I played with an iPad
yesterday. Here’s my mini-review. The screen is bright and the touch
sensitivity is fantastic. Given that it reminds me the most of an
iPhone, it’s surprisingly heavy. It feels dense with potential.
On the childlike-sense-of-wonder-scale (as fake Steve Jobs
would say), the iPad is better than the Macbook Air but not as stunning
as the iPhone when the iPhone first came out. I played with my wife’s
iPhone for just a few minutes before I knew I had to have an iPhone. But
I never really cared about the Macbook Air, mainly because the screen
resolution was worse than my current laptop. The iPad fits between those
two products in the spectrum of desirability for me.
The form
factor is… weird. You’re going to feel strange carrying one of these
into the grocery store, in the same way you felt weird using your cell
phone in the grocery store at first. Leave it to Apple to blaze a trail
of coolness though; the iPad will make this form factor acceptable, so
you won’t feel quite as strange carrying a tablet into a meeting in a
few months. The form factor fundamentally is awkward though: the iPad is
book-sized, but much more delicate than a book. A screen this big with
no protection will get scratched or scuffed. I’d expect to see plenty of
articles about dropped iPads like you did about Wiimotes getting thrown into TVs and windows.
The gadget lover in me wants one, but the part of me that cares about open source and tinkering is stronger. I’m with Cory Doctorow
on this one. The iPad is gorgeous, but it’s still not worth it for me.
Yesterday, I also bought two books at the bookstore to read on a trip.
Walking back to my car with “paper media” felt a bit dorky–why am I
buying books on paper in 2010? If I could buy a book digitally and
really own it (not just obtain a license to read a book, where the
license could be revoked), I’d quickly switch to buying my books
digitally. But the success of the Kindle shows that a lot of people care
more about the convenience than completely owning what they’re buying digitally.
I
think the iPad will be a huge hit. Non-tech-savvy consumers will love
it because of the user experience, the simplicity, and the lack of
viruses/malware/trojans. It’s like a computer without all the hassles of
a typical computer (pre-installed crapware, anti-virus software,
inconvenient software upgrades). Lots of tech-savvy consumers will love
the iPad for the same reasons, and especially for the polish and user
experience. The current iPad lacks a few things (such as a camera),
which ensures that future generations of the iPad will also be a huge
hit.
But the iPad isn’t for me. I want the ability to run
arbitrary programs without paying extra money or getting permission from
the computer manufacturer. Almost the only thing you give up when
buying an iPad is a degree of openness, and tons of people could care
less about that if they get a better user experience in return. I think
that the iPad is a magical device built for consumers, but less for makers or tinkerers.
I think the world needs more makers, which is why I don’t intend to buy
an iPad. That said, I think the typical consumer will love the iPad.
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