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The iPad cometh

Posted by Warren Frey on Wed, January 27, 2010 5:37 PM · Filed under Denver-Boulder, Portland, Seattle, Calgary, Edmonton, Montréal, Ottawa, Toronto, Vancouver, Victoria, Kitchener-Waterloo, South-Florida, Atlantic-Canada , iPhone · 1 Comment

After years of waiting, rumours and nonsense, the Apple iPad is finally upon us. Am I impressed? Am I blown away? Kinda.

Clearly it makes sense to move media from the somewhat clunky interface of keyboard and screen to a touchpad, and Apple is the company to move the computer industry kicking and screaming into a new paradigm. And what the iPad does, it does very, very well, from we surfing to reading books and newspapers. And yet….there’s something missing. Maybe it’s the fact that there’s no camera, no multi-tasking and the fact that the iPad seems geared more to content consumption than content creation.

As someone who creates content for a living, that leaves me high and dry. I can’t use the iPad for quick and dirty vlogging or podcasting and I definitely won’t be editing video on it anytime soon. I have a Macbook Pro and an iPhone, and between the two of them I get everything I need without a third device.

But on the other hand it’s a new platform, so as a content creator that makes me happy. In theory, the iPad form factor makes it an ideal platform for video and for print, both fields I happen to work in. It even opens up the possibility of new forms of magazine, hybrids of video, audio, game content and print articles, distributable by small publishers consisting of a writer, developer and designer. In a way it could be the rebirth of the zine.

In fact, the potential of the iPad is almost limitless. But right now, that’s just what it is…potential. And that’s why i won’t be getting one just yet.

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1 Comment

Shawn Bouchard (@sbouchard) said on Thu, January 28, 2010 at 2:49 PM

Thanks for the post Warren. I agree the iPad is going to change things for content publishers, in the same way that the iPod/iPhone created a legitimate market for music, video and television sales online. The runaway success of the App store bodes well for the launch of iBooks and certainly has created a new opportunity for newsprint, magazine and book publishers to earn revenue in the digital arena. I wrote a blog post about this yesterday, because I believe this is perhaps Apple's greatest innovation - they have found a way to encourage us cynical new media types to pay for intellectual property again. That's huge!

http://www.smallboxsoftware.com/2010/01/27/apples_innovation_continues_with_ipad_tablet.ph

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