• Motivasi Dan DIY

    Creativity Beyond Measure

  • Tazkirah

    Sharing is Caring

  • Local Wrap

    Around Us

  • Friday Wrap

    Around The World

  • Baitul Muslim

    Kuliah Online Baitul Muslim

  • Kulinari

    Sugar, Spice and Everything Nice

Sehening Gunung Tursina

0 comments

Bismillahirrahmannirrahim

Masih terpahat dalam kota memori percutian aku bersama teman-teman. Berkelana ke bumi anbiya, bumi para nabi dan solehin. Niat musafir yang semata mencari redha Allah agar dapat meraih mutiara hikmah di bumi dagang MESIR.
Tursina suatu nama yang amat asing dalam kamus hidupku. Tursina? Pada saat itu yang aku tahu Tursina itu adalah gunung. Setinggi mana dan latar belakang sejaranhya aku tidak tahu sama sekali sehinggalah tiba saat untuk mendaki
Aku bertanyakan kepada ustaz tursina itu setinggi apa? Sejauh mana? Curam? Landai? Bahaya tidak? Dan kenapa harus mendaki jam 1.30 pagi? Ustaz hanya menjawab ringkas,“Tengok je nanti”.
Aku berasa pelik dan hairan suasana 1.30 pagi itu amat berlainan sama sekali. Terlalu ramai orang yang mendaki tanpa mengira usia, bangsa dan agama. Sangat variasi. Ustaz menerangkan bahawa di puncak tursina itu terdapat rumah-rumah ibadah pelbagai agama, “Di sana nanti kamu akan lihat manusia pelbagai agama berkumpul bersatu, kerana tursina tercatat dalam Al-Quran dan kitab-kitab agama lain” tambah ustaz lagi.

Disepanjang pendakian kami diselimuti  bayu angin yang dingin dan nyalaan lampu-lampu picit serta unta-unta yang sedia berkhidmat kepada sesiapa yang memerlukan khidmatnya dengan bayaran tertentu. Dalam benakku di saat melihat nenek-nenek tua mengenderai unta ada perasaan  takut dan khawatir menyelinap. Takut dan khawatir andai terjatuh kerana gayat.
Ratusan manusia mendaki dan terus mendaki. Aku dan teman-teman menikmati setiap langkah yang diatur dengan kesabaran meski penat dan ada sebahagian daripada kami merasa seakan tidak mampu. Syukran kepada ustaz demi untuk sentiasa membangkitkan semangat kami ustaz tiada henti bercerita tentang Tursina. Gunung Tursina kesemuanya ada 7 pit stop. Di setiap pit stop terdapat gerai-gerai menjual makanan ringan dan ada diantara pendaki mengambil kesempatan untuk berehat.
aku jejaki tapak nabiMu ya Allah
merasai lelah Nabi Musa
mendaki hingga ke puncak sinai
demi munajat kepadaMu Allah


Pendakian mengambil masa selama tiga jam bergantung sejauh mana kelajuan. Pada pit stop terakhir setiap pendaki harus bersedia untuk menapak pada “Tangga-tangga Cinta”. Jujurnya pada saat ini aku mulai berasa takut.Curam.Sangat curam. Tersalah menapak, buruk padahnya. Berkemungkinan jatuh ke dalam gaung. Berkat kekuatan yang dikurniakan Allah berserta tawakkal yang jitu dan keinginan yang membuak untuk menyaksikan sendiri puncak yang pernah menjadi saksi pertemuan Allah swt dan Nabi Musa a.s. aku dan teman-teman mengagahkan diri. Setapak demi setapak dan akhirnya sampai jua hingga ke puncak. Alhamdullilah.





Setibanya di puncak telah masuk waktu solat subuh lalu berimamkan ustaz kami solat subuh berjemaah bersama-sama dengan pendaki-pendaki lain yang beragama Islam. Beristighfar dan bertasbih memuji kebesaran dan keAgungan Allah swt.

 Gambar di atas adalah pecahan batu yang dipercayai bentuk Tubuh Nabi Musa As tatkala baginda bersembunyi kerana terlalu gentar setelah melihat cahaya Allah.


Dan kami telah menjanjikan kepada Musa (memberikan Taurat) tiga puluh malam dan kami sempurnakan jumlah malam itu dengan sepuluh malam lagi maka sempurnalah waktu yang telah ditentukan Tuhannya empat puluh malam. Dan musa berkata kepada saudaranya Harun “Gantikanlah aku dalam memimpin kaumku dan perbaikilah dirimu dan kaummu dan janganlah engkau mengikuti jalan orang-orang yang berbuat kerosakan.
Dan ketika Musa datang untuk bermunajat pada waktu yang telah Kami tentukan dan Tuhan telah berfirman langsung kepadanya, Musa berkata “Ya Tuhanku, tampakkanlah diriMu kepadaku agar aku dapat melihat Engkau”. Allah berfirman , “Engakau tidak akan sanggup melihatKu, namun lihatlah ke gunung itu, jika ia tetap di tempatnya sebagai sedia kala nescaya engkau dapat melihatKu”. Maka ketika Tuhannya menampakkan keAgunganNya kepada gunung itu, gunung itu hancur luluh dan Musa pun jatuh pingsan. Setelah Musa sedar dia berkata “MahaSuci Engkau, aku bertaubat kepada Engkau dan aku adalah orang yang pertama-tama beriman.
Al-A’raf (142 dan 143)


tanah dan batu-batu yang ku pijak sekarang
suatu masa dahulu
pernah menjadi saksi
pertemuan Nabi Musa dengan Tuhan

Sewaktu peristiwa Israk Mikraj Rasulullah saw melihat cahaya di pergunungan sinai cahaya yang menarik Rasulullah untuk berkunjung ke sini.

tanah dan batu-batu yang ku pijak sekarang
pernah dijejaki Rasul mulia

Ku ingin bertemu Mu
seperti Musa
bersaksikan batu-batu pecah yang gentar dengan sinaranMu
Tuhanku

insyaAllah ada rezeki, mendaki lagi J






Read more

Konvensyen Pelajar Muslim Malaysia (3hb Januari 2012) PROMO 2.0

0 comments
Assalamualaikum wbt.

Dibawa KHAS oleh AZAM Russia dengan kolaborasi bersama PPIM-Moscow Student Chapter

KONVENSYEN PELAJAR MUSLIM MALAYSIA
3HB JANUARI 2012
BERTEMPAT DI DEWAN UTAMA, HOTEL UNIVERSITETSKAYA
MOSCOW, RUSSIA


ANDA DAH MENDAFTAR??
APA TUNGGU LAGI??
ANDA PERLU TANGKAS, JANGAN SAMPAI TERLEPAS...










JANGAN LUPA UNTUK MENGAJAK SAHABAT-SAHABAT ANDA SEKALI..

PASTINYA ANDA TIDAK MAHU KESEORANGAN DALAM MENGHADIRI ACARA YANG PENUH BERINFORMASI LAGI MENARIK INI.

Tarikh tamat pendaftaran adalah pada 25hb Disember 2011

Untuk Maklumat selanjutnya, hubungi wakil-wakil lokaliti :

Wakil Moscow
Zulfadhli Zabri (M1, Moscow)
 Hazrul Hazwan (M1, Moscow)
 Kamal Iqlaas (MAI, Moscow)
Iman Zalzilah Rashidi (M1, Moscow)

Wakil Nizhny :
Azli Nasiruddin
Fatimah Othman

Wakil Volgograd :
Fahrurrazi Abbas
Athirah Hamdan

Wakil St Petersburg :
Syed Ahmad Fathi

Wakil Kursk :
Mohd Zulfadhli (MAI, Moscow)
Nabil Halim (M1, Moscow)j

Sekian, Harap Maklum


Read more

It's your loss

0 comments

          Вчера было,
сегодня есть
 и завтра будет.
как вы думаете, Что это?


What is the thing
that had been yesterday
exists now
     and will be tomorrow?       
             

            *
            
            *
           
            *
      

*         One of the things that cannot be returned back is time. Tick-tock tick-tock, every second is ticking, as we’re eating, as we’re studying, as we’re sleeping and what we’re doing in our everyday life.

can you turn back time?

And have you spent that time wisely enough?

It will be, on the Day they see it, as though they had not remained [in the world] except for an afternoon or a morning thereof.
(An-Naziat 79; 46)

Allah had mentioned that living in this world would be like living for one afternoon. Imagine that short amount of time.

And for that short amount of time,
Have you called your parents to ask how they were doing?
Have you reminded your friends to do good deeds and avoid His prohibitions?
Have you done good deeds?
Have you studied lillahi taala in hope that you can gain more knowledge for dunia and akhirah?
Have you started the day with a bismillah?
Have you sadakah, have you infaq as your supply of good deeds to akhirah?

Abu Huraira (Allah be pleased with him) reported Allah’s Messenger (may peace be upon him) as saying:
When a man dies, his acts come to an end, but three, recurring charity, or knowledge (by which people) benefit, or a pious son, who prays for him (for the deceased).
Sahih Muslim 

Have you included the Prophet Muhammad S.A.W in your prayers?
Have you remembered Allah S.W.T the Almighty for every second ticking..?
 Lie at night before you sleep and ask yourself..what have I done today?
Have I spent time wisely?

1. By Al-'Asr (the time).
2. Verily! Man is in loss,
3. Except those who believe (in Islamic Monotheism) and do righteous good deeds, and recommend one another to the truth (i.e. order one another to perform all kinds of good deeds (Al-Ma'ruf) which Allah has ordained, and abstain from all kinds of sins and evil deeds (Al-Munkar) which Allah has forbidden), and recommend one another to patience (for the sufferings, harms, and injuries which one may encounter in Allah's Cause during preaching His religion of Islamic Monotheism or Jihad, etc.).
(Surah 103, Al-Asr)

always slipping away..


A man is always in loss when he abuses time and uses it to disobey His prohibitions and not follow His orders.
Without realizing, we always take easy and disregard time as something very valuable.
Example: procrastination
Why wait for tomorrow what you can do today?
We can say...we can still wash that pile of clothes at another time, prepare for our concluding test tomorrow, we can still have fun at this young age and be pious and make taubah later..
But what if there is no tomorrow?


time's up!!
 A sister once said,
“Life is like a rope. For every second ticking, your rope is being cut, bit by bit. And for that short amount of rope left, let’s spend our time with something most worth spending at.”

There are a lot of priorities in life; studies, family, friends, work etc. But always remember, that one of our most top priorities in life is to be an abd, totally subordinate slave of Allah.
Before it became too late, and before you feel as though you have only lived for one afternoon, let’s spend the time left with things that He loves.

Before you rope came to its end, make a self-reflection and start living life as a chase to akhirah, jannah.

We might be weak, yes, but trying is what’s best, don’t you think?

psst..the answer is time.


Read more

FRIDAY WRAP ( DIS 4-DIS 9 )

0 comments
Dengan Nama Allah Yang Maha Pemurah Lagi Maha Penyayang.


Assalamualaikum.
Azam Russia membawakan kepada anda sorotan mingguan berita-berita dunia sekitar 4 Disember-9 Disember.




4 Dis,Ahad-Selepas berbulan-bulan menyaksikan debat panas dan pelbagai isu politik, rakyat Persekutuan Russia keluar mengundi untuk memilih parlimen baru dikenali sebagai 'Duma'.Lebih 3000 calon dari 7 parti bertanding merebut kerusi di parlimen.




5 Dis,Isnin-Selama 10 tahun terakhir ini, sekitar 60 sekolah Islam telah dibuka memandangkan keperluan untuk pendidikan Islam di England semakin berkembang dan semakin banyak ibu bapa muslim menghantar anak-anak mereka ke sekolah itu.
Malahan, sebuah sekolah di Birmingham yang bernama Al-Hijrah telah memperkenalkan sistem undian untuk menentukan muridnya dengan satu kerusi direbut oleh 25 ibu bapa.






6 Dis,Selasa-Ratusan penyokong pihak pembangkang di Russia telah ditahan oleh polis dalam satu protes membantah keputusan pilihanraya hari Ahad lalu, di Moscow dan St Petersburg.
Pihak polis berkata seramai 300 orang ditahan kerana cuba untuk mengadakan protes secara besar-besaran. 






7 Dis,Rabu-Bekas presiden Israel, Moshe Katsav, hari ini memulakan hukuman penjara 7 tahun selepas didapati bersalah atas tuduhan merogol.Kes ini telah berlalu sejak 5 tahun lepas dan ini merupakan kali pertama seorang ketua negara dipenjara.




.
8 Dis,Khamis-JAKIM telah mengisytiharkan haram ke atas buku yang ditulis bekas perdana menteri Singapura, Lee Kuan Yew.Di dalam buku itu, Lee mendesak umat Islam supaya kurang 
tegas dalam melakukan amalan dan hukum yang dianjurkan Islam.






9 Dis,Jumaat-Seorang rakyat Palestin syahid, manakala 13 lagi cedera dalam satu serangan udara di Gaza, kata seorang pegawai perubatan, sehari selepas satu serangan lain mengorbankan 2 orang pejuang Palestin.Serangan itu berlaku pada awal Jumaat, menyasarkan pusat latihan Hamas, Briged Ezzedine al-Qassam, di timur Gaza.  


Sekian saja laporan minggu ini dari Azam Russia.
Assalamualaikum.



Read more

White Bread Simplicity..by BaRakaHCooking School

4 comments

White Bread Simplicity.. by BaRakaHCooking School


Assalamualaikum.. Salam perkenalan semua.. ^__^ ini merupakn entry pertama Barakah sebenarnya.. dah lama nak buat tapi sebenarnya.. tapi takut tak istiqamah.. huhu.. tapi hari tu aku didatangi seorng sahabat minta aku wat entry masakan untuk Azam.. hemm.. piker punyer piker..  banyak masaku abih tengok citer korea, tido dan banyak lg bnde2 lagha.. (istighfar 3x) Akhirnya dapat gak kekuatan untuk buat resepi yg paling asas bila dok kat Bumi Russia ini.. cube teka2.. hihi..
Aku perasan mmg ramai orng Russia ni suka makan roti.. lg2 roti coklat.. bukn inti coklat tu.. (yg t upon aku suke).. tapi nama pon lidah Msia.. dok mncari la roti ala-ala Gardenia..

So aku pon mencari initiative untuk membuat roti gardenia aku sandiri.. By the way, Batton kat sini pon makin mahal.. bila jumpa yg sebijik mcm roti Msia ada alcohol plak.. (haish kering aku..) baik buat sendiri..

Resepi Roti Putih Ala Gardenia..

2.5 cwn Tepung Gandum
½ cwn Butter (suhu bilik)
½ cwn Gula
1 pkt kecil Yeast ( suka pakai yg warna merah ada gmbr pakcik wat roti hihi..)
1 gls 3.2% Susu Segar (lg tinggi percentage die lg lmbut)
Secubit Garam
1 cwn air suam




Cara-cara membuat
1.       Dalam mangkuk besar masukkn 2 cawan tepung gandum, gula, garam dan butter. Gaul rata menggunakn tangan sampai jadi mcm keping2.
2.       Suamkn susu segar tadi (dlm 37 degree C) dan cmpurkn yeast. Biar sampai berbuih-buih*
3.       Bila yeast dh sedia, campurkan susu yeast td ke dalam adunan tepung dan uli sehingga menjadi dough. Tambah sedikit demi sedikit lebihan tepung td jika terlampau basah atau air suam td jika terlampau kering.
4.       Apabila dough sudah sedia, tutup bekas dengan plastic rapper atau kain basah.
5.       Biarkan dough korang kembang 2 KALI GANDA.. hihi..
6.       Uli balik dough tadi sebentar dan masukkn kedalam bekas acuan (yg telah di sapu butter) dan biarkn lg 30 min
7.       Sementara menunggu panaskn oven (180 degree C) 10 minit sblm masukkn roti. Kemudian bakar selama 25-30 minit.


TADAAA.. Siap.. ^^






Mesti ada yg cakap.. “ala ape standard wat roti putih..” tp dengan roti ni la aku dev resepi lain mcm




Cth nyer;
1.       Mini pizza
2.      
Roti berinti (sardine ke, kaya ke, chocolate ke..)
3.       Roti sosej
4.        Mini Bun
5.       Cinnamon Role.. (my fav. ^__^)
insyaAllah resepi2 ni aku bg lain kali..



All that u need is just some time n effort.. kalo simpan elok2 tahan lama,  malah boleh brjimat.. bawak g kelas.. bg kwn2 (serious best bg org mkn..hihi) even boleh buat niaga.. hihi.. nnt share2 la untung tu ngan aku.. hihi..  bila ada duit lebih boleh buat sedekah..
“Bandingan (derma) orang-orang yang membelanjakan hartanya pada jalan Allah, ialah sama seperti sebiji benih yang tumbuh menerbitkan tujuh tangkai; tiap-tiap tangkai itu pula mengandungi seratus biji. Dan (ingatlah), Allah akan melipatgandakan pahala bagi sesiapa yang dikehendakiNya, dan Allah Maha Luas (rahmat) kurniaNya, lagi Meliputi ilmu pengetahuanNya.” (Al-baqarah:261)
saham dunia dapat saham akhirat pon dapat..
Ok la.. banyak dh mmbebel ni.. kalo ada comments, tips atau cadangan(s) sila la kongsi..
KALO X JADI CUBA LG.. KALO JD UCAP ALHAMDULILLAH.. ^__^V
Slamat mencuba semua..
Boleh komen kat sini atau email kat barakah_azam@yahoo.com




Read more

Which Tablet Is Best for You?

0 comments

See what the BlackBerry PlayBook, HP TouchPad, Motorola Xoom, and Samsung Galaxy Tab have that Apple’s iPad doesn’t.
The Apple iPad 2 is no doubt the best-selling tablet--but does that mean it's the best tablet?
To find out, I spent a few weeks testing some of the iPad's leading competitors. I learned that in a surprising number of areas, including navigation, e-mail handling, and Web browsing, the other tablets actually beat out the iPad.

 For this comparison, we set aside raw hardware specs. Processor speed, RAM, and ports certainly matter, but a tablet can have great specs and still be awkward and unpleasant to use. What makes or breaks a tablet is its operating system, which determines whether answering e-mail, watching video, and surfing the Web will be a pleasure or a frustration.operating systems are poised to battle it out. While most tablet OSs come on only one brand of tablet each, Google's Android 3.0 is the choice of a growing number of manufacturers, some of which add their own custom interface as HTC does with Sense UI and Samsung does with TouchWiz.
For this article I tried the iOS 4.3-based Apple iPad 2, the BlackBerry Tablet OS-based RIM BlackBerry PlayBook, and the Android 3.0-based Acer Iconia Tab A500, Motorola Xoom, and T-Mobile G-Slate. I didn't have a final version of the WebOS-based HP TouchPad (due out this summer) for unlimited testing, but I was able to spend some time with a preproduction unit.

Home Screen

Advantage: BlackBerry Tablet OS, Android 3.0
You'll go to your tablet's home screen again and again, so it's critical for the screen to look good and work efficiently.
The elegantly simple BlackBerry Tablet OS home screen smoothly transitions as you swipe among open apps in the navigator pane that appears in the upper two-thirds of the screen. RIM has built gesture navigation into the bezel, so a simple swipe up reveals context-sensitive menus, while a swipe down reveals the full app screen. The navigator screen and gesture-swipe combo makes moving among open, multitasking apps particularly intuitive. BlackBerry's home screen also deserves props for allowing one-tap access to Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, battery, and general-settings info. The BlackBerry's notifications are subtle: Messages appear in the upper-right corner to tell you that the battery is running low, for instance.
Android 3.0's home screens (you get six of them) are very different from the BlackBerry offering, but perfect for people who want detailed control over how their tools are organized and presented. The new home-screen design is cleaner than that of previous Android versions, and it makes moving app icons and widgets across the six screens easy. Widgets are a compelling addition to Android, too: Google and app developers can use them to put regularly refreshed information--such as your calendar, your most recent e-mail messages, or the latest weather--directly on your screen. Tap the widget, and you'll proceed directly to the related app itself. These shortcuts are finger friendly, but the frequently winking updates could become more clutter than convenience.
The three core Android 3.0 navigation buttons (back, home, and recently accessed apps) appear at the lower left of the screen, while the status bar is situated at the lower right. Both sets of buttons are built into the display, and will rotate accordingly as you turn the tablet from horizontal to vertical.
Oddly, the back button doesn't behave as you might expect: Nowhere does Android note that using the back button exits an app entirely, but that's the action it performs. The button for recently accessed apps, often erroneously referred to as the multitasking button, brings up thumbnails of the five apps you've used most recently; but even though this is intended as a shortcut, it can make your finger travel more, not less, to return to an app.
I especially like the redesigned notifications, which you reveal with the tap of a finger. The Android status bar is where you'll see notifications pop up, and where you'll get easier access to oft-used settings such as airplane mode and Wi-Fi.
The Apple iOS home screen is way behind the competition in many respects. It's staid and consistent, but not at all dynamic. The bottom area has room for a maximum of six docked apps, while the rest of your apps spread across one of the multiple (up to 11) home screens. App icons are static, and unlike Android 3.0, iOS doesn't allow for widgets. iOS has no set location for notifications, either; instead, it passes along alerts in intrusive pop-up boxes. Organizing apps on different screens or into folders is tiresome, whether you're trying to do so on the iPad itself or in the iTunes desktop software. And unlike other mobile OSs, iOS buries oft-used settings under the layers of the settings menu; you'll find no shortcut here.
Convenient Settings: Both Android 3.0 and WebOS give handy, easy-to-use shortcuts to frequently accessed settings directly on the home screen.Like HP's WebOS phones, the TouchPad has a home screen that uses what HP calls "activity cards." Each card represents an application, media file, e-mail message, or browser window. Cards can sit individually or in a stack in the center of the home screen, and you can flick left to right to scroll through them. I like the flexibility of breaking out activity cards, and the ability to stack related cards together, even if the sources are different apps. In addition, I like the unobtrusive notifications in the upper-right corner of the screen (tap the icon, and you can flick through your alerts right there); it also has one of the best approaches to accessing settings that I've seen.

 

Mail

Advantage: Android 3.0
Both iOS and Android 3.0 have good mail apps, but Android gets the nod, by a hair. Android's versatile, triple-pane approach to e-mail is easy to navigate. (If you don't use Gmail, though, you'll have to work with the generic e-mail app, which doesn't let you search your messages. At least you can easily organize them into folders.) More important, the behavior of Android's mail screens isn't dramatically different in the vertical versus the horizontal position.
Although Apple's Mail app looks good and is easy to navigate, it annoyingly behaves in a different way based on whether you're holding the tablet in landscape or portrait mode: In landscape, it shows you two panes, while in portrait it has a pop-up pane for moving through messages and inboxes. Compared with Android, iOS puts many more limitations on what you can download, and what you can do with a downloaded file. It will save JPEGs, PDFs, and Microsoft Office documents, but you can open those files only in specific apps that are written to hook into the Mail app (for example, Pages, iBooks, or Evernote). And you can't attach a file directly to a message; to send a photo, for instance, you initiate the message from the image in the Photo Roll, not from the e-mail app.
BlackBerry Tablet OS stumbles due to the fact that it lacks an integrated e-mail app. The BlackBerry Bridge feature lets you pair a BlackBerry phone with the tablet, so you can view your phone's BlackBerry Messenger e-mail, contacts, and chats on the PlayBook's larger screen. When you decouple the tablet and phone, the Messenger data disappears from the PlayBook--a feature that might frustrate consumers but should appeal to corporate IT honchos who want to limit the spread of sensitive information.
The PlayBook ships with icons for AOL Mail, Gmail, Hotmail, and Yahoo Mail (along with Facebook and Twitter), but these icons are misleading since they don't bring you to actual apps--they're merely shortcuts to those services in the Web browser. The browser interface for the mail services is a poor substitute for a mobile-optimized app. For example, I couldn't add an attachment in Gmail, though I could do so--with some graphics issues--in AOL Mail. I could save attachments from Web-based e-mail, but finding those documents again was difficult, and sometimes they didn't open properly.
WebOS's e-mail is similar to Android 3.0's take in that it has a multipane organization. Regrettably, individual e-mail messages can't be represented on their own activity cards unless you press, say, the reply or forward button; this action will make an e-mail message stand on its own, so you can stack it together with a Web page to create a hub of related content. You have the option of saving one or all attachments in an e-mail, or opening an attachment; however, I didn't see enough of the HP TouchPad's other apps to determine how attachments interact with them.

 

Web

Advantage: Android 3.0
The clear advantage in Web browsing goes to Android 3.0 tablets. The native Android browser has a tabbed interface that makes navigating a multitude of Web pages remarkably easy. And content on those tabs updates continuously as long as you're just shifting among tabs, not apps. The visual bookmark design--with thumbnails of your pages--helps you quickly access favorite items. I also appreciate the support for Adobe Flash Player 10.2--it means that users don't miss out on the large portion of the Web that relies on Flash. Another benefit of Android: You can download alternative Web browsers, such as Mozilla's Firefox 4 for Mobile.
In comparison, iOS 4.3 and BlackBerry Tablet OS feel stuck in the dark ages of Web browsing. Since their respective native browsers access only one Web page at a time, you must exit one page before you browse to another. Switching among pages is much faster and smoother in Android's tabbed design than it is on either iOS 4.3 or BlackBerry Tablet OS. And neither of those OSs updates a page dynamically.
In addition, iOS's mobile Safari browser limits the number of windows you can have open at a time, and displays bookmarks as only a text list. And as with e-mail, iOS restricts how the Web browser handles downloads. You don't download files, per se; instead, if a supported file (for example, a Word doc or a PDF) is on a page, that file will open in a separate browser window. From there, you'll have the option to open the file in apps that have been hooked into the Web browser, such as Apple's iWork apps, Dropbox, iBooks, or Photo Roll. But you can't download .zip files, video files, or any file format that iOS does not support.
I like the fact that the BlackBerry Tablet OS browser supports Flash, but I'm disappointed with its uneven behavior. It lets you save a JPEG to a Downloads folder that's accessible via the browser; in my hands-on tests, however, I couldn't open the JPEGs I downloaded on the device. I had similar problems with some Word docs and PDFs I downloaded, too, though other files saved and opened just fine in the PlayBook's preinstalled apps (Adobe Reader for PDFs, and the Microsoft Office-compatible Word To Go, Sheet To Go, and Slideshow To Go). Stranger still, tapping on a file didn't consistently bring up the action to save it--though when I did get the chance to save a file, the PlayBook also allowed me to rename it on the spot. Another frustration: The Download folder didn't consistently retain a history of the downloaded files; without that, or a general file browser that would let me rummage on the tablet myself, those files seemed lost to the ether.
The WebOS browser on the TouchPad works much as it does on WebOS cell phones. Each browser window behaves as its own activity card, and you can stack those cards together or view them individually.

 

Multimedia

Advantage: None
In addition to examining how the tablets display images and video and play music, I looked at how they allow users to import music and video, as well as to purchase it.
I didn't pick an outright winner simply because no one mobile OS gets enough right in this respect. Which mobile OS you deem best for media management will depend in part on your shopping habits and on how you plan to use your tablet.

The iPad's tight integration with the iTunes storemakes buying new audio and video on Apple's tablet exceedingly easy. Love it or hate it, iTunes is the dominant marketplace for digital media, and the iPad benefits greatly. iTunes desktop software remains fairly good at organizing and tracking your media, as well as at syncing that media onto your tablet. However, although you can add your own videos and music--as well as photos--to the iTunes library on your PC, in order to play that media on your iPad you have to sync the tablet with your PC's iTunes library. You can't just do a quick drag-and-drop file transfer, as you can with Android 3.0. Nonetheless, if you already have an iPod or iPhone, and you shop in iTunes, the iPad will fit in perfectly with how you buy music and video.
At the time of my testing, Google had no comparable music or video store for its Android OS (though persistent rumors indicate that it might soon launch Google Music, reportedly a digital storefront). With an Android tablet, you can shop at a variety of media stores--for example, the Amazon MP3 app for Android lets you buy music at the Amazon MP3 store and play it with the Amazon Cloud Player, and Samsung offers its Media Hub for music and video downloads on its Android tablets. It's great to have choices, but if you use different stores you could end up with music that you can't play together in the same music library (Media Hub content plays only inside that app, for example).
Beyond the shopping, Android 3.0 is capable of solid media management--most of the time. Syncing via Windows Media Player is simple, but if you prefer to drag and drop music files, that works just fine, too. The same goes for video files, though Android 3.0 surprisingly lacks support for WMV files, among others. Most of the Android 3.0 tablets I've seen have a widescreen aspect ratio, which is perfect for HD movies. Plus, you get Flash support for online video (note, however, that Hulu generally blocks access from Android devices). Google's redesigned music player is appealing in its aesthetics and usability.
Unfortunately, since Android 3.0 lacks a dedicated video player, your videos are meshed into the Gallery with your photos. And the version of Android 3.0 that ships on all of the tablets I tried has a major imaging bug: Android 3.0's Gallery app doesn't render images clearly--images look unsharp, and fuzzy. A Google rep told me that the company was aware of the problem, but offered no timeline for a fix. Sure, I like how the Gallery lets me view image EXIF data, but that information doesn't do me much good if I can't tell whether the image is actually sharp.
BlackBerry Tablet OS's media handling is a mixed bag. It does some things extraordinarily well: For example, the OS can power two different graphics activities simultaneously, so you can output 1080p video via HDMI to a TV and still surf the Web on the PlayBook. In my hands-on tests, Flash video played fine inside a Web page, though it occasionally had sizing issues that made it difficult for the in-browser Flash player on YouTube (and Hulu.com video) to resize to the PlayBook's screen.
You can buy music on a PlayBook through 7digital, the same DRM-free store you can use via a BlackBerry phone. RIM plans to offer a video store, but it isn't ready just yet.
I appreciated how smoothly the BlackBerry Tablet OS let me exit and resume YouTube and other videos while navigating among open apps; when I popped back to a video, it resumed playback instantly, with no stutters or hesitation. This OS had no issue with playing WMV, AVI, or even .mov files I shot on my iPhone. Images looked great--crisp and sharp--but the Pictures app is fairly plain, with few options for setting up slideshows or navigating shots, and no additional options such as viewing EXIF data and other image properties. I did have difficulty getting vertical images to rotate from the horizontal (though the same images do so just fine on Android 3.0); RIM says that function will be coming in a future update.
RIM makes getting content onto the PlayBook fairly easy. You have to install an app on your desktop, and then use it to transfer files to the device wirelessly (it acts as a wireless hard drive) or use the app's guided sync and transfer options. Impressively, it grabbed music from my iTunes library, skipping over some songs only because those tracks were protected by digital rights management. The music player built in to BlackBerry Tablet OS looks fine and operates smoothly, though its layout took a little getting used to and building playlists on the fly wasn't as easy as I'd like.

 

Apps

Advantage: IOS
Since no tablet does everything you could want with the OS alone, you must have apps. Apple's iOS enjoys a definite advantage in this regard. At last count, more than 64,000 of the 350,000 apps in theApp Store were optimized for the iPad. No matter what you want to do on your iPad, you'll likely find something that does it in the Apple App Store.
In contrast, only a hundred-plus Android apps are optimized for use on Android 3.0 and the larger screens of tablets. More apps are on their way--though it's not certain how much of the current Android app boom will be devoted to tablets. And I've had mixed experiences with apps that aren't intended for Android 3.0: Sometimes they work fine, sometimes they function but look a bit off, and sometimes they crash.
RIM says it launched BlackBerry Tablet OS with 3000 apps in its AppWorld store. Unfortunately none of the apps I downloaded particularly impressed me--some appeared to be simple, almost DOS-like in their design. RIM says the PlayBook will be able to run Android 2.x apps, but not 3.0 apps, sold via its AppWorld store; but the Android Player emulator that will enable the function, as well as the emulator that will run BlackBerry phone apps, won't be available until later this summer. At launch, the PlayBook lacks compelling apps to complement its (mostly) compelling hardware and mobile OS.

 

Best Overall Impression

I find a lot to like among all the contending tablet OSs, and wish I could cobble those appealing elements together into a single, awesome mobile OS.
But barring that, I believe that Apple's iOS remains the best tablet operating system overall. That may be a surprise to you, given that I prefer other OSs for many of the individual functions I looked at. On the whole, however, iOS delivers the best-formed environment for both productivity and entertainment.
Once Google addresses Android 3.0's drawbacks and more developers release tablet-optimized apps, Android 3.0 will be in a dogfight with iOS. But by then, who knows what Apple might introduce for iOS 5?
Meanwhile, businesspeople who already depend on BlackBerry phones should value the way those handsets will interact with the PlayBook, as well as the built-in security of the platform--and for that audience, such capabilities will outweigh many of the PlayBook's other weaknesses.







Read more