Q 8 Blog Reviews » Posts for tag 'perfect'

iPad SchmiPad: Who Needs Another Device?

I think I've decided - the iPad just isn't for me. I move around too much. I'm an on-the-go type of guy, and for that I've already found my two trusty devices - my 12" netbook and my iPhone. Between the two, I have everything I need, but maybe that's the problem with all of us techies, tech writers and early adopters, us serious content creators and code-o-philes, looking at and reviewing these new devices: they're just not for us. The iPad is for that 75% to 85% of the rest of the population, the couch sitters and TV watchers, the full-time employees who don't blog, code or anything of the sort. They watch videos, read articles, send quick notes to friends and family on Facebook, play some online Scrabble and call it a day. The iPad is for the average Internet user. Sponsor This post is part of a pro/con series written with ReadWriteWeb's Marshall Kirkpatrick, who argues that he waited a year to buy an iPhone, and this time, he's going to be first in line. Click here to read his counter-point article Life's Too Short: I'm Getting an iPad Right Away . For me, the more technical, content creator type of user, the iPhone and netbook combination is where it's at. On the go, the iPhone can handle quick microblogging, photos, chatting, location-based service, video, information retrieval and even very basic content creation and interaction, with things like the Facebook app. Unlike the netbook, it's always on and readily available in my side pocket. The netbook is the perfect compliment to the iPhone. It weighs three pounds, is about an inch thick at its widest point, and it has a few of my favorite, most used features - a mouse (with both a right and left button), a keyboard (nearly full-sized, even), a web cam (though I'm not personally big for being on camera) and multitasking. If I'm going to actually sit myself down and get on the Internet, I'm going to be doing five things at once, likely typing like a madman the whole while. I'm cutting and pasting, switching from one app to another, one tab to another, and editing photos along the way. So my question becomes, where does the iPad fit into this equation? The answer for me is "nowhere". But I certainly don't think that the answer is "nowhere" for all of us. The iPad will make the perfect coffee table item, the ideal traveling media center and the great reading-on-the-train-to-work solution. It will be an always-on device that you reach for quickly, when you want to know a mid-conversation answer or you're sitting around watching TV and want to visit the website that just popped on screen. But, until it will compete with my netbook, as Steve Jobs so aptly pointed out it wasn't going to do, it won't be doing anything for me. Discuss

d321d4b812p sign.jpg 110x150 iPad SchmiPad: Who Needs Another Device?

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iPad SchmiPad: Who Needs Another Device?

Tags:along-the-way, apple, being-on-camera, between-the-two, content creator, content creators, facebook, iPad, iphone, Marshall, Netbook, perfect, phone-between, population, Read, Steve Jobs, things-at-once, traveling-media

LoKast : The Disposable Social Network

Here's an idea for you: instead of slowly amassing followers, like on Twitter, or carefully culling your friends list over time on Facebook, making sure everyone is in their appropriate list and category, collect and dispose of friends like you ask for the time or a spare cigarette on a busy city street. That's what Lokast , the self-described "disposable" social network lets you do - carry your throw-away lifestyle over into the digital world. Sponsor The LoKast iPhone app was released earlier this week at the South By South West festival in Austin and is the perfect app for finding yourself among throbbing masses of the technologically inclined. But what is this disposable thing? From the email we received this week on the app's release: Disposable? Yes. That means unlike Facebook which is friends and family, this app is about finding random people in close range and being able to share and see parts of their public digital profile including downloading their public-share videos, music and pictures. The best part, is that after you're in that close range, you may never see them again. IE: Disposable. According to the press release, the name is short for "local casting", as opposed to broadcasting, and "aims to eliminate the need for physical media sharing, thereby eradicating physical CDs, plastic cases, video DVDs or waiting to get back to a PC computer to share and experience content." We have to agree that SXSW seems like the perfect venue for this type of app and we'd say why not give it a shot? We haven't made it all the way downtown yet to be close enough to give it a full whirl, but it looks more than capable from toying with it. Now, the thing is, we can't see a lot of people using this outside of big, hi-tech cities or conferences. Where does this fit into our day to day life? Are we really going to run around town staring at my screen trying to see if someone else with the same app is nearby? We don't think so. For now, though, we'd say give it an install and run around collecting some demos and see what people are listening to. Discuss

8394ddb925jul09b.jpg LoKast : The Disposable Social Network

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LoKast : The Disposable Social Network

Tags:digital, digital profile, Disposable, dvds-or-waiting, facebook, friends, like-on-twitter, perfect, press, public, slowly-amassing, sxsw 2010, technologically, time, week
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