I have to think that you are not as thick skinned as you believe you are if you find an opinion about the relative capabilities of one electronic device compared to another one to constitute a personal insult.
'Cuz descriptors like "dumbing down", "crippled", "infuriatingly hamstrung", and "lobotomized" couldn't be expected to convey inferiority? Okay.
Sigh.
What part of "one
electronic device compared to another one" do you not understand?
From a practical perspective the iPad simply does not have all of the capabilities of a full function tablet. I don't understand why you insist on assuming that this constitutes some sort of personal attack on you.
A tricked-out golf cart doesn't have all the functionality of a real car. It is not a personal insult to people using such a golf cart to acknowledge that. Unless they insist that their golf cart is just as good as a BMW sedan. I don't believe that is what you were doing. Maybe I was mistaken.
I have offered no opinions about the users of the iPad, and would not attempt to. For one thing such an effort would be a generalization and a stereotype by definition. For another I have nothing but positive regard for people who take advantage of the potentials of new devices. This does not alter the simple fact that the devices are not always equal in capabilities.
Yeah. I just think that it's okay that there is a range of capabilities available on various devices.
Me too. I don't believe I ever suggested otherwise.
Are you responding to the points I've actually tried to make, or just to the ones you want to think I was?
I have said many times (and not just in this thread) that I do not condemn the iPad on the basis of its features alone. I don't really condemn it at all. I was disappointed that it was not more capable than it was, and I feel that those limitations have (at least for the time being) done a disservice to the tablet concept by creating general impressions like the one exemplified in the title of this thread. I don't think that those mis-impressions will endure, but it is unfortunate that the extra impediment had to be added to the progress of the technology.
Why would this impede technology?
Heavy sigh.
I keep explaining this, and it is as if I am responding to a different thread. I have to think that you are intent on defining my opinions for me, and have little interest in understanding what they actually are. If this is the case you don't need me, you can just argue with yourself.
"Progress". You left out that word. I used it on purpose.
Half a decade ago (or more) tablet PCs were only just becoming technologically feasable at any remotely affordable price point. Their very rarity kept them from making much of an impression on the larger consumer PC market. This was gradually ... but
very slowly changing.
The introduction of the iPad changed this. It put the advantages of the tablet approach firmly in the public mind, and lent it a legitimacy which its earlier rarity could not. It was no longer limited to vertical markets and gadget geeks.
This was a "good thing". But there has been a downside. Because Apple chose to offer this device as an adjunct to, rather than a replacement for a fully featured PC ...a glorified peripheral, if you will ... the public perception of tablets as a class has still been colored by the appellation of "toy". I did not select this appellation. In fact, if you'd been paying attention, instead of so vehemently arguing against positions I haven't taken, you might have noticed that I deplored it as much as anyone else here, and more than many.
In this sense the progress of the technology has been impeded. I have every confidence that full function tablets will become mainstream, and sooner rather than later, I expect. But I believe that Apple's unfortunate choice of product placement has delayed that.
Like I keep saying. Look at the title of this thread.
Perhaps you should re-read what I have written. I get the impression that you are attaching significance to the content which I did not offer.
Sure. The tablets my company purchased in 2004 would run any software compatible with Windows XP Pro, or for that matter the Intel chipset it used. If I had chosen to I could probably have managed LINUX implementations.
But it doesn't appear that the average consumer wants or needs this.
The average consumer hasn't been given the choice ...
...yet. The average consumer has yet to discover what alternatives are available, or what
could be available. When they do, they're gonna want 'em.
Can you load AutoCad on your iPad?
I don't have or use AutoCad.
How about the latest HP Photosmart printer driver?
There's an app for that (free). I just haven't downloaded it because I don't happen to have an HP Photosmart printer.
Books from the Gutenberg Project?
Yes. Either from the website, or from iBooks.
That ancient DOS copy of Infocom's HHGTTG that you found on the web?
Probably not (although I'm not sure just what that is).
You didn't ask me about what
you wanted. You asked me, "Can you give an example of features which should be present, but are not ...". My point is that the entire galaxy of software for the world's most prevalent OS is available to a real tablet PC. Are you arguing that this is true of the iPad? I feel confident that the list can be made much longer. Since you were dodging the question you yourself asked I don't suppose that matters, though.
That's just one example.
How many USB ports has it got?
One with an adaptor to accept pictures/video.
Can you plug in your favorite keyboard and mouse when you want an alternative input method?
Yes, although I don't use a mouse on the iPad (seems a bit pointless).
Is that because you can
only use it as a tablet of limited utility, and nothing else?
My point is made.
(I use a Logitech Trackman. Can you load the driver for that?)
It isn't something I've needed.
See above.
Etc.
Aside from size and expense what features does your iPad provide to you that a full-function tablet PC would be unable to?
I don't have any way of knowing what is better for you personally, or for anyone else as an individual. I wouldn't presume to think that I did. This really has absolutely nothing to do with the point I have been trying to make here. I've been commenting on past technology, existing technology, future technology, and trends relating to that.
Your personal sensitivity to my comments is rather baffling to me.
Your device is too expensive, too heavy, lacks connectivity and a non-stylus touchscreen. The battery life is short and it doesn't have access to an app market. But I should prefer it because it runs programs that I don't own or use?
Linda
You have once more demonstrated a fascinating ability to see what you want to see and hear what you want to hear. Note the highlighted lines, above.
I have already discussed these aspects of the question. Why do you insist on ignoring that?
Most of the new tablet PC offerings provide
both touch screen
and stylus input. (Perhaps you didn't look at the specs on the several which have been mentioned in this thread.) Having used both I have to say that if forced to choose between one or the other I would not hesitate to choose the stylus. Touch input is like finger-painting by comparison.
But you see, with a full function device you can have both.
Battery life is certainly a consideration. How much battery life would Apple have sacrificed by provided a more full featured OS in the iPad?
Your applet argument is ridiculous on the face of it. People write those things because the platform they're addressing won't support all the software that's already out there for a more capable device.