Hey, that's why I said "weight matters only when you are transporting it". I realized that laptops need to be moved around. My point was, as soon as you stop transporting the device and start using it, a laptop's weight no longer matters whereas the iPad's weight continues to matter. In fact, the iPad's weight now matters even more than when it was being transported, because most people are going to hold it in their hands while using it, whereas to transport it they would tend to use a shoulder bag or a backpack, and people's shoulders tend to be stronger than their hands. In other words, I was trying say that for most people (who would spend a lot more time everyday using a laptop than carrying it -- let's say 1 hour of transporting it versus 8 hours of using it on a desk), a 3-lb laptop might be light enough, but the iPad, even at 1.5 lb, is still not light enough. To make myself perfectly clear: holding the 1.5-lb iPad by hand for 8 hours a day is worse than carrying a 3-lb laptop in a backpack for 1 hour a day.asiafish wrote:I beg to differ, and that is the reason why I never have and never will buy a laptop that weighs more than 6 lbs. Being "weightless" would be fine if the laptop stayed on the desk, but if that was the case why not buy a cheaper, more powerful and more expandable desktop?
There are solutions to the "iPad being too heavy" problem, of course. The first one is to just lay it flat on a table while using it, but you would have to bend over your neck the whole time and might develop serious neck and back pain! Another solution would be to put it on a tilted stand so you can view the screen at a comfortable angle, but typing on the virtual keyboard at this angle would be extremely awkward.






