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Gadgetwise: A Review of the Bowers & Wilkins P7 Headphones

Built With a Loudspeaker in Mind

A Review of the Bowers & Wilkins P7 Headphones

Primarily known for making hi-fi speakers for audio studios and luxury hotels, the British company Bowers & Wilkins recently turned its expertise to headphones. The company quickly built a high-quality lineup, and rounding out the roster is the P7, its first over-ear headphones.

The P7 is the first over-the-ear headphones from Bowers & Wilkins.

The inside of the P7 headphones includes parts designed with a traditional loudspeaker in mind. The technology includes voice coils made of a light aluminum-copper compound, which improves high-frequency reproduction, and damping materials to reduce distortion. All of this adds up to produce “truly immersive sound,” according to Bowers & Wilkins.

But the company seems to have spent equal time on the exterior of the P7. The headphones are made with sturdy materials like leather and stainless steel, providing a look of refinement. “Dual-cavity” cushions on the ear cups are intended to provide a more comfortable fit while blocking outside noise. The ear cups even have a rectangular shape that resembles a loudspeaker.

All of that attention to detail pays off in the sound quality. The aural precision is pretty amazing; it's like sitting in a sound studio. I could hear every nuance of the music, with clear highs and a solid bass.

At first glance, the headphones didn't look as if they would fit well, but the rectangular cups fit securely over my ears, creating a nice seal that allowed little sound to escape. They were so comfortable that at one point I fell asleep while wearing them, not realizing they were still perched on my head.

The P7 headphones come with two tangle-free audio cables â€" one with an in-line remote and microphone and the other without â€" and a quarter-inch plug adapter. The headphones can be folded and stored in a case that is included and resembles a clutch handbag.

At $400, the P7 headphones are not a product I would use on my daily subway commute, but I would feel comfortable wearing them while relaxing in a luxury hotel.



State of the Art: Lighter and Faster, It\'s iPad Air

Lighter and Faster, It's iPad Air

Carl Court/Agence France-Presse - Getty Images

The new iPad Mini, left, and the iPad Air. The Air will have plenty of competition when it goes on sale on Friday morning.

The iPad Air is noticeably lighter than its predecessors.

If you are the least bit interested in the new tablet computer from Apple, you probably already know that. The company's engineers shaved just short of a third off the weight of the earlier version; the 9.7-inch Air weighs only a pound.

What you may not know is this: Those 6.4 ounces make all the difference when, as you recline while reading or watching a movie, you conk out and the iPad falls forward to bonk you on the nose. The Air won't hurt you the way the old iPad did.

The weight reduction and a 20 percent slimmer profile provide other benefits, too. My messenger bag strap didn't dig into my shoulder as deeply when my iPad was in it. My hand didn't cramp up while grasping the iPad Air for an hour while watching movies or playing games.

But is Nose Bonking Reduction enough to justify buying a new iPad if you already own one of the 170 million iPads that have been sold over the last three and a half years? And if you have never bought a tablet computer, is this the one that persuades you to fling your laptop aside like crutches at a faith healing and embrace a new era?

When the iPad Air goes on sale on Friday morning around the globe, it will face its toughest competition yet - from Samsung's Galaxy Note 10.1, Microsoft's Surface 2 and Amazon's Kindle Fire HDX. Google has a new Nexus tablet in the wings.

The iPad Air will also compete against its little brother, the iPad Mini. Later in November, Apple will begin selling a new version of that tablet, which comes with a high-resolution 7.9-inch Retina screen and the same faster processor found in both the Air and the new line of iPhones.

So how does the Air stack up? Compared with the Mini, the question really boils down to size. If all you want to do on a tablet is read books or watch movies, the smaller screen is excellent, and you can save $100 (the cheapest model of the Air costs $500. The new Mini costs $400). But I use the iPad for work, reading documents and occasionally even editing or writing on it. I also use it as a second screen (actually it's a fourth, but we won't get into that) on my desk for research on the web. The extra real estate provided by a larger screen matters at the office.

If you decide you need the bigger screen, you will find a lot of benefit in the iPad Air. In addition to being light and slim, it loads apps and web pages quickly - faster than the old iPad, because Apple tailored software to mesh with the custom A7 processor and vice versa.

It easily runs for 10 hours on a charge, just as Apple promises - despite the battery's smaller size and the increased demands put on it. In my test of pretty heavy use, it downloaded and played three hourlong episodes of “Game of Thrones” and a few hours of music. I scrolled through Twitter and Flipboard, played games and perused the web. That's almost a typical day for me and my iPad. It will get you through a normal day and then some with no worries.

The iPad Air also sports two antennas to pull in Wi-Fi signals faster than the old one did. Called MIMO for multiple-input and multiple-output, these antennas make a noticeable difference when your fast Wi-Fi signal is weakest, like in a back bedroom or the basement. (You'll have to have a recent MIMO compatible router to see the magic, though.)

But do you need to plunk down $500 or more for an Air if you already have an earlier version of the iPad? Notice I used the word “need.” Even though I love shiny new objects, I really can't tell you to replace your old iPad; the improvements on the new one are incremental, not revolutionary.

If you've never had a tablet, though, the answer is different. A tablet, especially this iPad, is a delight to use and will bring you more hours of enjoyment than any other electronic device I know of.

Apple sells the devices in two colors - black and white. The company, though, calls them Space Gray and Silver because that's the color on the back of the tablet. (What can I say? It's a quirky company.) It also sells covers in six colors for $40 and cases, also in six colors, for $80. You can assume stores will soon be stuffed full of covers and cases of various materials and designs from many vendors to fit the new specs of this version.

Damon Darlin, the international business editor, is a guest columnist for State of the Art.

A version of this article appears in print on October 30, 2013, on page B1 of the New York edition with the headline: Lighter And Faster, It's iPad Air.

At Foley’s Memorial, a Rare Show of Bipartisanship

The Capitol Hill memorial service for Thomas S. Foley, the former House speaker, brought together Republicans and Democrats who just two weeks ago were fighting about the government shutdown, but who were united in praise on Tuesday of a man who himself was a victim of partisan rancor two decades ago.

President Obama spoke of Mr. Foley â€" a Democrat from Washington State who died on Oct. 18 at age 84 â€" as an example of the type of leadership that is again needed in Washington.

“At a time when our political system can seem more polarized and more divided than ever before, it can be tempting to see the possibility of bipartisan progress as a thing of the past,” Mr. Obama said. “It can be tempting to wonder if we still have room for leaders like Tom.”

“We are sent here to do what’s right, and sometimes doing what’s right is hard, and it’s not free,” the president said. “And yet that’s the measure of leadership.”

Former President Bill Clinton, who was in the White House during the last two years of Mr. Foley’s tenure as speaker, described him as “one tough guy” who was willing to suffer for what he thought was right.

During his five and a half years as speaker, Mr. Foley pressed the first President George Bush to include tax increases in a deficit-reduction deal, and he ushered Mr. Clinton’s budget through the House in 1993.

The legislative fight that may have doomed Mr. Foley’s career came the next year. A mass shooting on an Air Force base near Spokane, Wash., led Mr. Foley, a longtime opponent of gun control measures, to push for a ban on assault weapons. It passed in 1994.

Realizing it was a politically risky move, Mr. Foley predicted that the ban would sweep Democrats from office, but he believed it was the right thing to do, Mr. Clinton recalled. And Mr. Foley was right â€" he lost the House seat he had held for 30 years in 1994, becoming the first speaker since the Civil War to be defeated for re-election in his own district.

Robert H. Michel, who served as minority leader opposite Mr. Foley, spoke warmly of his former colleague, calling him “a fair and honest broker and a worthy adversary.” He recalled how Mr. Foley had allowed him to preside at their last session of Congress together, a memory that had come to mind when Mr. Michel visited him shortly before his death.

“When we stood side by side at the podium on that last day of the 103rd Congress, we knew that we were icons, I guess, of a bygone era,” Mr. Michel said.

“We both took great pride in knowing we had made things happen,” he said, adding “that we found good ways to solve difficult problems and make the House a working institution.”

Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the Republican leader, said Mr. Foley believed in reaching across the aisle, even when his fellow Democrats criticized him for it.

“That kind of comity is sometimes viewed as old-fashioned around here, but that’s never been true,” Mr. McConnell said. “The parties have always disagreed, but it hasn’t kept them from working together from time to time to solve problems that we all recognize.”

“His faith in government was, shall I say, a little more robust than mine,” Mr. McConnell added. “But we shared a deep respect for the institution and a belief that working with the other side, particularly at a time of divided government, is no heresy when it enables you to achieve some good for the nation.”



At Foley’s Memorial, a Rare Show of Bipartisanship

The Capitol Hill memorial service for Thomas S. Foley, the former House speaker, brought together Republicans and Democrats who just two weeks ago were fighting about the government shutdown, but who were united in praise on Tuesday of a man who himself was a victim of partisan rancor two decades ago.

President Obama spoke of Mr. Foley â€" a Democrat from Washington State who died on Oct. 18 at age 84 â€" as an example of the type of leadership that is again needed in Washington.

“At a time when our political system can seem more polarized and more divided than ever before, it can be tempting to see the possibility of bipartisan progress as a thing of the past,” Mr. Obama said. “It can be tempting to wonder if we still have room for leaders like Tom.”

“We are sent here to do what’s right, and sometimes doing what’s right is hard, and it’s not free,” the president said. “And yet that’s the measure of leadership.”

Former President Bill Clinton, who was in the White House during the last two years of Mr. Foley’s tenure as speaker, described him as “one tough guy” who was willing to suffer for what he thought was right.

During his five and a half years as speaker, Mr. Foley pressed the first President George Bush to include tax increases in a deficit-reduction deal, and he ushered Mr. Clinton’s budget through the House in 1993.

The legislative fight that may have doomed Mr. Foley’s career came the next year. A mass shooting on an Air Force base near Spokane, Wash., led Mr. Foley, a longtime opponent of gun control measures, to push for a ban on assault weapons. It passed in 1994.

Realizing it was a politically risky move, Mr. Foley predicted that the ban would sweep Democrats from office, but he believed it was the right thing to do, Mr. Clinton recalled. And Mr. Foley was right â€" he lost the House seat he had held for 30 years in 1994, becoming the first speaker since the Civil War to be defeated for re-election in his own district.

Robert H. Michel, who served as minority leader opposite Mr. Foley, spoke warmly of his former colleague, calling him “a fair and honest broker and a worthy adversary.” He recalled how Mr. Foley had allowed him to preside at their last session of Congress together, a memory that had come to mind when Mr. Michel visited him shortly before his death.

“When we stood side by side at the podium on that last day of the 103rd Congress, we knew that we were icons, I guess, of a bygone era,” Mr. Michel said.

“We both took great pride in knowing we had made things happen,” he said, adding “that we found good ways to solve difficult problems and make the House a working institution.”

Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the Republican leader, said Mr. Foley believed in reaching across the aisle, even when his fellow Democrats criticized him for it.

“That kind of comity is sometimes viewed as old-fashioned around here, but that’s never been true,” Mr. McConnell said. “The parties have always disagreed, but it hasn’t kept them from working together from time to time to solve problems that we all recognize.”

“His faith in government was, shall I say, a little more robust than mine,” Mr. McConnell added. “But we shared a deep respect for the institution and a belief that working with the other side, particularly at a time of divided government, is no heresy when it enables you to achieve some good for the nation.”



Gadgetwise: With Skylanders, Swap Characters, or Their Halves

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Q&A: With iOS 7 Upgrade, Podcasts Move to an Apple App

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Gadgetwise: Paying a Premium for the Leica Name

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Gadgetwise: An iPhone Case That Doubles as a Charger

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Have to Ask What the App Costs? It\'s Not for You

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App Smart: Apps to Protect Your Array of Passwords

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Tool Kit: Gadgets to Help the Party Host

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State of the Art: Reconciling 2 Worlds With Windows 8.1

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Facebook Eases Privacy Rules for Teenagers

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Pogue\'s Posts Blog: Terrific Sound in a Tiny Package

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Sorting Out the New Yahoo Mail

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Pogue, Times Technology Columnist, Is Leaving for Yahoo

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Bits: Senator Raises Questions About Protecting Student Data

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Gadgetwise: Tap and Swipe for a Good Cause

Tap and Swipe for a Good Cause

In Sidekick Cycle from the Global Gaming Initiative, players race across the African terrain.

Mobile games are designed to be simple endeavors, something to pass the time while waiting in a doctor's office or for a train. But the Global Gaming Initiative wants to elevate them to a higher purpose.

Founded in 2010, the Global Gaming Initiative is an organization of game developers that seeks to connect mobile games and philanthropy. The group selects charities, then develops a mobile game that can provide support to the charity through in-app purchases. The hope is that if each player spends a couple of dollars in the game, it can add up to thousands of dollars for the charity.

The group's first project is Sidekick Cycle, which raises money to buy bicycles for impoverished communities. The game is free to download for iOS devices (an Android game is coming later this year), and 50 percent of the proceeds from in-app purchases go to the organization's partner, World Bicycle Relief, a nonprofit organization that provides bicycles in Africa, South America and Southeast Asia.

The game is easy to play: tap on the screen to trek through Africa's rugged landscape on a bike, performing jumps and other stunts to collect coins and gears as you race down mountains and across savannas. Along the way, you can customize the bike, upgrade your gear and add a sidekick, like a rhino or a rabbit, to increase your strength or speed.

At its release, the game had about 35 levels, which isn't much compared with popular and addictive mobile games like Angry Birds and Cut the Rope, but the Global Gaming Initiative has promised to update the game with more action, including adding terrains from North America. Sidekick Cycle is not quite as engaging as it could be, but at least your tapping and swiping skills could help a good cause.

A version of this web log appears in print on October 24, 2013, on page B8 of the New York edition with the headline: Tap and Swipe, and Spend In-App Cash, for a Good Cause.

Gadgetwise: Tap and Swipe for a Good Cause

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Gadgetwise: Earbuds Built of Sterner Stuff, With a Few Quirks

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Gadgetwise: Vacuum Tubes in a Speaker, but Lacking Old-Time Warmth

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Gadgetwise: Beats\' Signature Headphones Get an Upgrade

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Apple Targets Microsoft Office With Free Apps

Apple Targets Microsoft Office With Free Apps

Jim Wilson/The New York Times

“This is our biggest leap forward ever in a full-sized iPad,” said Philip Schiller, a vice president at Apple, on Tuesday.

SAN FRANCISCO - At an event meant to feature its latest iPad tablet computing devices, Apple on Tuesday took aim at one of the biggest and seemingly unassailable businesses of its rival Microsoft, its Office software for tasks like word processing and spreadsheets.

Timothy D. Cook, chief executive of Apple, with the larger iPad, renamed iPad Air, which is slimmer and lighter.

Apple said iWork, a set of applications for Macs, iPads and iPhones that essentially duplicates what Microsoft's Office offers customers, would be free to anyone who bought a new Macintosh computer or mobile device from Apple. Each Apple app used to cost $10 apiece.  The latest version of the Macintosh operating system, Mavericks, will also be free.

The pricing maneuver was perhaps the lone surprise at an Apple new media event here at the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts. As expected, Apple souped up its iPads with faster processors and zippier Internet connections.

The company upgraded its iPad Mini, the smaller tablet, with a higher-resolution, 7.9-inch display. The full-size iPad, with a 9.7-inch screen, was renamed the iPad Air, because it has a slimmer design and has lost some weight. The smaller iPad starts at $400 and the bigger iPad will cost $500. Both will ship in November.

“This is our biggest leap forward ever in a full-sized iPad,” said Philip W. Schiller, senior vice president for marketing at Apple.

With its free software offering, Apple is capitalizing on strong growth in tablet computing sales and Microsoft's reluctance to offer Office for the iPad.

Tablets are devouring the PC market, which has long been Microsoft's playing ground. About 120 million tablets were shipped in 2012, nearly seven times as many as in 2010, when the first Apple iPad was released, according to Gartner, a market research company. IDC, another research company, predicts that sales of tablets will surpass those of PCs in the fourth quarter of this year and on an annual basis in 2015.

So far, Microsoft has had little success in that growing market. Its attempts to sell tablets have been failures, and Windows 8, which it has marketed as a software system for tablets and PCs, has gotten a chilly reception. What's more, Microsoft still charges $120 for people who want to upgrade from the older Windows 7 system to Windows 8.

That shift to mobile devices and low-cost software is why Microsoft is trying to shift from being a traditional software company into one that sells Internet services and devices, said Ross Rubin, an independent consumer technology analyst for Reticle Research. The company could reduce the upfront price for its software and charge people more over time for the services through subscriptions. And with the release on Tuesday of Microsoft's new Surface tablets, the company is more aggressively marketing the online services available for it, like SkyDrive, a service for storing files on the Internet.

Microsoft's chief executive, Steven A. Ballmer, said recently that the company would bring a version of Office to the iPad and other touch devices, but the company has not said when that will be. It sells an annual subscription to Office 365 on other devices for $100 a year.

Asked about Apple's decision to give away its iWork apps, Heather Knox, a spokeswoman for Microsoft Office, said in a statement that a Web-based version of Office was the best free alternative to Microsoft's traditional Office applications. “They extend the Office experience you know and love with anytime, anywhere online editing and collaboration,” Ms. Knox said. 

The new iPad Mini also gained a high-resolution Retina display. The new tablet costs $400 - $70 more than the previous iPad Mini. But Apple said it would continue selling the older iPad Mini without a Retina display for $300.

The iPad Air is about 20 percent thinner than the previous iPad and weighs one pound, down from 1.4 pounds. Both new iPads will include new chips, called A7 and M7, which Apple introduced last month in its latest high-end iPhone. The A7 is a faster processor with a new architecture that makes it better at multitasking. The M7 is dedicated to sensing movement, which could allow for new capabilities in software or games that incorporate motion, like a car racing game.

The iPads have an improved antenna system for faster Wi-Fi connections. They will come in white and silver and in black and gray, similar to the colors of the iPhone 5S (though the iPads will not come in white and gold like the iPhone). The iPad Air goes on sale on Nov. 1, but the new Mini will ship later in November.

The new iPads do not include the fingerprint sensor technology, TouchID, that Apple introduced in the iPhone 5S. Analysts say that may be because parts are in limited supply, as the iPhone 5S is selling so quickly.

The Mac computers have taken the back seat of Apple's business, but the company also released upgrades for some of its Mac hardware on Tuesday. The MacBook Pro notebooks with Retina displays are now thinner and faster, with better battery life. The 13-inch version will cost $1,300, down $300 from its original price, and the 15-inch model will cost $2,000, down $200 from the original price.

Apple also said the high-end Mac desktop computer, the Mac Pro, which was introduced in June, will begin shipping in December, for $3,000.

Apple is No. 1 in the tablet market with about a 32 percent share, according to IDC. But the company faces fierce competition from companies like Amazon, Samsung Electronics and Google, whose tablets undercut the iPad in price. Samsung, the No. 2 tablet maker, is quickly gaining traction, with 18 percent of the market in the second quarter, compared with 7.6 percent in the period a year earlier, according to IDC.

Smartphones are still more popular than tablets: Gartner predicts manufacturers will ship one billion smartphones and 184 million tablets this year.

But Carolina Milanesi, an analyst for Gartner, said she expected smaller tablets to continue gaining in popularity as the smartphone market becomes saturated.

“We expect this holiday season to be all about smaller tablets as even the long-term holiday favorite - the smartphone - loses its appeal,” Ms. Milanesi said.

Nick Wingfield contributed reporting from Seattle.

A version of this article appears in print on October 23, 2013, on page B1 of the New York edition with the headline: Apple Targets Microsoft Office With Free Apps.

Bits: Amazon Raises Threshold for Free Shipping

Amazon.com tightened the requirements for one of its most popular shipping methods Tuesday morning.

The change is to Super Saver Shipping, which for a over a decade mailed items free as long as the order met a $25 threshold.

The new threshold: $35. Amazon gave no reason for the change.

Super Saver Shipping was in many ways Amazon's best deal for people who were occasional-to-regular shoppers but did not need emergency orders of diapers. Why buy something for $20 and pay a few dollars shipping if you could buy two things and get them mailed for free?

When Super Saver Shipping began, it was an innovation. It helped spark the movement to cheap or free shipping by all online retailers, and cemented Amazon's reputation as a cutthroat competitor.

Here is the positive way to spin this announcement: This will tempt more customers to the Prime shipping service, which charges $79 a year for unlimited two-day delivery. It is thus a brilliant move by Amazon, which wants everyone to be Prime so they will buy more and more and keep raising revenue.

Here is the negative way: This is the biggest rollback of benefits for Amazon's customers ever. Amazon incessantly talks about how it is doing more for its customers; this goes in the other direction. Customers will notice.

“I would often order two CDs to get the free shipping, but now that isn't going to happen,” said Ariel Grostern of Washington.

Here is the really negative way: Amazon is under stress. Paulo Santos, a widely read short-seller on the Seeking Alpha financial site, published a post after the news with the headline, “Amazon.com Shipping Change Means The Earnings Miss Is Probably Massive.”

Mr. Santos quoted from Amazon's financial documents, where the company stresses, “We believe that offering low prices to our customers is fundamental to our future success, and one way we offer lower prices is through shipping offers.”

“What Amazon.com is doing is backtracking on this central tenet,” Mr. Santos wrote. “It would not do so lightly.”

The final spin: It will take more than this to dent investors' optimism. Amazon shares rose after the news broke.

An Amazon spokesman had no comment.



App Smart: A Roundup of Worthy Apps for the New iPads

A Roundup of Worthy Apps for the New iPads

Tablets have altered the barriers of the computer world, shattering the belief that a personal computer must have a keyboard. And while laptops have become associated with boring Excel documents and the other digital trappings of work, tablets are making computing fun again.

Rockpack shows you interesting new videos from around the Web.

Real Racing 3 has vivid graphics that would be at home on a console player.

A plane-window view of London on the Google Earth app for iPad.

Although Android tablets are getting better all the time, Apple is still leading the tablet charge - and the new iPads the company announced on Tuesday look as if they will keep the company in front. A major reason for that is the number of great iPad apps available.

These recommendations are for apps that showcase tablets, and they all work with the new iPad versions.

Video is something iPads do better than iPhones, thanks to the larger screen. YouTube is well known for viral videos of all sorts, and YouTube has an official iPad app that works a lot like the traditional Web site, with extras like gesture controls. The app is mainly for playing video when you have a network connection, so it won't be useful at all times. Google will soon add the ability to download videos for watching when your iPad is offline. The YouTube app is free and worth trying, but I dislike its menus and find its gesture controls a little flaky - they don't always seem to do what you want.

For a better online video experience, you may prefer Rockpack. The app is easy to use and its design is excellent. Rockpack shows you an array of great videos drawn from across the Web and recommended by your social media friends as well as celebrities. Sharing your own video discoveries with friends on Twitter or Facebook is also a breeze. Rockpack, too, is free.

My favorite iPad video player is VLC. This free app plays video files that you have downloaded on a computer, and its strength is that it can play pretty much any file format you can think of. But it does require an extra step: Before playing the downloaded videos, you must transfer the video files to the app from your computer via Dropbox, iTunes or a Web server system. VLC is handy for catching up on movies during a weekend away or perhaps a long flight. But learning to master its somewhat technical controls can take time.

Game apps also go well with iPads, and there are thousands. Real Racing 3 is one great game that combines amazing graphics and a type of motion-control gameplay that you can really get only on tablets. It's a car racing game that you control by steering your iPad as if it were a car's wheel. The graphics will impress you, as they're what you'd normally expect to see on a game on a console like a PlayStation or Xbox, and the gameplay is entertaining. The segments between races for upgrading your car and selecting tracks can drag on too long, but the game is free, so it's hard to complain.

For a totally different kind of game experience, try zipping way back to 1980 with the official Pac-Man app. It's the classic arcade game lovingly remade for the iPad, with great graphics and sound and a few new tricks. You won't have to feed quarters into the game to keep playing, though it does cost $5. And if you're into fighting games, then Star Wars: Knights Of The Old Republic is the one for you. It's a role-playing/fighting game with fabulous imagery and all the Star Wars paraphernalia you love. The downsides: it is $10 and it will gobble up a lot of your iPad's storage space.

Talking of planets and space, a completely different app worth trying is Google Earth. Though this looks simply like another version of Google's Web app, the tablet's screen is absolutely the best way to experience Earth. Zooming and diving by swiping the screen to see beautiful satellite imagery of the world and 3-D graphics of famous buildings feels wonderful. The app is free.

Another iPad app that could amaze you is Shazam. This free app, with graphics that make the most of the big display on an iPad, recognizes music that you hear playing, perhaps on the radio or in a coffee shop. It will automatically tell you what the track is called, show you lyrics and even give you the chance to buy it. If you let it, Shazam can also listen all the time - so it will automatically “tag” every song it hears playing near your iPad, perhaps during a movie or TV show, without you having to interact with it. This automatic feature is, for now, something only the iPad app can do.

For learning languages with your iPad, Duolingo is a free app that makes the most of the tablet's screen with a clear interface. And for learning everything a TED talk has to offer, the free and amazing TED videos really are more convenient via the iPad app - because you can watch when you're out and about.

Hopefully by trying these apps you will see that your iPad is much more than a device for browsing the Web or reading documents or books. Have fun!

Quick Calls

Microsoft has released a new app to let you remotely connect your 21st-century iOS or Android device to your old-fashioned PC - it's free, and lets you control what is on the PC screen. ... Dream of Pixels, a successful iOS game, is now on Android too. It's like a backward Tetris, where you unpack a grid of shaped pieces instead of stacking them up. Fun, and free.

A version of this article appears in print on October 24, 2013, on page B7 of the New York edition with the headline: A Roundup of Worthy Apps for the New iPads.

Twitter Illiterate? Mastering the @BC\'s

Twitter Illiterate? Mastering the @BC's

Minh Uong/The New York Times

Using Twitter sounds so simple. Type out no more than 140 characters - the maximum allowed in a single tweet - and hit send. That's all, right?

Not quite. Twitter's interface may look simple, but it is not, and its complexity has turned off many people who tried the service. This is a problem because one of the big questions facing Twitter before it starts trading as a public company, perhaps as early as next month, is whether it can attract enough users to become a robust outlet for advertising dollars. Although Twitter brings in money from advertising, it does not yet sell enough ads to make a profit.

Still, in the few years since it started, Twitter has quickly gained users. People and organizations of many stripes - celebrities like Justin Bieber, brands like Oreo, even the economist Jeffrey Sachs - have flocked to Twitter to share information and thoughts.

In a prospectus released for investors last week, the company said its worldwide monthly users grew to 232 million in the third quarter, up from closer to 200 million early this year. According to a Pew survey, the percentage of American Internet users on Twitter as of May was 18 percent, more than double the percentage in November 2010.

But those numbers are a far cry from those attained by Facebook, a top rival. Facebook has more than a billion users, and according to a Pew survey, Facebook was used by 67 percent of American Internet users as of late last year.

Will Twitter become a platform used by the masses? Maybe the best way to answer that question is to use the service yourself. Here's a primer.

SET UP AN ACCOUNT Signing up to Twitter is simple. Just choose a username, known as a handle, and a password. Most people try to use their name or a variation of it as a handle, like @BillGates. Try to keep it short. You don't want your handle taking up too many of the 140 characters if someone mentions you in a tweet.

Next, give other Twitter users some sense of who you are. People who don't know you but find themselves interested in your Twitter feed will want some clues about whether they should “follow” you - meaning add your Twitter messages to the ones that they see in their unique feed. Unlike on Facebook, where people connect with their friends and family, on Twitter most people follow others with similar interests or professions.

Start by adding a profile picture to your account. A headshot, cartoon, image of your puppy - anything is better than the default egg, which screams Twitter newbie.

And fill out your bio. Use the 160 characters available for your bio to explain who you are and try to give a sense of what topics you will tweet about. You can also include a link to a Web site, maybe of the company you work for or a personal site. Here's an example of a strong bio from Laura Seay, a political scientist:

“Proud Texan. Colby College political scientist. I study governance by non-state actors & U.S. policy in central Africa. Scenic Maine texasinafrica.blogspot.com.”

BUILD A COMMUNITY Next, find people to follow. The Twitter messages written by accounts you follow will show up in your feed, also called your timeline. It's easy to get deluged with tweets, so be selective about which accounts you follow. You want your timeline to feel alive with smart, interesting, informative and entertaining tweets. But remember that “unfollowing” an account is only a click away, too.

Decide what topics you're most interested in, like college football or Canadian politics or New York restaurants, and then search by name for writers or commentators on those topics. You can also search by topic or geographic area on https://twitter.com/search-advanced.

Once you find an account that tweets regularly on a topic you're passionate about, see what that account follows. For example, if you're a fan of Jessica Valenti (@JessicaValenti), a feminist author and speaker, you can follow her and then discover others interested in gender issues by looking at her feed. To see everyone a person is following, click on the person's name and then click “Following.”

Once you've found people to follow, engage them. Send them a link to an interesting article. (To save character space when sending a link, use a Web address shortening service like Bit.ly.) Interact with them: respond to their tweets by hitting “reply,” mention the articles they share, show that you like a tweet by hitting the “favorite” button. When all else fails, try a compliment.

LEARN THE LANGUAGE To engage with people, it helps to know some of Twitter's insider language and etiquette, which is a big part of what can make the service confusing for new users. “RT” means retweet; it is used when repeating what someone else said. If you want to add commentary, place it before the RT. Here's an example of Cory Booker, the senator-elect from New Jersey, retweeting and adding commentary to the Twitter user @LindsCarter on Election Day last week:

Twitter pros often amend their tweets with “via” or “h/t,” which stands for hat tip. These are ways to give credit to someone who shared the information first. Acknowledge others in the Twitter community, and the favor will most likely be returned.

UNDERSTAND THE SYMBOLS Twitter users often add hashtags, like #Brooklyn or #SuperBowl, to enable others searching for that topic to find their tweet. They work well in specific instances - during events like professional conferences, for example, when you want to know what others are saying about a panel.

But hashtags, while a nice idea, often feel so #2012. They've been overused and aren't terribly useful for searching. Hashtag fans will disagree, but my advice: Use them sparingly.

An important technical rule governs the use of the “@” sign, which is the beginning of every account's handle. If you start a tweet to someone with “@,” only that person and those who follow both of you will see the tweet. This is so you can have a semi-private conversation with that person without cluttering up others' timelines. To make the tweet appear in the timelines of everyone who follows you, add a word or character before the “@” sign, even just a period. Here's an example from Dan Nowicki, a reporter at The Arizona Republic:

BUT TWEET LIKE A PERSON A lot of people join Twitter and think they are supposed to suddenly start writing in short bursts of words barely strung together. Who needs pronouns or subject-verb agreement? This is Twitter!

Twitter is still a conversation, and you will want to be understood. Write the way you speak. Let your tweets flow like sentences. And let your character come out.

ORGANIZE YOUR FEED One of the best ways to organize the madness that can become Twitter is by using the platform's lists tool. Create different lists based on your interests and then add people to them. At 9 a.m., when you want the news, you can pull up your media list and see what your favorite news services and journalists are tweeting. At 5 p.m. on a Friday, pull up your entertainment list to get weekend plans.

TELL OTHERS And finally, the best way to build your community is by telling people that you're on Twitter. Add your handle to your business card, your e-mail signature and, when possible, the bottom of your correspondence, like so: Follow me on Twitter @HannaIngber.

This article has been revised to reflect the following correction:

Correction: October 25, 2013

Because of an editing error, the Toolkit column on Thursday, about the fundamentals of using Twitter, misstated the number of characters allowed for a Twitter bio. It is 160 characters - not 140, which is the limit for a tweet.

A version of this article appears in print on October 24, 2013, on page B1 of the New York edition with the headline: Twitter Illiterate? Mastering The @BC's.

Q&A: Editing Microsoft Word Files on an Android Tablet

Editing Microsoft Word Files on an Android Tablet

Q. I don't have a subscription to the Office 365 site, so what's the easiest way to read and edit Microsoft Word documents on an Android tablet?

A. The Google Play store has several apps for working with Microsoft Word files. When shopping for an app, check the feature list carefully, as some free programs allow you only to view files on your Android device, not edit them.

Apps that offer document editing include the $15 full versions of Documents To Go or OfficeSuite Pro 7, the free Kingsoft Office or the free Olive Office Premium. Features and user reviews vary by app, so study up before downloading to make sure you get everything you want.

Quickoffice, another popular app for working with Word files, was recently withdrawn from the Google Play store, but for a reason. Last year, Google bought the company behind the software, and last month it made Quickoffice free for Android and iOS users. The new Quickoffice app requires a free Google account and stores files online with Google Drive. The new version does not support online syncing and storage to other services like Dropbox, as previous versions did.

Using Folders in the Safari Bookmarks Bar

Q. How do I make a drop-down menu of related bookmarks on my Safari toolbar in Mac OS X 10.8?

A. Safari, Apple's browser for the Mac, can store folders of favorites (as well as links to single sites) in the “bookmarks bar” below the address/search box. When you have a folder in the bookmarks bar, clicking a folder name reveals a vertical menu with all the bookmarks stored in that folder.

If you have bookmarked sites in Safari that you want to add to the bookmarks bar, start by making a folder. Right-click (or hold down the Mac's Control key and click) in an empty spot on Safari's bookmarks bar area and choose New Folder. You can enter a name for the new folder right there.

Next, right-click or Control-click the new folder and choose Edit Contents. This opens the Bookmarks window in Safari, with the Bookmarks Bar icon selected and a list of the program's bookmarks underneath it in the left pane of the window. From here, you can drag the bookmarks you want to add from the left pane into your new folder in the center of the screen. (If you turn on the Auto-Click checkbox in the Bookmarks window, all the bookmarks stored in that folder will open in separate browser tabs when you click the folder's name in the Safari window.)

As an alternative method, you can also create a new folder and open up the Bookmarks window all at once - just go to the Bookmarks menu in Safari and choose Add Bookmark Folder. When the Bookmarks window opens, name your untitled folder in the left pane, drag in the desired bookmarks and then drag the new folder onto the Bookmarks Bar icon at the top of the column.

Once you close the Bookmarks window (click the small book icon in the Safari toolbar, or go to the Bookmarks menu and choose Hide All Bookmarks), your new folder should be waiting for you in the bookmarks bar. Click it and select the site you want to visit from the menu.