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:lolLau said:
:lolLau said:
Ghost said::lol
Yes, thank you altruistic apple overlords, your refusal to allow anyone to do anything that might circumvent your control over software distribution is a truly a just and noble act for which we are all very grateful.
Kung Fu Jedi said:- It doesn't run flash for a reason. The web is moving to HTML5, and with YouTube making the jump, it'll probably be sooner than later.
How lazy is it really to not allow Adobe to design a flash plug-in for mobile Safari?VAIL said::lol at people defending the lack of flash support, flash "might" be going away, but it's certainly not happening anytime soon.
This is a lazy effort plain and simple.
greepoman said:Posted in different thread but then didn't see it here:
Steve Jobs Introduces new iPad
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no.neorej said:So it doesn't support Flash, but does it support Silverlight?
No. I replied that you can VOIP with it when you said that you couldn't phone with it - as in, making a telephone call.Lau said:No I don't, I never said I wanted. In fact, I said: if it's not a phone and it's not a laptop then what is it?
In which someone replied:
"You can VOIP"
and I said:
"That's not a phone"
simple as that.
neorej said:So it doesn't support Flash, but does it support Silverlight?
shantyman said:
Web standards.shadowcomplex said:then what dose it support ??
jts said:Web standards.
dude said:This device is just weird. Sure, I'm not the biggest Apple fan, so I expected to not be impressed but the tablet. But really, I just don't understand the target audience that would but this, what gap does this super-sized iPhone is intended to fill?
It shouldn't be, but it really is, seeing how even the most used web browser in the world doesn't support them properly.shadowcomplex said:WHAT NOT WAY!!@!@ OMG THATS ORGASMIC!
ToxicAdam said:I think people are sleeping on the fact that the Ipod Touch is an amazing "hands on" product. It's something you don't think you would need or want, until you pick one up and start playing with it for a few minutes. Then it's pretty easy to imagine yourself using it on a daily basis. Recent sales show how popular this product is once more people became acquainted with it (a lower price point helped too)
I think the same thing will happen with this product. The challenge for Apple is to get this product in the hands of people who may buy it. People who think of a hand-held device as too small for their computing needs, but still want a very easy UI for their portable device. I think it can be a success, but it will be a slow grower. It's not like the Iphone or Ipod where you will see it out and about in everyones hand the first few months of release. Word of mouth will be a lot slower for this one.
ToxicAdam said:I think people are sleeping on the fact that the Ipod Touch is an amazing "hands on" product. It's something you don't think you would need or want, until you pick one up and start playing with it for a few minutes. Then it's pretty easy to imagine yourself using it on a daily basis. Recent sales show how popular this product is once more people became acquainted with it (a lower price point helped too)
I think the same thing will happen with this product. The challenge for Apple is to get this product in the hands of people who may buy it. People who think of a hand-held device as too small for their computing needs, but still want a very easy UI for their portable device. I think it can be a success, but it will be a slow grower. It's not like the Iphone or Ipod where you will see it out and about in everyones hand the first few months of release. Word of mouth will be a lot slower for this one.
If you're satisfied with the value proposition of the iPad on its own merits, you shouldn't need to engage in this much downplay of the competition's merits. A netbook is "just" more for less, like that alone isn't a significant factor to a lot of people? Windows programs are "obscure" now? What about some basic onboard connectivity options like a USB port or two, and a built-in flash card reader rather than another inelegant dongle? Multitasking?SnakeXs said:This is the question I've been positing for a while, and aside from streaming music and instant messaging, or some obscure little program they need Windows for, I haven't heard a single solid reply. Just NETBOOKS = MORE FOR LESS and little more. And Flash, but that one is blown entirely out of proportion, if you ask me. Youtube is what most people really care about, and it's covered.
And this is all before the launch, the possibilities of 4.0, and one thing I've also brought up a bunch of times to no avail, the App Store. At the end of the day its core functionality could very well deliver, but Apps are going to make it shine.
kaching said:What is the big competitive advantage that the iPad would command over its direct competitors, that it would hold for a year or more like the iPhone did over its smartphone comp?
I played with the iPod touch and iPhone and wasn't all that impressed. It was cool to play around with, sure, but I wouldn't spend money on that thing.ToxicAdam said:I think people are sleeping on the fact that the Ipod Touch is an amazing "hands on" product. It's something you don't think you would need or want, until you pick one up and start playing with it for a few minutes. Then it's pretty easy to imagine yourself using it on a daily basis. Recent sales show how popular this product is once more people became acquainted with it (a lower price point helped too)
I think the same thing will happen with this product. The challenge for Apple is to get this product in the hands of people who may buy it. People who think of a hand-held device as too small for their computing needs, but still want a very easy UI for their portable device. I think it can be a success, but it will be a slow grower. It's not like the Iphone or Ipod where you will see it out and about in everyones hand the first few months of release. Word of mouth will be a lot slower for this one.
Whaaaaat? I'm a PC man, always have been. Never owned a Mac, never used a Mac. I bought an Ipod Touch after using one and thoroughly preferring it to my Creative Zen. After using the ITouch for a while I found myself wishing for one with a much bigger screen for casual browsing. Here it is. I don't want or need a netbook because anything apart from browsing and maybe casual gaming I'd much rather do on my beastly, high spec (Windows) laptop.ChoklitReign said:I can't believe there are people here who are dissatisfied with netbooks but are perfectly fine with an iPad. The cult of Mac grows.
So its really that unbelievable that people could be dissatisfied with the form factor and software of a netbook?ChoklitReign said:I can't believe there are people here who are dissatisfied with netbooks but are perfectly fine with an iPad. The cult of Mac grows.
Vennt said:A netbook is just entirely the wrong form factor for me, I'd consider another tablet but it would have to be silent (no fans whatsoever), as light as the iPad (1.5lbs) and offer similar battery performance.
I was really interested in the CrunchPad, the Notion Ink Adam and similar, but so far the Android interface on the Adam just looks ugly as sin, the CrunchPad is dead, and for me having iPhone app compatibility outweighs things in favour of the iPad.
Being told a Netbook is "better for me", when honestly, it just isn't, irks me somewhat, If a netbook filled the gap, I'd own an ION based one already.
ChoklitReign said:I can't believe there are people here who are dissatisfied with netbooks but are perfectly fine with an iPad. The cult of Mac grows.
kaching said:If you're satisfied with the value proposition of the iPad on its own merits, you shouldn't need to engage in this much downplay of the competition's merits. A netbook is "just" more for less, like that alone isn't a significant factor to a lot of people? Windows programs are "obscure" now? What about some basic onboard connectivity options like a USB port or two, and a built-in flash card reader rather than another inelegant dongle? Multitasking?
What is the big competitive advantage that the iPad would command over its direct competitors, that it would hold for a year or more like the iPhone did over its smartphone comp?
SmokyDave said:Whaaaaat? I'm a PC man, always have been. Never owned a Mac, never used a Mac. I bought an Ipod Touch after using one and thoroughly preferring it to my Creative Zen. After using the ITouch for a while I found myself wishing for one with a much bigger screen for casual browsing. Here it is. I don't want or need a netbook because anything apart from browsing and maybe casual gaming I'd much rather do on my beastly, high spec (Windows) laptop.
Where did 'The Cult Of Mac' fit in? Did they get me while I slept? Or is it that people make products that aren't aimed at you and you don't understand that?
dude said:I guess their strategy is to target the crowd that doesn't care all that much about tech and just wants a device for a quick and easy access to the internet.
Starchasing said:you mean the majority of people out there?
Those are the same that made Wii so wildly popular, those who dont care about tech and just want a device for a quick and easy to access game...
Starchasing said:you mean the majority of people out there?
Those are the same that made Wii so wildly popular, those who dont care about tech and just want a device for a quick and easy to access game...
TheBranca18 said:There are also a lot more people available to pay 250 dollars rather than 500 for a gimped version of this unit.
I kinda wish Apple had done a better version of the Touch Book. http://www.alwaysinnovating.com/home/index.htm
My only question is, if you ARE creating some documents, how do you get them off/on to the device?
Yeah, but as I said. Most of this people will probably buy a EEE for cheaper (and get a full OS), or they wouldn't care enough about the extra stuff and stick to their iPhones.Starchasing said:you mean the majority of people out there?
Those are the same that made Wii so wildly popular, those who dont care about tech and just want a device for a quick and easy to access game...
Mr. Dobalina said:Same here (althought I have a 27" iMac :lol )
I think the thing most "preferring" a netbook are refusing to look at is what they are actually using a netbook for. For everyone I know that has a netbook, they use it to take on the go to browse the internet, get email, and maybe do some word processing. If you need to write War and Peace, yeah, the on screen keyboard isn't going to cut it. If you're just typing up a quick email here and there, and the bulk of your time is surfing the net, reading books, etc. I can't see how someone can argue that the iPad isn't vastly superior.
My only question is, if you ARE creating some documents, how do you get them off/on to the device?
Absolutely agree. I'm not saying the iPad can't lead the market for this kind of device, but it really will come down to marketing. Certainly the iPhone tie-in will help too.ToxicAdam said:That's why it's success will be determined by it's marketing, not the overwhelming merits of the product itself. If they can make this the ubiquitous choice for people who are not computer saavy, it can be a huge seller. But that's a large chasm to cross.
Vennt said:You better give me 10 good reasons for me not to ban you, you have 5 minutes to comply.
colinisation said:Over reaction???
UI, ease of use, UI, App Store, battery life, great hardware. That said, who is it competing with? It's not taking on netbooks. It CAN replace netbooks for some, but Apple didn't release this thing to target a tiny, tiny market like netbooks. I see it as altering web consumption.
Beyond that it's easy to not take a step back and look at everything it does and see the sum of all the parts. Yes mobile Safari looks like iPhone but bigger, yes eBooks are better on an eReader, yes games are "better" on PSP/DS, and yes I could make connections to every single thing iPad does, but it does them all.
WHOA, take it easy. It's been past 5 minutes, jeez. I was talking about the people who were thinking about buying an iPad for casual internet browsing when an iPhone and a netbook can do that just as well. It's just my opinion.Vennt said:You better give me 10 good reasons for me not to ban you, you have 5 minutes to comply.
dude said:Yeah, but as I said. Most of this people will probably buy a EEE for cheaper (and get a full OS), or they wouldn't care enough about the extra stuff and stick to their iPhones.
But I don't think this is comparable to the Wii.
ChoklitReign said:WHOA, take it easy. It's been past 5 minutes, jeez. I was talking about the people who were thinking about buying an iPad for casual internet browsing when an iPhone and a netbook can do that just as well. I just don't think that's logical.
m0dus said:Vennt, as someone who is in a very similar position to yours, can I weigh in?
The ipad makes too many compromises. I'm actually holding off this time, and I'm a gadget freak (and certainly not hurting for apple hardware--2 Iphone 3Gs's one iphone 3g, an imac, and TWO axiotron modbooks.). There were better, more capable products shown at CES that have a similar form-factor, without so many sins-by-design. And I don't just mean android tablets. Fully functioning OS's, broad connectivity options, and slick interfaces.
Mr. Dobalina said:It's really carving a new niche and I view it more as an appliance than a computer.
Apple, while they make computers and nice software, is really in the content delivery business now. Sure, they make a nice profit on their hardware, but their content delivery - first off music, then movies and TV shows and now books is where their growth is coming from - and it's almost 100% profit for them.
Battersea Power Station said:I can't for the life of me figure out why people want to keep supporting Flash. It's poor from a system resources point of view, it's proprietary (so is h.264, so Apple's not exactly turning this into an advantage), and the biggest video sharing service on the Internet, YouTube, wants to and has started to phase it out (as has the highest-quality video sharing service, Vimeo).
Why do you feel the need to prop this crappy plug-in up? Shouldn't we be done with plug-ins et al?
m0dus said:Vennt, as someone who is in a very similar position to yours, can I weigh in?
The ipad makes too many compromises. I'm actually holding off this time, and I'm a gadget freak (and certainly not hurting for apple hardware--2 Iphone 3Gs's one iphone 3g, an imac, and TWO axiotron modbooks.). There were better, more capable products shown at CES that have a similar form-factor, without so many sins-by-design. And I don't just mean android tablets. Fully functioning OS's, broad connectivity options, and slick interfaces.
Zaraki_Kenpachi said:What's not to understand? No one is "supporting" this plugin but don't tell me this thing ever at surfing the web when I can't even watch videos on websites because it uses like almost every site, java. No one gives a shit whether it's harder to use or anything else, they just want to watch content on their device like other devices that they claim are inferior to surfing the web.