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iPad: The Greatest Disappointment in Human History
Challies.com ^ | January 28, 2010 | Tim Challies

Posted on 01/28/2010 2:50:35 PM PST by Constitutionalist Conservative

Yesterday I sat and watched liveblog coverage of the long-awaited announcement from Apple. To no one’s great surprise, they unveiled their newest device, the iPad. While everyone knew this tablet device was coming, everyone had wondered exactly what it would be. Apple has high standards when it comes to devices like this one and I, for one, was prepared to be amazed. Alas, I was disappointed. iDisappointed, even. I’m ready to declare that the iPad is the greatest disappointment in all of human history (at least since The Phantom Menace).

iPadLet’s get this out of the way. The thing looks really nice. It’s a giant iPod Touch—glossy, pretty, aluminum. Visually, it presses all the right buttons. We may have been hoping for something a little more innovative in form, but nevertheless, the Touch works well, so there’s no reason to think that the iPad won’t work just as well on a macro scale. We know as well that the operating system will be solid, that the app store will provide many excellent applications, etc, etc. What the iPod Touch does well when it’s not being an ultra-portable device (or what the iPhone does when it’s not being a phone or an ultra-portable device), the iPad should do just as well.

But it could do a whole lot of things a whole lot better if only Apple had not deliberately handicapped the device. They did two things that annoy me to no end and make me declare it a massive disappointment. First, they held back features so they could play the hero when they add them later on. And second, they deliberately left out features, handicapping the device, so you would have to continue to buy their other hardware.

Features They Held Back
We know that Apple has a long road map for future versions of this product. They are a company of smart people who have to look far beyond product launch. So we know that in an office somewhere they have a document outlining iPad 2, iPad 3, and so on. And we understand that they have a product spec arranged for each of them. Apple knows what they will add to each of the next three or four generations of the product. This is well and good. But it seems evident that many of these innovations are things they could easily have added this time but held back deliberately so they could add them to future generations.

So rather than allow future versions to be driven by genuine innovation, they can assuage their users by adding features that should have been there from the beginning. In future versions they will add a camera. But the camera should be there now. What possible reason is there not to have a camera now? In future versions they will add more storage capacity. But it should already have more storage capacity. In future versions they will add some great new input abilities. But that should have been one of the fundamental features right from the start.

All of these things will come. But they will come as reasons to make us buy into future generations of the product. It was not for lack of ability that Apple did not include them this time around. It was just to wring more money out of us later on.

Features They Cut
That is one annoyance—that they handicapped the device so we would buy future versions. But they also cut obvious features of it so it would not replace any of our existing Apple devices. Though I understand this from a business perspective, it offends me as a consumer.

You can look at the iPad’s feature list and see all of the places they deliberately handicapped it in order to make sure that people wouldn’t buy it instead of one of their other products. Apple wants you to buy the iPad, but they need you to keep buying the MacBook (or iMac) and iPhone.

Here are just a couple of examples.

The iPad has no compelling input abilities beyond the on-screen keyboard or an external Bluetooth keyboard. And the device is really only as good as its inputs. The on-screen keyboard looks great, but I would expect it to be useful only for brief periods of time. You cannot use it effectively with one hand which in turn means that you need to lay the device on a surface in order to use it. But then you’ll find yourself hunching over the screen and that can’t be comfortable for long. You can use an (expensive) external keyboard, but then you need to be able to prop the device upright (probably using an expensive cover). And do you really want to bring an external keyboard to class? Or to a meeting? Where is the stylus so you can draw on the screen? Where is the input innovation? Why the lack of innovation? And all of this ensures that it will not replace the MacBook or the iMac. Further, the device still needs to sync with something, so it will be severely hampered as a standalone device. A student cannot head to college with only an iPad and an iPhone. He will still need something to sync them with.

The iPad has no phone abilities so it will not compete with the iPhone. I understand this decision as it vastly reduces the complexity of the device and its pricing. Plus, you’d look awfully silly holding a device that size against your ear. But what about giving us some kind of innovative way of using this as a communication device? Surely there is a way of using the Wifi and 3G capabilities to communicate with others. At the very least, offer some Skype-like ability and make that a key component of the device. But no, that would bring it into conflict with the iPhone.

It goes on and on.

Lost Opportunity
I wanted the iPad to do lots of neat things but to do one thing exceedingly well. Speaking personally, I wanted it to be an exceptional reading device. Why Apple didn’t position it as a reading device baffles me. Why didn’t they work with textbook manufacturers to make this the future of reading, the future of studying? Think of a dry history text that could come alive with interactive features (I know, I know. Neal Postman is rolling over in his grave. I’m not saying I agree with interactive learning like this—just surprised that Apple didn’t try it on us). This device could have been an amazing way of taking reading (which even Steve Jobs knows isn’t really going to go away) to the digital world. Kindle has tried and has done some good things. But the whole field is still vastly underdeveloped. Apple had its chance and, by what I can see, has completely blown it. Sure the iBook application looks pretty, but it does not look at all innovative beyond a few visual effects.

Apple’s lost opportunity was to create a device that did one thing amazingly, exceptionally, innovately well. Instead they chose to make a giant iPod Touch that I can’t carry in my pocket and that I can’t use to call my wife when I’m going to be home late. I can’t take it on my morning walk to listen to music. I can’t take it to a conference in place of my MacBook, either. Now there is a chance that I could throw it in my bag in place of my Kindle, but I don’t know if that’s likely to happen. After all, the Kindle does one thing and it does it well—better, I think, than the iPad. It can do it for two weeks, rather than eight hours and doesn’t require a monthly contract.

Even if the iPad was never going to be a Kindle-killer, Apple should have targeted it squarely at one audience. The iPad does not seem to have a really obvious audience. Who, exactly, were they pitching it to? Is it for students? Stay-at-home moms? Businessmen? They never said and I still don’t know. It seems to be a device without an obvious user. My guess is that they are hoping to sell it to Windows users who currently have neither an iPhone nor a MacBook (or iMac) but who want a taste of the Mac experience. But that’s just a guess.

Conclusion
I could go on with annoyances. There is no tethering between the iPad and the iPhone. The battery life is simply not sufficient (if they say ten hours, they probably mean six or eight with a bright screen and heavy use). There are so few input and output possibilities. I will stop there. No I won’t. How hard would it have been to smack an SD card slot in there? Seriously! It’s great to show a pretty photo application, but why not allow us to quickly and easily get the photos on there in the first place.

I guess it comes to this. If they are to maintain their share price, Apple needs you to continue buying an iPhone and a MacBook (or iMac). Thus they cannot allow the iPad to replace either one of them. And so it is a device between. It’s a device lots of people want, but nobody needs. What Apple should have done is to create a device that is spectacularly good at one thing—one thing that neither of the other devices does particularly well (like reading!). Instead, they went with the kitchen sink approach, trying to make it passably good at everything—things that the iPhone and MacBook do just fine.

I’m disappointed because the iPad could have been so much more. There are areas of my life it could have jumped into and done well, justifying its cost. As it is, I don’t see that happening. I’ll grant that ultimately I’ll need to use it and experience it to really know for sure. Maybe the experience of it will show me how and where it can find its place in my life (as happened with the iPhone). I would not be half surprised if, in the end, I end up with one (at least for R&D purposes). But it is going to take a very compelling argument for it to change my mind and find its place.


TOPICS: Computers/Internet
KEYWORDS: apple; ilovebillgates; ipad; iwanthim; iwanthimbad; microsoftfanboys; review; technology
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To: Deb
Well, its just supposed to be a reading device. I think this guy was expecting too much.

No kidding.

In future versions they will add some great new input abilities. But that should have been one of the fundamental features right from the start.

The iPad as it exists now will sell like hot cakes and be snapped up by all those who simply MUST have the latest and greatest.
Revenue from those sales will fund the future iterations of the product, with more bells and whistles.
Those new versions will be snapped up by by all those who simply MUST have the latest and greatest AND those who've been waiting for the right feature set.

A well written analysis of the product but he's dead wrong on one point;
The iPad will not be the biggest disappointment in allof human history. That title is irrevocably held by Barack Obama.

The iPad will sell like a mother******. Even I want one and I'm no Apple fanboi....far from it.

41 posted on 01/28/2010 6:05:28 PM PST by Bloody Sam Roberts (An armed man is a citizen. An unarmed man is a subject.)
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To: ~Kim4VRWC's~; 1234; 50mm; Abundy; Action-America; acoulterfan; AFreeBird; Airwinger; Aliska; ...
Another Ant—iPad review from a reviewer who has NOT held or used one... PING!


Anti iPad screed Ping!

If you want on or off the Mac Ping List, Freepmail me.

42 posted on 01/28/2010 11:08:10 PM PST by Swordmaker (Remember, the proper pronunciation of IE isAAAAIIIIIEEEEEEE!)
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To: Constitutionalist Conservative
Very well written, useful review from a loyal Apple fanatic.

Tim Challies has been a Mac basher for a long time... so I don't see how you can call him a "loyal Apple fanatic." He did write a semi-contrite "ipology" a year ago when he bought a Macbook and found out that he was wrong... but still bashed Apple users...

43 posted on 01/28/2010 11:16:32 PM PST by Swordmaker (Remember, the proper pronunciation of IE isAAAAIIIIIEEEEEEE!)
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To: Tzfat
No Flash support (What kind of Web experience is that?)

Flash is processor intensive and a battery hungry... wastes energy and doesn't support the H.264 standard that is rapidly supplanting video on the web.

Mail does not do Exchange (iPhone and iPod Touch do)

Who said it doesn't? Exchange is part of the iPhone OS... which is on the iPad. I don't know for sure, but I suspect that is FUD.

44 posted on 01/28/2010 11:23:53 PM PST by Swordmaker (Remember, the proper pronunciation of IE isAAAAIIIIIEEEEEEE!)
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To: NCC-1701
“...I thought the Segway was the biggest dissapointment....”

No it wasn’t. That honor goes to Barrack Hussein Obama.

Not for me... that dis-honor goes to the American electorate who elected him...

45 posted on 01/28/2010 11:26:44 PM PST by Swordmaker (Remember, the proper pronunciation of IE isAAAAIIIIIEEEEEEE!)
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To: longtermmemmory
This is much like the MacAIR which was "pretty" but underpowered.

Underpowered???? At 1.86Ghz or 2.13Ghz and 2GB RAM it's hardly "underpowered."

46 posted on 01/28/2010 11:33:54 PM PST by Swordmaker (Remember, the proper pronunciation of IE isAAAAIIIIIEEEEEEE!)
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To: Swing_Thought

That brings up a question... Will Apple block a Kindle app for the iPad? Amazon’s prices are cheaper than the prices Apple indicates they will be charging in their bookstore.


47 posted on 01/28/2010 11:41:38 PM PST by MediaMole
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To: Swordmaker

Flash does support h.264. Starting with Flash 9.


48 posted on 01/28/2010 11:42:50 PM PST by MediaMole
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To: X

Great idea!

49 posted on 01/29/2010 12:08:36 AM PST by I see my hands (_8(|)
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To: MediaMole
That brings up a question... Will Apple block a Kindle app for the iPad? Amazon’s prices are cheaper than the prices Apple indicates they will be charging in their bookstore.

No. Don't think so.

50 posted on 01/29/2010 12:48:33 AM PST by Swordmaker (Remember, the proper pronunciation of IE isAAAAIIIIIEEEEEEE!)
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To: MediaMole
That brings up a question... Will Apple block a Kindle app for the iPad? Amazon’s prices are cheaper than the prices Apple indicates they will be charging in their bookstore.

Good question. You never know, with Apple. But they'd be foolish to do this. Having access to Amazon ebooks will help sell a lot of iPads, and Apple still is, after all, primarily a hardware company.

The iPad will force an adjustment in ebook creation, though. ebooks are likely to start looking more like blogs, with embedded web links, videos etc...

51 posted on 01/29/2010 12:57:40 AM PST by Swing_Thought (The doorstep to the temple of wisdom is a knowledge of our own ignorance. - Benjamin Franklin)
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To: Swordmaker

The maket yawned as AAPL went down 7%. I predict a middling success for the iPad. Not a must have so many buyers will wait for the full featured iPad 2.0 or 3.0. They will copy the author here

In the PC world I see features being rolled out quicker due to the recession thus heightened competition. Such as Blue Ray burners being available cheaper and quicker than in normal times.
Apple’s cynical stalling on a full featured iPad will backfire in a consumer revolt/boycott. By the law of averages the Cupertino Gangstas are headed for a FAIL and this is it


52 posted on 01/29/2010 1:02:16 AM PST by dennisw (It all comes 'round again --Fairport)
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To: Constitutionalist Conservative
How hard would it have been to smack an SD card slot in there?

Not everyone uses SD cards. More slots = more size/weight/cost/complexity. You want an SD slot, get the adapter.


53 posted on 01/29/2010 1:06:39 AM PST by ctdonath2 (Pelosi is practically President; the Obama is just her talk show host.)
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To: Constitutionalist Conservative

I don’t think I’ll be an early adopter, this time. I type a lot on the web, so was hoping for a good keyboard interface. And since I will need to sync with a phone, I wish there were a USB input.I’ve also got 1 1/2 more years on my contract with Sprint, with a card modem and unlimited data - I’d like the option to try the IPad out with it.
They are kidding about the 64 GB storage limit, aren’t they?


54 posted on 01/29/2010 1:13:37 AM PST by hocndoc (http://www.LifeEthics.org (I've got a mustard seed and I'm not afraid to use it.) (RIA)
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To: Constitutionalist Conservative
Whiny author. The iPad is what it is, not something else.

it should already have more storage capacity.

64GB isn't enough for ... what, exactly? It's meant to be tethered to a full-bore computer at times, with what you need loaded on - not your entire collection, most of which you don't use. It also is meant for "cloud computing" use: need something, get it via WiFi/3G.

no compelling input abilities

Page-sized multi-touch. That's what it does. No, really, that's what it does. It's not for other abilities. Want other abilities, get a device designed for those.

do you really want to bring an external keyboard to class? Or to a meeting?

Then this isn't the product you're looking for.

no phone abilities

3G + Skype = phone. It's 2010; let's get past that "phone" model already (I'm heading there ASAP).

Why Apple didn’t position it as a reading device baffles me.

iBooks. And, hello, it's a lot more than just a reading device; given the choice of a $300 kindle or a $500 do-a-lot-more iPad, many will buy the latter.

they chose to make a giant iPod Touch

Exactly what I wanted.

Apple should have targeted it squarely at one audience.

They're creating the audience. Unlike every other tablet maker who saw the niche as "Windows notebook minus keyboard", they see what the iPhone did in creating a whole new multi-million-customer market.

...

I'll grant the complaint of no user-facing camera. This thing has "videophone" written all over it (likewise every other phone with a camera today - but no, we don't get that yet from anyone).

On the whole: the author bought into all the hype, hysteria, rhetoric and projectionism. This product is great; it is what it should be, no more & no less.

55 posted on 01/29/2010 1:25:38 AM PST by ctdonath2 (Pelosi is practically President; the Obama is just her talk show host.)
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To: RightOnline

Yep, I agree exactly.

I’m a Mac fan and user from way back, and I’m disappointed there’s no Flash, no multi-tasking and no camera.

I also was hoping it’d run OSX so I can load my own apps, not the ones that Apple wants me to use, and nothing more...which means no Photoshop, Dreamweaver, InDesign, Illustrator, etc.

Darnit, they didn’t want to position it as a media reader/web surfer and give us a camera and multi-tasking, but also didn’t want to position it as a touch-capable netbook done the right way.

Too big to carry while working out, no camera for video chat, no multi-tasking so I can’t surf the net while reading my email.

Yeah..I’m disappointed.

Ed


56 posted on 01/29/2010 1:26:48 AM PST by Sir_Ed
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To: gibtx2

Yeah...Dem lurker; yep....that’s me.

Now where the hell did YOU come from?


57 posted on 01/29/2010 2:33:23 AM PST by RightOnline
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To: Sir_Ed

Wow.......ya know, I hadn’t even caught the fact that this little beast doesn’t run OSX. What a joke.......


58 posted on 01/29/2010 2:34:22 AM PST by RightOnline
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To: Swordmaker
Who said it doesn't? Exchange is part of the iPhone OS... which is on the iPad. I don't know for sure, but I suspect that is FUD. Nope. I am a developer. Not there.
59 posted on 01/29/2010 3:27:55 AM PST by Tzfat
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To: visualops

Ping to ya :)


60 posted on 01/29/2010 6:54:49 AM PST by TheStickman
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