Apple iPad Verdict from Times, Journal: Not for Everyone
Is the Apple iPad going to replace your laptop?
It depends on who you are and how you use your laptop-that's the nutshell
verdict from The New York Times' David
Pogue and the Wall Street Journal's Walter
S. Mossberg, whose separate reviews of the iPad went live March 31.
"I believe this beautiful new touch-screen device from Apple has the potential
to change portable computing profoundly and challenge the primacy of the
laptop," Mossberg wrote.
"But first," he continued, "it will have to prove that it really can replace
the laptop or netbook for enough common tasks, enough of the time, to make it a
viable alternative."
Pogue, usually the less persnickety of the two, offered compliments where they
were due but was far from as effusive as the clearly more smitten Mossberg.
Pogue, hearing vastly different early sentiments coming in from two camps-techies
and regular consumers-split his review, addressing each group separately.
Still, to neither group was he as upbeat or positive as he's been in reviews of
the Palm
Pre, say, or the Motorola
Droid.
The iPad's screen is big and glossy but "every fingerprint is grossly
apparent," Pogue wrote. There's an ebook reader, but the book selection is
"puny," you can't read the screen well in direct sunlight, the 1.5-pound iPad
quickly becomes a whole lot heavier than the 10-ounce Kindle, and the iPad is
not going to save the newspaper or book industries. "And," Pogue added, "you
can't read books from the Apple bookstore on any other machine-not even a Mac
or iPhone."
Mossberg, however, found the half-inch-thick iPad a refreshing change from
carrying around a laptop; found-as Pogue did-the iPad's battery to outlast
Apple's promise by more than an hour; and, as an e-reader, thought the iPad is "better
in my view than the Amazon Kindle."
However, Mossberg, too, agreed that the iPad is notably heavier than the Kindle
and requires two hands for reading.
Where Mossberg found typing on the on-screen keyboard, in a horizontal
position, to be "more comfortable and accurate to use than the cramped
keyboards and touchpad's on many netbooks," and thought the iPad case, sold
separately for $39, to "bend to set up a nice angle for typing," Pogue found it
"just barely usable."
When used vertically, the iPad's on-screen keyboard offered, Pogue wrote, a
"horrible experience."
Both reviewers found Apple's custom processor to be very fast, and seemed
impressed with AT&T's 3G offering, though the model with both 3G and WiFi
is not yet available-both men tested WiFi-only iPads. The AT&T service fee
will be $15 for 250 megabytes or $30 for unlimited cellular Internet service.
Plus, the fee applies to one month-there's no annual contract.
"The other carriers are probably cursing AT&T's name for setting this
precedent," Pogue wrote.
Both Pogue and Mossberg made note of the fact that because Apple
turns up its nose at Adobe Flash, there are Websites with white boxes where
video or animation should be. Bummer.
"There's no multitasking, either. ... Plus no USB
jacks and no camera," Pogue added. "Bye-bye, Skype video chats. You know Apple
is just leaving stuff out for next year's model."
But then there are the apps, an area where Apple has long excelled.
Apple has rebuilt key iPhone apps for the iPad, adding more sophisticated features,
such as a "popover" menu that lets a user see his choices without leaving the
screen he's on.
There are also specially designed iPad apps, of which Apple says it will have
1,000 as of the iPad's April 3 launch. These apps, Pogue wrote, are "where the
real fun begins." He found the Marvel comic-book app "brilliant in its
vividness" and enjoyed the real-newspaper look and layout in the iPad newspaper
apps.
Apple also offers a $30 suite that includes a spreadsheet, presentation program
and word processing application. Mossberg generally enjoyed these, explaining
that they can import Microsoft Office files-though not always accurately or
with their formatting intact.
Quibbles, frustrations and all, Pogue concluded, "The iPad is so fast and light,
the multitouch screen so bright and responsive, the software so easy to
navigate, that it really does qualify as a new category of gadget." And
Mossberg agreed.
"Because the iPad is a new type of computer," Mossberg wrote, "you have to feel
it, use it, to fully understand it and decide if it is for you, or whether,
say, a netbook might do better."
