15 June 2010

Interlude - $125 a Pound

Interlude - $125 a Pound

Continuing with the guest blog theme, Sharon Ritchey muses on how the iPad came into her life and how she has been using it.

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I just bought an iPad and I lost 6 pounds. The machine was so expensive I can’t afford to buy food.  O.k., seriously it’s all true, except I can still afford to buy food.

When news of the iPad first hit the technology streets I didn’t think much of it. I knew that we’d own at least one because the techie in the family is an early adopter of all new gadgets. But for me, eh- just another gizmo, or so I thought.

Fast forward to March of this year. I broke down and upgraded my phone. I purchased my first smart phone, an Android. To say I hate it is a bit harsh. But I don’t love it. Part of the problem is that I was convinced by the ever helpful sales dude that I needed a screen protector to keep it from scratching. Well that scratch protection also prevents my small fingers from properly contacting the screen. I could never answer the phone before it hit voice mail. I would jab the screen furiously trying  to access applications only to scream in frustration as the phone  went into sleep mode. Cool techie apps are great but they weren’t fitting into my world.

Enter Denis

Our friend’s arrival in April was soon followed by the arrival of his new iPad. The machine had just been released and there was a mad scramble in Apple stores across the country to get one. The techie in the family had pre-ordered the 3G machine months earlier but its arrival was not scheduled until the end of May – almost a month away. Techie and Denis went to check the madness out.

Two days later we were all hooked. Denis, the Techie, my two girls, and anyone who had stopped by to say hi. If Denis was lucky he got to steal it back for a few minutes here and there to use it himself. 

I admit I didn’t know what to expect other than a large smart phone. But as applications were loaded I started to make connections to how this new technology could improve my life. It’s not a laptop and doesn’t pretend to be one. But for an on-the-go business owner I could see the productivity power. 

Now I have one. I bring it to meetings and run through presentations, I track the hours I put in on various jobs. I track my mileage, answer email and have enough room to type real responses. One application allows me to draw, type, and record my voice. Then there are the fun apps: news, games, weather, information resources, photos, and music. It also has a rock-star quality to it. I recently took it to a meeting at the local university where I consult and the Dean in charge of the school’s technology programs grabbed it and with a quick “would you mind?” started to play with it. I enjoy the coolness.

It’s not a perfect machine. It constantly needs to be cleaned, the keyboard is incomplete, you can’t print from it, and I now have a new data charge to my monthly bills. But that’s part of business. The machine is limited by the applications I can find and use. It has two e-readers loaded but I have found reading online occasionally gives me motion sickness. I also have to fight with my children but I can solve that by deleting their games. 

As for the 6 pound. The iPad’s arrival coincided with a push to lose some weight that had crept on with Denis’  arrival and a month of good food and wine. I’ve got an amazing little application called MyNetDiary that easily tracks the calories I consume along with my exercise and vitals. It’s a fun way to stay on the diet and it is a motivating tool, something all dieters need. 

So let’s see... cost of the iPad divided by the amount of weight I’ve lost equal about $125 US a pound. 

Perhaps if I continue to cut back on food I’ll be able to bring the cost of ownership down. 

1 June 2010

Interlude - Can I have a little bit more?


Now that the iPad is available in the UK and other countries, and has been around in the USA for a couple of months, It's  time for some other users to have their say and tell us what they think...

First up in a series of guest pieces is Frans-Jozef Rutjes with a look at how the iPad has been accepted by his family.

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I should have known better, really. But in the mist of the sheer excitement that came with the opportunity to replace my wife’s ailing PC with a crisp, white MacBook, I side-stepped my caution – I should have known better.

Even with the ‘Design Thinking’ power of Jonathan Ives and his peers, nothing had prepared said MacBook for the ambitions harboured by my 2-year old of ‘getting higher up’. That is, of course, literally getting higher up: stepping onto a closed MacBook to reach for something on a bedside table.

What started as a small crack, ended up with an ominous black spider-like crevasse across the entire screen of the MacBook. Apart from seriously hindering any viewing pleasure – no website looks good viewed only from the bottom half of the screen – it made me winch every time I glanced over to see my wife still battling on, squinting at her favourite bookmarked websites. I suspect it says something about the ease of use of an Apple product and its associated software, when my wife can still use it with only half the screen showing and the mouse cursor frivolously playing hide and seek in between the blacked out areas of the screen.  

Having said all that, rather than being furious with my son, I suppose I should really thank him for how he ‘stepped up’. In fairness, his unbound enthusiasm did pave the way for my latest purchase of Cupertino magic: the iPad.

Throughout the years I have rarely been able to capture my wife’s imagination with technology. Deeply rooted in the realities of everyday life with kids, fashion and keeping me from running off with my imagination, she simply has never been that impressed with what it might have to offer.

Also, she appears to possess a translation skill I lack. Whilst I might opt for a 265GB HDD recorder with Freeview and FreeSat because of its high-tech pedigree, she looks at the shiny black box as a means to allocate time to herself: Freeview equals CBBC, which equals kids bottoms on sofas and eyeballs silently glued to screens, which in turn equals the ability to spend some quiet time to herself.

I suspect that if I understood this mechanism better, over time I might have been able to harvest more approvals for acquisition of much needed gadgetry. As it stands, I spent a few lost days trying to justify the purchase of an iPad, using the argument that she was a ‘content consumer’ not a ‘content creator’ and therefore, why would she need another MacBook? But in the end I just ordered her one.

It was after the order confirmation email had slipped into my inbox that I noticed something curious happening. For the first time ever I saw a sliver of interest for something technological appear in my wife. Apparently, she had seen the TV commercial and came to the conclusion that the new iPad was ‘only a laptop screen’. Apart from the obvious fact that I had - yet again - been totally inept at describing the device (why had I not simply described it as ‘just the screen from your MacBook in your hands’?), it struck me that she was asking me….questions. Many questions, as a matter of fact, but the one that stuck was “How will I know how to use it?” 

Cracking question. Obviously a silly one. Or was it? As an iPhone owner and a happy technocrat, I assumed that using it would be obvious to anyone. Blind to how my average description of technology makes little impact on my wife’s understanding of it, I attempted to clarify that there would be portrait and landscape web surfing, touch-screen delights and ‘capsule content’ wrapped into individual ‘apps’. I even ventured as far as showing her (at the bottom half of her cracked MacBook screen) YouTube videos of 'unboxings' and ‘first-surfs’ to show her what to expect. But in the end, I just unboxed it upon arrival and simply handed it to her. 

And when I did, this is what happened: I didn’t see it back for hours. And even more significantly, there wasn’t a single question for what literally seemed an eternity. To put this in perspective, it took her all of two minutes to ask me to turn off predictive text on her new phone and it took her less than ten minutes to ask me to turn off the previously mentioned HDD recorder, as it seemed to ‘speak a different language’.

However, it took her 4 hours to ask me how to turn off the iPad….in case she wanted to. In case she wanted to? Amazing!

It seems to me that unlike any other object, the iPad has managed to unlock something worthy of a Dan Brown novel. Slightly populist, flirting with insider know-how and elevating the obvious to a higher order but with dead-on purpose that leaves readers wanting just a little more. And without being a critic or an advocate; keeping interest going appears to me precisely what is at stake here.

So far, the iPad hasn’t disappointed on this front. When my wife's interest in surfing appeared to wane (after all, there is only so much swivelling websites from portrait to landscape view one can take), she discovered apps. When finding interesting apps became more of an effort than a surprise, she moved recent pictures from camera to iPad with the adapter I ordered for her. When she had flicked and re-flicked through her pictures my 7-year old son sat next to her and they started to surf the web together handing the iPad backwards and forwards. And in the end,  when they switched off the iPad, it wasn’t because they got bored but because they had to, in order to rejoin family life and have dinner.

From using it to liking it has been a small step this time. But with new technology and a vast knowledge gained from exploits that ranges from the Newton MessagePads to the iPhone, Apple have pushed boldly ahead and are now demanding the leap from ‘like’ to ‘love’.

And from where I am sitting – next to my wife, eagerly awaiting being allowed to have a go on ‘her’ iPad – they’re allowed to claim at least a little victory in our household.

Small Print

A tip of the hat to Sharon Ritchey, Carl Schenkenberger & Frans-Jozef Rutjes for their invaluable help and encouragement. Without them I'd be wasting my days on a game console or grumbling about 3D software that doesn't work properly. Or eating. Probably the latter.

The content of this blog is my personal opinion, based directly on my personal experiences. Feel free to email me at hairytech@gmail.com if you want to discuss anything on here. Or better still, leave a comment.