The top eight things the PC press hides about the iPad

Summary: Why do so many Wintel "professionals" hate the iPad? To paraphrase Nixon -when you have them by the wallet, their hearts and minds tend to follow

Quite some time ago now a joke about the PC press suggested that if Steve Jobs walked across San Francisco Bay using nothing but his bare feet, their headlines would read: "Apple "Genius" can't swim!".

This hasn't changed: an overwhelming majority of PC press iPad reviews mix faint and deeply reluctant praise with enthusiastic emphasis on anything even remotely construable as a negative. There's a review of iPad reviews done by some Computerworld blogger that illustrates this perfectly - because the bits picked from other reviews for retail to the Computerworld audience include some of the silliest attempts to denigrate the iPad you'll ever see. Would you believe, for example, that having a faster CPU than the iPhone is bad thing?

Even though the performance of the iPad and the [iPhone] 3GS over the same AT&T 3G network were almost identical, the iPad felt slow, mainly because of how much faster the iPad's CPU can render pages. ...

The consultancy side of the PC hype machine acts the same way: there isn't a major player out there that hasn't recommended against business adoption of the iPad on grounds every bit as honest and logically compelling as their earlier rejection of the iPhone, the iMac - and just about every other Apple product ever released.

So, with that in mind I thought I'd help out a bit by listing the eight most important things the PC press won't go out of its way to tell you about the iPad:

  1. No Intel CPU (it's a PPC derived, ARM core, system on a chip);

  2. No motherboard "architecture" - from the review of reviews quoted above:

    The 3G iPad is not nearly as barren as the Wi-Fi-only iPad, but it's still not jam-packed.

    Not jam-packed? oh the horror! the horror!

  3. Like the iPhone, it runs Unix (making Unix now the best selling consumer OS)

  4. The iPad/iPhone apps industry is the single fastest growing smart jobs generator in America today.

    In absolute terms it's still tiny, of course - but the take-up rate is amazing.

  5. Security issues generally relate to user accounts and shared network infrastructure, not the iDevices themselves - did I mention that they run Unix and don't use Intel CPUs?

  6. The iPad is already driving some secondary innovation - Purses designed to accommodate the things, early adopters in real estate marketing finding major competitive advantage, a real possibility that new media reporting will hit the mainstream, and people at Boeing thinking of using them in airplane seat backs to offer better services at lower cost and lower weight.

  7. the iPad generally meets or exceeds customer expectations - a mortal sin in the Wintel world where service revenues depend on exploiting the gap between hype driven customer expectation and the reality of what the products can actually deliver.

  8. Since at least 1984 the PC press has ridiculed every major advance in communications and computation until its own advertisers could produce copies and then enthusiastically hyped those copies as world beating innovations. What we're seeing with the iPad is just more of the same: the objective experts who hated the first iPhones now love the me toos, and the same people who now hate the iPad will be telling you, in a year or two, how incredibly wonderful, ground breaking, and just plain business mission critical the wintel industry's insanely innovative clones are.

    And that, of course, is the single most important thing the PC press hides about the iPad: that hating it is commercially important to them.

So, bottom line? I don't think people who write headlines like iPhone 4: Perfect for everyone, except humans attack it because it advances personal computing, offers new business opportunities, or embeds new design ideas; I think these people instinctively reject Apple products simply because those products generally meet expectation -while their living depends on selling products that don't.

Topics: Smartphones, Hardware, iPhone, iPad, Mobility

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  • RE: The top eight things the PC press hides about the iPad

    Not having an intel processor is not a problem as you can still run Windows apps through software such as ThinServer

    http://www.aikotech.com/thinserver.htm
    bojanwojan
  • It isn't a laptop

    It isn't a laptop, it is a jumbo iPhone where the architecture doesn't matter; it is a totally different device so the end user does not have the same expectations that they would have a netbook which simply looks like a small laptop (and thus expect to be able to run all their favourite software). Apple is successful because they market their products well and give the customer what they want - you can sit back and have and intellectual debate over what people should value, just as I can debate the sorry state of music these days shows the descent of our culture, but at the end of the day people buy what they want.
    Macintoshtoffy
    • It's a mostly-passive consumption device

      @Macintoshtoffy
      I think this is an important point. A lot of people, including initially myself, look at the iPad through laptop tainted glasses.

      Desktop computers, laptops, netbooks, Sun Rays, etc - pretty everything with a multitude of "human interface devices" are geared around active use. By active use, I basically mean "work" and "gaming" with very broad definitions. The key difference being the user is very actively interacting with the machine. These types of usages are how my own personal conception of computing formed. Computing is an active endeavor.

      But a lot of computing today is passive media consumption. For me, at least, the web has almost entirely replaced both television and print periodicals. But it has not replaced printed books.

      Why hasn't the computer replaced books? Because sitting at my desk staring at a glowing screen is not the most comfortable way to read. Especially to read for pleasure. I don't own an iPad or e-book reader, although with recent price drops on Nook and Kindle I'm seriously considering buying one. It would be really nice to have something for comfortably reading papers (meaning academic papers, not news papers).

      Anyway, the point being devices like this are for accessing media and information, which is primarily what the average consumer computer user does.
      Erik Engbrecht
      • You'd probably feel differently if you had one, Erik.

        I also once thought the iPad was good only for "consumption", but, after using one for a while, have changed my mind on that. The iWork apps are excellent examples of "creating" apps. I'm especially impressed with Numbers. This spreadsheet app is no Excel, but the average home consumer (and probably the average offfice worker, too!) only uses a small percentage of what Excel is capable of. The way Numbers uses the touch interface and custom pop-up keypads is VERY ingenious.
        Pages is also a capable word processor. Again, it doesn't do everything that Word can, but I haven't yet hit a wall with the capability it has.
        I do quite a bit of photography, and have found Photogene to be a great app for editing and post-processing photos. No, it isn't Photoshop, but what is???
        I think you would be impressed with how "creative" an iPad can be.
        P.S. Using one of the e-book apps on the iPad might also change your mind about reading on a screen, too!
        Userama
      • RE: The top eight things the PC press hides about the iPad

        @Userama
        I personally will go to great lengths to have a real keyboard complete with a numeric keypad and think that having only one real monitor is a great impedance to getting real work done. But that's just me. I probably have overly high standards for what qualifies as "work" or even "active."
        Erik Engbrecht
      • RE: The top eight things the PC press hides about the iPad

        @Erik Engbrecht This is all about the Apps. You can claim that the iPad is all about consumption and not about creation if you like, but what about it stops that? The built in applications are mostly about consumption to be sure, but what has Windows got "built in" that's about creation? Office isn't part of the base package. If you think about a factory fresh PC and compare that with the iPad I think you'd find the iPad far more capable.

        Of course, nobody actually uses a PC like that. But why consider the iPad on those terms? When you think about the number of applications being written for it, as well as the number already written it changes the whole dynamic of the system (and yes I know there are a lot of pointless "one trick pony" apps - but there are some real gems too).

        The iPad is as useful as the apps it has loaded.
        Jeremy-UK
      • It's about the form factor

        @Jeremy-UK
        Small Screen + no keyboard = low bandwidth interface
        low bandwidth interface = not very productive

        The apps hardly matter for producing things if there's no high bandwidth interface to the machine. If someone can be productive by moving a mouse around, clicking, and occasionally typing something in, then they probably can be productive on an iPad. I probably just wouldn't judge the person as productive.
        Erik Engbrecht
      • RE: The top eight things the PC press hides about the iPad

        @Erik Engbrecht

        Low bandwidth interface? WTH does that mean?
        People
      • RE: The top eight things the PC press hides about the iPad

        @Erik Engbrecht The screen is much smaller than a laptop (1024x768 or 768x1024). As for keyboard, there several choices here, use the onscreen keyboard (In landscape it is pretty good - oddly the fact that it is derived from the iPhone helps - it corrects many errors and makes suggestions. In the spreadsheet the different versions make for a better experience than a real keyboard.) or the keyboard dock (I've not used that - so I have no opinion either way) or a wireless Apple Keyboard (I have used these, but not with the iPad). I know other wireless (bluetooth) keyboards do work, but I haven't used such a thing and I've no ideas if there are odd "issues" (I **believe** they work, but worth checking). I **think** the Apple camera connection kit can support a USB keyboard - again I'd check first.

        Now you're using the phrase "low bandwidth" but I'm sure I don't agree with the premise. The iPad uses touch and can track multiple points of contact at once. That sounds far "higher bandwidth" than a typical PC where you have a single tracked point (the mouse) and keypresses. Pedantic definitions aside, the user can move between on screen controls FAR faster on the iPad than a user can on a PC, and can interact with a number (probably two for most of us) at the same time. The "productivity" of this varies with the application. Now where the iPad does lose out to a traditional mouse is precision - fingers are blunt things. But the iPad interface has the edge in gestures (you can rotate, zoom and reposition an on screen element all at once - you can't do that with a mouse).

        So I'd argue that actually the iPad has a far "higher bandwidth" interface than a PC. I'm also suggesting that your definition would tend to preclude a laptop too.

        Oddly I probably agree with you more than you'll realise up to this point. There is no way I can do enough of what I do with a computer to justify a laptop (this isn't a question of price, but rather weight). And before you think I actually need a NetBook, I don't the lengthy boot up and the need to put it on a desk preclude almost everything else!

        However, I do want email on the move, I do want the web on the go, I do want access to my calendar on the go (etc). The iPad is perfect for that, and yes I am more productive.
        Jeremy-UK
      • RE: The top eight things the PC press hides about the iPad

        @Userama I own the iPad 64gb WiFi model, along with a Kindle 2. I can tell you that for me, and probably any truly heavy reader, the iPad isn't going to be a replacement for the Kindle, or Nook, or whatever e-Ink reader a person has bought. Reading on my Kindle from an eyestrain standpoint is virtually identical to reading a hard copy book. The iPad screen is gorgeous, but after reading on it for hours my eyes get tired much quicker than they do from using my Kindle. Also reading in a bright, sunny day outdoors is almost impossible on the iPad, due to the reflective nature of the glass screen as well as the LCD technology of the screen. Even at night using night settings on the iPad, I still prefer my Kindle with an LED light attached. It is just easier on the eyes. Also to be noted that the Kindle is far lighter which will also make a difference in long periods of use.

        I'll keep both devices thank you. One will not replace the other in my life. My iPad gets the most work, but for relaxing reading, nothing beats my Kindle!
        Aragorn_z
      • Creating content with the iPad

        I bought an iPad for two things:

        1) To be a living room browser;

        2) As an internet access device for travel so I didn't have to lug the laptop (plus 3G is way cheaper on the iPad than a laptop).

        In a month or so of use, however, I have almost entirely abandoned the laptop, except for e-mail. To say that this is a surprise is an understatement. The portability of the thing is incredible, and the battery life -- easily double that of my laptop -- is great too.

        I used it to consume stuff, and for minor content creation like commenting to articles like this one, until I found Sketchbook Pro. This is a wonderful graphics tool and shows that the devices can be used for top-class content creation. In my mind it's like getting a Cintiq plus Adobe Creator tools for as little as $510, whereas the PC approach would be more like $2500. That's cheap enough that I'm considering buying one for my budding artist daughter.

        But that was only the beginning. I needed to put together slides for a presentation, and I didn't have my laptop around. I downloaded Keynote (which I tend to use for slides, I like it a lot more for building graphics than Powerpoint even though I end up importing those graphics into PowerPoint for actual presentation for various reasons). There was a bit of adjustment as I learned new gestures for things I used to use the mouse for, but it worked and in some cases was way better than the mouse interface. (And some not; placement can be painful because your finger tends to hide the thing that you're moving.) I still want to use the laptop for polish, but the iPad works fine for the bulk of the work.

        I am not a big fan of the touchscreen keyboard (and the autocorrection drives me insane sometimes), but a bluetooth keyboard is all you need to make typing as good as anything. At that point it loses some of the portability that I really like, but one parent I know is using that solution for their daughter so she doesn't have to have a full-blown laptop. They travel regularly and the iPad is a great solution for the kid's entertainment on long car or plane rides where a laptop would die too fast, and plenty good enough for homework.

        Maybe Apple expected this, maybe not, but poo-poo-ing the iPad because you can't make your own content with it is to ignore the fact that many people actually are. I never expected to use mine that way, I certainly didn't even consider that when I bought it, but it turned out to be pretty good for those things -- call it 80% of a laptop, rising to 95% if I were to get a real keyboard.

        I expect to use it more and more as the productivity app collection grows. I also expect to be leaving my laptop at home most of the time; I sure do like the fact that 3G means I don't have to depend on the hotel network as I did with the laptop (I refuse to pay the criminally high prices for tethering and data cards).

        One unexpected downside is that I developed tennis elbow from holding it in one hand while reading; it's just too heavy for that. You want to prop it up. For this reason, and because I (also unexpectedly) find that I get eyestrain if I read on it too long, I am not planning to ditch the Kindle any time soon.

        jim frost
        jimf@frostbytes.com
        jimfrost
  • Look @ this

    SCOsource Licensing

    Many IT users are concerned about using Linux since they have become aware of the allegations that Linux is an unauthorized derivative work of the UNIX? operating system. Users have come to SCO asking what they can do to continue to run their businesses. SCO has created the SCOsource business division in response to these needs.

    SCOsource is a SCO business division that manages its UNIX? System intellectual property and contractual rights. The charter of this division is to create new and innovative licensing programs to meet the changing demands of today's market and to protect its intellectual property-related assets.

    SCO Intellectual Property License Program

    To meet customer's needs, SCO has introduced the SCO Intellectual Property (IP) License Program to make binary run time licenses for SCO's intellectual property available to end users. The license gives end users the right to use SCO intellectual property contained in Linux, in binary format only. End users who purchase this license will be covered for their use of SCO's intellectual property in binary format in Linux distributions on the licensed system. The license applies to all commercial users of Linux.

    SCO is the owner of the UNIX Operating System Intellectual Property that dates back to 1969, when the UNIX System was created at AT&T's Bell Laboratories. Through a series of mergers and acquisitions, SCO has acquired ownership of the copyrights and core technology associated with the UNIX System.
    junknstuff@...
    • RE: The top eight things the PC press hides about the iPad

      @junknstuff@... Dude.SCO lost the Novell v. SCO case.Novell is the rightful owner of UNIX copyrights.

      But yeah

      http://www.owned.lv/images/x3x99cf43f93e8ff584b82d5dc234c12c3d.jpg
      ssj6akshat
      • RE: The top eight things the PC press hides about the iPad

        @ssj6akshat

        Just reminding Rudy.....
        junknstuff@...
      • RE: The top eight things the PC press hides about the iPad

        @ssj6akshat Right on! SCO needs to just go away now. They've caused enough trouble in their lame attempts to lay claim to something that isn't theirs.
        Aragorn_z
    • Judge Confirms That Novell Owns Unix Rights in SCO Case

      http://www.eweek.com/c/a/Linux-and-Open-Source/Judge-Confirms-That-Novell-Owns-Unix-Rights-in-SCO-Case-884404/

      On March 30, a Salt Lake City jury confirmed that the licensing rights to the Unix operating system belong to Novell and not to the SCO Group.
      davebarnes
      • RE: The top eight things the PC press hides about the iPad

        @davebarnes
        Rudy does not think so.
        junknstuff@...
    • RE: The top eight things the PC press hides about the iPad

      @junknstuff@...
      justJekke
    • RE: The top eight things the PC press hides about the iPad

      @Aragorn_z

      But Murph wants to see IBM taken down at all possible costs, so facts needn't cloud the matter.
      civikminded
  • Am I dreaming ...

    ... or is this really ZDnet on I am reading this? Paul, you will get banished for openly telling the secrets of todays "tech journalism" to everyone!

    GREAT article; I love it!!
    financegozu