Go Buy An iPad
So I’m sitting here writing this from my iPad and I wanted to tell you that you should probably go get one. Since purchasing mine 3 weeks ago my Laptop has only left my desk once or twice. I can do virtually everything I need right from the iPad with little trouble. Additionally, the iPad can go places that the laptop can’t.
No Flash…Thank God!
I have been asked and told that the iPad sucks because it doesn’t have flash support. Actually, the opposite is true. The iPad is a next generation device, would you also insist that it have an internal 5.25″ floppy drive so you can load up Harpoon? Flash is, has been, and probably will always be, a mess. On a portable device, it’s worse. The iPad’s battery lasts me 10 to 12 hours of use daily, tabs playing flash video last 2 to 3 hours. He’s the truth about flash. There are only two sets of people who care about the iPad not having flash. The first are the flash developers, heaven forbid they have to learn something knew. The other are the groups of people who hate all things Apple and have to find something that “makes the iPad suck.”
I’ll bet dimes to dollar bills that the ones in the latter category are the same ones that immediately click “skip intro” when they get to a flash website. In other words, no, I really don’t miss Flash at all. I would really likes it to disappear from the web entirely, as most technical people have wanted for years.
I think apple has mostly gotten this right. There is way more right with the iPad than there is wrong. There are some things that I don’t like, but given the market environment with cell phone providers, that isn’t going to change much. I am not sure how I feel about the model Apple has created for developers. I also think that making finding things in the App Store easier would be better for both the developer and the end user. I think it’s hard to justify buying an app sometimes that you are’t completely sure how they work.
All in all, I think that Apple learned some important lessons from the 80s and the Apple Clones we saw. We are seeing the result of those lessons with the iPad and iPhone. These are lessons that are unique to Apple and other companies in the technology world haven’t been afforded. If you think that’s not the case, ask yourself when the last time you saw a copy of Lotus 1-2-3 installed on a computer, or Wordperfect, or how about an external US Robotics V.Everything modem (I still have one if you want a picture). These companies are go one for all intents and purposes and even some that are and have been major players have been marginalized. As of December 2010, Microsoft had sold approximately 1.5 million Windows Phones, at the same point, Apple had sold 16.24 million iPhones. Funny how when apple only has 10% of the PC market they aren’t important, but when Microsoft has only 7.7% of the market, they are the ones calling the others a joke.
I think the market will play out, but as a TOOL, the iOS model wins. Remember, Palm, who was the other player in the smartphone market with RIM not too long ago, is now part of HP and it’s floating at 2.8%. Palm’s CEO Ed Colligan said “We’ve learned and struggled for a few years here figuring out how to make a decent phone, PC guys are not going to just figure this out. They’re not just going to walk in.” That was just 6 years ago, anyone want to ask him about that now? Oh by the way, he left Palm in 2009.
But this is about the iPad. I love it, and I have quit taking a computer with me as I don’t need it anymore. Of course much of that has to do with the quality of the Apps I’m using, and some of, many of these are on par with many of the desktop apps I use. The best ones understand that I don’t need every function available on the iPad, but understand how to know what’s important and what isn’t. Just like on the Mac, it’s the Apps, it’s all about the Apps.



