"The new Amazon Kindle DX has a few weeks to live—and the magazine and newspaper industries may not have much longer." - Sascha Segan, PCMag.com
People who say things like this have never seen a Kindle. The E ink and electronic paper format is immeasurably easier on the eyes than any of the backlit stuff we've been dealing with in the history of this kind of technology. And you've got to figure that eventually, someone is going to devise that kind of technology in color, which will kill backlighting across the board. When you hear someone trash the Kindle, ask them if they've ever actually seen or held one. Some of the backlash against this technology by traditional book people is understandable -- there really is something satisfyingly tactile books -- but don't buy into any of the garbage you hear about it being tough on the eyes. The visual technology that kindle brings to the table is not going to be outdone by anything Apple will roll out until it develops its own proprietary version of what the Kindle has to offer.
I suppose it could ultimately kill off the netbook, but there really is something to your eyes and fingers approaching the whole thing at different angles. Yeah, they've got the keyboard dock for that, but if it's all the same, why not just have a much cheaper netbook and a smartphone?
"The iPad itself seems less svelte than many fans expected-a blogger at Gizmodo estimates that 20 per cent of the surface is bezel. The device's home screen features weirdly spaced-out icons. The overwhelming early response among those live-blogging the event, and reacting to the live blogs online, is that this thing looks like a really big iPhone," - Newsweek
There's a host of notably important things that it does not do. Per the New York Times liveblog of the event:
- No ability to play Adobe Flash animations, widely used on the Web.
- No camera, still or video
- No non-Internet phone function
- Unclear whether you can bundle your AT&T iPhone plan with an iPad data plan
- No removable battery for a device that can suck a lot of power
- No removable storage
"I'm sorry, but this idea is weak sauce. I can see shrinking a laptop down to make a netbook....but increasing the size of an iPhone/iPod touch to that of a netbook seems like a sign of a company really desperately trying to scrape the bottom or the nearly-dry barrel of the whole iPod/iPhone concept." - PC World
Amen.
[Insert your own feminine hygiene product joke here].
http://www.npr.org/blogs/alltechconsidered/2010/01/ipad_apples_way_of_reaching_ou.html
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