Guessing what'll be on it, what it'll look like, what it'll be called and when it'll be out seems to have become a full time job for some tech junkies ahead of the much-speculated iSlate launch.
Cyber-rumour has it that Apple will launch its new tablet sometime in March, with some sort of launch event towards the end of this month.
As usual, the company is tight lipped, its silence doing the usual remarkable job that it does in fueling hype and speculation even further.
All seem to agree that it's likely to be an iphone on steroids - a sort of an overgrown touch screen device that'll be too big to fit in your pocket but about right for a handbag.
The (pathetic, I know) early adopter in me can't wait to get her hands on one and wonders if it's gonna rival the Kindle, which is finally losing it's new-e-reader-small after just a few months.
The PR hack in me wonders what devices like this are going to do to the way we source, surf and interact with news. And how long it's going to be before our daily papers will have to face the electronic age head on.
Local media, publishers and bookstores have been shielded from the full impact of this last bastion of the e-revolution thanks to, amongst other things, the refusal of our telecoms companies to bring the price down on the wireless capability needed to make Kindles a happening thing here in NZ.
In virtually every other developed nation in the world you can download your morning newspaper or the latest Jodi Picoult while you're sitting on the beach, walking down the street or on the train.
While Amazon is trialing a basic web browser on Kindle, it would seem that full internet connectivity would be a given on any Apple Tablet. And that has to force another seismic shift to the way we get, experience and interact with news content - a jolt akin to the shift from traditional channels to online.
We'll be watching that particular space with a great deal of interest.
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