Apple iPad released - Whats your take?

d0b33

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Just exactly what form factor did you expect apple to launch? A banana shaped device with a stylus? :confused:

Everything is scaled up this does not mean it will be ergonomic, like the home button does not seem practical there for such a huge device, on the iphone/itouch it makes sense but they should have had the buttons all reachable with one hand rather than exactly the same as the itouch but now miles apart.

just my opinion I would not interested in a tablet anyway.
 

Keeper

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i like this one a bit more:

Silver_Right-W_01.jpg



not as thin as a iPad but runs the complete Mac OS, or even windows - that means Full control - do whatever you want to!

its not a normal touch screen - the screen is one giant wacom pad!

Got better specs too - bigger HDD, and Dual Core 2 GHZ, not single core 1Ghz.

118_mb_art6b_01.jpg


Hello Photoshop :)

http://www.axiotron.com/index.php?id=modbook
 

Jola

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I also run demanding apps on a netbook but they leave a lot to be desired. Photo editing is an exercise in futility.

It's not great for PS, but it's OK for when you need it. I find the performance is OK. Although I mainly do PS on it when in remote locations.

I have a 320GB 7200rpm drive, 2GB RAM, and clock the N280 at 2GHz. But you get better netbooks than mine now.
 
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bwana

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It's not great for PS, but it's OK for when you need it. I find the performance is OK. Although I mainly do PS when in remote locations.

I have a 320GB 7200rpm drive, 2GB RAM, and clock the N280 at 2GHz. But you get better netbooks than mine now.
I have a 17" Macbook Pro that does PS surprising well for when I'm in the field. :)

However - when I go to a prospective client I'd love for my portfolio to be on one of these iPads. Horses for courses. :)
 
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cerebus

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Mind you I suppose if you were buying that sort of form factor functionality wouldn't really be an issue anyway.
 

dslzephyr

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I am such a gadget fan boy... so, I've already started the countdown to April! I want an iPad!!!!

M
 

SlinkyMike

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I really want to want one but I just can't figure out what it's for.:-/

I am certain that people will find a use but it's not immediately evident that this is something awesome.
I am very confused by certain choices made in the interface, no multitasking seems crazy and almost immediately nullifies any netbook comparisons - that one thing makes me almost agree with the 'giant iPod' set.

Two things I do not like:

1.) Stupid stupid stupid curved backplate... WHY??? I hate it on the iPhone 3G and wish more than anything that they'd go back to the flawless piece of industrial design that is the 1st gen iPhone. The only thing that I can figure this curvature does is create a faux 'drop shadow' on whatever surface the thing is lying on which looks cool to other people but if you are the dick that has to handle the thing it is annoying.

2.) There will most likely be a slew of 3rd party cases and covers but that thing looks very slippery (as in off you lap/couch/whatever) it could so with some sort of rubberisation strategy.

Whats my take?
I'd have an iPad over a Kindle given the option but really: I don't want either of them.
 

SlinkyMike

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I really want to want one but I just can't figure out what it's for.:-/

I am certain that people will find a use but it's not immediately evident that this is something awesome.
I am very confused by certain choices made in the interface, no multitasking seems crazy and almost immediately nullifies any netbook comparisons - that one thing makes me almost agree with the 'giant iPod' set.

Two things I do not like:

1.) Stupid stupid stupid curved backplate... WHY??? I hate it on the iPhone 3G and wish more than anything that they'd go back to the flawless piece of industrial design that is the 1st gen iPhone. The only thing that I can figure this curvature does is create a faux 'drop shadow' on whatever surface the thing is lying on which looks cool to other people but if you are the dick that has to handle the thing it is annoying.

2.) There will most likely be a slew of 3rd party cases and covers but that thing looks very slippery (as in off you lap/couch/whatever) it could so with some sort of rubberisation strategy.

Whats my take?
I'd have an iPad over a Kindle given the option but really: I don't want either of them.
 

PeterCH

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I really want to want one but I just can't figure out what it's for.:-/

EXACTLY. It's a convergence device aimed to be a jack of all trades but master of none. It works out if you can buy music on iTunes, buy video/TV shows there, but apps at the store, buy books from their content partners and read the NYT in their special browser. In SA you can only buy apps and in many countries you can't even do that. Also with an HSDPA subscription of unlimited INTERNET for $30 pm (R200) it make sense to download and view video on that thing ON THE GO. Do note that it doesn't do flash but it will do this new HTML5 video standard.

I am certain that people will find a use but it's not immediately evident that this is something awesome.
I am very confused by certain choices made in the interface, no multitasking seems crazy and almost immediately nullifies any netbook comparisons - that one thing makes me almost agree with the 'giant iPod' set.

They prevented multitasking in order for you to still need a Macbook. Had they dumped that, you could in theory, not need a notebook - chances are you'd buy this instead of a Macbook. If all you do is browse www sites and send emails/IM on your notebook, why buy one?

Two things I do not like:

1.) Stupid stupid stupid curved backplate... WHY??? I hate it on the iPhone 3G and wish more than anything that they'd go back to the flawless piece of industrial design that is the 1st gen iPhone. The only thing that I can figure this curvature does is create a faux 'drop shadow' on whatever surface the thing is lying on which looks cool to other people but if you are the dick that has to handle the thing it is annoying.

2.) There will most likely be a slew of 3rd party cases and covers but that thing looks very slippery (as in off you lap/couch/whatever) it could so with some sort of rubberisation strategy.

It's a fragile device.

Whats my take?
I'd have an iPad over a Kindle given the option but really: I don't want either of them.

For me, reading journals and textbooks would work out better on an e-ink device. The Kindle sucks because it has a tiny screen. However, reading text on an LCD for hours on end is way worse. This thing looks nice but they could have made it tougher,
made it have a FINDER, made it easier to copy docs (and other files) back and forth, made it multi-task, made the screen larger - but keep the same overall size, increase the resolution more and make it transflective. USB connectivity would have been great too.

It's a nice device for coffee shops or sitting on the couch and reading some websites but typing is still better on a tactile feedback keyboard. It's good for small things. It's a great way for Apple to make money on both H/W and music/app/video sales :).
 

PeterCH

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Really ? I run Photoshp CS4 on my netbook. Also have a Blu-ray writer attached to it. Etc.

I realise that you said "most", but the iPad just doesn't cut it. Better to stick to iPhone and get something else for this purpose.

I agree. I own a 720g netbook (weight of this device with 3G), it has a higher res screen, also 64GB of SSD and plays open 720p video in h264. Sadly I need to install Win 7 to get it to play 1080p without a CPU hit but yeah and if I drop it from the couch or sit on it or hit someone unconscious with it, it won't be damaged either. I'm disappointed by the iPad. I was one of the first guys in SA to buy an iPod - long before Core sold them, one of the first to buy a Mac Pro but this disappoints. What I'd have bought was a Macbook type machine in tablet format. Not an iPhone in tablet format.
 

Shardie

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i love it - just sucks that its not a full, proper OS.

I totally agree. Cant load Adobe CS4 or Final Cut etc etc, guess it wasnt meant for that hey, before i get the "GET A MACBOOK PRO !!!"
 

Zyzzyva

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I'm I the only one who sees the potential here?

Stephen fry said the following regarding the critics.

could they not see that this device was gorgeous, beautifully made, very powerful and capable of development into something extraordinary? I see those qualities in the iPad. Like the first iPhone, iPad 1.0 is a John the Baptist preparing the way of what is to come, but also like iPhone 1.0 (and Jokanaan himself too come to that) iPad 1.0 is still fantastic enough in its own right to be classed as a stunningly exciting object, one that you will want NOW and one that will not be matched this year by any company. In the future, when it has two cameras for fully featured video conferencing, GPS and who knows what else built in (1080 HD TV reception and recording and nano projection, for example) and when the iBook store has recorded its 100 millionth download and the thousands of accessories and peripherals that have invented uses for iPad that we simply can’t now imagine – when that has happened it will all have seemed so natural and inevitable that today’s nay-sayers and sceptics will have forgotten that they ever doubted its potential.

Agree or disagree, he then goes onto make an important point.

There are many issues you could have with the iPad. No multitasking, still no Flash. No camera, no GPS. They all fall away the minute you use it. I cannot emphasise enough this point: “Hold your judgment until you’ve spent five minutes with it”. No YouTube film, no promotional video, no keynote address, no list of features can even hint at the extraordinary feeling you get from actually using and interacting with one of these magical objects. You know how everyone who has ever done Who Wants To Be A Millionaire? always says, “It’s not the same when you’re actually here. So different from when you’re sitting at home watching.”? You know how often you’ve heard that? Well, you’ll hear the same from anyone who’s handled an iPad. The moment you experience it in your hands you know this is class. This is a different order of experience. The speed, the responsiveness, the smooth glide of it, the richness and detail of the display, the heft in your hand, the rightness of the actions and gestures that you employ, untutored and instinctively, it’s not just a scaled up iPhone or a scaled-down multitouch enhanced laptop – it is a whole new kind of device. And it will change so much. Newspapers, magazines, literature, academic text books, brochures, fliers and pamphlets are going to be transformed (poor Kindle). Specific dedicated apps and enhancements will amaze us. You will see characters in movies use the iPad. Jack Bauer will want to return for another season of 24 just so he can download schematics and track vehicles on it. Bond will have one. Jason Bourne will have one. Some character, in a Tron like way, might even be trapped in one.

lol, you have to love Stephen Fry, fanboy nature and all.

http://www.stephenfry.com/2010/01/28/ipad-about/
 
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Synaesthesia

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Agreed I think a lot of "tech people" are criticizing it, especially on a sort of checkpoint basis. No multitasking. No Flash.

Seen from the point of view of an ordinary person, or a developer, and the situation changes.

I agree with John Gruber, the iPad (and similar devices) will soon become most people's regular computer, and our PC's will become the domain of specialists, and developers.
 

Dave

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The iPad is just too big, if it was a little smaller (perhaps a 7" screen) it would be almost pocketable, at least in a jacket pocket and would be usable on the go for browsing, reading, videos etc. Better than my iPhone for all those functions and still able to carry without the need for a bag. Unfortunately the iPad as it is will be too big even for a large jacket pocket so whats the point?

If I'm going to carry a bag I may as well carry a netbook with all the extra funtionality, or even a sub-notebook (as the iPad is going to cost more than the average netbook).
 

cerebus

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I think people are seeing this in terms of a stripped down netbook which it isn't... I agree with synaesthesia, it just isn't that sort of device. It isn't really classifiable as a computer. Apple is very focused on exactly the type of device they want it to be and they're ruthlessly trimming the fat by neglecting to include obvious computer functionality.
 

Synaesthesia

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People say it's too big, but it's the same size as my netbook. Actually smaller and thinner with better battery life, better gaming performance, easier to use...

Daring Fireball has a good summary in my opinion.
 
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