Which iPad

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  • xcarlx0

  • monospaced0

    I couldn't justify more than 16GB of storage. I have a 16GB iPhone with thousands of songs, a bunch of Apps and couple of movies and I'm barely 1/3 through storage. I pity the fool who needs to walk around with anymore than that.

    • Each App has a limit of 2GB, which is apparently quite low .. so 16GB = x8 Apps ?lukus_W
    • which app weights 2GB? most apps are less than 5 megabytesernexbcn
    • I don't think there is a single iPhone App that even nears 2GB.monospaced
    • I have 3 pages of installed apps and they don't even add up to 1GBmonospaced
    • I read that some of the iPad specific titles (like the 'Elements' App) struggle with the 2GB limit.lukus_W
    • I guess this will be true for more than just that one application?lukus_W
    • An iPhone will obviously need less space, no?lukus_W
    • that periodic table app has dozens of high res movies, that's not the common caseernexbcn
    • Hmm.. what's to say that you won't have a few HD films on it too though? I'd go for 32GB.lukus_W
    • The idea is to sync it to your computer and carry around what you need instead of your full librariesmonospaced
    • Yeah, true - didn't think of it like that.lukus_W
    • have about 8gb of apps on my phone. tomtom is over 1gbephix
  • plash0

    Get one, dont get one. really i could give a shit less. just stop calling it revolutionary and stop making such a big deal over your damn apple products. really, i have no problem with apple but huge issues with apple fanboys. all i want to do is hate crime you.

  • monospaced0

    The reviews are all very positive. I'm starting to consider one.

    • ahahahhahahahhahaah lol,
      you're only starting to consider one now?? I thought you had already made your mind
      GeorgesII
    • what made you think that?monospaced
  • auxillary0

    The white one!

  • Raniator0

    For real. If the fucking thing did Flash I'd be all over it. My high-profile DJ lifestyles only permits Flash websites. Sorry Apple, not even I want this pile of anal cum shit.

    • "high profile DJ lifestyles"ernexbcn
    • "anal cum shit?" kinda sums of Flash :Pdaveglanz
    • AHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAH...
      !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! "high-profile DJ lifestyle" AHAHAHHAHAHAHAHA
      marychain
    • *chokesmarychain
  • clearThoughts0

    The reviews seem to be pretty good.
    I actually wouldn't mind reading Wired on that on a Sunday morning. The problem will be the strawberry jam....

  • quack0

  • lukus_W0

    There are virtually _no_ critical reviews. Probably (at least partly) because most journalists are hoping that their publications will end up for sale on the device.

  • detritus0

    Aye, lukus_w is on to something there - the iPad and its ilk is a potential saviour to traditional publishing business models, and with Mr. Murdoch himself gushing about the iPad, you can bet your bottom dollar that the message has come from ahigh that the 'iPad' is beyond overt criticism.

    So, go right on - buy the iPad, if you're a mac head you'd do it anyway - just don't be too irritated when your more '1st gen' product is outmoded in no time at all but every other manufacturer's output.

    Make no mistake - this is not the same battle the iPhone won.

    This tech has BIG potential (sorry, moth, I know you don't believe this) - it's the bridge between the internet haves and the internet have nots, not just in the West, not just in emerging markets, but long-term - everywhere.

    You wonder why Indian companies have a handful of tablet form-factor releases already?

  • monospaced0

    While there may not be any "critical" reviews, the public opinion on the device is loud and clear. There is a ton of content out there bashing the device, its specs and the its vision, while others are praising it. Anyway, MacWorld reviews are surprisingly critical of its shortcomings and straightforward about its purpose. I guess what I'm trying to say is that, just like this thread, the coin can land either way. Even critical reviews will continue to have a bias toward or against the device.

    • The bottom line is what the user experience is like, which none of us have any idea of.ukit
  • monospaced0

    detritus: "just don't be too irritated when your more '1st gen' product is outmoded in no time at all but every other manufacturer's output."

    I'm not trying to start shit, but do you think this will really happen? Other manufacturers have had 2 years to top the underdog iPhone and are barely getting there. Before you know it a new iPhone will be out, and by the time someone makes a better tablet, Apple will no doubtedly have improved on it. Once again, just looking for a discussion, not a mud-slinging.

    • Apple do have a habit of leaving out a few key features in 1st gen products - maybe to increase take-up of 2nd gen?lukus_W
    • Maybe, but I think some features are left out to make others shine. The 9-12 hr battery life is my guess.monospaced
    • I don't think there's any doubt in Apple doing things which are a bit 'evil' .. they just have superb marketing.lukus_W
  • lukus_W0

    My main problem with this is the way the App Store functions as a closed platform.

    Apple decide who can trade - and their criteria is unknown. They have full control over the market. A small developer, making their living from selling a iPhone or iPad app, can be dumped tomorrow with no reason given. It's wrong, imo.

    In the short-term - if the closed model is going to exist - I think Apple should be forced to allow competing App Stores for all of their closed platforms. Government agencies should intervene if necessary (DoJ?).

    • I totally see your point. It's Apple's way of maintaining quality control. That being said, I'm really happy with the offerings in the Store.monospaced
    • offerings in the store. I can't wait to see how this develops.monospaced
    • Well, yeah - they'd say it's quality control - but it's also to do with profit. They are as greedy as any other corp.lukus_W
    • I hate to admit it - but I do kind of want an iPad .. but only if it's jailbroken.lukus_W
    • can you REALLY blame them?monospaced
    • (why should I have to be criminalised for wanting access to my own computing device?)lukus_W
    • Hahaha. What would you do if it was "jailbroken?"monospaced
    • I reckon it will be jailbroken - the main question is, will Apple ever do anything to brick devices which have been modified?lukus_W
  • DoktorDavid0

    Full disclosure: I'm a photographer who owns close to three dozen different cameras; early adoption/gadget obsession is something I am keenly aware of.

    I still have not seen anything about <em>any</em> tablet PC that says "I must have this". Looks great, probably feels wonderful in your hands, but what can it actually do for me that a myriad of laptops/portable devices cannot? On one hand I can see why content developers will want one or two; it is another platform for them to earn money from. All the better to them - but, for the general public it seems to all come down to "who has the most toys at the end wins".

    I read that when presented with the idea for a tablet device even Jobs couldn't find the compelling business/usage need the necessitate the creation of the device. They, of course, went ahead and did it; I suspect it will be a generation or two of use before we completely understand if it was a good decision or not.

    Will I buy one? Nope - saving my money for that prime 85mm f.1.4 lens instead. =]

  • monospaced0

    "Government agencies should intervene if necessary"

    Department of Justice? Pretty funny man. Apple's done nothing illegal here.

    • I don't know enough about the US gov agencies to know which would apply - from the UK.lukus_W
    • I'd say their current behaviour is anti-competitive.lukus_W
    • i think the UK has stiffer anti-competitive laws then the US. it's a borderline monopoly with lots of outsrusty_ace
  • DoktorDavid0

    From the Globe and Mail... replacing an iPod with an iPad??

    And there, at the head of the reserved line is the Brueckman family, Scott, Julie and their kids Madison, 11 and Jordan, 13. They’ve driven down from St. Jacob’s, Ont., to replace Madison’s stolen iPod with an iPad.

    “We thought that’s a nice replacement, for something that went bad, make it something good. So she’s quite excited,” says Scott.

    But then Jordan thought an iPad would be a great early graduation present and, well Julie thought the big, one-button device would be perfect in the kitchen for recipes. “I think I might have to get one, because I’m not sure these guys will share because they’re going to love it so much. I can’t wait to use it for cooking.”

    http://www.theglobeandmail.com/n…

  • detritus0

    Problem with handset tech is - it's necessarily small. Therefore, a lot more expensive to create a well-developed, high spec product that functions well, looks great and sits in the pocket.

    Tablets don't quite have that limitation - there's a lot more breathing room in development and production terms - hence, a number of smaller players in the game (JooJoo, for example) coming out with machines that are actually quite radical, if you step back and analyse them.

    Apple does software bloody well, no doubt. That's their trump card in this game. But they've been caught up. They're not the only draw in town showing off natural gesturative interfaces and neat interaction.

    So, what do they have left? Apps.

    Now, Apple can get away with wringing Westerners dry for every last $5 app that jiggles tits or pretends to be a lightsabre.

    Not so, the rest of the world.

    They'll want something that allows them to access cheap, free software, and the option to make stuff for it easily.

    Remember, tablets won't likely be a 2nd, 3rd or even 4th tier machine for your average global consumer - they'll be primary use. If I had an iPhone (aside from my three PCs and all the other tech), I wouldn't necessarily care that I couldn't do my own shit with it (well, i do - which is why I don't have one, but..) - but I would care if I felt I didn't have full access to my desktop.

    The App store was actually filled quite quickly (18 months or so?) - it'd be naive to suggest Android/Linux competitors won't achieve the same level of coverage, quicker, better, broader.

    Apple will probably always have a place, especially in middle-class heavy societies, and I admire them for striking out against Flash, but I really don't think they'll achieve quite the same critical mass with the 'pad as they did the 'phone, at least beyond the heavily edited front presented by Western Media.

    • Well said, although it's yet to be seen the tablet model takes over the worldukit
  • lukus_W0

    ^ "can you REALLY blame them?"

    I think I can. But it's not surprising that they choose to take the option which brings them the most cost.

    I reckon that corporations have gained in size so much - that if they're left to their own devices, they'd be able to do a lot of things that are solely in the interest of shareholders. I'd say this is wrong - BUT, it's unsurprising when profit is the main variable that counts.

    It's up to the government to introduce legislation that moderates their behaviour - because, unmoderated (regulated) behaviour leads to giant, enormous clusterfcks (like the current recession).

    We have laws that were introduced to protect the consumer in the industrialised aged (which made up the majority of the 20th century). Now we need laws that will do the same for the digital age (21st century).

    At the moment, most of the legislation that's being introduced is designed to moderate _OUR_ behaviour, and protect the interests of corporations. It needs to be the other way round.

    Unfortunately, lobbying is a force which holds an amazing amount of influence. So perhaps the first batch of legislation should make it more difficult for corporations to lobby government?

    • *brings them the most PROFITlukus_W
    • I genuinely believe one of Apple's main driving forces is to deliver quality product/experience, not just profit.monospaced
    • profits. Most companies would kill to have Apple's success, and their perfectly legal business model.monospaced
    • It's only legal because the issues haven't been discussed.. Apple are on a vanguard.lukus_W
    • They're not doing anything wrong. It's their product, they decide how they sell it. You are not forced to buy it.raf
  • detritus0

    "Now, Apple can get away with wringing Westerners dry for every last $5 app that jiggles tits or pretends to be a lightsabre."

    Oh - they banned the tit-jiggling software, didn't they?

    Well, there's your #1 piece of evidence against Apple's future hegemony right there - OS/OS won't put a dampener on porn consumption.. surely the prime driver for any new tech?

    :)

  • lukus_W0

    Apple are an amazing company - largely because they produce an emotive response in their users. They tap into something primal.

    This doesn't stop them from doing what all corporations do. For every enthusiastic, committed, UI and UX geek at Apple HQ -> there's another shrewd business person who's out to extract the last drop of profit from each line of products or services.

    • That's called good business.monospaced
    • At least the product quality/build is top notch. Custom chips, aluminum, great UI. They aren't compromising there.monospaced