
For those unfamiliar, the iPad is a touchscreen tablet due for release in Europe this week and has been well received in the U.S. where Apple launched the product a few months ago . It sports a brilliant 9.7” LED-backlit screen at 1024 by 768 resolution and comes in three capacity sizes (16GB, 32GB, 64GB). If you have used an iPad Touch or an iPhone, you will be right at home with the interface. It’s laid out identically and utilises the same App store to download new applications to the iPad. But very different from the iPod Touch / iPhone, the developers of these apps have almost 3 times the size of the screen to take advantage of. Here’s a few areas that we believe app developers will change the consumer electronics landscape:
Remote Control:

Logitech should jump into this market full force with the Harmony platform.
The same goes for the high end controller companies like Control4 and Crestron. The large, high resolution screen is the perfect size for remote functions and the form factor of the iPad is made for sitting around your dedicated home theater. There's already several universal remote apps on the iPhone app store, but they will need to be updated to take advantage of the iPad landscape.
Device Integration:

What if you could purchase HD movies on iTunes with your iPad and it would stream them into your television screen via your home network? What if you could use the on screen keyboard on the iPad to search through the program lineup and type questions during a BD-Live chat session with your favourite personalities?
Device integration will likely roll out fairly slowly, but companies that are already investing in iPhone app development are likely to release iPad versions as well.
Music Selection:
iTunes is already in a dominate position for digital music distribution and the iPad will only solidify that. In addition, inventive music applications like Shazam (which identifies music by listening to a song playing) or SoundHound (another identifier that tags a song by a person humming it) are just scratching the surface at shaping how we can become introduced to new artists and genres of music.

So as you can see the things we had all been expecting are now becoming mainstream to the consumer and that can only be a good thing!