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2010: The Year of the Slate Device

Flavius

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I thought that with the advent of the iPad the Kindle and its brethren would be in for a major struggle since they are all one-trick-ponies, you know - who's buying MP3 players these days?

But now, at the end of 2010 it all makes sense. I think. What happened was that both the iPad - and the Kindle (and some other devices on their coat tails) sold like hotcakes. The advent of the iPad created a major paradigm shift where a complete computer illiterate would want and buy a mobile computer appliance and successfully use it.

All of a sudden the Kindle, a 'similar' device, a slate as well, another appliance-style device, as easy to use as the iPad appeared on the radar screen of people how only recently learned about mobile computing appliances.

I bought an iPad for my wife the first day it came out, already knowing that I was going to get the 3G version as well. My wife loved everything about it - but rarely ever used it, turning my arguments against laptops (and netbooks specifically) against the iPad. She said: "If I have the choice to either use the iPad or my 27" iMac, you know, I chose the iMac. That's a no-brainer, isn't it? The iPad is a goner."

And gone it was. Soon after the 3G version came out, we sold out first day iPad on ebay for a very good price.

For Christmas I got my wife a Kindle 3. She loves it, embraces it (still won't read the manual) and knows how to handle it.
 
iPad or iMac/MacBook? I think people are going to go with the Mac most of the time.

However, I've noticed most of the iPad owners that I know are PC/Windows users. The iPad is often their very first Apple product (aside from maybe an iPod).
 
The ipad and the kindle really have two very different functions. I don't think they'll be competing directly until color e-ink (or perhaps until very fast color e-ink). Both devices let you search the internet and read books, but one is a much better e-reader and one is a much better internet browser. They can exist together for the time being.
 
I have many Kindle e-books, but I read them on an iPad. I like the backlit screen. My iPad works fine for me as an e-reader; I would never want an actual Kindle.
 
I think a few years down the line tablet PCs will become the norm and are on their way to replace the laptop.

Currently laptops are far more powerful than a tablet but you "pay" for it too with weight, battery life and cost. You just can't comfortably fall down onto the couch and do some web browsing with a laptop.. a tablet allows that.

However tablets are still developing.. Apple (as usual) made the first gigantic leap with a powerful and very well designed product with the usual "Apple flaws" (no flash, no possibility for external devices like USB etc) but once serious competitors get their shit together and start to release good tablets on their own i believe the public will even appreciate them more.

Personally i wouldn't mind having an iPad or a good, similar product (so far there are none.. most what i read about are amateurish products nowhere near the quality of the iPad) but i just can't part with the money to actually buy a device which i won't use that much.
I'm pretty much set with my PC table, the 24 inch flatscreen monitor and my comfy chair.
 
You just can't comfortably fall down onto the couch and do some web browsing with a laptop..

Of course you can.

I do it all the time, and I don't even need to keep the laptop on my lap. I put it in the middle of the couch (at an angle toward me) on top of one of those laptop cushions. The laptop stays in that position for casual browsing/typing (such as right now, while I'm watching high stakes poker on tv), and I only put the laptop on my lap for heavy paper-writing.
 
iPads and the like may replace laptops for very casual computer users but they're a very poor substitute for anyone who needs to do real work.
 
I bought an iPad for my wife the first day it came out, already knowing that I was going to get the 3G version as well. My wife loved everything about it - but rarely ever used it, turning my arguments against laptops (and netbooks specifically) against the iPad. She said: "If I have the choice to either use the iPad or my 27" iMac, you know, I chose the iMac. That's a no-brainer, isn't it? The iPad is a goner."

This was EXACTLY experience with an iPad.

It's a cool cool device for really short bursts. It's really slick. But I frequently found myself getting irritated, putting it away and going to get my laptop instead.

Then when I wanted to do work at a coffee shop, the iPad just wasn't good enough and I started taking my laptop again.

I actually had about a week and a half where it was my primary device while I was shopping for a new laptop. It was woefully inadequate.

It's also too big and heavy to use with one hand. It's not bad if you don't already own a smartphone. Otherwise it's very much a "couch device"... except i don't hang out on the couch all that often. :)
 
The iPad is a locked down proprietary device that restricts your rights.

The Kindle and eBooks like it are devices that threaten consumer freedoms and rights-

http://www.defectivebydesign.org/KindleSwindle

http://www.defectivebydesign.org/amazon-kindle-swindle

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/02/25/opinion/25blount.html

http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/07/20/kindle-swindle/

eBooks are Fahrenheit 451 and 1984 rolled into one-

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fahrenheit_451

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1984

enabling selective editing, history-revision, and "book burning' by the seller/license holders-

http://www.fastcompany.com/blog/kit...84-kindle-recall-was-legal-not-big-brotherish

http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2011/01/huckleberry-finn-nword-slave/

A short scifi story written over 10 years ago predicted exactly this outcome-

http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/right-to-read.html

Samuel T Cogley was right :(

http://memory-alpha.org/wiki/Samuel_T._Cogley

Does this mean tablets won't/shouldn't be a Big Thing- nope.

Just be sure to get tablets that are open, or trivial to make open/free (speech), or "rooted".

Reading unencrypted .pdf, text/ASCII/html/ePub versions of books on more open tablets like Android 3.0+, Meego and various Linux's like Ubuntu will be commonplace moving forward- just need to thwart the "bad guys" like the Kindle and it's ilk...

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MeeGo

http://www.android.com/

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Android_%28operating_system%29

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ubuntu

http://www.ubuntu.com/

There will be a HUGE number of Atom cpu and ARM cpu tablets this year- and they won't cost an ARM and a leg :D

Plenty of free books at

http://www.gutenberg.org/wiki/Main_Page
 
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