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Apple Cements Tablet Market

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Apple Inc's newest iPad looked like another hot seller as hundreds lined up at stores around the world to get their hands on the tablet, though the crowds and waiting times in some cities were less than in previous years.

The third-generation iPad has only a few new features including faster wireless connectivity and a crisper display, but analysts nonetheless expect Apple to dominate the tablet market well into next year.

"I just got hyped into it, I guess," said David Tarasenko, a 34-year-old construction manager who was the first to pick one up from a Telstra wireless store at midnight in Sydney.

In New York, the queues were nothing compared with previous with battery like Toshiba PA3191U-1BAS Battery , Toshiba PA3166U-1BAS Battery , Toshiba PA3331U-1BAS Battery , Toshiba PA3098U-1BAS Battery , Toshiba PA3084U-1BAS Battery , Toshiba PA3399U-1BAS Battery , Toshiba PA3250U-1BAS Battery , Toshiba PA3356U-1BAS Battery , Toshiba PA3291U-1BAS Battery , Toshiba PA3591U-1BAS Battery , Toshiba PA3757U-1BRS Battery , Toshiba Qosmio F750 Battery years. "I came by at midnight and nobody was here," said Peter Brown, 51, who owns a marketing and communications company in London and was waiting in line at Apple's flagship New York City store on Fifth Avenue.

The new iPad - Apple has refrained from calling it iPad 3 - has faster chips, fourth-generation wireless, a sharper display and a better camera, making it harder for competitors like Samsung's Galaxy, which also lack Apple's range of apps and content, to catch up.

On price, too, Apple's rivals will struggle to beat it. The new iPad starts at $499 in the United States, 479 euros in Germany and 42,800 yen in Japan. Only Amazon Inc's far more basic Kindle Fire is significantly cheaper.

Apple will continue to sell the iPad 2 but has dropped its price by $100 to start at $399. Some analysts expect sales of the new iPad to overtake the old. So far, the company has sold 55 million tablets since the first iPad was launched in 2010.

Even in a tough economic climate in some parts of the world, many buyers, like 27-year-old Steve Henry in Paris, said they would scrimp elsewhere if necessary.

"I save money on my other purchases for high-tech shopping," said Henry, a systems engineer at a railway company who was hoping to buy his first iPad mainly to watch films and read during his more than two hours of travel per day.