iPad Review

Jun. 2nd, 2010 09:53 am
drplokta: (Default)
[personal profile] drplokta
Having had an iPad (32GB, not 3G) since Friday, here are my impressions.

It looks good, with Apple's current slimmed-down shiny black and aluminium aesthetic. It's too heavy to hold up with one hand in use -- it's either two hands or rest it on your lap. This turns out not to be much of a problem.

Steve Jobs was right to say that it's a game-changer. It makes browsing the web into a whole new experience -- it's more tactile, and the screen is the perfect size for web browsing. Safari is lacking some handy features, but Atomic Web costs 59p and provides useful things like adblock and opening links in background tabs. All web browsers really need some way to scroll individual elements in a web page as well as the page as a whole, though.

There are already a lot of good apps, which make use of the larger screen. Compared with the iPhone, the screen is large enough that an app can have different parts of the screen that do different things. My current most-used apps are Goodreader (excellent PDF reader), iBooks (Apple's own eBook reader), NetNewsWire (RSS reader with Google Reader synchronization), IM+ (chat) and Plants versus Zombies (game).

Photographs look stunning on the screen, and there are a bunch of apps like Guardian Eyewitness, APOD and FlickStackr that take advantage of this.

The keyboard is about as good as a touch keyboard could be. I can easily do my usual two finger plus thumb typing in it. It could do with an apostrophe on the main keyboard, although I eventually discovered that you can get one by pressing and holding on the comma. Still, I'd rather see a couple of extra keys replacing the right-hand numeric shift key. I'm typing this review actually on the iPad, and it doesn't feel much slower than on a real keyboard.

One of my main reasons for buying it was for reading eBooks, and it has some way to go here. The screen is actually too big for eBooks, and the only two reader apps that give you two columns in landscape mode at present are iBooks (which is a pain to get your own books into) and Barnes & Noble eReader, which is only available in the US and appears to be impossible to get your one books into. I'm sure a better app will be along soon, preferably with Calibre integration.

The battery life is astonishing. We were away for a couple of days at the weekend, and I didn't need to take the charger. The claimed 10 hours seems like a bit of an under-estimate, even when playing CPU-intensive games.

(no subject)

Date: 2010-06-02 09:46 am (UTC)
andrewducker: (Default)
From: [personal profile] andrewducker
I'm sure I read somewhere that you can scroll internal elements with a two-fingered drag. I could be misremembering though.

(no subject)

Date: 2010-06-02 10:03 am (UTC)
andrewducker: (Default)
From: [personal profile] andrewducker
I guess even Apple don't have the mind-controlled-device-interface working yet. :->

I'll be intrested to get a look at an iPad at some point, it sounds worthwhile. Won't be buying one of course, but it does sound like it's well worth having a play with.
Edited Date: 2010-06-02 10:04 am (UTC)

(no subject)

Date: 2010-06-02 10:30 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] alexmc.livejournal.com
> Apple don't have the mind-controlled-device-interface working yet

That's what they *want* you to think :-)


-----------

> iPad (32GB, not 3G)

So you got the version which is like an iPod touch rather than an iPhone?

Well, it is documented in the user guide

Date: 2010-06-02 10:56 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] groliffe.livejournal.com
but I think it's the only piece of information in the Safari chapter that *isn't* bleeding obvious (at least if you've used an iPhone), and I agree it's completely non-intuitive. I also have trouble getting the two finger drag right - it too easily turns into a zoom/pinch.

(no subject)

Date: 2010-06-02 01:09 pm (UTC)
ext_51095: Gaspodia (Default)
From: [identity profile] gaspodia.livejournal.com
[livejournal.com profile] gaspodex has managed to import his non B&N books into the B&N reader on his ipad, so it is possible. I've got no idea how of course :)

(no subject)

Date: 2010-06-02 11:44 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] surliminal.livejournal.com
FWIW I've just had a very different assessment from John Naughton who is a well respected engineer/IT jnlist type. He certainly doesn't think it's a "game changer". He thinks it's purely for consumption and wildly irritating for those trying to make and share. One example was that since it only easily uses Apple apps it was difficult to download and share docs on Google Docs which many academics use to collaborate. He'd ended up having to launder docs via iTunes!

I merely report - it was an interestingly different a/c. What I learnt from playing with his was that the touchscreen keyboard was a lot more usable for me than the iPhone one. But I still don't particularly want one.

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