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timhouston

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Location:Β United StatesMember since:Β May 05, 2003

All feedback (505)

shengyuwangluo02 (2070)- Feedback left by buyer.
Past 6 months
Verified purchase
Great communication. A pleasure to do business with.
xyverx (110833)- Feedback left by buyer.
Past year
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Thanks from πŸ†‡πŸ†ˆπŸ†…πŸ…΄πŸ†πŸ†‡ πŸ…²πŸ…ΎπŸ…ΌπŸ…ΏπŸ†„πŸ†ƒπŸ…΄πŸ†πŸ†‚. Your #1️⃣ Source for πŸ’» πŸ–₯️ πŸ“± OEM Spare Parts
plugg62208 (251)- Feedback left by buyer.
Past 6 months
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Thank you
meepleme (915)- Feedback left by buyer.
Past year
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Thank you for an easy, pleasant transaction. Excellent buyer. A++++++.
achievehealth (1919)- Feedback left by buyer.
Past year
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Thank you for your order. Wishing you the best. Stay safe!
weihuaie (33708)- Feedback left by buyer.
More than a year ago
Verified purchase
Great communication. A pleasure to do business with.
Reviews (1)
Feb 04, 2011
Apple iPad Wi-Fi + 3G (64GB)
I'm a PC person and normally stay out of the Apple world. However, the Apple tablet PC (called an iPad) caught my attention and I decided if I was going to cross over to Apple, I was going for top-of-line, even if it wasn't brand new. I ended up getting a used Apple iPad with Wi-Fi, 3G, 64GB, and optional keyboard. The iPad itself came in it's original box. I noticed when opening it that there were very few extra parts - everything you want is already built into the iPad itself: the memory, the battery, the WiFi, the 3G. What did come in the box was a short setup instruction sheet, a USB data cable, a wall plug-in charger which you plugged the USB cable into, and a pin for removing the 3G Sim from the iPad. I believe a new iPad would have included headphones too, but that wasn't included with this used one. The optional keyboard came separate from the original iPad box. This first thing you have to do (besides charging it if the battery isn't charged), is plug it via the supplied USB cable into a PC or Mac with Apples "itunes" product on it. I already had itunes, but if you don't, it's available for free download from Apple. You will need to set up an "Apple id" for itunes and the iPad. Usually you just specify your favorite personal email address as your Apple id. Once you have itunes set up on PC or Mac, plugging the iPad in will cause itunes to sync your iPad up with whatever you have in itunes - music, pictures, movies, apps, books, etc. You can also use itunes to backup and/or Restore your iPad. There are 14 preloaded apps. Four basic ones across the bottom of the screen: Safari - a web browser, Mail - handles email, Photos - a photo library manager iPod - a music/sound manager and 10 more apps above these: Calendar - a calendaring application, Contacts - a contact/address book manager, Notes - general note recording, Maps - a mapping application.. no need for a GPS, Videos - shows videos, YouTube - interface into this web app, iTunes - interface into this web app music store, Game Center - some (not all) iPad games, Settings - settings values for all apps Going through the "Settings" app on the ipad was easy. Actually I found almost everything easy. Way too easy to buy apps from the the app store and going over budget. Once you've comfirmed that you want to buy an app in the app store, it downloads and installs itself - and a lot of the apps are FREE! The way the screen re-orients itself to the way you hold it is neat. The iPad uses solid state memory instead of a disk drive to hold everything, but since I got 64G model, I have plenty of room. Now that I already have it: a)I find that using just the WiFi is usually sufficient since there's lots of free WiFi around. If I had it to do over, I wouldn't have included 3G support. b) The on-screen keyboard, although not exactly QWERTY, is very usable. I would not get the external keyboard if I had to do it over. All in all, I have very little to complain about. But there are 3 items: 1) The iPad looks like it would accept an iPhone or iPod charger, but the iPad requires 2 amps before it will recharge the battery, so not all iPhone or iPod chargers will work. 2) Apparently Adobe Flash player will not run on Apple equipment, so you can't watch video on web sites which use Adobe Flash Player. 3) It's easy to start an app, but I haven't figured out a way to kill a running app other than turning off the iPad. (Some Apple expert will probably point me to some free app.)
109 of 112 found this helpful