I think everyone should have one of these badass glass-topped and sealed easy to use powerhouses.
My iPad showed up yesterday around noon, and I've been playing with it since. I've downloaded a dozen or so apps, including iBooks, Pages, Plants vs Zombies, Autodesk Sketchbook Pro, Marvel's comic app, and a pack of others. I'm even typing this post on my iPad.
If you already have an iPhone or iPod Touch, getting started with an iPad will be a breeze. If you're new to Apple's phone and consumer device scene, it'll take you about fifteen minutes longer. I know grasping Apple's OS's is supposed be intuitive. Unfortunately none of us share the same code, brain, a priori knowledge, automatized whatever, so there are idiosyncrasies you'll have to get used to--that either arise out of the device's portable nature or Apple's sense of how things ought to work, which may not match yours. Nothing extraordinary, but don't be surprised if you hit a couple behavioral expectation anomalies. It won't take you long to get it all down.
Again, I'm typing this whole thing on a keyboard made of glass. And my expectations were low for actually typing anything serious on this flat virtual keypad. I even ordered the dockable keyboard, certain that I'm going to need it. I still think I'll use a real keyboard for writing, but I'm really impressed with the usability of the on-screen deal.
Apps and books
On day one, April 3rd, there are a bunch of necessary iPad-specific apps available like Apple's own iWork apps--but not thousands. I'm typing this in Pages, which I don't really like on the Mac. There are just better alternatives available. It's more than adequate on the iPad.
The iBooks app is stunning. In terms of book-like beauty, iBooks sweeps everything else away. I have a Kindle2 and a Sony Reader. I love them. I love reading ebooks. I'm a fan of eInk's reflective technology. But I'll come right out and say it: iPad with the iBooks reader kicks their asses. This is the closest I've ever seen to reading a real book on a device.
On the other hand, iBooks, in terms of content, is a total disappointment. Some solid bestsellers, big non-fic titles, but it's going to have to really ramp up if Apple wants to take on Amazon, B&N, Sony, and anyone with more than a thousand books and a delivery process. I fully expect them to, but if I could have wished for one thing to have at the iPad launch, it would have been a gigantic pile of content available in the book store. Sigh.
No camera
I don't want a camera on this thing. Now that I have it in my hands, the last thing I'd want to do is take pictures with it. It's just too big. Until I had the iPad in my hands, the lack of a camera bothered me. In the future? It would work, and it would be a nice extra. But now I see what Apple's designers saw. It would be like taking pictures with a dinner plate, little bit silly. I have cameras on several other devices. I can shoot and send the pic to my iPad. The lack of a camera just doesn't seem like the problem it did a couple days ago.
File importing and exporting
As it stands, this is a pain in the ass. I'm hoping for an cleaner, easier way to get files on and off the iPad in the future. Here's the File Sharing section at the bottom of the Apps tab when your iPad is connected. I didn't even see it at first, didn't even know I could scroll down, or what I would find when I did. (I searched Apple help for this one).
Maybe. I think DRM is a waste of time and money, and I don't think Apple would disagree. Even so, I don't feel locked into much with my iPad. I only buy about half my music from iTunes. Importing music, video and audio books is simple. If you really need something write it yourself. I've written a batch of iPhone apps, a couple in the app store, and I'm already writing iPad apps, stuff for the App Store as well as utilities for myself. Complaining about Objective-C I can understand--and I have a fairly strong C and C++ background. Still think we should have been able to develop apps in Lua, Python, etc. all along.
The sealed, glued device you don't own because you can't easily take it apart?
I say "easily" because that's exactly what they did on iFixit.com, and they make it look pretty easy.
This is probably the least understandable argument against the iPad. It has a Luddite fear of technological change hysteria to it. A Luddite may even want technological change, but at a snail's pace and only if it uses last century's materials, tooling methods and design constraints. It's a fear felt by those who want technology to remain at a comfortable level, a level they can understand and work with. While I just see smaller, sealed, easier to use nearly-unbreakable devices as the future--and I don't know about you, but I see a future where homes, cars, furniture, and consumer devices are sophisticated enough to self heal, powerful enough to evolve and grow new parts instead of requiring firmware upgrades and replaceable batteries, devices you can communicate with, devices that can tell you how they work if you want to know. Sorry to say we're not going to get there with screwdrivers.
Technology is what I want
Yeah, there's been some iPad-bashing, some of it well-deserved, some of it just makes me shake my head. I can understand slamming the hype machine, because so much of the time that's all a product is, a lot of talk, bright colors, the big and loud stage show. Not the case here. And yes, the Apple freaks can get out of hand sometimes, ooh-ing and ah-ing and sacrificing blood relatives to Vengeful Cupertinoea. You know who you are. We all know you're excited. Come on, break it up.
Here's the thing, I genuinely think the iPad is a revolutionary device, and it will change everything--or maybe a better way to put it: the iPad will drive everyone else into this tactile slate format future with a device that's easy to use, that's as powerful as any computer without the system and config hassles, and solid enough to use as a weapon. .
That's it for now. I'm going to write the other half of the book I'm currently writing in Pages on my iPad. I'll be posting on progress, the good and bad.
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Couldn't agree with you more, Chris! This is more than just the consumption device that I originally thought it would be, I can actually be creative and productive with it. Sketchbook Pro and Pages are must haves.
Posted by: Steve Thorn | 04 April 2010 at 06:08 PM
Hey, Steve! Absolutely right. I guess I'm a little curious to see how I'll think a month or two from now, but I can't imagine I'll be anything but more impressed. There will be more books in the iBook store, a thousand more apps...
Posted by: Chris Howard | 04 April 2010 at 09:32 PM
I feel so excited reading your post, Chris. I have an iPod Touch and love reading ebooks on it - even though the screen is small, I'm used to it. But the iPad sounds like the computer world has suddenly shifted in another direction. Before long desktop computer will be something we include when we say "do you remember when...". Laptops will hang on for a while, I think, but they too will eventually disappear as technology finds smaller alternatives.
Posted by: Karen Lee Field | 04 April 2010 at 09:52 PM
Hi Karen! Right on! You know I've opened up my notebook computer once this weekend, and that was to sync the iPad and do a little programming. I threw together a couple simple apps to play around with the bigger screen size and new formats. I've done everything else--typing right now--on my iPad. I love it!
Posted by: Chris Howard | 04 April 2010 at 10:20 PM
Okay, so this is like the 10+ good review i have read about the iPad.. I'm planning to get one but I'm not that convinced yet. i'm still quite contented by my iphone.. :) but what I really want in the iPad is the ebook app.. That seems to be a really really good and must have feature.. :)
Posted by: medieval costumes | 05 April 2010 at 02:24 AM
I use the Kindle app on my iPhone all the time, really like it. The iBooks app is great, but so is the Kindle app on the iPad. The one thing that isn't going to fly with some readers is the iPad's weight. One thing to keep in mind. With the iPad, it's like reading a hardcover book. The device is heavier than Kindle or Sony Reader, and nowhere near as convenient as reading on the iPhone.
Posted by: Chris Howard | 05 April 2010 at 07:16 AM
I still would like a camera -- not really for taking pictures of stuff (although I would really like to use it as a "reality overlay window") but for video conferencing with my family on trips.
Do you miss Flash? So many of the sites I go to on my laptop use Flash I think it would be too restricting not to have it. But I am biased as you know. :-)
How is Brushes on this beast? I imagine it is pretty sweet.
Posted by: Joe Steele | 05 April 2010 at 11:04 AM
Hi Joe! Yeah, I can definitely see a need for video camera for augmented reality stuff and video communications. Even with version 1 and the WebEx client app for iPad.
I don't think I missed Flash on my iPhone, where during the normal course of browsing in 320x480 the typical Flash experience wouldn't be much. We'll see on the iPad where the browsing experience is much more like a normal computer.
I haven't installed Brushes yet, but really loving Autodesk Sketchbook Pro, which is basically a bigger more powerful version of Brushes--at least that's how I'd compare them on the iPhone. I should get Brushes on iPad to see what the differences are with the larger format and more processing power.
Posted by: Chris Howard | 05 April 2010 at 01:23 PM