Opinion: Thanks, Steve, for not giving me an iPad

By Nate Cochrane on Apr 15, 2010 2:40 PM
Filed under Software

Delay means time to concentrate on important stuff.

Thanks, Steve Jobs, for delaying the release of your shiny new iPad in Australia.

Now I can compare its merits against other such slate devices from HP, the Chinese factories and Asus among others. I hear they have things the iPad lacks, such as USB, decent Wi-Fi reception, a camera for Skype, multi-tasking and faster processors.

Now I will make an informed decision and not rush into anything.

By the time the iPad gets here, maybe it will be in its second or third incarnation and all those pesky bugs, incompatibilities and security flaws will be ironed out. Next time you're presenting to your American buyers, those first-class citizens in the nation of Apple, please pass along my thanks for stepping into the line of fire to smooth those crimps for me. Champs.

I'm especially warmed by your encouragement under the bland headline "Apple Media Advisory" for me to be happy for your US chosen who will get my iPad: "We know that many international customers waiting to buy an iPad will be disappointed by this news but we hope they will be pleased to learn the reason - the iPad is a runaway success in the US thus far".

That certainly softens the blow, thanks, again.

And I guess you delivered on one promise, at least: the iPad truly is magical. Even before it arrived this month as you said it would, it already has performed a disappearing act. Boom.

I was talking to my local Apple reseller today -- you know the blokes who sell, service and support your products and customers? He was not a happy chappy, let me tell you. But what does he know? He's only been selling your kit since before the Newton MessagePad was a glimmer in the eyes of Michael Tchao and Steve Capps and when every Cube sold came with a complimentary smoke alarm and invisible crack removal tool.

Besides, the lack of local supply will surely be met by parallel importers and grey market websites, so it all balances out, kind of, doesn't it?

I'm amused by the thought of Apple's lumbering fleet of container ships the size of supertankers turning around in the world's shipping lanes as they were headed to their destinations laden to the bulwarks with iPads. I imagine it would take an hour or more under full steam for each of them to turn around as all the smaller boats and ships dart out of their way.

Of course, the air shipments just have to be re-deployed and I imagine the seats on US-bound airliners will fill up swiftly now that non-Americans, that 60 percent and the fastest growing part of your business, have to physically go to a US Apple Store to slake their thirst at the font of all things cool in gadgetry. No prizes for guessing why there's a US shortage - the comitragically hip are either buying online or hopping on planet-destroying airplanes. Mountain and Muhammad.

And it gives the telcos a bit longer to ready their hopelessly inadequate 3G networks for the data these devices will suck up.

Sure, there will be teeth gnashing from disappointed fashionistas who hoped later this month to balance a cafe latte in one hand and an iPad in the other while baristas, waiters and coffee shop customers craned their necks to bask in the reflected glow of their Apple Inc style. Now they'll just have to content themselves with doing iLaps along Chapel and Oxford streets in their Vespas for a bit longer.

And there will be those today who will rant in online forums and blogs but they will be re-educated by the faithful, the Apple fanbois from the Cult of Mac who see it as their You-given duty to put a positive spin on every lame move Apple makes. So you won't have to spend too much on PR to counter the umbrage.

And one more thing, you may even be able to turn a quid from this debacle of poor planning because we all know that Apple doesn't get enough free advertising through the media...

 
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Opinion: Thanks, Steve, for not giving me an iPad
"Well it's obvious almost anything that is waste goes to the landfill so that ain't something to brag about. One thing for certain though, not many people realise that everytime Apple releases ..."
 
 
 
 
Comments: 4
Tom_B
Apr 16, 2010 4:03 PM
Nate

Apple have released a device that has outsold everyone's expectations, including their own and are unable to supply stock to the US, let alone Australia (who might I add represents approx 2% of their total addressable market).

Diddums that you can't go out and buy an iPad from your mate Joe Apple Reseller. You might have to just wait a little longer.

No doubt you are a member of the community who canned the original iPhone for it's locked down OS, and lack of physical keyboard. Yet you now present it proudly as you sip your latte at your local coffee shop.

Apple's unbelievable success over the past 3 or 4 years has nothing to do with Vespa riding Fanbois. They continue to innovate an otherwise stale market.
RaTTyRaTT
Apr 19, 2010 6:05 PM
Re: Tom_B

Sorry mate, there's not much innovation in this product. Tablets have been around for years, and simply slash & burning on features of a Tablet PC, simply reducing the weight = is NOT innovative. Nice try Fanboi. I have watched this product with interest, mostly with an enterprise market space viewpoint - and seen nothing new except more consumer landfill garbage, which is where all this stuff ends up after dying.

In the end, the only success here lies with Apple's ability to market 'something' by spending the money in turn on the PR/Hype, leading up to it, and building up a fan-base. While the iPhone has it's merits = this product is simply another piece of a 'boring' puzzle that is NOT innovative.

feel free to flame now - done & done.
tabletpc
Apr 20, 2010 3:03 PM
RaTTyRaTT, whilst your comment itself is pretty slash and burn, I think it is spot on.

I now have an iPad here on my desk and I have to say that it is amazingly sexy, but the functionality is a huge dissapointment. I asked myself if I could work on this without a PC for a quarter, a month or even a week and the answer to all is a big NO!

There's just far too much that I can't do on it. Like this morning, I was trying to track down a supplier payment and match it up with our bank account, but of course I couldn't have the two open at the same time... Just far too hard.

One handed input on the virtual keyboard is way too slow for anything more than a 1 or 2 line email. I can hand write for ages at double the speed on a Tablet PC... This iPhone Virtual Keyboard is great on a phoen, but on a slate, it is seriously not innovative.

That said, it is still fantastic device for games and ebooks, just don't expect to be productive with it...

It really is just a big iPhone, without the voice calling and 3G (which makes the iPhone useful)... Had to swtich over to the Tablet to get anyting done today.

I am really looking forward to the Windows Slates coming out later in the year. We will have handwriting recognition, an active digitizer and a serious productivity machine.
cootified
Apr 20, 2010 3:12 PM
Well it's obvious almost anything that is waste goes to the landfill so that ain't something to brag about.

One thing for certain though, not many people realise that everytime Apple releases something, it's always the non-fanbois complaining and carrying on about the features and comparing it to other products.

Apart from the iPod, there is nothing that compares to the iPhone. You are yet to see a phone that can tell you when your bus comes, where you are, where's the nearest petrol station, MMS your friend of your GPR cordinates with an almost perfect OS GUI.

Features are great, lots of features are awesome. But what is it good for if you don't know how to use it or you hardly use it at all?

For the iPad, yes the concept is not new. But you wont find a tablet PC back in 2002 with a 3G connectivity, Wi-Fi 802.11n, a Flash hard drive and a touch screen that is very responsive.
Aren't they innovations?

If they have been around for a while, then why did we have to wait for someone like Apple to release it and create hype?

We all know the truth is that, people are against Apple because of their "locked-down" stance where they want to control everything.

To that, all I say is Android. It has been 2 years since Android came out and has it beaten the iPhone?
So obviously control is working?
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