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10 Reasons to Nix the iPad in Your IT Strategy
CIO Update ^ | March 16, 2010 | By Robert McGarvey

Posted on 03/19/2010 3:04:14 AM PDT by Swordmaker

Brace yourself. Before the month is out, they will be knocking at your door, insisting that Apple’s iPad tablet―for sale on or about April 3 (pre-orders started March 12 at 5:30 pm PST) ―is just the gadget that will solve a multitude of IT problems while, simultaneously, giving your IT strategy a leg up . It will not.

What it will do, say many experts, is create problems. And those problems will become your problems. It’s not just the iPad. Other tablets are not much better, even though Gartner now is projecting an avalanche of 10.5 million tablets to be sold in 2010.

Even if your company has relented and now supports the iPhone, as growing numbers of businesses do (70% of the Fortune 100 are at least testing it, says Apple) you'll want to say "No" to the iPad and other tablets. Here's why:

1. Slow is as slow is. Even the academics join in the dissing. “Tablets and touch screens do not work in traditional enterprise settings because the interface is much slower than the traditional mouse and keyboard,” said James Wolf, an assistant professor of Information Systems at Illinois State University. Moving your hands around a screen is clunky. “The keyboard/mouse is much faster and easier than the tablet’s input.”

2. “The iPad does not run common office productivity tools,” said Lorenz Lammens, a web strategist and managing director at the Online Design Bureau in Dallas. No Microsoft Word, no PowerPoint, not much of anything important to business today.

3. No camera on an iPad. None. How weird is that? No video conferencing. No Skype video.

4. No multitasking allowed on the iPad. At a time when multitasking is the norm, only one non-Apple app can run at a time because, under the hood, the iPad is a gussied up phone (it runs on the iPhone OS).

5. No Flash on iPad. That means no watching Web videos (unless it’s on YouTube, for which a special player is promised).

6. No USB out of the box. So, just how will a user transfer blocks of files? There’s no transferring work to look at later at home. But that doesn't really matter because there’s no app to run that work on anyway, said Lammens. So, maybe the lack of USB makes a kind of only in Cupertino sense.

7. Money talks. A decent netbook can be had for half the $500 Apple is expected to price the bare bones iPad. A tricked-out iPad will cost $829. http://www.apple.com/ipad/pricing/ A really sweet netbook won’t cost more than $400, and this unit will run all the office productivity tools. The economics worsen. A data plan for 3G capable models is expected to add another $30 monthly to the tab.

8. Speaking of money, there is no money in the company budget to pay for iPads. There is money for cell phones so a persistent Apple fan might finagle funding for an iPhone in lieu of a BlackBerry, but there is no budget line for tablets. None. That makes saying "No" definitively easier.

9. Not supporting iPad will be the enterprise norm. ”Consumers will buy the iPad to use as an e-reader,” predicts Chris Hazelton, research director for Mobile and Wireless at The 451 Group. “But the iPad will not be bought by enterprise.”

10. Tablets have never caught on. Apple won’t change that. As far back as Comdex in 2001, Bill Gates predicted tablet computing would change the world. You know what happened to Comdex and tablets, too. Steve Jobs has marketing mojo, no doubt, but it is difficult to see exactly where tablets will fit into enterprise. What do they do that smartphones don’t do better at one level, and netbooks at the other? The right answer is nothing.

Here’s a final irony, per Trevor Doerksen, CEO of MoboVivo, a distributor of content to iPhones, iPods, many other devices. “The people in enterprise I know who have tablets were given them by vendors. They did not pay for them.”

As a busy freelance writer for more than 30 years, Rob McGarvey has written over 1500 articles for many of the nation's leading publications―from Reader's Digest to Playboy and from the NY Times to Harvard Business Review. McGarvey covers CEOs, business, high tech, human resources, real estate, and the energy sector. A particular specialty is advertorial sections for many top outlets including the New York Times, Crain's New York, and Fortune Magazine.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Computers/Internet
KEYWORDS: ilovebillgates; iwanthim; iwanthimbad; microsoftfanboys
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To: Swordmaker
Nope, no Flash... but then the idiot goes on to say there will be no Web video at all... ignoring every other web video format that is supported... excellently.

Yeah, these people seem to equate Flash with YouTube, forgetting that YouTube serves H.264 for Apple products. I can't get one because I would plan to let my kids use it, and my kids love their online Flash games. A netbook worked fine for that.

And I'm betting there will be a camera in V2 of the iPad.

21 posted on 03/19/2010 9:19:49 PM PDT by antiRepublicrat
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To: Swordmaker

If I were writing something while I am away from home, using an iPad, how would I save what I had written? I am not talking about correspondence but rather research, personal writing, etc.

In other words, what kind of backup could I have for what I had done, before I were to travel back home?

I “think” I want an iPad, but this is important: backing up work on it.


22 posted on 03/19/2010 10:17:13 PM PDT by Yaelle
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To: Swordmaker

Can you give me an example of the iPad filling a need in the enterprise that existing technology cannot address?


23 posted on 03/19/2010 10:28:39 PM PDT by tacticalogic ("Oh bother!" said Pooh, as he chambered his last round.)
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To: Nervous Tick
It’s not that it’s Apple, it’s that the pad form factor simply isn’t that universally useful.

Too big to be a phone, too limited to be a computer.

Maybe useful as a web browser while sitting on the can.

24 posted on 03/19/2010 10:37:57 PM PDT by cynwoody
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To: Swordmaker

Wow, I assumed that it would be like an iphone with a monthly service charge. I want one. Satellite internet is absolutely the worst. Any automatic down load or security update is enough to exceed the usage limit and cause them to shut down your computer for 24 hours. It’s really the worst.


25 posted on 03/20/2010 6:51:21 AM PDT by Eva
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To: Yaelle
If I were writing something while I am away from home, using an iPad, how would I save what I had written? I am not talking about correspondence but rather research, personal writing, etc.,

In other words, what kind of backup could I have for what I had done, before I were to travel back home?

I “think” I want an iPad, but this is important: backing up work on it.

I am assuming you are referring to off iPad storage... since the iPad has plenty of storage in its solid state hard drive. For off iPad back-up, I would use my access to my computer at home over the internet via 3G or WiFi, or to my MobileMe account storage. Simple.

26 posted on 03/20/2010 8:47:15 PM PDT by Swordmaker (Remember, the proper pronunciation of IE isAAAAIIIIIEEEEEEE!)
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To: Swordmaker
For off iPad back-up, I would use my access to my computer at home over the internet via 3G or WiFi, or to my MobileMe account storage. Simple.

I was hoping NOT to have to pay for 3G for the iPad. I already have so many accounts and my ATT bill is a killer. I would like to use WiFi but it is not private enough for sending my writing. Is there another way? Would Mobile Me also be sent in a way that is readable by others in the hot spot?

(Yes, I am a bit dumb -- sorry!)

27 posted on 03/20/2010 10:17:15 PM PDT by Yaelle
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To: Sherman Logan
Speaking just from the history of the last 10 years, betting against Apple and Jobs isn’t a smart bet.
He just may have spotted a niche here nobody else could see.

I would not bet against Apple either. They have done very well over the past few years. As long as Apple sells a few million units, they will do OK.

28 posted on 03/20/2010 10:26:30 PM PDT by stripes1776 ("That if gold rust, what shall iron do?" --Chaucer)
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To: Yaelle
I was hoping NOT to have to pay for 3G for the iPad. I already have so many accounts and my ATT bill is a killer. I would like to use WiFi but it is not private enough for sending my writing. Is there another way? Would Mobile Me also be sent in a way that is readable by others in the hot spot?

My understanding is that you should be able to pay for the 3G for the iPad on a month by month basis only when traveling. Also, you should be able to Bluetooth files to your iPhone, if you have one.

For your problems about readability of your writing, PGP would solve that when uploading and downloading your files from your online resources...

I suspect that before too long a version will be available for the iPad.

29 posted on 03/21/2010 3:26:09 AM PDT by Swordmaker (Remember, the proper pronunciation of IE isAAAAIIIIIEEEEEEE!)
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