Marty Chinn said:
I'm all for a new method of doing things like the iPhone was in many ways, but I'm having trouble understanding where this fits in between a Laptop and an iPhone. If I want quick short access to things, I have my iPhone. If I want something more in depth, I have my netbook or laptop. What functionality besides a bigger screen is the tablet giving me over an iPhone that doesn't make the laptop a better candidate at that point if you're going bigger? The eReader angle seems a possibility but it already sounds like Apple's implementation is going to be botched and if they do botch it, then I really hope it doesn't catch on because that would be a negative impact to eReaders.
You're exactly the point I'm making. A lot of people are excited about it, and they keep saying they want a tablet, but you can't then really quatify why you want it or what you want it to do. I'm not hung up on the desktop metaphor. I'm hung up on trying to figure out its role in the scope of things.
Many of us believe that the desktop metaphor is inappropriate for a mobile platform. The tablet form factor is an opportunity for introducing a computing platform that doesn't have to conform to it.
It's not so much that a laptop is bad - actually quite the opposite. It will still have it's place. But it's not really mobile computing. It's
portable computing. That is, I have a laptop, and I love it. I bring it to and from work, and I have everything in both places. It's marvelous.
But what about travelling on a train somewhere? Or sitting in the park? The laptop is suitable for that. Sure, it can be used, but it's not well suited. For sure, an iPhone is great for a bus ride, or checking while standing in line for something, but again it's not suitable for some things. I'm hoping the tablet can bridge that.
There's a difference between 'portable' and 'mobile'.
Back to the desktop metaphor - the idea of files and icons is great for a sit down desk. You have file locations, you mess about with documents and so on. But what about a computing device where you don't deal with all that? One where you just deal with what you are doing. A new form factor is a chance to break that mold. Of course, you can do the same thing in a laptop, but if someone were to bring out a laptop and have no file management system, people will be ,"WTF." And vice versa, some brings out a tablet with the same old windows interface, and people will be, "WTF." And they have, for several years that's what tablets have been like. Trying to recreate what is suited to another form factor.
In a way it's like the PSP playing hours long console games - that's not what is suited to a hand held. Nintendo have always known that, and Apple does too.
It's not about what features that the tablet can replicate - it's the new way we can experience computing. I think no-one can really understand the products Apple make until they see it in action. The iPod, the iPhone, the Apple TV. They all bring something to gather that seems so obvious on paper, but it isn't until you actually experience it in day-to-day use. I'm not saying any of it is innovative when broken down (iPhone), or that Apple were first to do it (iPod), or that they were even it's what people want or is successful (Apple TV).
Just think about the iPod - pfft - just a portable MP3 player. But what it was at the time was ACTUALLY a
portable MP3 player. You could literally stick it in your pocket, and it could carry your entire collection.
The iPhone - pffft. It's mobile internet. But surely you've seen what always on mobile internet combined with the other features of the iPhone have done. Of course Apple weren't first to bring it, but they were first to make it so that it was easy to use such that everyone DID use it.
Apple TV - pfft, just media on your TV. Of course a computer actually does a pretty admirable job of this, so perhaps that's why it hasn't been the home run it could've been (I believe with a little bit stronger marketing and a few more features, it could've been every bit as big). The concept of the hub of your home theatre being linked to your iTunes and computer is sound. I think Apple underestimated a little how much people actually relied on iTunes as their source of home media, and how connected the average home is (as in networking). Still, if I ever established a home with a fast internet connection and good networking, I will pick up an Apple TV.
Anyway, I'm getting off topic. You're looking at the parts of the tablet. Traditionally, Apple have managed to make their products MORE than the sum of their parts. That is why I'm excited for the Tablet.