iPad 2

I broke down and bought an iPad 2 over the weekend. It was a treat for myself after working extra hard lately and accomplishing some of my goals. This platform has matured incredibly quickly and I can barely recognize it from when I got started as an early adopter last year. I’m really glad I left for a short while because it has made the progress of both the hardware and software just that more dramatic in my mind.

I’m still playing and exploring this device. What should be nearly identical in every way except for speed is proving to be an entirely different experience altogether.

Getting My Creative On

After eight weeks I finally have an iMac to work on. Say hello to iMac 3, screen 2. So far it seems to be working well enough. AppleCare will keep me covered and all will be well. (I hope) I’m praying that the drama I had outlined here is now well behind me. Now that I’m getting settled in, my iMac is doing exactly what I had wanted. It’s enabling me to be all sorts of creative and I’m loving it.

As you can see, I’ve already cooked up a new masthead. I’m ashamed to have left the last one up for so long, especially considering the fact that it was the default theme image. I purchased a copy of Aperture 3 which I’m really excited to get started with and yesterday I picked up a copy of Pixelmator for half price. I’m more than thrilled to pay just $30 for something that does pretty much every single one of the basic Photoshop functions. Not only that, but Pixelmator does it all following the standardized user interface guidelines for Mac and isn’t bloaty. (Imagine that, software that just works with both a streamlined price and hardware requirements list. Get your crap together Adobe.) For now this will more than sufficient to get me going.

I downloaded Steam for the Mac which was one of the reasons I wanted to get the iMac. I’m able to play mainstream games on my computer now! Woot! They were giving away Portal for free which I snapped up and have played and it is really fun. I was surprised how well Apple’s buttonless Magic Mouse performed while gaming. Right and left clicks registered perfectly and it tracked well. I look forward to pickup up Indiana Jones and the Fate of Atlantis. I remember playing that game as a kid on my family’s old 386, crammed in the office nook next to the washer and dryer. That game totally rocked!

This will be the beginning of a new era for me, creatively. Though notebooks have the upper hand with portability, they just don’t work for me when I’m trying to get a creative workflow going. Since 2001 I’ve been using notebooks. There was a brief three month stint where I used the iMac G5 when it first came out. (That was a ridiculously sexy machine back when it was introduced.) Unfortunately, at that time I just couldn’t use a computer which wasn’t mobile and immediately switched back to notebooks. With the introduction of the iPad I had a strong feeling I could finally move to a desktop machine again and I was right. The iPad takes care of my casual computing needs effortlessly.

The problem with notebooks isn’t power, it’s form-factor. At the ripe old age of 25 I now have severe RSD issues with my right wrist and some nasty tendonitis in both arms. I think that heavy computer use in general had a lot to do with that, but I honestly don’t think that notebooks helped. I’m a big guy and having to curl up into a hunched ball over a laptop was definitely not the most elegant ergonomic situation. Now that I’m all set up with my pretty new computer I’m really excited to be able to dig into a lot of projects and really work on some of my hobbies a lot more effortlessly. I’m already starting to see the fruits of this strategy and I’m really pleased.

A Fanboy’s Prayer

In response to an interesting quote from Steve Jobs today at the iPhone developer preview for iPhone OS 4.

Our father, who art in Apple
hallowed be thy name
Thy iPad come, thy will be bought
On Earth, as it is in Apple.

Give us this day, our daily Apps
and forgive us our shit talking
as we forgive those who shit talk against us

And lead us not in to temptation
But deliver us from Bill Gates

iMen

Papsky @ Gizmodo

The iPadcolypse

The Apple iPad is an amazing product no matter what the detractors say. The iPad fits a rather broad market segment which encompasses people who find a full laptop overkill for their needs, who have been looking into netbooks but haven’t been able to be fully convinced for any number of reasons, and/or the people who have been looking at eBooks but haven’t been 100% thrilled with those either.

I’m in love with the iPad. It rather neatly resolves the dillema I’ve documented in the past regarding my computing needs. I have always disliked the idea having more than one computer. I like elegant gadget solutions as I can’t afford to buy different devices frequently and I’m amazingly OCD so I don’t like overcomplicating things. I’ll be saving a huge amount of money getting an iMac and iPad instead of an iMac and MacBook Pro.

The vitriol about what the iPad isn’t has been unending and I think the haters are all just missing the bigger picture. iPad is great, people who don’t like it aren’t required to like it. The people who weren’t planning on buying one anyway need to shut the hell up already, obviously it wasn’t made for them. I had a huge post coming together about this and even I began to get bored with it so I will let far more eloquent and geeky people say it all for me.

TUAW’s amazing Erica Sadun, writer/developer/geek extrordinaire, wrote In praise of the iPad: A contrarian view. Jon Armstrong over at Blurbomat.com made an excellent case for Casual Computing and very clearly explains Who’s Gonna Buy That?

We are not apologists. (I’ve been clear in criticizing Apple in the past and just recently discontinued my subscription to MobileMe.) We are lovers of technology, geeks, who can see a device for what it is and it’s amazing potential as it has been realized.

P.S. Flash is the devil, HTML5 will save us from Adobe’s ever-bloating evil. I’m willing to wait for more widespread adoption.

P.P.S. The Hulett Plumbing Disaster Part II coming tomorrow!!!

OMG Hype!

Do you remember when the first iPod launched? Do you remember where you were or what you were doing? I do. I was in high school back then, working my dream job at the local library. I was cleaning and while tidying up the Wall Street Journal I first saw the iPod, rendered in the classic hand-illustrated style of the WSJ on the front page. I was captivated by it’s simplicity, having been looking at other products from Creative, Rio, and Iomega. (Anyone remember Clik! disks?)

The stats for this new iPod were staggering. It had a four gigabyte hard drive, could run for hours between charges, charged and synced data with one simple FireWire cable, and most amazingly you could transfer an entire album to it in 30 seconds. 30 SECONDS!!! Surely this was evidence that we were living in the future. I couldn’t believe what I was reading because it was just all too amazing.

I also remember feeling an overwhelming sense of sadness. It’s original price point of $399 seemed to be far to high for mass adoption rates. It only would work with Macs which I saw as a major shortcoming, though I was an amazing fanboy even then, as that also would immediately disqualify the vast bulk of consumers. I figured that I was looking at yet another beautiful Apple flop à la Twentieth Anniversary Mac or G4 Cube. I put the newspaper down and resigned myself to the idea that Apple was amazing, but might never have a product that would captivate the world or hold a majority of any market.

Several weeks later I heard of a student at my rural high school not just getting an iPod from his parents, but an iMac in order to use the new device. This would have been quite the revelation for the geeks, but the news had trickled down through the mainstream grapevine. The iPod was causing a stir and soon enough, it hit critical mass. Less than 10 years later, the iPod had become not just any device, but the device responsible for shaping the digital music revolution. It’s companion software iTunes being just as transformative to the process of buying music.

A similar feat, coupled with similar awe and just a hint of skepticism (even from me) was accomplished with the launch of the iPhone and eventually the App Store. Both have done a huge amount to shape how consumers view smartphones, expect to interact with these devices, how we view the Internet from the point of view of mobile, and location based services. The iPhone and App Store have even influenced how the tech industry views the process of development and distribution of software in general as well as how we define the the role and responsibilities (for better or worse) of mobile operating system vendors.

This brings us to where we stand today. On Wednesday Apple are launching a brand new device. What was originally referred to as just a “creation”, which could be interpreted on grand or small scales, was clarified today during Apple’s Q4 2009 earnings call by Steve Jobs himself as “a major new product.” The rumor mill leads us to be looking forward to an iSlate/iPad/iBook relaunch thingamabob.

This new “slate” class form factor, which is to netbook as tablet is to notebook, is hoped to find a solid foothold in the consumer electronics market. Tablet PCs, which were hoped to be a transformative product class, became a mainstream disaster. They managed to find a niche in the medical field and other specialist fields, but really failed to change the world as expected by the likes of Bill Gates.

That accounts for my skepticism which has always been a prerequisite for any awesome and successful Apple product launch, especially one expected to be so novel. The level of potential awesomeness is off the charts for what has been bandied about, but I won’t get into all the details as they are scattered and range so far and wide. I would refer you to my sources for the rumor mongering:

Gizmodo

The Unofficial Apple Weblog

AppleInsider

Mac Rumors

9 to 5 Mac

So here is hoping this new device, whatever it is, manages to be just as amazing, implausible, and ultimately successful as the iPod and iPhone. It’s been too long since I’ve had a new must-have gadget to lust over.

(As a side note, does anyone remember the Nokia N770 “Internet Device”? Not totally the same market, but similar enough to cause me to worry.)