Recommended Posts

All I can see is that 3 people I know, who bought iPads from the beginning, all sold them.

It's a "magical" device you use out of excitement for a few days when you buy it and then you eventually realize that you spent money on a gadget that really doesn't do anything you can't do with your laptop/desktop at home and that you have wasted $500-$600 on something that's only usable to most people while sitting in the living room or taking a dump. And I certainly won't be lugging around the ipad with me along with my phone and other stuff.. It kind of defeats the purpose.. People might as well carry a small netbook/laptop. That's a lot of money to spend on reading device while you poo-poo :)

Surprise surprise. I expected this, it seems like just a gimmick to me to be honest. Apple would have done a much better job producing a netbook that ran OS X, because it's been proven that OS X runs well on netbook hardware.

Wasted opportunity on Apple's part.

Agree to an extent. I was looking forward to the iPad thinking it would run OS X. Like the tablet form factor. But I've already got an iPod, why would I want another one with a slightly larger screen? If it ran the full OS X, then that would be a product I'd buy.

As it stands, I went out and bought a multi-touch tablet (Lenovo) instead.

Apple had such good plans for it back when it was still being called the iSlate, but in the end they scrapped all that and ended up turning it into a giant iPhone/iPod Touch, what a waste ...

It's about time people woke up to this. It really is nothing more than "palm candy"; a novelty device at best. It may be fun and have a few uses, but the average person would never need it. Don't even get me started about the price!

It needs content, and it will come. Give developers time.

I have an idea!! Lets release a product, call it revolutionary, and have little to no content!! Great marketing and a wonderful way to run a business. (insert sarcasm EVERYWHERE)

Apple was betting on the success of the iPhone/iTouch to fuel the sales of the iPad. Looks like their plan is backfiring...even if a little bit.

Apple had such good plans for it back when it was still being called the iSlate, but in the end they scrapped all that and ended up turning it into a giant iPhone/iPod Touch, what a waste ...

How do you know? All of the iSlate news we got was pure speculation.

The iPad, like many 1st and 2nd generation iDevices, seems purposely limited so that Apple has some wiggle room to add new stuff which should have been included in the first place, for later iterations. Apple has always marketed themselves as the Mercedes/BMW of computing products, so creating a crippled device in place of a full featured, useful, product in order to keep costs down seems ridiculous. From the start, this device should have had similar specs to the MacBook Air (as someone previously pointed out), pen input (which would have increased functionality of the device two-fold from the start), full OSX, and the ability to use the iPhone OS while it is asleep/off (like ExpressGate on certain Asus motherboards). A slate tablet with those features and the ability to use a bluetooth keyboard with it would have been an amazing replacement to my current laptop, let alone a separate category of devices.

Otherwise, there isn't really much the iPad does that my iPod Touch doesn't do.

I'm Happy with my 1st Generation itouch, the only thing I would like on it is a mic and a camera which is basically an iphone which is better but costs a lot. Instead of buying an ipad simply because it looks cool is stupid why not put that cash towards a holiday or are these people so deprived or social contact or immensely rich and fling their cash around.

What I don't like about the ipad is that they advertise it like it does everything but instead they have built a cheap device and removed a lot of features to keep it relatively good, if flash needs a lot of battery invest in research for more powerful battery's or make it a bit bigger.

The ipad is like something out of the pound store in terms of computers but is a tiny bit smarter.

Ever seen those emulation psp's, they cost like £40 are made with the cheapest battery's and screens but software wise they pack it with tones of useless features like radio, e-books, movies, music and maybe a 0.2mp camera and although music and movies can be good on a small device, this device was not capable of supporting it with a 150px by 70px screen. ipad is the same but they just never cluttered it with stuff that only works well on a device capable of supporting it.

The iPad, like many 1st and 2nd generation iDevices, seems purposely limited so that Apple has some wiggle room to add new stuff which should have been included in the first place, for later iterations. Apple has always marketed themselves as the Mercedes/BMW of computing products, so creating a crippled device in place of a full featured, useful, product in order to keep costs down seems ridiculous.

Maybe they are building them as they go. No many devices come to the market fully featured in their 1st generation. I doubt if it's an intentional thing. It just takes time to build new features into products.

Surprise surprise. I expected this, it seems like just a gimmick to me to be honest. Apple would have done a much better job producing a netbook that ran OS X, because it's been proven that OS X runs well on netbook hardware.

Wasted opportunity on Apple's part.

All part of the plan. Expect next year's obligatory second generation iPad to run Mac OS X.

And you just know the same Apple apologists who worship the current iPad will worship the next one. And the one after that. And will have no problem paying $800+ for each one.

I don't know. I use mine all the time. Stream videos over the internet from home using airvideo, read books, use the web, IM, games. I can't wait till OS 4.0 so I can finally multitask. If people bought it and they are not using it is because they went with the hype instead of what they needed/wanted. I liked it so much I bought one for my mother and she's loving it as well :)

I think the iPad would make a fantastic concept device leading into an extra year or two of R&D that would eventually polish it, add useful features, and work out kinks like how horrifically uncomfortable people look when using it without a set of $80+ accessories.

Backlash? Sounds like buyer stupidity to me. People need to wake up and realize they don't need every single item that hits the market. Go look at the 3D TV market. Same situation. None of the movies out, save for Avatar, are worth the 3D experience. Where's the backlash for that?

I have a friend who bought one on release, only person I know who has one so far. He loves it. He also doesn't have an iPhone or Touch. Just depends on who you are and what you need.

Don't forget it runs all the iPhone apps so there's like a bajillion apps.

yea and 10 that are useful :p

but yea i seen this coming i have a buddy that bought one and the first week he had it every day bragged about it etc etc over the next few weeks i noticed when i seen him all he had was his cell and or netbook .

i had to ask where is the Ipad .. all he said is waste of money

I jumped off the apple cart ages ago. Former Ipod Owner.

Got fed up with the lock downs, I had a ipod mini that I could use as a external HD. Ipoid touch had the feature for a while till they switched it off.

Got fed up with the boring grey GUI of itunes, I want it the same as my window GUI dammit.

Got fed up of the sneaky updates and having to have quicklime installed. Just let me have the plugin and be done.

Got fed up with the store selling low bitrate mp3. Give me wav so i can convert to the bitrate i want or give me the option to choose. I have recently gone back to buying cd's for this reason.

I don't see any place in the market for the ipad, its a gimmick a fashion statement.

Yes.... "Unfortunately" his personal experience means **** when it comes to the iPad popularity. iPad has been the fastest selling device so far and its future applications are enormous especially in the educational, medical and military market.

Fishfull thinking for Apple haters, but good luck with that.

Cheers

All part of the plan. Expect next year's obligatory second generation iPad to run Mac OS X.

Why would you want a desktop OS to run on a tablet? I honestly don't get the obsession with this. Mac OS X nor any of its applications (build-in and 3rd Party) have interfaces that would work well with touch input. The OS simply isn't designed for that.

The iPad will never be taken up by the military or medical market, especially not in the UK. Do you think that the tax payer would be happy if they saw the NHS spending their money on these wastes of money?

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Exactly, this is just the beginning. I hope that by that time, our inept politicians devise something like a Universal Basic Income, because unemployment and poverty rates will skyrocket otherwise. And believe me, robots that perform physical work aren't a matter of IF, but WHEN. No career is truly safe from AI/robots, it's just a matter of time.
    • Subtitle Edit 5.0.0 by Razvan Serea Subtitle Edit is a powerful, free, and user-friendly subtitle editing tool designed for creating, editing, and converting subtitles for videos. It supports a wide range of subtitle formats, including SRT, ****, and SUB, allowing users to easily modify and adjust subtitles for accurate timing and formatting. With its intuitive interface, Subtitle Edit provides a variety of features such as waveform audio display, spell-check, subtitle synchronization, and real-time video preview, making it an ideal choice for both beginners and professionals. The software also includes powerful tools for batch processing, translating subtitles, and converting between different subtitle formats. Subtitle Edit features: Create/adjust/sync/translate subtitle lines Convert between SubRib, MicroDVD, Advanced Sub Station Alpha, Sub Station Alpha, D-Cinema, SAMI, youtube sbv, and many more (300+ different formats!) Cool audio visualizer control - can display wave form and/or spectrogram Video player uses mpv, DirectShow, or VLC media player Visually sync/adjust a subtitle (start/end position and speed) Audio to text (speech recognition) via Whisper or Vosk/Kaldi Auto Translation via Google translate Rip subtitles from a (decrypted) dvd Import and OCR VobSub sub/idx binary subtitles Import and OCR Blu-ray .sup files - bd sup reading is based on Java code from BDSup2Sub Can open subtitles embedded inside Matroska files Can open subtitles (text, closed captions, VobSub) embedded inside mp4/mv4 files Can open/OCR XSub subtitles embedded inside divx/avi files Can open/OCR DVB and teletext subtitles embedded inside .ts/.m2ts (Transport Stream) files Can open/OCR Blu-ray subtitles embedded inside .m2ts (Transport Stream) files Merge/split subtitles Adjust display time Fix common errors wizard....and more. Subtitle Edit 5.0.0 changelog: Subtitle Edit 5 is a major new release and a big step for the project. For the first time, Subtitle Edit runs natively on Windows, macOS, and Linux from a single, modern, cross-platform codebase. The builds are self-contained, so no separate .NET installation is required, and on macOS and Linux the needed media components (mpv/ffmpeg) are bundled in. Please read before upgrading: Subtitle Edit 5 is a new application, not just an update of Subtitle Edit 4. It has been rebuilt from the ground up to be cross-platform, so: It is not 100% the same app. The look, layout, and some workflows have changed. Some things are in different places, and a few behave differently than in SE4. Not every SE4 feature exists in SE5 yet. SE5 covers all the core editing, conversion, sync, video playback, OCR, and online services, but some of the more specialized SE4 tools are not available yet. Features will continue to be added. If you rely on a specific SE4 feature that is missing, please keep SE4 installed alongside SE5. The easiest way to run both side by side is to use the Portable versions of SE4 and SE5, which keep their settings separate and do not interfere with each other. Which version should I use? Subtitle Edit 5: recommended for most users on Windows 10 (22H2) or newer, macOS 12+, and Linux. Subtitle Edit 4: please continue to use SE4 if you are on an older Windows version (Windows 7/8), or on older / slower computers where SE5 may not run well. SE4 remains available and is the right choice in those cases. To run SE4 and SE5 at the same time, use the Portable versions - you can try SE5 while keeping SE4 as a fallback. Download: Subtitle Edit 5.0.0 | ARM64 | ~60.0 MB (Open Source) Download: Subtitle Edit Portable | 103.0 MB View: Subtitle Edit Homepage | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
    • Google Pixel 11 series: Here's what to expect by Hamid Ganji Google Pixel 10 series In recent years, Google has successfully turned its Pixel devices into worthy contenders in the smartphone market. The search giant is now preparing to launch the Pixel 11 series in just a few months, and many Pixel fans are likely wondering what Google has in store for them this year. The next lineup of Google smartphones includes four devices: the Pixel 11, Pixel 11 Pro, Pixel 11 Pro XL, and Pixel 11 Pro Fold. This year, we don’t expect Google to bring revolutionary upgrades to its handsets, and the Pixel 11 series is likely to receive modest hardware improvements alongside a slew of AI-powered features. Here are the rumored specifications of the Google Pixel 11 series ahead of its official debut: When will the new Pixel phones be unveiled? The last two generations of Google Pixel phones (Pixel 9 series and Pixel 10 series) were launched in August, unlike the previous three generations that debuted in October. With that in mind, we expect Google to unveil the Pixel 11 series sometime in August 2026. The exact launch date has yet to be confirmed. Google Pixel 11 CAD renders - Image via AndroidHeadlines How much will the Pixel 11 series cost? Predicting the final price of upcoming smartphones has become increasingly difficult. As you may know, RAM and memory prices are rising sharply, leading to significant increases in the cost of consumer electronics. Recently, Apple CEO Tim Cook said that price increases for some future Apple products are unavoidable, suggesting that the iPhone 18 series could become more expensive. Google has remained tight-lipped about any potential price increases for the Pixel 11 series. If the company manages to maintain last year’s pricing structure, here’s what the lineup could cost: Pixel 11: $799 Pixel 11 Pro: $999 Pixel 11 Pro XL: $1,199 Pixel 11 Pro Fold: $1,799 Given current market conditions, it may be difficult for Google to avoid raising prices unless it adopts cost-saving measures, such as equipping the base model with 8GB of RAM. Google Pixel 11 series anticipated specs: We expect the Google Pixel 11 series to debut with a new Tensor G6 processor as well as an upgraded camera system. The overall design, however, is expected to remain largely unchanged across the lineup. Specifications Pixel 11 Pixel 11 Pro Pixel 11 Pro XL Pixel 11 Pro Fold Display 6.3-inch LTPO AMOLED / 120Hz refresh rate / up to 3100 nits of brightness 6.3-inch Super Actua LTPO OLED, 120Hz refresh rate, up to 3600 nits of brightness 6.8-inch Super Actua LTPO OLED, 120Hz refresh rate, up to 3600 nits of brightness 8-inch inner screen and 6.4-inch outer display, 120Hz refresh rate, up to 3600 nits of brightness RAM & Processor Tensor G6 / 8-12GB of RAM Tensor G6 / 12-16GB of RAM Tensor G6 / 12-16GB of RAM Tensor G6 / 16GB of RAM Storage options 128GB or 256GB 256GB, 512GB, 1TB 256GB, 512GB, 1TB 256GB, 512GB, 1TB Camera 50MP main sensor, 13MP ultra-wide, 10.8MP 5x telephoto, 10.5MP front camera 50MP main camera, 48MP ultra-wide, 48MP telephoto with 5x optical zoom, 42MP selfie camera 50MP main camera, 48MP ultra-wide, 48MP telephoto with 5x optical zoom, 42MP selfie camera 50MP main camera, 10.5MP ultra-wide camera, 10.8MP telephoto camera, 10MP front camera, 10MP inner camera Battery 4,840 mAh 4,707 mAh 5,000 mAh 4,658 mAh Software Android 17 Android 17 Android 17 Android 17 The Pixel 11 series won’t be a major departure from its predecessor, with Google instead focusing on subtle improvements and AI additions such as Gemini Intelligence. However, a patent filed by Google suggests the company is working on a removable battery for its smartphones, and we could see this feature make its way to the Pixel 11 Pro Fold. Given that nearly all smartphones today lack removable batteries, such a feature would be a welcome addition to future Pixel devices. That said, it may not arrive with this year’s lineup after all, and the final decision is yet to be made by Google. The Pixel 11 series could also face an uphill battle in the market. In the Android segment, Samsung is performing well with the Galaxy S26 series, while the Galaxy Z Fold 8 lineup is also expected to launch next month. On the other hand, Apple is preparing to unveil the iPhone 18 Pro and iPhone 18 Pro Max in September alongside its first foldable iPhone.
    • At least AMD is still taking Windows 10 seriously (after the oops) before it consumer extended support ends. @WaltC - Memories, 2x Voodoo in SLI with a Riva TNT with an Aureal A3D soundcard.
  • Recent Achievements

    • One Month Later
      timbobit earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • One Month Later
      nates earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Week One Done
      Almohandis earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Rookie
      dorf went up a rank
      Rookie
    • First Post
      mike_rumble earned a badge
      First Post
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      476
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      172
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      105
    4. 4
      Michael Scrip
      88
    5. 5
      Steven P.
      70
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!