Battersea Power Station
Member
...?Technosteve said:they don't want 3rd party api on the hardware.
...?Technosteve said:they don't want 3rd party api on the hardware.
Battersea Power Station said:...?
scola said:Any insight on whether the iPad will have to pay for OS updates? Or has apples transition to new accounting practices fixed that?
favouriteflavour said:Once you finish school and college unless you use your computer for work you do not tend to type all that much.
Liu Kang Baking A Pie said:What do people want a USB port on this for?
shantyman said:This is the most inane thing I have ever seen posted on this forum.
Northtemple said:Technophobe
A good friend of mine is an attorney and reluctantly uses technology for his work. In age, hes somewhere between my generation and the baby boomers. He recently lost his phone in the snow and then found out his company was moving to AT&T. He replaced his lost phone with a blackberry and when our group of friends caught wind of that, we informed him he could have gotten an iPhone. So on our recommendation, he decided to take the Blackberry back and give the iPhone a try.
I had never once seen him exhibit any excitement over technology but the next time I saw him, he could barely contain his enthusiasm for his new phone.
Fast forward to last Wednesday evening. I told him about the new iPad and his eyes grew wide. He blurted out Wait, are you talking about an iPhone but with a bigger screen? A regular sized computer THIS easy to use? $15 a month for internet anywhere? When can I buy one?
He had been won over completely by the user experience of the iPhone. It was amazing to watch and fascinating to see him project his good experience and excitement to the iPad.
Kind of goes back to what I was saying about traditional desktop/laptop computers having hit their apex in the work place. There are so many people out there who need to use e-mail, internet, and traditional office apps, but can barely do that on a daily basis. The first time something even slightly goes wrong (think, accidentally deleted a shortcut on the desktop), IT gets called. The iPad or devices like the iPad are going to free up a lot of resources for people who work in non-technical fields.SuperPac said:This and the other anecdotes on this blog speak to why this thing is going to be a huge hit.
apple devices don't let you view "files".Flying_Phoenix said:For the problems of not having an SD card slot or USB for more storage. Can't I just use a Wifi SD card so I can just pick up the connection on my iPad and open up the files through there?
Flying_Phoenix said:For the problems of not having an SD card slot or USB for more storage. Can't I just use a Wifi SD card so I can just pick up the connection on my iPad and open up the files through there?
An SD slot makes sense, but I would prefer a CF, as that's what I use. Just a personal preference. Actually when I saw the iPad I thought it did have an SD slot, but it turned out to be the volume rocker :lol. I was briefly excited for a moment... THere's no way they'll let you use it as extra storage though.Ignatz Mouse said:To be able to plus in storage to copy things to and from it.
As noted, it's meaningless without access to the filesystem, which I also want.
I'd actually prefer an SD slot, buta USB port is a nice hedge against future developments.
No, it already has a profitable beachhead in laptops and desktops.Opiate said:If it does actually manage to create a beachhead there, it will try to move towards more complex devices: from netbooks to standard laptops eventually to desktops. That's what that Keyboard/Stand are for: make the iPad in to a psuedo-desktop.
mrkgoo said:It's not a matter of just hardware. The iPhone OS just doesn't allow it. Think about it - it's just Wifi. Can you connect to your Mac and view your mac files on your iPhone? The answer is not natively. If you download a thirdparty app that enables this, then yes.
Actually, the iPhone can connect to your computer through so many different ways: wifi peer-to-peer, wifi on a network, Bluetooth, USB and so on.
But it's not going to 'just work' without any software. And the iPhone OS doesn't have anything to 'just' view files.
Opiate said:So are most in agreement about the goal of this device? It appears to me (and based on others in the last few pages) that this intended to target netbooks first: that is, people who own a laptop and use it nigh exclusively for 1) Browsing 2) Email 3) Multimedia like movies and pictures and 4) Productivity apps.
If it does actually manage to create a beachhead there, it will try to move towards more complex devices: from netbooks to standard laptops eventually to desktops. That's what that Keyboard/Stand are for: make the iPad in to a psuedo-desktop.
I'm not at all saying this will work, by the way. That's another discussion entirely. I'm just trying to establish what Apple wants to do.
kaching said:smh
No, not strange. Just what a well-rounded OS has to do to account for all the ways a user may try to use it.
By your logic, this "middle" device shouldn't even include wifi or 3G support, because when the device isn't in range of either form of signal, has a really weak connection or perhaps runs into a wifi router it's not compatible with it would have to report a confusing issue to the user. Best to probably just leave the browser out as well - wouldn't want to confuse the user with pages that load fast sometimes, slow others and not at all in other cases...
Opiate said:So are most in agreement about the goal of this device? It appears to me (and based on others in the last few pages) that this intended to target netbooks first: that is, people who own a laptop and use it nigh exclusively for 1) Browsing 2) Email 3) Multimedia like movies and pictures and 4) Productivity apps.
If it does actually manage to create a beachhead there, it will try to move towards more complex devices: from netbooks to standard laptops eventually to desktops. That's what that Keyboard/Stand are for: make the iPad in to a psuedo-desktop.
I'm not at all saying this will work, by the way. That's another discussion entirely. I'm just trying to establish what Apple wants to do.
Flying_Phoenix said:Alright so I can just download an app? Badass.
I can't stand plugging in a cable from my Camera just to put in photos.
But don't you still need a laptop to export your photos and MP3 players and stuff? Sounds like people will still need that laptop.
mrkgoo said:No you can't. Only if there is software, which there isn't. At least not in the default iPhone OS or photos app. My point is, if a third party were to make a photo viewing app that could access a wifi network, and possibly read the file structure, they might be able to get it to read files, and then save to the photos area. Not sure if you can get an iPhone to look at a file structure, but you can definitely get storage apps that can see the file structure of an app, and thus stick files in there.
devices don't have a say here, apps do. and one can view files in iphoneOS just fine, as long as they're located within the private space of the particular app (that's what the whole sandboxing model's been about).out0v0rder said:apple devices don't let you view "files".
SuperPac said:I think the main goal of this device is to make a computer that's easy to use; ticking off the checkboxes for the things most people use computers for (browsing, email, multimedia, simple productivity) and expanding its capabilities through Apps. I don't think the goal is just "to do what netbooks do," but to make an approachable device that's easy for *anyone* to use.
I don't think Apple is even going to have to "move" their goal to more complex devices at all. They'll have apps that can do what most users would want a standard desktop/laptop to do. But there will always be a need for professional desktop applications that have more complex functions than could be done on the iPad.
But don't you still need a laptop to export your photos and MP3 players and stuff? Sounds like people will still need that laptop.
With Air Sharing, you can:
* Mount your iPhone or iPod touch as a wireless drive on a Mac, windows, or Linux computer, over Wi-Fi, or connect from your computers web browser.
* Drag-drop files between your iPhone or iPod touch and your computers.
* View documents in many common formats.
FEATURES
* Familiar Finder-like file browser
* Use of Bonjour and WebDAV (like iDisk) for easy connection
* Extensive in-line Help with detailed, simple instructions
* Controls to prevent or to delay iPhone auto-lock
* Syntax coloring of source code
Advanced image viewer
* Stable, high-quality viewing of very high-resolution image files
* Configurable image slideshow
* Next and Previous buttons in image viewer
Fast access
* Page Up and Down buttons that accelerate while held down
* A folder popup for going back to previously viewed folders
* Automatic jump to last viewed location when opening a document
Security
* Optional password protection
* Public folder for guest access
* Local passcode lock for app security
Flexibility
* Unique pinch-to-zoom in the file browser to reveal more or less file information
* Full support for landscape orientation throughout app
Compatibility
* Mac OS X (Tiger, Leopard, & Snow Leopard)
* Windows (XP, Vista, & 7)
* Linux (GNOME and KDE)
* Any web browser
Quality
* Avatron Softwares signature design, usability, security, and stability
VIEWABLE FORMATS
* iWork 08 and 09 (Pages, Numbers, and Keynote)
* Microsoft Office (Word, Excel, and PowerPoint), with limited support for XML formats
* Web Archive (web pages downloaded by Safari)
* HTML Web page
* RTF (Rich Text Format)
* RTFD (TextEdit documents with embedded images)
* Plain text (many different file extensions), with Unicode support
* Source code (C/C++, Objective-C/C++, C#, Java, Javascript, XML, shell scripts, Perl, Ruby, Python, and more), with color-coded formatting
* Movies, Audio, and Images (standard iPhone formats)
Vennt said:Anyone who's not already using Air Sharing to mount their iPhone/iPod Touch as a wireless drive on their PC/Mac is nuts.
Flying_Phoenix said:Wow that's awesome. But it doesn't work with a Wifi SD card I assume?
blu said:devices don't have a say here, apps do. and one can view files in iphoneOS just fine, as long as they're located within the private space of the particular app (that's what the whole sandboxing model's been about).
Vennt said:Anyone who's not already using Air Sharing to mount their iPhone/iPod Touch as a wireless drive on their PC/Mac is nuts.
Vennt said:I used to use Pro, but found I didn't really need all the PDF features that much.
I mainly use DigiDNA's FileApp now, it pretty much does the same thing, it just mounts the device as an FTP server.
mrkgoo said:As far as I know, Air sharing doesn't read anything from somewhere else. It's like an App with viewable, writeable storage space within your iPhone. YOu run it, access the storage space and dump stuff into it via a computer. SO technically, yes - if you can connect your Eyefi to it, and view the iPhone then it will work. Eyefi actually has some system to connect and write to storage space, but I'm not sure how well that will handle Air sharing.
Zaraki_Kenpachi said:Hmm, $10 is kind of pricey though... Does it let you do it over usb also? It's not bad but there still aren't enough wifi points around to make it worthwhile for my touch.
Flying_Phoenix said:So I can get my iPad. Open up the Air share app. Open up my SD cards Wifi signal. And drag my files to my iPad. ?
mrkgoo said:Depends what are you dragging on? The Air sharing on the iPhone (as far as I know) doesn't look at a computer and bring things over, a computer looks at the iPhone, and you can send things to it. Basically it acts as a drive mounted on your computer.
ToxicAdam said:This might be the worst tech article I have ever read:
http://www.pcworld.com/article/188286/apples_ipad_will_be_the_death_of_the_mobile_web.html
(sorry if old, I'm running out the door)
:lol
Ironically, the iPad makes the iPhone -- Apple's game-changing technology of 2007, whose impact still reverberates through the wireless, mobile, and computing industries -- obsolete. And as the iPhone fades away as a short-lived marvel, so too will disappear the mobile Web.
yes. i was merely talking of the current model available to idevice users.Jill Sandwich said:iPhoneOS 3.2 also lets you store files in a shared folder on the device. This folder can be shared between apps and is mountable when docked. You can also send these files wirelessly. Food for thought for those whinging about no filesystem or not being able to view them. There's a lot more going on under the hood than it being a 'big iPhone'.
Flying_Phoenix said:So it doesn't work both ways?
I just want photos and videos.
Flying_Phoenix said:So I can get my iPad. Open up the Air share app. Open up my SD cards Wifi signal. And drag my files to my iPad. ?
Tobor said:Just set up the Wifi SD card to upload the pictures to Flickr, or Photobucket, or whatever web service you use along with downloading to your PC/Mac. Then you can access them from any device, including the iPad.
Flying_Phoenix said:So I would I be able to upload my files on Photobucket, Flickr, Tinypic, etc?
Flying_Phoenix said:So I would I be able to upload my files on Photobucket, Flickr, Tinypic, etc?
uses your home Wi-Fi network
Upon setup, specify which networks the Eye-Fi card uses to transfer your media. Add up to 32 networks for your card to use. The next time your camera is on within range of a specified network, your photos and videos will fly to your computer and to your favorite sharing site.
gets media where you want it
During the quick set-up, you customize where you want your memories sent. The Eye-Fi card will only send them to the computer and to the sharing site you choose. Pick from one of over 25 popular sites »
mrkgoo said:YOu need a computer, so ideally you just create a peer-to-peer, no wifi point necessary.
There's also a non-pro version for like $6.
Tobor said:http://www.eye.fi/how-it-works/basics
Once you set it up, it will automatically upload wherever you want:
Though Apple didn't outline its strategy to target the educational sector with its iPad last week, people familiar with Apple's thinking have said that the iPad's use in schools was one of the focal points of discussions in developing the product. In its exploration of electronic book technology, it thought particularly about how it could re-invent textbooks, these people said.
Hey, worked for me, I'm going out to buy the cheapest mini I can find as a home-base computer and will sell my MacBook to get an iPad, because using this much hardware for web, email, vids and budgeting is just a waste. iPad fills the gap for people that KNOW a notebook is more computer horsepower than their lifestyle actually requires.Opiate said:So are most in agreement about the goal of this device? It appears to me (and based on others in the last few pages) that this intended to target netbooks first: that is, people who own a laptop and use it nigh exclusively for 1) Browsing 2) Email 3) Multimedia like movies and pictures and 4) Productivity apps.
If it does actually manage to create a beachhead there, it will try to move towards more complex devices: from netbooks to standard laptops eventually to desktops. That's what that Keyboard/Stand are for: make the iPad in to a psuedo-desktop.
I'm not at all saying this will work, by the way. That's another discussion entirely. I'm just trying to establish what Apple wants to do.
sarcastor said:does anyone have any HQ photos of the Ipad, like this bigger?
mrkgoo said:Are you trying to make a replica? :loll
Anyway, I don't know who would have higher quality images than Apple themselves, to be honest.