Immediately it seems promising. A laptop like the "AirBook" (as I persist in calling it no applause at all) is very handy is size and weight, but it's just clumsy to hold and use. The iPad is only half the size and weight. If the user-interface really works, they may have something here.
I've been intrigued with all the things people do with the iPhone, but the display is simply waaaaay too small to appeal to me.
I really hope the iPad can multi-task, unlike the iPhone. (Update: seems it doesn't. I don't get it.)
The iPad docks to a dock which has a full-sized keyboard. I like that.
I wonder if you can use a regular USB keyboard? That would seem like a good idea. But the iPad does not even seem to have a single USB port, I wonder why.
... It does have bluetooth though, maybe one can use a blutooth keyboard and mouse?
Stephen Fry tweets: "Nothing you can say about the iPad matches the experience of using it. So much more than a large iPhone or small laptop. Stunning feel."
And David Pogue has a first-impressions blog post.
And TidBITS covers it.
"During the announcement, Apple CEO Steve Jobs led up to the iPad by pointing out that everyone (well, everyone who is anyone, or is likely to be a customer, from Apple's perspective) uses a laptop and a smartphone, so any device that attempts to fit between those two form factors must perform key tasks better than one or the other. He then pointed out that products in the popular netbook category fail that test, since they're generally slow, have low-quality displays, and, well, run Windows.
Thus, Apple sees the iPad as sitting between the iPhone and the MacBook, and competing directly with the entire netbook category. And certainly, the iPad's screen looked far better than any netbook we've seen, and the responsiveness of the demoed apps was impressive."
Another gotcha (after no multi-tasking): it doesn't support Flash? Weird. (And we don't know about PDF yet. That would be another big hole.)
Steve said:
"I can envision them as being a great way to share digital images or slideshows without audio. The one downside I wonder about is the audio for sharing. Not good on the iPod Touch."eolake said...
They claim the built-in speakers are very good.
"The future of magazines and periodicals has just been presented."
Yes indeed. I've been waiting for this for ten years. This is clearly a huge step in that direction.
I still buy magazines out of habit, but I almost never read them, because I've read all the news on the web! This device potentially replaces magazines in the sofa, in cafes/restaurants, and in the bed.
Update: GG points to an article with a very good point, that the iPad, like the iPod and iPhone, is not for geeks, it's not for people who already have devices of that stripe, it's for everybody else! (Just like the Mac was for people who were allergic to looking at command line code.)
There's a famous Ballmerism, one he's even said to me, that goes something like, "A business isn't worth entering unless the sales potential is 50 million units or more." 50 million. That's why Ballmer is happy to go into the portable media player business and the game console business, but laughs about ebook readers.
That's ridiculous. If everybody had to wait for every market to be potentially 50 million units, there would be no markets of any kind. A market is worth going into if it can make a profit, that's all. (I'm aware he's talking about M$, but still.)
And in a decade or two, the ebook reader business will be as large as the gaming console business, or in the same order of magnitude for sure. I hereby officially predict that "reading" (and video) devices like the iPad has the potential of becoming totally dominant, due to simplicity and portability and universality.
(And this has not dawned on me just now, I have been considering what the ideal form would be for such a device for a decade. Basically, what is the magazine/newspaper of the 21st century...)
Oooh, another good observation from that article:
We can sit here in our geeky little dorkosphere arguing about it all day, but as much as Apple clearly enjoys our participation, the people Jobs wants to sell this to don't read our rants. They can't even understand them. My step-mother refuses to touch computers, but nowadays checks email, reads newspapers and plays Solitaire on an iPod Touch, after basically picking it up by accident one day. That's a future iPad user if I ever saw one.
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An iPod Touch with an A, for on Anabolic steroids (?).
ReplyDeleteAs I do enjoy my iPod, I can see one of these in my future. The future of magazines and periodicals has just been presented.
I can envision them as being a great way to share digital images or slideshows without audio. The one downside I wonder about is the audio for sharing. Not good on the iPod Touch.
A great time we live in, eh?
Lots of people on Twitter are saying this will kill Kindle and other ebook readers. I think that's wrong. If that happens, it will be a sad moment for book lovers, because if this gadget picks up the way the iphone did, ebook readers will not be developed anymore. Reading on a screen will never compare to reading on epaper, unless you are under 20, want to destroy your eyes, and used to "browse" books instead of actually reading them. Like reading books on a tv screen. I think I'll skip the I-pad (what a name! some have already nicknamed it I-tampon) and wait for the more promising Skiff
ReplyDeleteThey claim the built-in speakers are very good.
ReplyDelete"The future of magazines and periodicals has just been presented."
Yes indeed. I've been waiting for this for ten years. This is clearly a huge step in that direction.
I still buy magazines, but I almost never read them, because I've read all the news on the web! This device replaces magazines in the sofa, over lunch, and in the bed.
with that name, this was unavoidable.
ReplyDeletehttp://feedproxy.google.com/~r/failblog/~3/BnfHZZNxkt0/
Sorry for the double post, blogspot is acting weird on me.
@ Ganesha Games
ReplyDeleteAs a Sony eBook reader, and by that I mean reading books on a Sony Reader, also having an ipod Touch Used on a regular basis, I think the battery life on the iPad will come up short for eBook reading. A major downer for people who enjoy extended reading without be tethered by a power cord.
As for the expected experience, I have to think the iPad will be much like reading a glossy mag or newspaper where quick perusal is the norm. Where ePaper is much like reading book printed on matt paper and better for spending time with the text. Three entirely different experiences when one considers actually reading books or mags on real paper. I am not sure I am totally ready to give up the later.
The whole concept of reading without paper is so new that I am sure it will take a couple or three years to sort out one's preferences. But damn, isn't it grand to have a choice, while not consuming trees or fiber in general, chemicals and all the assorted crap that comes with printing on paper?
After all, isn't it all about the content and how we enjoy it?
@Steve Weeks: I'm just afraid that if this thing is successful, it will draw away investments from proper ereaders. This, I think, follows the logic of "giving people what they ask for and not what they really need" in terms of reader-to-book relationship. People will download books to the I-pad, try to read them on the shiny screen, and will in the end either give up reading 'cos it hurts the eyes, or decide that "paper is better anyway" and continue to chop off trees. Now, what Apple could do IMHO is a two-sided reader with a screen on a side and epaper on the other ;-)
ReplyDeleteIf it can play video for ten hours on one charge, then I think the battery is fine, just reading should last a couple hours longer, I'd guess.
ReplyDeleteGG uses the Kindle a lot, I think.
I have sometimes wished to get to a more comfortable place (bed, sofa) to read web stuff or watch videos, but a laptop does not really help. I suspect this may be a good think for the couple hours I spend reading web stuff every day.
... And also for stuff like Steve Jobs' keynotes, it's hard to get comfortable in an office chair for a two-hour video.
ReplyDeleteas Eolake said, I read a lot on my kindle, 3-4 books a week, and I'm looking forward to buy a bigger one that properly formats pdfs.
ReplyDeleteI am an ebook producer: I write tabletop wargames (www.ganeshagames.net) and the ebook readers are just perfect for our needs. An early adopter, I purchased (via an American friend) the very first version of the kindle, which repaid itself in 6 months only accounting for the difference between buying the paperback and the ebook version of the titles. I also read a lot of free ebooks (mainly pulp novels and old SF written in the 20s and 30s)so the kindle is just what I need. But purchasing a large ebook reader that can correctly show A4 pages would let me read the 200+ pdf wargame rulebooks collected over the years without going blind or killing a forest. And it would actually save me hundreds of dollars per year.
@ Ganesha Games: As one who is monetarily invested in the success of eBook readers I can understand your concern. As a consumer I find the iPad concept to be a nice bridge between having content on paper versus digital. I have found there is media that doesn't port over to ePaper that well. Pictures or color graphics come to mind. A nice colored pdf picture book is an absolute cluster f**k of the Mongolian variety on ePaper.
ReplyDeleteWithout having seen your content (which I will do), why not just port it over to the iPad or the like?
Eolake: In my mind the iPad make perfect sense for what you describe. I can also see you reviewing content for your website while in a much more comfortable position than at a desk. As I picture that, does life get much better than that?
ReplyDelete@ Steve Weeks
ReplyDeleteIf it comes with a PDF reader, and I can't see why it shouldn't, the content is already ported. I know of people using my products on mobile phones which is madness in my mind but, well, to each his own.
I was, actually, speaking more from the "user" perspective than the "producer".
Color epaper is in development (by a Dutch company whose name escapes me now)and should debut in a year or two, they showed a preview this year at CES.
I also read hundreds of comics per year so I do feel the lack of color (and grayish whites) of epaper as a limitation. But the alternative must be a better epaper, not an eye-straining screen made for webbrowsing or video.
The Kindle or its successor (the technology isn't quite there yet in my opinion) may kill off paper books (except for fancy editions of some durable classics) but this will almost certainly kill off magazines and newspapers which are on their last legs anyway.
ReplyDeleteLike I've said before, I don't like the greyness of the current e-paper screens.
ReplyDeleteI am not sure why LCD screens should be more straining than e-paper. Is it the flicker?
it's the flicker and the fact that the light comes from the screen instead of bouncing on it. One thing is staring at a white wall, another staring at a white light.
ReplyDeleteWhich reminds me, I must go to sleep. But tech blogs are ripping the i-pad apart and are quite interesting read. Now if I had an ipad I could continue reading in bed :-D
@ Ganesha Games: From what I see as the features the iPad will come with an almost Mac interface, which may include Preview for pdfs. If not there are some good apps for viewing pdf.
ReplyDeleteAs for reading I have found there are different demographics. Serious book readers will stay with the ePaper format (however that evolves) for the very reasons you mention. Magazine or newspaper readers may find the iPad more to their liking. These are only my thoughts and God knows I have been wrong about so many things.
I did check out your website and I couldn't find any games that in my mind lend themselves to an ePaper format. If you would be so kind as to direct me to an example I would appreciate it. You can do it off the board at lvneonguy at cox dot net.
"One thing is staring at a white wall, another staring at a white light."
ReplyDeleteYes, but if you turn down the contrast, is there really a difference? Paper also sends out light, does it matter if it's the source or not, if we imagine the brightness is the same?
@steve weeks
ReplyDeleteDid you go to www.ganeshagames.net ? All my games are books, 32 to 48 pages long, in black and white, two columns with decent sized type. So the epaper is just brilliant with them. They are rulebooks, not boardgames or anything like that (people use the rules to conduct battles on a tabletop with real toy soldiers, and check the rulebook when in doubt).
@eolake
My director of photography (when I was working in animation) insisted that even TV is worse than watching a movie projection at the theater, because of the "straight" direction of light rays and the flicker that forces the eyes to countless micro adjustment. But I don't know if this is scientifically sound.
Eolake: I don't see a flicker on my Touch as much as a refresh that is slower than on a computer. I have got accustomed to it and for me a none issue.
ReplyDeleteDifferent from reading on ePaper, yes. Device killer, no.
I find the gray-ness and lack of contrast of the ePaper best when spending long periods of time with it. And by long, I mean 4-5 hours. I can't imagine spending that much time reading the iPod. Different horses.
As for a 10 hour battery life, good luck gringo, unless Apple has done some serious small battery R&D. When playing or surfing with the iPod (2G) I get maybe 2 hours on a charge. If you become an early adopter for the iPad please let us know your thoughts on it's battery life.
according to gizmodo, no pdf support. Sheesh. And it doesn't multitask and it doesn't lay flat on a table. Apparently, Apple did that "form over function" mistake they did with their standard "mouse" which is giving carpal tunnel syndrome to all the students in the design school where I teach part-time.
ReplyDelete@GG: I got the correct link that time. Before I was getting http://ganeshgames.com/ Totally different deal and I will check yours out.
ReplyDelete@ Eolake: There is a large difference between the viewing on a Touch type screen than on ePaper. As it now stands I couldn't see me reading a long book on a iPod or imagined iPad. Articles or short stories, especially with images/pictures, bring on the iPad. Hours with a book and I will stay with the ePaper unless something changes.
@ GG: Do not dispare, pdf is such a universal format that if it is not native (which I doubt) there are/will be apps that cover it.
ReplyDeleteAn earlier article about the iPad.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.paleofuture.com/blog/2007/5/10/project-2000-apple-computer-1988.html
Gizmodo sums it all up:
ReplyDeletehttp://gizmodo.com/5458531/the-ipad-is-the-gadget-we-never-knew-we-needed?skyline=true&s=i
At 16:33 in the keynote video Steve Jobs opens a pdf map of a map of the Napa Valley which was an email attachment. Support for pdf attachments in email is also listed in the tech specs on Apple's site. It would seem odd to me if the iPad could quickly display a pdf in email mode but not at all otherwise, but even if that is the case I'm sure there will soon be an app for that.
ReplyDeleteOne thing that I have noted while viewing pdf files and web pages on traditional computers is how slow and inconvenient it is using a mouse to view and zoom in on content that is larger than the screen it is viewed on, versus how smooth and quick Jobs does it in his demo.
I can very easily see myself never turning on a TV or a radio in my home for personal entertainment once I get an iPad. It will just be too easy to take my entertainment to where I'm comfortable watching/listening to it rather than taking myself to a specific room(s) designed for the purpose. Why have a television in every room when you can get streaming video on-demand of most TV shows and movies via the internet on a device you can enjoy in a hammock in the back yard or a table at a coffee shop - or on a blanket in a park or a seat on a train if you have the 3g version?
No multitasking? So what! Not every user is an American teenager with ADHD or a workaholic. For me this device will be a great way to enhance my leisure time, and I really don't see a need to multitask when I'm not working.
phnxhitman, yes, you have some good points, thanks.
ReplyDeleteI'm badly mentally hyper-active myself, and it's a bit hard to get out of that mindset.
re: "Another gotcha (after no multi-tasking): it doesn't support Flash? Weird."
ReplyDeleteWon't HTML 5 make that a moot point?
I like Apple's inspiring open-source products. Maybe someone will make code for Flash enabling, but HTML 5 is also open-source and, so, more virile than Flash; it's got legs.
I'm all for that, and I hope it happens, I'm just not so optimistic, seeing the general inertia of such things.
ReplyDeleteIs HTML really that powerful?
Is there signs of it being adopted?
Steve Weeks said...
ReplyDelete"...an absolute cluster f**k of the Mongolian variety..."
ROFLMAO! HILARIOUS! Thanks for the laugh! Trust me; I was needing a GOOD ONE!! :-D
"A nice colored pdf picture book is an absolute cluster f**k of the Mongolian variety on ePaper."
ReplyDeleteMmmm, I've been in a Mongolian cluster f**k, and I had a good time.
"I can also see you reviewing content for your website while in a much more comfortable position than at a desk. As I picture that, does life get much better than that?"
Sure.
Well, to be serious, in practice, reviewing and editing submitted pictures is an intense business which is dependant on very big screens, ability to move files around quickly, the right software for sorting it, marking it, etc. In other words it takes a beefy Mac.
Eolake said...
ReplyDelete"Mmmm, I've been in a Mongolian cluster f**k, and I had a good time."
LOL!! SILLY YOU...TOO/TWO!! :-D