as the keys are so much bigger anyway.
N4S looked great although I didn't spend anytime trying to figure out how to play it. I saw Tetris there but didn't try it. The Clock App looks very polished with different styles, alarm clock's etc. The guy told me that he wasn't allowed to show youtube so there may have been some issue there either with the Sears network config or with the PB sw.
It wasn't completely polished as it was fairly clear there were a few glitches here and there (orientation mainly) but if they can get those straightened out for launch, this is one solid device. It's not that hard to use if you have an OS6 device as its quite intuitive (but of course I know how to work the simulator so I'm coming with a headstart).
There was a few customers there when I showed up and another customer joined us when I had some hands on time with it. That customer had an iPad and his biggest concern was the compatibility of the 250K Android apps. I asked him how many he had on his iPad and got a blank look. I told him that the vendors would need to "sign" the apps on AppWorld but from my experience this was at most a few man hours of work and that I thought that any serious vendor would undertake to do this to open themselves up to a device that is projected to sell millions of copies to an app hungry audience. He seemed satisfied with that - and then bitched about how his iPad didn't do flash which is why he was so interested in this.
David asked me to send a few of my friends down, he was disappointed in the foot traffic at Sears on a Friday... so have at him guys and gals! He gave me the impression he was there tonight and tomorrow.