Zarathustra[H]
Extremely [H]
- Joined
- Oct 29, 2000
- Messages
- 37,463
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Zarathustra[H];1041846151 said:I'd have to try it myself to see if I'd like it.
With all the free hand input it seems like it would be a rather messy and unappealing method to collect data, but I guess it wouldn't ave a following if people didn't like it...
I like the way traditional text entry and image object entry forces you to structure and lay out everything, so that it isn't messy.
Zarathustra[H];1041846151 said:Having a bunch of typed text, mixed with webpage snippets mixed with hand written notes and annotations feels - based on description alone - like it would make my head want to explode.
Zarathustra[H];1041846161 said:I loaded up my Win10 Pro VM because you guys had me curious.
This was one of the most disappointing events Apple has had in a long time. There were no new ideas and there was a lot of copying and catching up. I wonder how Jobs would feel if he were alive. He'd probably clean house and start over.
No doubt the iPad is kinda meh (why wouldn't I just get a hybrid with a big boy OS?), but tablets, to me, are just big phones. There are some photo apps that can be coupled with an SLR that are interesting, but overall, I think they're fun toys, but not must have tools.
MIght as well run OSX from this thing imo.
They can't, because it may need more power to run OSX.
I guess I am the odd man out ... as my eyes have gotten older I want bigger ... I won't get a phone smaller than 5" ... with that big a phone a 13" tablet is perfect ... I need to upgrade my 27" 1440P monitor to 4K next year (hopefully something in the 30s) ... and my projector I use for TV is 100" ... sometimes smaller is neither more convenient or better![]()
Could be worse...
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Because the stylus is not a passive stylus. It is pressure sensitive for drawing/writing.
Most drawing tablets have it the other way around.. but I am guessing it is a whole lot cheaper to make a stylus with pressure sensitivity then it is to make a huge screen with drawing tablet like pressure sensitivity.
So you have your screen which senses where the stylus is.. and then the stylus is transmitting pressure data to the iPad in order to figure out how think of lines, etc. to make.
It's an electrostatic pen that has to be powered like pretty much all non-traditional Wacom digital pens do these days. Traditional Wacom pens used electrometric resonance, i.e. Samsung's SPens and the first two Surface Pros. Those require an extra layer to emit the signal from the screen but the pen doesn't need power and has to be made of non-conductive materials. Electrostatic pens emit signals from the pen thus requiring power but reducing the cost of the device and adding all of the cost into the pen. That's why even Wacom now is using electrostatics in it's newest pen tech.
Those are much better reasons that I was expecting as to why it had to be charged. I guess that makes sense. Still, $99 for a freakin' pen is a bit silly.
I find pricing it higher than Wacom's prices to be ridiculous. The Intuos stylus doesn't command such a price, not even their Bluetooth offerings meant to go with iPad.
OMG that's the stupidest design ever. Random tiny batteries for no reason and a really weirdly sized main battery? That's like something a buncha drunk people would put on a napkin and then try to find on kickstarter. Its no wonder the Surface Pro isn't selling very well compared to like Dell or HP's stuff.
OMG that's the stupidest design ever. Random tiny batteries for no reason and a really weirdly sized main battery? That's like something a buncha drunk people would put on a napkin and then try to find on kickstarter. Its no wonder the Surface Pro isn't selling very well compared to like Dell or HP's stuff.
I doubt that is the reason the Surface Pro 3 isn't selling as much as the HP and Dell.
Stylus has been there for the longest time way before the Samsung even introduce any mobile device. Same as Split screen....
This is to general a statement. Im assuming Apple is looking for broad enterprise adoption with this (they pounded medical hard in their demo, and I know ipads are in airplanes) and an extra 100 dollars isnt much in those contracts.
Pfft. And Jobs was always "Why would anyone want to use a stylus?"
Enterprise. Pfft. Apple can't support Enterprise. They don't have the infrastructure, mindset, nor the desire for it.
well, he is still right. I wouldn't want to use a stylus on my phone, computer or tablet for the vast majority of tasks. Sketching or painting models are the only time I use mine (wacom)
well, he is still right. I wouldn't want to use a stylus on my phone, computer or tablet for the vast majority of tasks. Sketching or painting models are the only time I use mine (wacom)
But that's the way things are sometimes, chaotic. It doesn't mean that the information isn't useful or that annotating something over time or with additional information doesn't become extremely valuable. The less one thinks about structure and more about actually what's important to gather and remember, the more powerful and useful OneNote becomes. One thing I do a lot is take an image of something, like a computer I'm working on or something around the house or a whiteboard at work and on the image make notions of things to remember. And the handwritten notes are searchable just like text. Chaotic, not structured but VERY useful.
I doubt that is the reason the Surface Pro 3 isn't selling as much as the HP and Dell.
Both HP and DelI have pens for their devices that use the same AAAA battery. The "random" battery powers a Bluetooth transmitter that opens OneNote and allows screenshots to be taken.
LOL! The Surface Pro 3 is now being sold by HP and Dell to their enterprise customers how wanted to be able to buy the SP3 through their existing supply chains.
There is a huge difference between a stylus which is just a stick and a digital pen with digital ink.
A tablet with a 12.9" screen isn't a big phone, it's a medium sized laptop at least as far as the screen is concerned. The lines are blurring at this size of screen. The iPad Pro doesn't support a mouse and I have no idea how well that keyboard works but no doubt at least from some it can do the work of a "must have" tool while providing capabilities that some would also consider must have, like the digital pen that has not traditionally been coupled with must have tools.
I think we are finally getting to the age where hybrid computing is starting to come together now that even Apple is starting to play the game. Of course the convertible hybrid concept is far from new and Microsoft certainly failed at the beginning of the millennium with its Tablet PC concept. But all the main elements of that vision of the tablet PC seem to be catching on now. And that's not a new phenomenon. Sometimes it takes a while for things to come together such that even a good idea doesn't come to fruition until the execution is right. In the last couple of years the pieces are starting to come together. I think hybrid devices will in the next few years finally a very significant part of mobile general purpose productivity computing much like the idea of Tablet PCs from 13 years ago.
I understand, but it's still a phone OS. I was hoping maybe they'd have a hybrid that could run Mac apps...ideally it'd run MAC and iOS apps. I love my iPhone, but there's nothing here to convince me that I should buy an iPad Pro instead of a Windows 10 hybrid.
It's a kick ass tablet. Great size, good performing, comes with a pen and a keyboard. Not bad at all. It's a great product.
However, with alternatives (Macbook/Surface Pro offer a fuller experience for a small amount more) out there, it's not a great deal. I'd rather spend around the same or a little more for a full desktop OS (OSX or Windows). If I want a strict tablet with iOS, I'd go with the smaller iPad (I have the iPad 3 and love it).
I can see that it's awesome. I can't see the value in it. It's just a standard tablet running iOS. That was why I upgraded to a Surface. It could do more. iOS is too limited. I still use the iPad, but for the small apps, reading, email, some web, etc.. It's not a do everything OS like OSX or Windows is. So, I won't spend a whole lot on it. Even if it is well made and a great device. From a functionality standpoint, the value isn't there for me.
They can't, because it may need more power to run OSX.
Actually no, it doesnt come with a pen and keyboard. You can buy an additional keyboard and pen for $270 extra
One of the things this re-illustrates is why ARM CPUs are so popular and pushed so hard, they create massive profit margins. Apple can basically tout this as a surface pro competitor to the ignorant masses which is most people and sell this at similar prices to Surface pro but their profit margins are going to be so much higher because the cheapo SOC is worth like $30 compared to several hundred for Intels.
I for see another smashing profitable quarter for apple. Unbelievable how much they can get away with.