>I'd be interested in hearing some more of your impressions of the iPad.
Someday I'll get around to writing an in-depth review, but for now I can summarize it by saying that I'm surprised how much more useful a device it is than I thought it would be at first.
Everyone's usage will be different. For me, here's principally how I use it day-to-day:
It's replaced unhooking and lugging my laptop into meetings. We have a daily scrum meeting at 10:00 every morning. We use online tools such as Rally and Bugzilla to track the project and bugs. The iPad is perfect for this. (I can also surf when things get boring!)
As a book-reader, it's fantastic. It's put the fun back into reading for me. I used to read voraciously, and it's tapered off because, well, even with reading glasses, these 52-year-old eyes get easily strained. The fact that I can pump up the fonts, and even choose a sans-serif font (which I prefer for screen reading) is great!
I use both the iBook and Kindle applications for this.
There's a fantastic 3D pinball game that I like to play when I need a break:
Other things I do include: a planetarium application that shows the position of the stars and planets at any point. Check the weather, including real-time radar. Listen to podcasts. Stream Netflix video. Read PDFs. And of course, email and photos.
I plan to get the Pages application to see if I want to use it to take my daily engineering notes (which I currently write down in an Engineering Notebook).
>I'm thinking of getting iPad in a year or so for two reasons. One is mobility throughout the house for
>very casual use like browsing, YouTube, letting my older son (almost four right now) watch videos from
>certain websites, etc.
It'd be really good for that. It's a lot easier to cart around than a laptop, and its wireless connectivity throughout the house is stellar.
>The other reason would be video chatting ... this all depends on the iPad acquiring a forward-facing
>camera
Right. Rumors put a camera in this thing in the next version. Not a big deal for me, but I can understand how those that use video chat need this.
>Have you used any productivity apps on the iPad?
As noted above. Reports from other users of Pages and other apps is favorable.
>Among other things when I fooled at the store, I cranked out a few paragraphs in Pages using the
>onscreen keyboard and found it totally not awful.
I'm not a touch typist, so pecking away on the virtual keyboard is no problem for me. It's plenty big and the surprisingly good auto-correction takes care of most of my typos.
>Do you know how document storage works (do you have access to a file system)?
The PDF reader keeps its files "somewhere". I'm thinking that each app gets its own sandbox to play in, but am still finding out more. There's no equivalent to Finder to browse a shared file system. I'm not sure what facilities exist for sharing documents between apps.
I've downloaded the Dropbox app to be able to access files in my Dropbox "cloud" but haven't had much time to play with it yet.
>Do you find the (current) lack of multitasking an issue? I know this has been a criticism.
Not in the least. Apps start up almost instantaneously and are good about retaining state, so switching between them is almost indistinguishable from having them constantly running in the background.
There are a few things I'm not thrilled about, but they're minor in the grand scheme of things.
- The way that the Safari app does multi-paging is a bit awkward. I'm not sure why they didn't just go with a tab metaphor.
- Web pages that rely upon hover are hard/impossible to use. That's more a criticism of the web page implementation and touch interfaces than the iPad itself.
- There's no keychain, so Safari doesn't remember logins. Typing in usernames and passwords to the various web sites -- especially tools like Rally that require long credentials, is tedious.
- There's no junk mail filter in the mail app. I'd really like it to sync the well-trained junk mail filtering from my MacBook Pro to the iPad mail app.
And here are just some other random impressions:
- The screen is fantastically sharp and clear.
- It's fast and responsive.
- Battery life is great.
- It's probably going to make me learn Objective C so I can write my own programs for it.