All good points.

I'm sitting here inside a university thinking that this is a potentially
really useful device. There was nothing hugely unexpected, though I'm a
touch disappointed at the lack of a camera or SD card slot.  The lack of
Flash so far is also still an issue, but may not be forever - I think it's
only a matter of time before the pressure to introduce it becomes too great
to resist. I think Apple's key problem is security (see OS X 10.6.1)

However, the software side is more interesting. And the fact that the book
formats make it much easier for us to publish materials to this format.

The other thing is that much of the OS underpinnings have not really been
talked about, so how iPhoneOS 4 and the next iteration of the iPad software
will change things is anyone's guess. I'm also agnostic about the keyboard.
The keyboard on my iPod Touch is better than I expected but two-handed
typing is not going to be all that easy. It seems that more handwriting and
finger based stuff will be possible. The Brushes demo was interesting for
this reason. 

I am a power user and, though I'm not a rabid Apple fanboy, I really can see
myself using one of these things. I really think there will be a market
there, but it will take a little time to grow. And, let's be honest, Apple
are not struggling financially, so they can (like with Apple TV), afford to
sit on it and wait to see what develops


Å 28/01/2010 10:29, "Mo McRoberts" <m...@nevali.net> a écrit:

> On Thu, Jan 28, 2010 at 09:56, Brian Butterworth <briant...@freeview.tv>
> wrote:
>> Sorry, I didn't realise we were back in the 1970s where the software that
>> runs on the iPhone can be called an operating system.
>> And it clearly doesn't have a keyboard.
> 
> Not just an operating system, but a very close relative of a
> commercial UNIX. From what I can tell, iPhone OS isn't far off
> POSIX-compliant at all (mostly because a lot of userspace utilities
> are absent).
> 
> It doesn't have a keyboard built-in, but you can get the keyboard
> dock, or use a Bluetooth keyboard.
> 
> 
> There are a lot of people who the iPad won't be right for, and
> shouldn't buy it -- because if they do, they'll spend all their time
> bitching and moaning about what it can't do. Lots of people seem to
> conflate "it doesn't do the things I want" with "it's rubbish" (and
> the same happened with the iPhone, and the same happens with other
> classes of products), when really that's a huge fallacy; you don't see
> people complaining that the Nintendo DS doesn't run background
> applications, or that you can't open a command prompt on the Wii,
> because they'd probably be laughed at. But, this is the danger in
> breaking new ground; not necessarily in terms of ideas, but definitely
> in terms of execution.
> 
> It's a piece of consumer electronics. A very powerful piece of
> consumer electronics, but a piece of consumer electronics nonetheless.
> There's a bloody good reason that Apple scaled up iPhone OS instead of
> scaling down Mac OS X [again]: the latter is a pain in the backside to
> turn into something usable by many people.
> 
> The big target market for the iPad are the people who have never
> bothered buying a computer (or did, but it's now about eight years old
> and virus-infested), and actually don't really want one because it's a
> lot of hassle; the people who type URLs into Google; the people who
> just want to listen to some music and watch videos, look up web sites,
> get some e-mail and play some games. Maybe write a letter or two.
> There isn't a device on the market today which is appropriate for this
> group of people (despite many attempts over the years), yet it's a
> pretty huge market.
> 
> Many "power users" won't like it, because they think a tablet should
> be a slimmed-down laptop and be capable (from a UI perspective) of
> everything a laptop can do: except that in doing that, you kill off
> any chance of it being appropriate for aforementioned novice market.
> 
> Apple has pretty successfully demonstrated that iPhone OS is usable by
> all and sundry, but will have got some pushback that the form factor
> of the iPhone and iPod touch isn't ideal for some kinds of pretty
> common and ordinary activities. While it's useful to be able to read
> your e-mail on a device the size of the iPhone, composing a long
> e-mail is a pain (hardware keyboard or not). The same applies to lots
> of other things. This is where the iPad fits in.
> 
> There are changes afoot in the OS - baby steps, but 3.2's just a point
> release, and in that context there's a lot to be positive about.
> Developers are going to have a field day with it, and there's a decent
> chance that the iPad will kill off a lot of the more frivolous App
> Store apps.
> 
> Personally, and this seems to be a view shared by lots of people
> (though I wouldn't claim it to be the majority), there are plenty of
> occasions where I don't need the grunt of a laptop, and it's actually
> not all that convenient to open it up to do stuff, but a
> small-form-factor device is a less than ideal. I may be a developer, a
> sysadmin and a power users, but I'm often just an ordinary end-user
> and want to browse the web or play some games without having to faff
> around, and that's with the proviso that I don't have to do much
> faffing as it is (it's still more than it should be). It's a device
> which can be left on a coffee table and be unobtrusive, until you want
> to see the TV schedules for the next seven days. As much as many of us
> currently do reach for our laptops or smartphones to do just that,
> you'd be hard pressed to argue that a middle-ground between the
> convenience of a smartphone (which you can just pick up and put down
> when needed) and the useful size of a laptop screen isn't something a
> lot of people wouldn't buy into, quite possibly in preference to
> either of them.
> 
> I expect we'll see plenty of applications appearing as it starts to
> sell, too: similar things happened with the iPhone, as developers
> started to explore what's possible.
> 
> Now, for the (again) "power user" group, there's lots of stuff which
> could be transposed onto a different device - there's nothing
> particularly "iPad-specific" about having a cool newspaper app with
> embedded video, for example, but the competing devices aren't here
> yet. I doubt it'll be long before some start to appear, though, with
> varying degrees of success  (and there's always Microsoft's second
> tablet push, which may or may not be more successful than the first).
> 
> M.
> 
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-- 
Darren Stephens MBCS CITP
School of Arts and New Media
University of Hull Scarborough Campus
Filey Road Scarborough

t: +441723357360
e: darren.steph...@hull.ac.uk  
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