As you might have gleaned from my last post, I'm torn on the new Apple
iPad. Like so many naysayers that have come out over the last week, I'm
disappointed in all the things lacking from the first generation iPad:
multitasking, a camera, Flash support, Microsoft Exchange support (Apple is
unclear about this, but excludes it from the list of supported e-mail providers
on its web site), blah, blah, blah. Of course I'd love it if the iPad had
all of these things, didn't run any slower because of them, and didn't cost any
more either. We always want more. But it is what it is. I
can't change Apple's engineering decisions. I can only decide whether the
device is something worth buying or not.
So I've put my thinking cap on over the last week to try to imagine how I might
use such a thing.
The first thing I imagine is an accessorized iPad, not a stock iPad. I've
heard people complain about how the iPad has a slight curvature on the back
that will make it difficult to put it on your lap and type on the virtual
keyboard. Forget about that. We're going to put the iPad inside of
a nice portfolio of some kind that will remove this objection. I want
something to protect it a little bit if I handle it less than gently.
Apple already has a nice looking iPad portfolio on their web site, and I
imagine that there will be plenty of other third-party options just like there
are zillions of cases for the iPhone. Imagine a nice portfolio case for
the iPad. A place for a pen, maybe a stylus, a little pad of real paper,
and a holder to stuff in a few business cards. The photos of the Apple
portfolio doesn't show good enough photos of the inside of it, so I can't tell
if it will have those features or not. But surely, there will be some
really nice cases for it. The case will provide a nice typing surface for
lap typing. I'm not worried about that objection.
Next, I imagine somebody is going to make a nice stylus that I can use with the
iPad, and there will be some way of using the stylus to create hand-written
notes. And I'm not talking about some little plastic stick, I mean a nice
stylus, with the same quality and feel of a good Waterman pen. Such
things already exist for other PDA's and smartphones, so surely there will be
some kind of solution for the iPad. I'm not going to get too wrapped
around the axle about the lack of note-taking capabilities, because surely this
is going to be addressed some how, some way.
Those two accessories will give me a nice, portable platform for transporting
the iPad with me. Would I meet my friend at Starbucks for tea and take
something like that with me? Yeah, I might. If I didn't need my
laptop, but still wanted to have a business-oriented meeting that might require
opening a document or a web site, this wouldn't be a bad option. My 17
inch MacBook Pro, nice as it is, is still pretty big and heavy. I really
don't want to take that to Starbucks unless I know for sure I really need
it. Now to be sure, there would be plenty of times when I wouldn't take
*either* the laptop or the iPad, I would just take my iPhone, but I can imagine
there would be times where the larger screen of the iPad would come in really
handy at Starbucks.
I'm also imagining, however, that I would use the iPad around the house much
more frequently than I would take it to Starbucks.
My home is laid out in a long and narrow footprint. At
one end is my office, and clear at the other end of the house is the master
bedroom. In the evenings, my wife is usually laying in bed watching TV,
perhaps using her 13 inch Macbook Pro to do a little work between
commercials. I'm all the way at the other end of the house in my office,
usually surfing the web or organizing my e-mail. That sucks. It
would be nice to spend some time with her together. Now, me being a dude,
my original solution to this dilemma was far different than getting a netbook,
Macbook Air, or a tablet PC. My suggestion was to get a second Mac Pro, a
second 30 inch monitor, install a heavy-duty wall-mounted monitor arm, and a wall-mounted
sliding keyboard tray. Then, not only could I surf and check e-mail, I
could do real work, like actual programming. My wife was so impressed
with this idea that she said "no freakin' way."
Given where I'm at now, the obvious solution would be to simply
take my 17 inch MacBook Pro into the bedroom. I've done it. It
works. It's not a bad solution. It's a little bit bulkier and
clumsier that I would like, however. If I'm typing a long e-mail
response, the laptop keyboard is nice to have. But most of the time, I'm
not doing much typing. It would be nice to have a smaller, lighter device
that I could switch between landscape and portrait mode. The iPad does
have some potential here.
I am disappointed that Apple hasn't specifically mentioned
support for Microsoft Exchange. I use a hosted Exchange server to get my
e-mail. One thing that would be nice to do laying in bed is to go through
my Inbox and organize my e-mails. I can do this on my iPhone, but there's
certain things I can't do. For example, if I want to create a new folder
to move the e-mail into it, I can't do that on the iPhone. Or if I want
to save off a PDF receipt onto my QuickBooks server, I can't do that.
Typing anything more than one-line responses to an e-mail is too tedious on the
iPhone. So the iPad could give me a better platform for doing that, and
it would be a lot easier to flop around in bed with the iPad than the 17 inch
laptop. Let's assume the iPad has no support for Exchange. That
sucks, but I imagine that a future software update will solve that. In
the meantime, I could use the web-based Outlook Web Access (OWA) from the
iPad's browser and do it that way. Such a solution would be unthinkable
on the iPhone, but with the larger screen of the iPad, it might be a good-enough
transition solution that it could hold me over until there was native Exchange
support. I don't really like the OWA interface, however, so I really hope
that Exchange support is coming in the not-too-distant future.
Another thing I like to do a lot is type notes into my
wiki. If I'm searching the web for a topic, and I find some good links, I
typically copy-and-paste them into my wiki along with some contextual
notes. I can access my wiki from Safari, and it doesn't use any Flash
plug-ins, so I could see myself sitting on the couch or laying in bed, watching
Celebrity Sex Rehab with Dr. Drew on TV, and typing away on my wiki with my
iPad. I really do use my wiki a lot, as a journal, a to-do list, a
software architecture platform, and lots of other things, so it would be kind
of nice to have a light-weight device with good battery life that I could use
to update my wiki when I'm not sitting at my desk. Ditto for writing blog
entries as I'm doing now.
Lastly, and this may be the sleeper app that nobody has
thought much about yet, the iPad might make a really great platform for remote
desktop-ing into other computers around the house. In addition to my
primary desktop and laptop, I've got a couple secondary desktop computers, 5
rack-mounted servers down in the basement, and numerous virtual machines for
various applications. Being able to hit any of those from my iPad would
be really cool. There are already several remote desktop apps available
for the iPhone, but the iPhone's screen is really too small for serious
work. I have to assume that the remote desktop vendors will update their
apps to take advantage of the native screen resolution of the iPad.
One frequent use of remote desktop is accessing my
QuickBooks installation. As I mentioned in an earlier blog post, I
decided to set up a dedicated virtual machine specifically for running
QuickBooks and storing finance-related documents (bank statements, receipts,
etc.). That way I can access QuickBooks from either my desktop or my
laptop, or any other computer for that matter. It's not the fastest
solution in the world, but it's worked out fairly well. Like a lot of
small business owners, I hate doing the books, and I procrastinate doing it for
as long as possible. But if I could sit on the couch with my iPad, remote
desk into the QuickBooks VM, enter a few invoices, pay a few bills, and
reconcile a few bank statements, I might be more motivated to keep my
financials up-to-date. People are complaining about the lack of
multitasking, but with remote desktop, problem solved. Who knows, maybe
remote desktop will turn out to be the killer app for the iPad.
Speaking of multitasking, I hear people complaining that
they won't be able to run an app and listen to music at the same time. I
don't know, but for my money, I'm probably not going to play music on the
iPad. Photos, maybe. Watching a movie on an airplane,
definitely. But if I want to run an app and listen to music at the same
time, I'll just play the music on my iPhone or iPod Nano. I mean, I'm
always going to carry my iPhone with me, iPad or no iPad, and an iPod Nano or
Shuffle is so small that I could take one of those with me too if I really
thought I needed it. Who cares if the iPad can't play music and run an
app at the same time. Now, multitasking would be really nice, don't get
me wrong ... I hope they add that in iPhone OS 4.0, but I think I could still
do useful work on the iPad even without multitasking.
So that's how I could see myself using the iPad ... sitting
on the couch surfing the web, updating my wiki, writing a blog, organizing my
e-mail (please, please, please give me Exchange support), and catching up on
QuickBooks via remote desktop. Let's see how close reality comes to that.