ie8 fix

For tablets to succeed mainstream: Consumers simply must “get it”

By | May 4, 2011, 5:41am PDT

Summary: Tablet makers are racing to get products to market, but they are missing a key point to get consumers to buy them. Consumers simply must “get it” when exposed to a given tablet.

Tablets are everywhere these days, in TV ads, big box retail stores and certainly all over the web. Where they aren’t is even more significant: in lots of consumer’s hands. Tablet makers are racing to get products to market, but they are missing a key factor to get consumers to buy them. Consumers must look at a given tablet and “get it”; they must be able to see in just a short time how that product will fit in their lives. OEMs are failing at getting that message across, with the exception of Apple with the iPad.

I have been using and testing tablets of all kinds for years, and a big part of that testing is gauging consumer reaction to a given product. The mainstream consumer market is the target for tablets, and understanding how they react to them is vital for determining how well a given device might do in the market.

One of the first things I do with a tablet, whether it is an iPad, Android tablet and currently the BlackBerry PlayBook, is hand it to regular folks with no explanation. The purpose is to see how quickly, and how excitedly, they jump into using the tablet in hand. Their reaction to a product is valuable, because even though hands-on impression is extremely important for this type of product, the marketing that most companies use for such devices is terrible. The first hands-on exposure to a tablet usually is the all-important first impression upon which he/she will base all thoughts about not only this product but often for all other tablets that come along. Watching what they do with the tablet is a good indicator of how consumers will react to it when it comes time to buy or not.

Invariably, the reaction people have to the iPad is very different from that with other tablets. Apple has designed the iPad and its interface to be totally without intimidation. The iPad in use follows through with the marketing message that Apple gives: you just do things with it. No computing metaphors, no talk of all the different email services it can access. You will never hear the word “tablet” in an iPad ad. You just do things with it, and consumers “get it”. Every time I’ve handed an iPad to someone they start touching icons and swiping the screen, and in seconds they are doing things with it, and totally ignoring everything around them.

Doing the same thing with the Motorola XOOM, Android’s flagship tablet, couldn’t be more different. The person I hand the XOOM to invariably stares at it for a while, trying to figure out how to turn it on. Once its running, I see more staring as they try to figure out not only what to do with it, but also how to do it. Google went with a desktop computer interface for Honeycomb, and that is a huge mistake. Computer desktops intimidate most people and that carries over to the Honeycomb tablet.

Once the individual gets past the visible intimidation to the Android tablet, they usually ask me what they can do with it. They don’t get it. They don’t visualize all the neat things they can do with this tablet, and that’s a big failure. Almost without exception they play with the tablet for a few minutes and hand it back to me. The first impression failed to excite them in any way, and thus failed to make them see what they might do with a tablet of their own. They are not going to buy one.

The marketing of these tablets isn’t helping things. Remember the XOOM TV ads that showed the user morphing into a cyborg with the XOOM in hand? What message did that send to the prospective buyer of the XOOM? Not one that made it clear how the XOOM could be of use to the average buyer. In fact it sent an intimidating message to the viewer. Not only did the consumer not get it, the ad maker didn’t either.

I see folks have the same reaction to the BlackBerry PlayBook as they do to the Android tablets. They are less intimidated by the hardware, which is a plus for RIM, but they just stare at the screen for a while as they try to determine what to do with the PlayBook. There is no immediate “doing things” as is the common reaction to the iPad. It’s not just a lack of apps on the PlayBook either, it’s a complete lack of vision that the product invokes in the user. No joy of experimenting with the device, no excitement of discovery of what this new type of gadget can do. Often there is that same question I hear a lot: “what can I do with it?”

Tablet makers must make sure that, like the iPad, their product has a simple hardware design. They must put an interface on it that is totally intuitive and inviting to be touched, and most importantly invites the user to do things. No intimidation is allowed, just the invitation for exploration with the tablet. Make that the focus of all marketing for the tablet. Not whiz-bang features, not sophisticated functionality; get the message out that you can just do things with this tablet. That’s all mainstream consumers want to hear.

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Topics

James Kendrick has been using mobile devices since they weighed 30 pounds, and has been sharing his insights on mobile technology for almost that long.

Disclosure

James Kendrick

James Kendrick has no affiliations or relationships that need to be disclosed.

Biography

James Kendrick

James Kendrick has been using mobile devices since they weighed 30 pounds, and has been sharing his insights on mobile technology for almost that long. Prior to joining ZDNet, James was the Founding Editor of jkOnTheRun, a CNET Top 100 Tech Blog that was acquired by GigaOM in 2008 and is now part of that prestigious tech network. James' writing has appeared in many print publications: Smartphone and Pocket PC Magazine, Information Week and Laptop Magazine to name a few. James' coverage of the mobile technology sector has regularly appeared in the New York Times, Salon.com and CNN/ Fortune online. Not just a writer, James has filmed numerous video reviews and how-tos that have garnered well over a million viewers. He has appeared on local news segments and been interviewed by the Associated Press on mobile technology topics. Additionally, James has been podcasting about mobile technology for years.

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0 Votes
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Excellent Analysis
Takalok 4th May 2011
That was exactly the question my wife asked me the other day, "What do you do with a tablet?"

LOL
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Buy her an iPad...
Bruizer 4th May 2011
@Takalok

In three weeks she will ask, "Why did I ever use that computer thing..."
@Bruizer "to do productive things" will be your answer. happy
@Bruizer That's funny I have yet to hear anyone say that, if they have to type. If they just look - then MAYBE.
@jhughesy...

Why does a computing device always need to be productive? In a work environment, yes productivity is key, but in the consumer space?... well not so much.
@Snooki_smoosh_smoosh
Not so much "productive" as useful.
My iPad - I like it for the games and some other things it can do - I hate it for the limited web experience and the push for apps vs bookmarks.

I want to play games, surf the web, do email, writes notes, produce learning/work documents, etc....

So far, no tablet can do all this.
There are notebooks that can. but not as convenient as you should be able to do on a tablet.

Hi @rhonin,

Alex from RIM here. PlayBook supports the full web, including Flash. That?s definitely important since half of the top 17,000 websites are Flash-based (according to data from Alexa, Quantcast and the Fortune 500). Support for HTML5, CSS and JavaScript round out the full web experience.

As I mentioned to @Jhughesy, the PlayBook also comes loaded with notebook-type productivity out-of-the-box including document viewing and editing, as well as remote PC and secure VPN access using its built-in Wi-Fi connection, allowing you to access enterprise data and applications. When it comes to email, BlackBerry smartphone users receive wireless and secure access to their BlackBerry PIM applications like email, calendar, contacts and even BBM via BlackBerry Bridge, and we native email apps are on the way (see a demo here: http://bbry.lv/jkzxUz)

On the gaming front, we?re working with companies like Unity, Ideaworks, Gameloft and EA, and just announced that Angry Birds is coming to PlayBook!

Cheers,
Alex, RIM Social Media Team
@Takalok
What a boring wife... mine is like when can I get my iPad 2?!
@Hasam1991 exciting wife wanting iPad 2
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@Hasam1991
Sounds like a boring marriage. I can see why she prefers the iPad over other things. wink
Kendrick has written a good analysis and observation. He has hit the nail on the head. I have observed the same reaction to various devices.
I personally chose the iPad over the Xoom when they sat side-by-side in the showroom. But I have found how quickly I infuriated forum geeks who came right out and said I was crazy for even suggesting such a thing. The fact they were not able to subjectively evaluate what I shared shows the whole "get it" is over their head.

Not only does the public get it... so does Kendrick.
@Hasam1991 Maybe she can't wait to get an iPad 2 because she has a boring husband. happy
@Takalok It's basically a laptop for people who don't really need a laptop, but still need to do more than listen to music and answer phone calls. My mind immediately goes to all those people who can barely turn their computers on who made me "fix" their computers all the time. Those are the people who will probably get the best use out of tablets.
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You Are So Right
Xyberion1K3 4th May 2011
You are so right @Takalok. I use my laptop for so many different tasks, including reading news stories and finding music. A tablet will probably never become a need for me. I have no interest in having one. Tablets are mainly for peoples who want to communicate with other people, read materials or listen to music. Tablets are not for me.
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Exactly
Snooki_smoosh_smoosh 4th May 2011
@nickswift498... And this is the crowd that this is a hit with.

I am someone who will always need a laptop/desktop around, but I also see the value of sitting in my living room with a lightweight device to read/surf/ and generally do those tasks that I don't need a 6 to 8lb laptop sitting on my lap piping all kinds of heat into my lap.
@Takalok :

Make a tablet that can do everything my laptop can do --- then I'll "get it". Otherwise, many of the tablet offerings are merely entertainment-only devices that are only worth half their suggested retail prices.

I will buy a tablet only then the specs indicate that it will capably replace my laptop. Isn't that how laptops got so popular --- once they were able to do everything desktops could do --- the average user understood the importance of the laptop device. Tablets aren't there yet, but those using Windows 7 is a better step in the right direction.

Right now, the Acer Iconia has the form factor (dual touchscreens) that today's tablets should have used initially. Today, many of the popular tablets indicate that consumers really don't need many of these "high performance" desktops & laptops like they think do. The average consumer needs a basic computing device that can access the Internet, read & write basic documents, and play music & videos.
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Consumers Must GET IT and really NEED IT
davesimpsonjr 4th May 2011
I think you are right. A Tablet needs to be more than a consumption device! Put the dreaded stylus on it and make it a productive device. And yes I know writing recognition was always a problem for early PDAs (i.e. PalmPilot).
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You don't 'get it'
camcost@... 4th May 2011
@jlt0x
By no means does a tablet have to replace a laptop for everything. My iPad replaces my laptop for about 50 to 60% of my computing needs. Those needs make-up about 90% of my time spent when not using the computer for work related activities. It is those leisurely tasks, such as checking email and facebook, scanning web sites, looking up a contact/address; seeing what's playing at the local theater, and various other social media activities that make the iPad function far more efficiently and easily than my laptop (especially if the laptop's turned-off and has to go through the tedious process of turning-on).

My tablet has not replaced my laptop for everything, but for the things I mentioned, it has taken away the desire to go backwards and use the laptop (with it's ancient 1990 form factor) for those activities.
@davesimpsonjr: Actually, Graffiti on the Palm was a *very* effective, very easy to learn entry method. Palm blew it when they unnecessarily switched to Graffiti 2. It was much more cumbersome and much less accurate than the original Graffiti. The Treo keyboards were good, but just not as fast as Graffiti.

What shown for me with it was that when I would demo or teach someone the handwriting recognition, I would frequently get the "No, no... let me figure it out" response from end users. They found it engaging, or as James puts it, they "got it."

In fact that was true of the Palm devices, in general, through the Tungsten series. You could put it in the hands of their target audience (in this case, business users) and let them go at it. It was intuitive and they could figure it out easily. I usually had to make them give mine back.

Palm lost that vision and lost the market. Microsoft never understood the vision and they spent a decade trying to pitch Win CE/Win Mobile on a mostly uninterested market.

Apple found that vision and established a market. There is certainly room for other players, but they need to take the time to understand their users and not expect their users to have to learn to understand them.
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@Takalok
This article is like a doctor saying that patients "don't get it".
The wrong party is being handed the "responsibility" for success.
@kd5auq
That metaphor would work if the users were something akin to sick and starting the tablet was a cure.

I would say that if a device works as expected, the possibility of engagement is greater. Mr. Kendrick, as a reviewer, is testing what seems natural.

We note that Apple is extremely well focused in its marketing on showing non-users what can be done and what the fundamental gestures are.

What were the ads I saw for the Xoom? Oh yes, some hipster looking guy in a sea of white jump-suit/hooded guys sending virtual flowers to the only woman who was not in a white jump-suit. (With a disclaimer about how the flowers were not exactly composed or sent via the device.) And Apple shows New Yorker covers done on the iPad.
Hi @Jhughesy,

Alex from RIM here. PlayBook comes loaded with ?productive? functionality, including document viewing and editing, as well as remote PC and secure VPN access using its built-in Wi-Fi connection, allowing you to access enterprise data and applications, just like you would with a computer but with the added bonus that you can do it while you?re on-the-go.

Let me know what other types of productivity you?re looking to accomplish.

Cheers,
Alex, RIM Social Media Team
@alexkinsella I'd like to be able to get my corporate email without having a stupid BlackBerry as a second device. Fix that, then I might care.
@Takalok
I agree. I searched and searched and still cannot find a reason to but a tablet.
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Simple ain't easy!
Userama 4th May 2011
Microsoft has been trying to do "simple" for years, and still hasn't been able to accomplish it successfully. Let's face it--engineers tend to design things for technically-oriented users like themselves. It takes strong leadership to emphasize ease of use as a primary design goal--and to keep refining a design until it is done right! As you point out, Apple has hit the mark with the iPad. While techies may deride Apple products as "toys", the vast majority of users appreciate how tech doesn't get in the way of just doing things.
@Userama

I agree here but with one caveat. I am sure comparing the ipad ease of use to the windows OS. These are 2 completely different animals.
@MLHACK Yet both were put on Tablet computers...
@Userama Try comparing it to Windows Phone 7 which is a touch based interface. Very simple to use and more integrated than the iOS UI which is all app based with no integration between apps.

Windows 7 is for a different function.
@Userama
Why not just say that GM is better then Boeing because look how easy it is to drive a car vs. Flying a 747!

Looking at OS X, it sure isn't any easier then Windows 7.

Should we attribute that to Job's poor leadership?
@Bill Pharaoh Having just purchased a Macbook a few weeks ago, so I can run OS X, WIndows and Linux, I would agree the OS X is not any easier than Windows. There are a few things that Windows does better from a UI. But from what I read...Lion should add those as well.
@Bill Pharaoh

Actually, I have had the opportunity to teach people to use both Win7 and OS X and while the basic "launch this" is about the same learning curve, just about everything else -- even just "quit this" -- isn't. OS X beats Windows soundly. Things (like the system control panel) are much better organized, there's a lot less trying to guess where something is.

Personally I'm not very organized myself and this highlights another advantage OS X has: Search is front-and-center and fast, two things you can't say about search in Win7. Can't remember where you put that file? Searching for it (including content, not just the filename) yields results within a few seconds. Not minutes or longer as it is with my Windows machines.

The real failure I see with Windows, though, is long-term. They're really hard for the average person to keep running, particularly if the user is one of those "I just clicked yes" users who are constantly being malware-infected. The machines rot really fast, and it's not made any better by (almost) every new Windows release requiring a lot more resources than the one before -- meaning that either you upgrade your hardware every couple of years or the machine becomes deathly slow.

I got my mother-in-law a Mac as a defensive measure, she continually broke the Windows machine that preceeded it. The Mac was twice as expensive than the PC, but the PC required me to do major system administration (10-14 hours at a shot) three or four times every year and a lot of phone support too. The Mac? She calls up with simple things ("my Dock disappeared") but there's been no malware, no disappearing drivers, no printers that stop working mysteriously. The one big administration task was that a few months ago her drive filled up. It turned out that here system logs had been growing since 2005 and finally filled the whole disk. I upgraded the system (she was still running that 2005 OS), cleaned up the logs, and upgraded the RAM to the maximum the hardware would support (only 1G, this being a 2005-era Mac mini). This all took about two hours, including the trip to Staples for the RAM.

Is OS X easier than Windows? It is. It's a LOT easier, both for naive users day-to-day and for those who have to keep the machines running for naive users. You probably don't believe it unless you have to deal with both of them daily, but I do and the difference is striking.

jim frost
jimf@frostbytes.com
  • Flagged
@Jim Frost ... Don't know what planet you used Windows 7 on... but the search features are unlimited, amazingly fast and FRONT AND CENTER. In fact... Windows Vista Search is better than OSX. As for the control panel? Give me a break. OSX has very few controls, since you don't get to set them, that doesn't make them easier to control...or simpler. In fact, many things can only be adjusted in OSX but knowing what commands to type into the command line UNIX interface. This seriously undermines the user friendliness.

Tell me, Why does iPhoto try to IMPORT all the photos from a network connected drive when you open it the first time without asking you if you want to do so first? I know it is simpler than asking you a bunch of silly questions like... umm Would you like to fill your 250 GB Hard drive with 3 TB of pictures? Yeah.. it doesn't ask... just takes off and doesn't even respond to "Force Close". My Niece learned this little lesson... don't connect to a network drive before starting up iPhoto.

Then you mentioned upgrades... You have to upgrade Macs every year or 2 also. Apple even forces you to upgrade the hardware if you want to upgrade to the new version MUCH quicker. How many Macs from 2003 can you install OSX Snow Leopard on? Answer: ZERO. 2005? ZERO. 2007? some. Windows 7 is installable on any x86 machine with 1GB of RAM and will run smoothly. Including my 2002 HP desktop at home that I use to let guests surf the internet on.

Windows UI is very easy to use..much easier than OSX.
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I disagree on that
Bill Pharaoh 4th May 2011
@jimfrost
Maybe to you it appears to be easier, but for those I know that use both, I still get calls with the same questions, no matter what computer they're using.

OSX is really not any easier then windows, the proof for me is what I see and what I hear from those that use Macs.
@condelirios
Hyperbole doesn't help your argument at all. Snow Leopard will install on any Intel Mac, which includes ALL Macs from 2007 (and most from 2006) onward, not "some" as you claim.

And Macs don't need to be replaced every year. Where the hell do you come up with that? If anything, Macs have typically been able to support successive versions of OS X for at least four years. Snow Leopard is an exception only because it drops support for PPC Macs, and even there Snow Leopard came out more than 3 years after Apple phased out the last G4 and G5 models.

My 2006 iMac is running Snow Leopard, and it will also run OS X Lion. A 2002 computer running Win 7 is more the exception than the rule.
@Bill Pharaoh

"Looking at OS X, it sure isn't any easier then Windows 7."

I cannot agree with you. I've used PCs since the original XT computers and I've used just about every version of Windows for PCs. After those couple of decades, I changed to an iMac several months ago. It is hard to put into words, but OS X is far better to use. I still have a laptop with W7 Pro installed and I really dislike using it now. There is something about OS X that simply makes more sense, some intangible quality. Quite simply, my 27" iMac is the best computer that I've ever used . . . and I've used a LOT of computers!
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@Bill Pharaoh - Your analogy isn't so great. All these mobile products are aimed to *roughly* the same customer base. GM and Boeing aren't even close.

Yes, Windows and Android devices might be more flexible and, in some cases, may be able to do a little more heavy lifting.

But if it's too hard and unintuitive to do the basic stuff, people don't always stick around to figure out what heavier lifting the device can help them with.

I'm a developer and take a lot of pride in making things easy to use. It is very hard to do. You have to spend a lot of time with the people who will be using the programs before and during the writing of the code.

The only Apple product in my house is my kids iPod, but it's obvious to me that Apple gets it which is why their users get it.
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So True
dksmidtx 4th May 2011
James - This is the best piece yet written that explains teh iPad "it" factor. As much as I am frustrated by the lack of MS Office on tablets and integration with the office network, I too do not "get it" from the consumer perspective. The iPad is the antithesis of intimidation, which Moto has been foisting on the comsumer public with it's "Droid" attitude, which now spills over to the XOOM. Without a doubt, and with a lot of sweat and perserverence (as I learned with a rooted Nook Color), you too can make Android tablets do most of the "mainstream things" an iPad can do...except...pretend that it is a guitar or drum set; easily organize and view piles of photographs; browse the internet (YES - try the standard Android tablet browser, and you are soon switching to Dolphin HD - makes Safari seem really good); watch real time sonograms; CONNECT TO MY ITUNES COLLECTION - all without turning yourself into a pretzel in the process.

Sorry folks, and hope I don't start a flame war since I am as geeky as anyone on this forum, but comparing the rest of the tablet universe to the ipad harkens back to comparing DOS 2.1 on an IBM green screen to the original Mac - with the Mac having the superior depth of software. For a more modern comparison, think of the iPod click wheel and the then existing state of MP3 players...
@dksmidtx Respect other opinions, but I prefer the Android browser over Safari. When I encounter Flash videos only, I can play them assuming my device is 2.2 or higher. With my Tab, I can zoom the page, and the text reflows which it is does not on Safari. Unfortunately, some 10" tablets are eliminating the reflow, bad move IMO. My experience with the Android browser has been fine, have not tried Dolphin.

I store my iTunes on a NAS, and using a free file explorer app, I can play all the iTunes collections easily on my Android devices. I can even play, non-DRM videos from my NAS on my Windows Mobile devices some dating back to 2004 using WM built-in file explorer.

What the author did not mention is unless you ultimately go to the "intimidating" email setup screen, that iPad friendly email icon is useless. If I don't connect the iPad to iTunes at least once, none of the icons will work.

With the new Android tablets, I input my Gmail address when it is setting-up for the first time, and all contacts, calendar, and market purchases are automatically downloaded. The only other question I am asked during setup is my timezone. I can skip inputting my Google email address if I wish. My Android tablets have yet to be attached to a computer. The iPad is useless unless you initialize it via iTunes on a computer.

I don't believe I have changed the icons on the Xoom's home screen. Let's see how intimidating / unfriendly they are: Browser with a world icon, Gmail, Talk, Music, Books, and Market with a shopping bag icon along with a clock widget which shows the current time based on the time zone I selected when setting up. Don't look any geekier / intimidating than the iPad icons, but I do respect other opinions. If I select the app icon at the top right of Honeycomb, I get all the app icons which is what I see with the iPad.

Maybe the reason people are more comfortable with the iPad is they have been inundated with iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch ads on network TV for much longer than any Android ads. If they watch network TV, they have seen dozens of iPad ads showing it doing "cool" things so they know from the ads some of the things an iPad can do. I agree, the Android tablet ads should show the tablets doing "cool" things rather than "geek" appeal, but the Droid theme did sell a lot of smartphones. The Android ads should emphasize the cool things the Android tablet can do that the iPad cannot do like playing Flash videos, or uploading a file to Dropbox which is not just a photo / video. Based on the number of non-tech friends using Dropbox, it is not a "geek" only app, and several non-tech friends have expressed their frustration with the iPad's lack of Flash support. Also, some ads should emphasize how easy an Android tablet is to setup the first time with no computer connection vs. the required iTunes tether for the iPad.

Being a gadget addict, I have an iPad, and an iPad 2. They are fun to use, but too limited for my needs. I do realize all needs are different, and for some, maybe the iPad is the ideal tablet marketing hype aside.

I tried replacing a laptop with an iPad on a recent weekend trip. At night, I would check my email, and my favorite tech sites. Several times per evening, I received the too frequent Flash needed message. Since videos are important to me, I did use my laptop, or Android device to watch the videos the iPad could not display. I also update several databases on my Android devices daily, and upload the files to Dropbox so other devices have access. Although the database is available on iOS, I cannot upload a database file directly to Dropbox from iOS. An Android tablet, or smartphone can replace my laptop for a weekend, but not an iPad, or iPhone.

Again, I respect we all have different opinions based on what we want our devices to accomplish. For me, an Android, or horror of horrors, a Windows 7 based tablet is a much better fit for my needs whenever I want to do more than watch videos.
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DOS 2.1 on an IBM green screen to the original Mac
camcost@... Updated - 4th May 2011
@dksmidtx
Yep, I was there. About fifty employees and only two of us had the new Macintosh computers. Our little boxes gathered much amazement from all the poor folks who had to mess with DOS all day. The only people in our office who weren't impressed were the two IT guys. You would have thought IT computer folks would have gobbled-up the new technology, but it scared them.

It's almost the same scenario happening all over again. Look on the forums at who is frightened by the iPad... and who isn't. Once again the computer elite/literate/snobs/nerds/geeks/sophisticates/experts/etc are the ones who don't seem to 'get it' while the average guy does.
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You assume too much.
Bill Pharaoh 4th May 2011
@camcost@...
elite/literate/snobs/nerds/geeks/sophisticates/experts/etc are the ones who don't seem to 'get it' while the average guy does.

Totally off the mark there.

First, people aren't "frightened by the iPad". That's an assumption many use to justify their purchase of an iPad.

I don't need an iPad to watch movies, I have a 42" Plasma TV (and 5.1) for that. I don't need it to read e-mails, I have a cell phone or computer to do that. I don't need it to type documents on the road, I have an office to do that.

Yet bring up those reasons for not wanting a tablet, (or why we aren't impressed) and its always the same people who will claim "that you're so scared of this great new technology!".

We're not scared or impressed - we just don't see a need for it at the moment, and when pointing out those reasons in a discussion, we should be asking why can't those same people accept our reasons for not buying a tablet as valid reasons?

What are those people trying to justify?
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One possible contender arises
etee74 4th May 2011
And that is the Color NOOK, with the most recent update. I haven't actually looked at one of them yet (though I want to), but the concept is right: it is primarily an e-Reader, but it is an e-Reader "with benefits". In the form of additional apps (which will work the same way the NOOK e-Reader functionality works) that let you "do stuff".

That ability - to just pick up the device, hit the "power on" button, and start doing things - is what really drew me to the iPad.

~EdT.
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"Mainstream" consumers have realized that they don't need to be saddled with a desktop PC, Windows laptop, or even a netbook to do the vast majority of their "computing."

Yes, you're not going to do your small business payroll, architectural design, or serious gaming on an iPad, but the "mainstream" consumer either doesn't do that or they've already got a machine for that. Tablets, aside from the narrow (and short) verticals where MS has made what traction it has, are really consumer devices that offer a subset of a PC's abilities with much greater portability. As a result, tablet owners may be doing "less" but they're doing it more in far more places.

Beyond that, the rest is just Apple's user experience genius. John C. Dvorak nailed it when he observed that with Apple any give action is either easy and totally intuitive or simply impossible. Which is exactly what "mainstream" consumers want. they want to "get it" if it's possible, otherwise it really doesn't matter.
@matthew_maurice

i not not agree with this statement " Apple any give action is either easy and totally intuitive or simply impossible"

Apple tends to take a smug approach to our way is the best and the ONLY way. I think if apple would listen a little more to there customer base.
@MLHACK

"I think if apple would listen a little more to there customer base."

Ha! I think the reason Apple is were it is today is because they've listened to their customer base. wink
@dave95. - definitely not. They've told their consumer base what to want, not listened and provided. If they did the iPad2 would've been a true 2.0 not a 1.5 incremental update. Why it has an inferior screen aspect ratio, pixels per inch, and contrast ratio to their iPhone screen makes no sense. What's with the 0.3MP front and 0.7MP rear cameras compared to the iPhone 5MP? Still no stereo speakers in the device? What gives? The headphones have stereo sound... they have TWO speakers in the device. They just put them side by side and they both play MONO sound. Where's WiFi iTunes syncing / updating? This device is supposed to be post-computer as Jobs says, yet the first thing you need to do when you buy it is hook it up to a PC with a cord. C'mon! Even the Playbook syncs wirelessly and it's not even a completed product yet. I've had an iPad, not buying an iPad2... skipping over to the Playbook this time and hopefully they'll actually listen to us and keep the product updated.
@MLHACK

It's been my experience on the iPad: If I can't figure out how to do something in 30 seconds or less it can't be done. There is no such thing as a list of "tips and tricks" for an iPad.

I also think Apple is where it is today by completely ignoring what their customer base SAYS that they want and thinking of ways to create something they never thought they would want but will when they see it.

How many customers were just begging Apple for a tablet with a cell-phone OS 5 years ago? What about now?
@matthew_maurice
I wonder if there is even one buyer of an Apple iGadget that doesn't already have at least one "regular" computer, either a Mac or Windows system, into which the device can be plugged. I don't see the iPad as much as a computer replacement, whether laptop or desktop, but an easily carried addition, when a fully featured computer is not needed.

I have a Mac Pro for doing work, but when I want to read a book or magazine article, the iPad is a much better choice, because it allows me to sit in my recliner with my feet up. Reading something in bed before falling asleep, is also an excellent use for my iPad 2.

I use my truck to haul heavy stuff, but I don't use it to go for a drive to visit my grandson.
@arminw Umm... They wouldn't be able to use the iPad if they don't have a regular Windows or OSX PC... because it will not run without first phoning home to iTunes. You have to connect it to a PC or Mac to get it running.

So.. the answer is... no there aren't any of those people.
Bringing in 95% less developer revenue than Apple's Apps Store, the only thing you can call Google's Android Market is a financial failure.

Part of this, I believe, is the structure of Android of putting Widgets out front and center. To get to the Market Place, you have to find the screen with all the applications on it. Then, you have to find, in all the added crapware added by handset makers/carriers (I include useful applications here as well), the Market Place applications.

I have had two friends that actually thought the application homescreen on their Droid X was the Market Place. There was so much trial ware and crapware they never realized it was just software shoveled on to their phone. Without help, they never would have found the Android Market.

Compare that to the simply UI of the iPhone. Instead of widgets front and center, it is apps. A goldmine of apps.
@Bruizer pages and pages of apps isn't necessarily a good thing.
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Firat31 15th Aug
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