How to ruin your iPad experience.

Last week I bought the Incase iPad case, demonstrated below. The reviewer loves it. I hated it.

Allow me to clarify. I hated what it transformed the iPad experience into. By trebling the thickness of the iPad, the case turns the whole experience into something akin to a netbook. The tactile experience is pretty much gone. Don't get me wrong, yes it's a great case, wraps the iPad up snug... Great quality leather etc etc. So I think what I want from an iPad case is at most a thin skin to protect the aluminium back. And separately, I'd like an iPad stand which is small, light, collapsible and allows me to mount the iPad in both landscape and portrait orientation - currently not possible with the iPad dock.

iPad infancy continues.

 

Where's the aircraft you promised, Dad?!

Sent from my iPhone

 

Izaak and Annabelle

 

Igglepiggle reporting for duty!

 

Glasgow West End fire through a different set of binoculars

via tweetie
 

Omega to Alpha: Changing times at the Apple Store

Empty iPod desks. Crowded iPad desks.

   
Click here to download:
Omega_to_Alpha_Changing_times_.zip (493 KB)

 

5 Days with an iPad

I bought an iPad on Saturday, reluctantly. I had a horrendous week and
felt like rewarding myself. Full of hope and joy I skipped to the
"iPad shop" for a very tactile first five minutes, hoping to get blown
away like I was with the iPhone when I first held it.

I wasn't. In fact I was disappointed. I though it was too heavy to
hold by just my left harm, whilst my right hand pinched and zoomed,
tapped and dragged. The shop environment didn't offer a relaxed
environment to first experience the iPad, nor did it offer wifi -
which is a complete failure.

Several hours later I went back to the shop and bought it anyway...
And I'm glad I did.

The iPad doesn't do the "5 minute" demo well, or at least not the way
the iPhone does. So at first feels like just a big iPhone.

After several hours you realise that Instead you get a device that
allows you to consume and share content such as news, comics, mail and
videos in a manner simply not possible until now. And I have to say
it's an amazing experience. Classic Apple. Beautiful.

The ability to touch and manipulate the content is a landmark step
forward in computing.

Anyone who says they can get similar or better value for money from a
£300 net book is missing the point. You're comparing apples with
oranges. Yes you can read stuff and watch video on a net book. Hell,
you can even consume Flash content.
Big deal! So can my desktop.

The advancement is touch computing. My son Izaak will grow up in world
where keyboards and mice are as alien to him as punch cards are to me.
That's the magical part. The next step forward.

Well done, Apple.

Yes there are things missing. The lack of Flash is one thing - but not
a showstopper. Drag and drop gestures on websites is another. The iPad
app store is a mess and it lacks the wealth of choice the iPhone
enjoys. But that's about it. Those apps will come, just like they did
for the iPhone or PS3 or XBox.

There will be Android tablets, but they're probably 12 months away on
delivering experience the iPad delivers today. Nonetheless I look
forward to then, because as the current smartphone battles between
Google and Apple have shown. Competition is good for all of us.

I'm glad I have one.

 

CycleStreets: UK-wide Cycle Journey Planner and Photomap

Great site for planning that safe route to work and back

 

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