Apple iPad a revolutionary device

I was definitely a skeptic of the iPad, but after spending 30 minutes with one this afternoon at my local Apple store my opinion changed. The Apple iPad is undoubtedly a revolutionary device. Now don’t get me wrong, the device has a lot of room to  grow and in its current form I will not be purchasing one, but the iPad has changed what is possible for personal computing. Apple took what to many was a far fetched dream and made it an affordable reality (starting at $499).

Form Factor

Like all Apple products the iPad felt soooo good in your hands. The styling is sleek and sexy. There are a minimal amount of buttons. The size is perfect; it is lightweight, but not so light and delicate that you feel like you have to be very careful with it.

LED Display

The 9.7″ LED screen on the iPad was very impressive. The contrast was good, the colors were brilliant and the screen was visible from almost any viewing angle. The first thing I did to test the screen was to view the images that Apple preloaded on the iPad. As expected they looked very good, but to give this an independent test I downloaded some high resolution images for work that I have viewed on very expensive and color calibrated monitors. Those images looked as good or better than I have ever seen them.

The next thing I did to test the screen was to view some movie clips that were loaded on the iPad. I choose Step Brothers, one of my favorite movies. The movie quality was great and very fluid. I could see myself watching a movie on the Ipad. According to a salesperson and Apple’s website the battery will last for 10 hours of continuous movie playback. I did not have any earphones with me so I was unable to test the audio quality, but I assume it will be similar to an iPod or iPhone.

After laughing out loud to a scene in Step Brothers I checked out the iBooks application. I read a few pages of Sun Tzu’s, “The Art of War”. The type was very crisp and easy to read, but I wonder what it would be like to read for an extended period of time? Personally I have never read anything on Amazon’s Kindle, but I hear that it is very nice because the screen is not glossy and almost looks like printed text. I asked a salesperson on his thoughts about reading a book on the iPad versus the Kindle and he had two comments, 1. the screen is back-lit so you can read in the dark; and 2. the iPad’s screen is color, so you can actually see images in books. Both valid points, but I still question what it would be like to read for an extended period of time.

Keyboard

As I suspected the keyboard will take some getting used to. The size of the keyboard is nice and can be used in landscape or portrait mode. My biggest problem is that when I type I lightly rest my fingers on the keyboard — this is a BIG NO NO. All in all it was not miserable, but I would not want to type a novel or long email on it. According to Apple, a keyboard will be released later this month.

Surfing the web

Surfing the web was a real dream. For me it makes it easier to interact with websites and if I’m going to sit on my couch and surf the web I would use the iPad over my laptop. The only drawback in my opinion is that Apple refuses to support Adobe Flash!!

Email

The email client is very similar to the one on the iPhone. It’s seems simple and easy to use. Full disclosure: since it was Apple’s iPad I did not have my mail accounts setup so I could not give the email a full test drive.

Maps

The maps work just as they do on the iPhone. The device lacks actual GPS so it relies on triangulation from cell towers to find your location just as the first iPhone did. I was anxious to check out the new terrain view, but there was some problem at the time that was not allowing me.

iWork

The iPad is not all play and can be used for work too! With the addition of iWorks you can make changes to presentations, spreadsheets and documents all on the fly. With the iPad Dock Connector to VGA Adapter you can plug your iPad into a projector for a presentation.

Biggest drawbacks of the iPad

  • Even with its speedy 1 GHz processor the iPad does not multitask.
  • The largest hard drive available is 64GB which by today’s standards is not very big.
  • Adding to the mediocre HD, the iPad has no slots for an external memory card.
  • No camera

As I said in the opening of this post, I think the iPad is a revolutionary device and look forward to seeing how it changes how people work, play and compute.

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7 Responses to “Apple iPad a revolutionary device”

  1. [...] of the iPad By ilikefreestuff Josh posted a great review of the iPad today on his site: http://josh.net/2010/04/03/apple-ipad-a-revolutionary-device/. I am excited to receive my free iPad soon. If you want to get your free iPad visit [...]

  2. Deocliciano says:

    No multitasking?

    Are you sure?

    Read Andy Ihnatko’s iPad and Multitasking:

    The iPad certainly does support multitasking. The iPod app plays music in the background of anything else you’re doing and if you download a movie from the iTunes Store, you can navigate away from that app and do something else during the time it’ll take to grab that 1 gigabyte file.

    It’s just third party apps that can’t run in the background. Which presents a few annoyances, such as when I’d like to listen to music from a streaming media app while I work elsewhere.

    So it disappoints me to see commentators on TV today dinging the iPad for a lack of multitasking.

    Sad indeed!

  3. Josh says:

    Deocliciano, you and Andy are certainly correct. Yes, music will continue to play and files from the iTunes library will continue to download while you write an email or work in iWork, etc. BUT, I consider those very simple tasks that run in the background. When I refer to multitasking I am talking about being able to work between many 3rd party apps at the same time just like you can on a regular Apple or PC. I want to be able to stream Pandora, while I play a game, check my facebook, and find a new place for dinner on Yelp.

  4. Noni says:

    The biggest drawbacks are nothing. I will not buy one right now, but will wait until the second generation so bugs are smoothed out.

    My thoughts:
    –lack of camera: I have 5. I don’t foresee anyone taking a picture with an iPad. BUT, it should have blue tooth, so you can send photos from the iPhone.–Or communicate with iPhones, which i don’t know if it does. That should be a must have.
    –I don’t think it should be a device to carry lots of data to do heavy work with. It’s like a small notebook, and like a real notebook you carry IT in a purse or pocket WITH ESSENTIAL INFORMATION. I would use it to carry pdfs and essential text files with personal data. Imagine an earthquake, I would grab the iPad with all my healthcare, insurance, birth certificate, house deed, car registration, bank and card numbers, etc…

    – No need for multitasking on a portable device. I would surf the web and read news and blogs and I think I would rapidly get used to the keyboard. I don’t think I would have to put my hand down on the screen since I am a two finger typer, I don’t have the discipline of a trained secretary and neither most of PC users.

    I just need to get hold of one and caress it!

    By the way you have a very nice blog setup here!

  5. john says:

    I enjoy this blog

  6. Marko says:

    I hope the new iPad Apps will not cost too much. Some of the Race Games are expensive but have a nice graphic. The iPad is nice thing to relax. I like it.

  7. Ezequiel Karcz says:

    It’s another Apple game-changer with attitude. Apple did not design the iPad to be an all-in-one tablet computer. But it did aim high with its first entry to address this computing paradigm. Comparing the iPad to e-book readers like the Kindle is pointless. Yes, it has some of Kindle’s features, but it goes beyond the e-reader platforms, and will go even further in future versions. No less important, it bears the label of a company with two rich-media-content successes. Don’t underestimate the power of the brand that brought us the iPod and iPhone.

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