On 4 October 2010 18:59, Ian King <IanK at vulcan.com> wrote:
These things are coming out of the woodwork these days
- you can't swing a dead Newton :-) without hitting another vendor. ?Mine was
purchased from an online vendor called Merimobiles, and is the "iRobot aPad
E7001" with a dual-core Chinese RockChip processor. ?There's an E7002 now, from
what I've seen, with a bit more speed. ?But the site
slatedroid.com gives both
information and opinion on a slew of new devices that fall between
Ereaders-on-megavitamins and small-footprint netbooks, including somewhere in the middle
tablets such as mine. ?Some devices are being sold through department stores - I even saw
a mall kiosk a couple of weeks ago.
I too have "mature eyes" and use reading glasses. ?I've seen these devices
from 5" (ISTR there's a Dell device) and up to 10" or so. ?I elected to go
with the 7" form factor for convenience: it fits in my hand, it fits in the glove
boxes of either my truck or my motorcycle, it slips into the bag that carries the laptop
(Windows 7) that I use for work. ?Yes, I thought about the larger devices, but frankly
that was one reason I stopped consistently using my Fujitsu Stylistic Tablet PC: it
didn't fit into a saddlebag.
I'm not saying that my aPad is without flaw - it has its 'early adopter'
warts. ?(Many of these are addressed by new flash images built by people in the user
community - ah, open platforms are handy, aren't they?) ?But it's also $150. ?It
has an externally-accessible microSD slot, a USB port that works in either direction
(access a keyboard, memory stick, etc. OR serve up USB mass storage), a multitasking
operating system - and did I mention it was $150? ?-- Ian
Glad you came back & followed up on this.
I'm with doc at
vaxen.net on this. Defining a category does /not/ by any
means denote that a device is the best in its category. I've spent a
few hours playing with iPads & whereas I think they're brilliant
devices, I don't want one, any more than I want an iPhone. (And yes, I
like Apple kit & own a fair bit of it.) They're just too closed for
me.
I wouldn't want it any smaller, myself, nor any slower, but I /would/
want a couple of USB ports, a card slot (or 2 or 3, given the size of
the device), and a rather more open OS. I would add multitasking but I
believe the iPad is getting that very soon, so it seems a tad unfair.
But the UI of the iPhone and the iPad is a work of art. It's something
qualitatively different from mouse-oriented WIMPs: it's a GUI, but of
the WIMP acronym, there are no W, M or P, only I, and those are as
much buttons anyway.
The iPhone introduced the GUI and showed that a company completely new
to the mobile-phone sector could produce a device massively better
than all the best efforts of every mobile phone company ever. OK, so,
in many ways, it's constrained, but it's still brilliant.
But the iPhone was a bit too small to be a general-purpose computing
device. The iPad takes the idea and runs with it.
Me, I'd be much more inclined to an Android - or perhaps better still,
Palm/HP WebOS - clone with a bit more expandability and a lot more
openness.
But TBH, for my purposes, I foresee sticking to laptops. Not even
netbooks, but real laptops. I tend to buy ultralight "executive"
models that are 2-3 years old and so as cheap as netbooks, but with
2-4x the power and capacity.
--
Liam Proven ? Info & profile:
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