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	<title>AntiCommon &#187; Love</title>
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		<title>Apple iPad: Love at First Sight, No Buyer&#8217;s Remorse</title>
		<link>http://anticommon.com/iphone-and-ipad/apple-ipad-love-at-first-sight-no-buyers-remorse-pc-world/</link>
		<comments>http://anticommon.com/iphone-and-ipad/apple-ipad-love-at-first-sight-no-buyers-remorse-pc-world/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 26 Apr 2010 22:43:03 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[iPad News]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[iPhone and iPad]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[apple]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Buyer's]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[First]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[iPad]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[ipad4g]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Love]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Remorse]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Sight]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[World]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[
			
				
			
		
It&#8217;s been a bit over three weeks since the iPadlaunched, and the hype has quieted somewhat. We&#8217;ve all seen the reviews that came out right around launch and we&#8217;ve heard all the arguments both for and against Apple&#8217;s tablet device.
It&#8217;s also been exactly three weeks since I bought an iPad and I thought this would be [...]]]></description>
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<p>It&#8217;s been a bit over three weeks since <a href="http://www.pcworld.com/businesscenter/article/194785/get_multitasking_with_limits_from_desktop_for_ipad.html" target="_blank">the iPad</a>launched, and the hype has quieted somewhat. We&#8217;ve all seen the reviews that came out right around launch and we&#8217;ve heard all the arguments both for and against Apple&#8217;s tablet device.</p>
<p>It&#8217;s also been exactly three weeks since I bought an iPad and I thought this would be a good time to share my experience with it. This isn&#8217;t an objective review; this is just me sharing my personal experiences with a new device. Before launch a lot of people wondered what the iPad was for, and this is my answer. This is what the iPad is used for in our house.</p>
<p>First a quick bit of background information on me. I primarily use Windows 7 (a desktop machine) at home and OS X (on a MacBook Pro) at work. I own a netbook (running Windows 7) that converts into a tablet. My phone is a Motorola Droid. The iPad was my first real experience with Apple&#8217;s App Store, though I am of course familiar with the Android Market. I&#8217;ve been attracted to the tablet form factor for a while now, but the netbook makes a lousy tablet. It&#8217;s too thick, too slow, and the screen needs constant calibrating. Just not a pleasant experience.</p>
<p>Now I&#8217;m going to confess something to you. When I got caught up in the hype and purchased my iPad, there was a little voice in the back of my head telling me it was a huge mistake; that it&#8217;d be something I&#8217;d use for a few days and then get tired of. That I was signing up for a heaping helping of Buyer&#8217;s Remorse.</p>
<p>That little voice was wrong (so far). I use the iPad constantly. In fact, it only took a few days for my girlfriend and I to realize sharing an iPad wasn&#8217;t going to work, so we&#8217;re now a two iPad household.</p>
<p>Let&#8217;s start with the problems I&#8217;ve encountered. My biggest gripe by far is the lack of Flash; it can be a real pain sometimes when surfing the web. What&#8217;s most frustrating is knowing that Apple doesn&#8217;t care that its customers are experiencing this frustration and that this particular problem will never be fixed.</p>
<p>Next, if you want to get work done, be warned: the iPad isn&#8217;t an office tool (in my opinion, I know others feel differently). I do take mine to the office, but mostly to carry my music on, and to use during my lunch hour. Generally speaking, the iPad is a home (and maybe coffee shop) device. It&#8217;s a bit too big to carry around with me all the time. When it comes to getting work done, I&#8217;m firmly in the &#8220;a laptop or netbook can do everything the iPad can do, only better&#8221; camp. Sure, you can plug the iPad into the Keyboard Dock, buy a Bluetooth keyboard (or apparently use the Camera Connection Kit to connect a USB keyboard) but why would you bother with all that when a laptop performs better for doing tasks that require lots of text entry or multiple windows/programs open?</p>
<p>Then there&#8217;s the issue of accessories. A naked iPad feels slippery to me; I feel like some kind of case is a must. I have the official Apple case, which is horribly over-priced but wonderfully versatile. The flip cover protects the screen when I jam the iPad into my laptop bag or toss it onto the back seat of my car, and that same flip cover folds back and into a slot to form a wedge-shaped stand that can hold the iPad vertical for watching videos or at a gentle angle for interacting with the device. My girlfriend has a silicone sleeve for hers (the Apple case has become really hard to find); it offers no protection for the screen but the back has a couple of ridges that offer a very secure grip on the iPad.</p>
<p>We bought two of the Apple docks and have never used them; they were a complete waste of money for us. You have to take the iPad out of whatever case you have it in in order to use the dock, and that&#8217;s a pain in the neck. A <a href="http://coreymarion.posterous.com/lego-ipad-stand" target="_blank">Lego iPad stand</a> would be of more use than the Apple dock. Chargers are over-priced, but at least you can use the iPhone/iPod cables you might already own.</p>
<p>Speaking of charging, let&#8217;s talk about the battery. There&#8217;s been a lot of complaining about the device not charging on a USB port. It will charge, slowly, once the unit goes to sleep, but realistically plugging it into a wall socket is the most efficient way to charge an iPad. What the complainers don&#8217;t tell you, though, is that an iPad will run all day on a single charge. Yes, the battery life is 10 hours but in real-world terms I&#8217;ve never run out of a charge over the course of a day. I just plug it in when I go to bed; the charging situation isn&#8217;t the problem nay-sayers want to make it.</p>
<p>So the iPad isn&#8217;t an office tool; what is it then? I&#8217;d call it an entertainment device, I guess. It&#8217;s the web at your fingertips in a screen large enough to make reading websites comfortable. Our iPads are always nearby. My girlfriend is one of these crafty types and she&#8217;ll often have her iPad beside her while she&#8217;s making things, using it to look up bits of info she might need or to take short notes on. There&#8217;s always an iPad at hand while we&#8217;re watching TV, in case we need to look up something on IMDB or Wikipedia. We&#8217;ve used them in the kitchen for checking out new recipes. Basically we carry them around the house constantly.</p>
<p>So it&#8217;s great for surfing the web. It&#8217;s also a great ebook reader. I can&#8217;t compare it to an e-ink device because I&#8217;ve never used one of those for any serious length of time. But despite the fact that people insist a back-lit screen hurts your eyes, I haven&#8217;t found that to be the case at all. My eyes aren&#8217;t as young as they used to be and by bumping up the font size and turning the brightness down, I can read more comfortably than I&#8217;ve been able to in years (yes, more comfortably than I read print books). I find the iPad&#8217;s screen is much more comfortable to read off of then either my laptop screens or the LCD on my desktop. It&#8217;s a beautiful screen (but a smudge magnet; I bought a packet of 12 lint-free cloths for $5 and they do a great job of keeping the screen clear).</p>
<p>We watch a lot of video on our iPads. We&#8217;ve got a Netflix account, and I&#8217;m fairly hooked on the ABC.com app. If we&#8217;re both going to watch the same show, we still plunk ourselves down on the couch in front of the big-screen, but the iPad makes a very nice &#8220;personal television.&#8221; Plug headphones in and she can watch &#8220;Walking With Dinosaurs&#8221; (she&#8217;s such a nerd) while I&#8217;m reading or watching something completely different.</p>
<p>And there&#8217;s the app store, of course. I spend way too much time downloading various apps. I find I purchase a lot more from the App Store apps than I do from the Android Market, and I think a lot of that has to do with the size of the iPad. I&#8217;ve got a few sketch applications which prove once again I have no talent for drawing. A few music making applications which remind me that I should&#8217;ve been a rock star. And of course more games than I really have time to play.</p>
<p>So there&#8217;s a lot I do with my iPad and that&#8217;s what makes it so useful. After a long day I can flop down on the couch and, on one device, play a game, then watch some TV, then read a book, then plink out some tunes on an electronic keyboard, then look up a tutorial for playing the keyboard, then check to see what&#8217;s happening on Twitter and catch up on my RSS feeds. Yes, you can do all of this with a netbook; I&#8217;ve done all of this with a netbook. But the ergonomics are completely different with the iPad. It doesn&#8217;t feel like a computer because it isn&#8217;t a computer. It feels like&#8230;well my apologies for sounding cheesy but if feels like something out of science fiction at times. It feels like I&#8217;m holding <em>The Hitchhiker&#8217;s Guide to the Galaxy</em> or <em>The Young Lady&#8217;s Illustrated Primer</em> from Neil Stephenson&#8217;s<em>The Diamond Age</em>.</p>
<p>Now, that all said, a lot of what I love about the iPad comes from it&#8217;s shape. I&#8217;m still not a fan of Apple&#8217;s &#8220;Walled Garden&#8221; and benevolent (?) dictatorship. I&#8217;m still really hoping that one of the upcoming Android tablets is as fast and ergonomic and beautiful as the iPad, and that the Android Market catches up to Apple&#8217;s App Store. I&#8217;ll switch in a heartbeat if that comes to pass.</p>
<p>But for now, there&#8217;s literally nothing like the iPad on the market, and I haven&#8217;t had an instant of that Buyer&#8217;s Remorse I was worried about. It &#8220;feels&#8221; like a unique product and I think it&#8217;ll be best appreciated by people who find joy in using technology. The iPad is a fun device and not something you&#8217;ll need at the office. The smart money is still on waiting for a second generation, or a similar Android device, but I&#8217;m not getting any younger and I&#8217;ve been waiting for a tablet like this since my days watching Star Trek.</p>
<p>No regrets, at least so far. We&#8217;ll see how the hardware holds up over time, and how much remorse I feel when a better, cheaper tablet hits the market.</p>
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