0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Read 24833 times.
This is a pretty good list: http://www.crunchgear.com/2010/03/12/seven-alternatives-to-the-apple-ipad/ followed-up with this one: http://www.crunchgear.com/2010/04/02/seven-more-ipad-alternatives/.The iPad has so many fundimental shortcomings. Dispite that, I suspect any Apple zealot intent on buying one will not be swayed by any non-Apple alternative.
I am hearing that one of our favorite iPhone apps, Apple's Remote App, is not yet iPad-ized. I'm very much looking forward to an app that takes advantage of the larger real estate with possible things like split screens, album art matrixes (ala iTunes), maybe even liner notes and/or reviews, etc. Let's not just make Remote a large version of the iPhone app.
Surfing AC on my iPad while I watch the game. So far I REALLY like it.
Ok, like the good iWhore that I am I went to the Apple store today just to scope out the new iPad. After owning an iPhone and of course my mac computers I knew it was going to be a great piece of kit, but when it was my turn to handle it I got way more than I expected. All the silliness about it being "Magical" and "Revolutionary" I tend to take with a grain of salt. I have always been a very jaded techie especially with audio equipment, but also with new gadgets. What I found was, oddly enough, all the BS was true. It is quite honestly THE COOLEST computing experience I have had ever. Including the iPhone, including my laptops, including my soon to arrive iMac simply put, nothing else compares. Yes my computer is more powerful, yes my iPhone is way more portable, but the iPad does things better than either of these products can do and ironically it made me think "Maybe if I get rid of my MacBook Pro and my iPhone and just got a cheapy phone and the iPad 3G..." Who knows
Yeah, the iPad expensive, has lots of limitations and difficult to justify purchasing given much less expensive options are available that don't lock you into using software that Apple blesses.
Btw - for you guys that now have an iPad, I'd be curious to know if you got the 3G version or not...and over time, if you are happy with the decision you made regarding 3G vs. not for this product...
I have both an iPhone and an Android-based G1...and I have a *much* greater sense of confidence that apps I load onto my iPhone will be stable and of relatively good quality compared to my experience on the G1. From that perspective, I am happy about apps requiring "Apple's blessing". I do agree that if I was developing an app for the iPhone that I would not like Apple's level of strictness as a gatekeeper for iPhone apps, but from a consumer's perspective, it is a very welcome to have that threshold/standard of quality...
Also compare the price to the crap you'll end up having a mediocre experience with. Netbooks and notebooks that have very few redeeming qualities.