ThinkRob wrote:
As I've said elsewhere: Apple's products tend to do very, very well at exposing a certain, limited set of functionality to the user. Provided you're content doing only what Apple supports in the manner that they support, their products really are the best. It's when you want to do something that's not one of their targetted use cases or when you want to do something in a different way than they've deemd "optimal" that the user experience heads downhill, and fast.
This is a fabulous post that sums up my attitude towards Apple very concisely. It's all well and good for someone else. For me, give me flexibility and choices.
The netbook is an important thing to consider when discussing the iPad. Remember how cool those were supposed to be? Just tiny little things that fit between a telephone and a laptop. You'd carry it with you when you didn't know what you might or might not need. It might have an 8GB hard drive if you were really willing to shell out, and the battery would last a few hours.
Obviously, that did not hold. Netbooks have been getting bigger and heavier, more often Windowsed. The hard drives are now regular-computer sized. They've basically become cheap laptops rather than a separate class of device.
The iPad goes after the netbook's intended market, but Acer's initial experiment with the Eee 701 proved that such a market does not exist. If they're going to sit down on campus or in the coffee shop, people don't want to be limited beyond their usual computing experience. They don't want to leave their music at home and use funny little custom Linux distros. They just want a lighter, cheaper computer, and that is why the line between netbooks and laptops is being blurred. Jobs captured it perfectly: "They're just cheap laptops." And that's what people want.
Now let's ask ourselves: what can an iPad do that a netbook can't? Why do I want to sacrifice functionality and pay more money for it? The biggest failing of the iPad, in my opinion, is its inability to multitask. Being able to run AIM, Pandora, and a browser in the background while I work on a paper is very useful. We are accustomed to having this functionality, and that netbooks can do it is why they sell so well - again, cheap laptops.
So Steve says that the iPad isn't supposed to compete with the netbook. (I could tell by the price.) But where the netbook was able to evolve its way into an established market segment - laptops - the iPad does not really have an established market to cannibalize. Instead, it has to create a market. And it does so with what seems to me like an awkward device - can you imagine typing on that keyboard? (Obviously I can't say that it'll suck for sure - but the big touch keyboard's weirdness is indicative of how little this market segment has been explored.)
All told, this is, as others have mentioned, a big iPod Touch. I'd just buy one of those and a netbook and be a happy man. More likely, actually, I'd buy a Nokia N810, just because I like them better, but you get the point.
X61 Tablet - 1.6GHz C2D, SXGA+, 1GB RAM, 100GB HD, Vista Business.
i have other laptops but i'll be honest i never use 'em