Entertainment For Lively Minds
iPad - first thoughts
Hello Word massive,
I'm sure I'm not the only one out there to have taken the plunge, but I recently got my hands on an iPad imported from the US into the UK. I was doing some IT work with a company who were desperate to get hold of one - I managed to get hold of one and bought one for myself at the same time.
I'm also sure there are quite a few of Word's American readers who may also have one by now.
My first thoughts are that it's very good - not quite as instant as I'd hoped, but it's growing on me. A few quirks with using it in the UK as opposed to the US (lack of iBooks as an app) although i read this I'd probably down to copyright issues and it may well become available not long after the iPad launches here.
Typing is ok, again not quite as effortless ass they made out on the launch video, but they had probably had months of getting used to it and in landscape and portrait mode it's just a case of going for it and the auto-correct takes care of most mistakes.
iTunes is very nice and runs in the background as it does on the iPhone allowing you to start something going (the next word podcast !!) and start to browse or do something else.
Lack of Flash isn't too much of a pain, except when you get to something like the BBC news site, although I'm sure they'll start to offer HTML5 video at some point soon if Steve Jobs has his way and persuades everyone with his anti-Flash tirade!
YouTube works really well as an app and there's not much you can't view on there with weblinks and embedded YouTube clips linking and launching in the YouTube app.
On the third-party apps TweetDeck is excellent although could do with support for facebook as it's twitter only at the moment.
Safari and the overall browsing experience is fantastic (the Word website looks great btw). Assuming you have a good n wifi network and a decent downstream you're going to be very happy with the performance. It really is very intuitive and is nice and snappy.
I like the addition of the orientation lock switch as often if you're using the iPhone when lying on your side it can flip when you don't want it to so this is a welcome feature.
iPhoto is very nice too and you only need to sync what you really want to, so if like me you have more photos than space available you can use a smaller selection instead.
More thoughts as I get used to the device, but I think it's a grower and I'm very impressed so far
Cheers
Geoff
- More from slartybartfast.
- Login or register to post comments










All I can say is....
and
But what's the compelling reason …
… to buy one?
It's... err... umm...
"nice"
and, ummm...
"shiny"
But...
can it kiss you goodnight?
There's An App For That
Ahem
Didn't persuade the FPO to allow you a new HDTV
for the World Cup then?
Not mine
Just posing with somebody else's.
Ah....
So the iPad has already made it to Word Towers. What do you think? Perhaps a short review on the next podcast? I know it's been discussed before but would be good to know what you guys and gals think. Does it float yer boat or sink yer dinghy?
Is that an iPod touch
in Diminuitive Dave's hands?
i-Pad. u-pad, we all pad.
Ah... that's what it is. I always thought it was some sort of sanitary product.
Look closely at this picture
Story here if you're interested http://9to5mac.com/layers_gets_interesting
I think I feel a backlash growing.....
...particularly in light of the recent iPhone v4 police raids, breaking down doors....this very funny clip from The Daily Show http://www.thedailyshow.com/watch/wed-april-28-2010/appholes ...and numerous posts on The Register
, all in spite of the undoubted quality, excellence and intelligence of the design and delivery.
AppleSoft
Yes I think one day Apple will turn into big bad brother in much the same way Microsoft has in recent years. Interestingly, the word AppleSoft just auto completed from the iPad dictionary.....spooky!!
Sorry...
That last comment should have been in reply to yours Mr Holt.
Maaaaany years ago, Applesoft was the brand name
for Apple's software arm. They provided the various programming langauges for the Apple II and III computers.
That...
...makes sense. Whatever happened to the apple Newton eh?
The two I bought are in a box in the loft :-)
I feel
A new thread coming on...
A Salesman
is coming in to show me one at 12.30 (part of my "job" includes purchasing IT equipment). I'd rather a 1TB iPod please.
Not for me ..... yet
I just got hold of one for a brief play yesterday and it was exactly as I expected apart from two things, the bigger "keys" on the keyboard make typing a lot easier than I expected and the pages in the iBooks turned much much slower than I expected (although that may be a setting that I didn't look for).
I won't get one until they become useful as well as merely desireable. It's not significantly lighter than my netbook and the Netbook is so much more flexible. If I need instant on Internet then I can always get my ipod touch out of my pocket and within about 30 seconds the netbook is out of hibernation and ready to go.
One market sector that would love the ipad is the small (but probably significant) number of older people that have never owned a computer and don't want to learn how to use one. No mouse to learn, fabulous screen, they won't be touch typists so the keyboard isn't an issue, the shortcommings are probably plusses in their case.
If someone makes an Android equivalent at a sensible price with at least one USB socket then I may well be in he queue.
I had a brief play last weekend
and I'm afraid it's just a big iPod Touch. Until it runs OSX and proper Apple software I don't think it'll be any use to me as I can do everything I need on a MacBook.
I'd like the opportunity to have a longer fiddle before finally deciding but first impressions of it's utility weren't good.
Having said all that, it's a very 'lustworthy' piece of design :-)
So will we be seeing
a special digital copy of the Word for the iPad?
Consumption
I've had this iPad for four days and read three books on it already.
Terminology
It's interesting that you refer to reading books "on" it. That seems quite a natural description but we would never use that terminology to read books from books.
Interesting point...
Never thought of it as "Today I'm reading the new John Otway autobiography* 'on a book'" :-)
*http://www.johnotway.com/