I’m going to say this upfront: I’m not an Apple fanatic. There’s been no queuing up at all hours to get the iPhone, nor shaking of my tiny fists at UK pricing of the iPad. Yes, they’re pretty. Yes, they’re uber cool. Yes, Steve Jobs is both a genius and an incredibly scary man. But honestly, I just haven’t cared that much – I like my Lenovo laptop and my Blackberry. I like having different tools to do different things. So, when my boss announced she’d purchased a company iPad, whilst stranded on an ash induced vacation, I wasn’t too excited. Then however, she bought it in to the office, handed it to me and told me I could take it home to try out …
The iPad does what it does very well. It’s a good design (if a little ‘honey, I blew up the kids’), the screen is incredibly impressive and using it is a breeze, though I couldn’t figure out how to turn if off! I looked for a holiday, flicked through the app store (and err…hello Glee app), wrote a couple of notes, enjoyed the delete action, read the paper and watched some videos. Easy, useful, very portable; but just not worth at least £429 of my hard earned cash.
The real problem is, it is what they said it would be, a third category device. I could do the same thing on my phone – not as well granted, but mostly I can. I can do the same thing on my laptop – sure it’s a bit heavier, but it’s still portable. Though I knew what to expect, I just imagined there would be more, and I was slightly disappointed there wasn’t.
One of the reasons is I’m a massive fan of writing; actual using a pen on a bit of paper writing. In fact, the first draft of this was written on the tube home, in my pad, with a pen. For me, the move away from this has been hard to bare, I’m constantly looked at weird for writing so much in my notepad – but I like it. So, for me, the iPad would be better with a stylus – which allowed me to write on it as though it were a pad. I know, I know, how retro of me, touchscreen is ‘the in thing,’ just, well it annoys me. And anyway, think about it, this is the next step up from using a pen and paper, just like that was an advancement on a quill and parchment. Sending handwritten notes – electronically, it’s both personal and amazing! I’m not talking for everything obviously, that letter to the CEO is probably better typed; but for a product, which, lets face it, is all about being ‘off duty’ – I think it would fit and rock!
However, aside from my little handwriting rant, I think this type of product is the future. I’m just not sure how far in to the future we’re looking. Sure, the iPad will undoubtedly be snapped up by early adaptors, but mainstream? I don’t think we’re ready for it yet. Though, saying that, the assault of these products on the market is just starting. When there’s a wealth of competitive products on the shelves and prices drop, I think they’ll be a different story. But, until that point, and perhaps until we get some awesome augmented reality apps and a stylus, I’m happy with my smartphone, my laptop, my biro and pad.
Tags: apple, cost, design, innovation, iPad, laptop, smartphone




the ipad is the most amazing thing out on the market right now there isn’t anything that it cant do!!!
I agree – I am a fan of good old pen and paper – it would be nice to have an iPad to take notes in meetings and things like that but there would be no point. The office I work is firmly in the Windows camp. I occasionally run presentations from Keynote on my MacBook and it gets commented on.
I also agree if it wasn’t for the price tag I might consider it but I have no need for it – I don’t ride on the tube everyday, I work in the same office from Monday to Friday, and outside of that I can just use my MacBook, phone or pen and paper! (Some preachers get a bit funny if you sit in the front row taking notes on your iPhone/Blackberry! lol
I agree that I would have like to have seen the option for a (wacom) stylus input for the iPad – which I could could then use as a digital sketchbook. I’m tempted by a tablet pc but cant really justify the cost.
If you do a search in the app store you will find that there are at least two handwriting apps
that you can use with a stylus, they even look like a notebook or chalk board or whatever custom
theme you want to use.
Do your homework love
Trev – there is an awesome Sketch App called “Sketchbook” that does just that.
When they say “there is an app for that” it’s actually true
Hi Amanda, thanks for your feedback.
I did look at the app store, but the only ones I could find you had to use your finger to write with – which isn’t quite the same. My point was more, that for me, this is all I’d use it for – so I would want it to come with that to begin with.
Then apologies gem,
Stylus’ do work to a degree, but if the iPad doesn’t do what you need it for then agreed, there is no point having one.
I do love writing with pen and pencil too but in this day and age and with my job I have to do things electronically so for me handwriting recognition or keyboard use is the best way, and time saving doing electronically rather than the pleasure of writing things out
you need a camera for augmented reality. the ipad doesn’t have one – yet.
just ’cause it’s called iPad doesn’t mean it’s glorified note book.
i bought the 64GB 3G. i love it.
horses for courses; for browsing, email, reference apps, gaming, news, streamed music/video, stored movies and music, photo storage/viewing….it’s just BRILLIANT. a joy to use. worth every penny.
but then i’m an early adapter (sic)