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Why the Apple iPad Will Make Me More Productive

(Reading time: 7 – 11 minutes)

I’m excited about Apple’s iPad.

I’m pretty sure the iPad will change everything for me. Hyperbole? Maybe. Before I look forward too much though, I want to look backwards.

Since the birth of the modern internet, software has conformed to hardware. The modern PC has been around a lot longer than the modern internet, and the hardware has remained the same. Yes, it’s gotten faster and better, but we still have the same old screen, keyboard and mouse that has been around as long as I can remember.

On the other end of the spectrum, the iPhone (and other smart phones) is just a variation of the Personal Data Assistant (PDA) theme. It has gotten about as good as PDAs can get, but the idea has been largely the same since the Palm Pilot: handheld, portable, big screen, keyboard optional.

As hardware has evolved, the internet has been conforming to the hardware. Web browsers have been designed to work with the keyboard, mouse, and screen, and websites and web-based applications have to work within those browsers. The software has had to conform to the hardware, and that has fundamentally impacted the design of web technology.

The tablet is the beginning of a new cycle, the hardware is conforming to the software. Instead of asking how to make the internet work with computers, the tablet answers how we can make computers that best work with the internet.

I think this will start a cascade of changes. Hardware will conform to software, then software will conform to new hardware, and the cycle repeats and repeats, flip flopping up a ladder of progress. The result will be that the internet will not be confined to the PC-style computer.

For the most part, the internet has only been useable with a computer. The connection between these two is so strong that computers and internet are almost synonymous. This tablet however, is not a computing device, it is a connecting device. It is designed to use the internet, and to be a device that makes using the internet a lot more useful.

Here are jsut a couple simple examples off the top of my head:

  • I’ll look up a recipe and reference it while cooking. I’ll just prop up a tablet on my counter as I cook. No need to print a recipe or walk back and forth fromt eh kitchen to my computer screen.
  • I’ll sit in my bed and read comics without buying a single piece of paper. I’ll store those comics on the device (or maybe even online) instead of filling my closet with boxes of comic books.
  • I’ll read your blog and drink my coffee on a couch every morning, without the pain of balancing a labtop on my lap.

I’m pretty sure that there are dozens of super simple, super practical ways that this will be immediately useful. I also imagine that there will be a whole lot more really complex ways that this will be useful. I believe in few years we will use tablets and think, “how did I ever do this on a laptop or on my iphone?”

All those reasons above are certainly cool.

I won’t be buying this because it is cool, but because it will make every other computer I have a more useful and productive tool. The reason for this goes back to how this device seperates computing from connecting.

I don’t need an iPad.

I’ve got an iPhone, 2 laptops (PCs), a desktop (also PC), and an xbox (if you want to count that). Everything the iPad will do can be done on one of my other devices.

But for many things, it can’t be done better.

For most tasks, my iPhone is too small, and my laptop is needlessly big and clumsy. Checking email, posting to twitter, quick blog updates, facebook, reading RSS feeds, and commenting on other blogs is a touch difficult on the iPhone because of its size. My labtops are powerful enough to do all of this, but they are not easily portable. I have to lug it around, plug in a mouse, wait for it to boot, and the battery runs out after 2 hours.

iPad the casual computer

The iPad tablet will be my “casual” computing device. The screen is big enough to be usable and useful, and the device is small and portable enough that I can lounge about at my coffee table, or sit in bed while I use it. I have a feeling that for all of these casual computing and internet tasks, this tablet will be the baby bear device: not too big, not too small, but just right.

I’ll quickly check my email, post to twitter, read some articles, or anything else that has to do with interaction, connection, personal contact, and media consumption. As soon as I get my hands on one of these tablets, I am uninstalling Feeddemon and Tweetdeck, and deleting my browser quick launch buttons from my laptops.

I am convinced that for the iPad does, it will do best.

Right now, my laptops are be-all, do-all devices. My laptop can be used for everything, and because of that, I focus less on the one thing I have to do right now.

Other devices, other uses

The real beauty of using the iPad for connection and consumption is my other devices will be free to do what they do best.

My iPhone will still be a phone, ipod, and on-the-go internet device. I’ll be able to look up restaurants, post to twitter, update foursquare, and check my email on the bus, walking to work, or anywhere else.

My laptops will be movable work stations, and I’ll be able to use them for what they do best, writing code, creating written content, and editing audio media. My desktop will be my primary media storage device, and my image and video editor.

The biggest challenge for me is that computers do too much. For someone that has trouble focusing on anything that isn’t edible (yours truly), it is a bit overwhelming to be connected to email, RSS, music, twitter, and websites, when I am just trying to edit an article I wrote. Even when I don’t have these applications fired up, the fact that email is just 2 mouse clicks away is a distraction.

When working on my computer, I don’t get so distracted by doing dishes, folding laundry, or reading a book. There is a hardware separation between those activities, this helps me separate these in my mind.

(Sure, it may be funny to think of a laptop and a dish sponge as separate hardware, but it works for me)

Separate hardware, better focus

Here’s an example: I don’t have a hardware separation between twitter and Notepad++.

Interacting on twitter and writing PHP code are very different tasks, they require different skills,a nd very different parts of my brain. They are abotu as different as checking email and doing dishes. Having one machine that does both keeps me a little distracted all the time, even when I’m not consciously aware of it. I may not know that this happens, but I feel that this happens.

I am a poster child for Constant Partial Attention

In the future, I’ll fire up my laptop when I want to write code, or write a blog post, edit images, or upload a podcast. I won’t need to turn on my laptop to check email or twitter, log onto facebook, or read my RSS feed. My computer will be a content creation device, and I will (hopefully) be able to break the distractions from content consumption.

My computers will once again be tools for getting work done.

I could write another 500 to 1000 words about how this tablet will change how media is consumed, create a new platform for media production, blah blah blah, and it probably will. The iPad will have an impact on the arts, media, and all sorts of cool stuff.

But really, having a device for consuming content separate from a device to produce content will make me more productive.

That alone sold me.

What do you think?

Is the iPad the future?

Are you gonna be in line at the Apple store? Why or why not? Leave a comment, let’s discuss.

Sean "Deacon" Neprud
Sean Neprud operates Bad Deacon Design under the moniker Deacon (surprise!), where he works in a range of mediums from wood block to web design.

Comments

  1. Heather says:

    I’d never actually looked at it in that way before. Up until now I’d been adopting the ‘but it doesn’t DO anything I can’t already do’ approach; yes I found it sexy, but there was no real need for me to have or want it.

    Now, though, there’s this little lightbulb that’s gone off in my brain and activated my ‘Want! <3' sensors. I hope you're happy.

    Loved the post, definitely enlightening.
    .-= Heather´s last blog ..Webcomic: The Mayans Day 3 =-.

  2. Rowdeezy says:

    I agree with the changing the way we do things persective. I also think it will open things up for casual computers. I won one and can’t wait till end of April to receive it. Really curious to see how I’ll end up using it.

  3. Nicki says:

    I am saving up my pennies but glad it may take a while. Having worked in computers back when a laptop was actually the size of a medium suitcase, I want all the kinks worked out before I get my pennies to Apple.
    .-= Nicki´s last blog ..The Tulips =-.

  4. Great post Sean! I too had never thought of how beneficial it would be to have things separated. I have my desktop and laptop that I do some different things on but it is interesting to think about dedicating machines to specific purposes. Just don’t create something to do your art with.
    Justin
    .-= Justin Matthews´s last blog ..I don’t fit into any category you have. =-.

    • Deacon says:

      I use my desktop and laptop for different purposes right now, so I feel like my theory of “different devices for different uses” will hold true, at least for me.
      .-= Deacon´s last blog ..Skater Series Printing is Done =-.

      • TS says:

        Sorry, but I see your reasoning as just a way for you to rationalize in your own mind that you need one, as opposed to the real reason, which is, you want one. Wasn’t it about a year or two ago that the cool thing about the I-phone, and as such, the reasoning behind getting one when you already had an I-pod, and a phone…, was that “now I can do everything on one device! Yea!” So which is it? Both, I suppose. Question: All this talk about being productive…productive for what? Making money? Or just posting somewhere in cyberspace who you went out with last night and what drinks you had? My thought is I’d probably like to have one, but not for a few years, not until I need to replace my laptop, and definitely not until I can easily afford one, which means all bills caught up, good steady work, and can buy it outright knowing for certain which one will serve my needs correctly, so I don’t do like some I’ve read have done–buy one impulsively before I know whether I need 3G or not and how much memory I’ll need.

        • Sean says:

          I was out at Cantina last night, TS, thanks for asking! I had what they call a “Philly Fizz”, which is basically a Manhattan made with orange bitters and some orange zest. It was delicious.

          There was some art on the walls, and one of the artists was there, very drunk (or high, or both). Despite the fact that I thought his art was a little too self-indulgent, we still had a decent conversation about painting.

          I appreciate the psychoanalysis that you provided, it has given me a different way to look at this thing. I’m a little confused however, since when I wrote:

          “I don’t need an iPad.”

          I thought I was pretty clear that this is not a device I need, but one that I want. I spent the rest of the article explaining the reasons I want one. I know I’m not the best writer in the world, so I could probably do some work to communicate more effectively.

          How could I have better communicated to you, TS, that I don’t need an iPad? I can see how there is room to misinterpret me when I merely say “I don’t need an iPad”.
          Sean´s last post ..Through the Fiery Furnace and the View from the Partition

          • TS says:

            Sure Sean, I know what you “said.” Maybe I’m picking on you. But most of these gadgets are just distractions for lives without any real meaning. Whew, that’s deep. What I’m trying to say is our consumerism is getting the best of us, especially when it comes to stuff like electronic devices. And I think we’re basically trying to trick ourselves into thinking they can make us do things more efficiently, which may be true, but the things we’re mostly talking about are things that don’t really enrich our lives. And…, There are so many people in this world that could really use our help, but instead we choose to spend a thousand bucks on a toy so we can surf the internet a little better than we can on our laptop. Most of us, and most of the software/apps aren’t really producing anything useful…we’re just using this stuff as toys. And of course new ways of engaging our minds typing messages to people we don’t know. :-)

            I have a roommate who doesn’t use computers at all. He watched me for 3 weeks after I downloaded Google Sketchup (a free 3-D drawing program) do what he considered “playing on my computer” with my new “toy”. What he found out was I ended up using the program to help earn me $800 in a consulting gig, and then an additional $600 for continued work for the same customer. Then he changed his opinion.

            Now if we go out and buy an Ipad when we already have an Iphone, laptop, et al, and really use it to be more productive: Which to me means giving us more time so we can earn more money, or helping us accomplish tasks that are truly necessary in less time so we can spend more time with family, or find ways to generate an additional source of income, then I say GREAT. But unfortunately I think the vast majority of us are just deluded.

            My ex girlfriend makes way more money than she can spend, like 150k a year. She has no kids, not married (yeah I wish we had worked out, oh boy do I!!) and works 65 hrs a week. So she buys a $2000 laptop, then an I-phone, but doesn’t even know how to use a computer in a manner that will keep her protected from viruses, spyware, etc. She’s a claimed Christian, but would you think she’d have a few foster kids that she supports, virtually, or something like that? No. But hey, she can afford it easily, and it’s a source of enjoyment for her, so no problem there.

            But there are so many of us who really can’t afford these devices, but we drink the kool aid anyway. I mean with the service plans and such, there are people who spend enough money every month on this stuff that they could…, well let’s just say it’s a car payment.

            I’d be curious to see a list of the next 20 people who buy an Ipad, and have them chart out exactly what they did with said Ipad during their first 60 days of ownership. Also, I’d want to know their age, what they paid for it, what their service costs per month, what service plan they bought, and how much money they earn, and what other electronic “connectivity” devices they have, and how old those items are. I bet the results would tend to give some real merit to what I am trying to say.

            End of rant. Hope I didn’t take up too much space on your blog!

            Tom

          • Sean says:

            @Tom,

            I can deal with getting picked on. I roll with the punches :)

            …and losing the sugar mama that works so much she is never around? Man, I could use a couple of those. Need to start looking..

            You know, one thing that I fundamentally believe about the world is that everyone does what they do for a reason. Even if it is irrational, counter productive, or whatever, there is some emotional drive, or positive emotional feeling that makes people do what they do.

            And maybe, to buy what they buy. If it makes folks happy to buy something they don’t need, I’m not sure it is my place to speak against it.

            Maybe it isn’t the best thing for them, or for the world, but who am I to tell people how to make themselves happy?

            We’re all just searching for our own happiness.
            Sean´s last post ..Ascending the Island In The Sky

  5. Ralph says:

    Dave, I really enjoyed this post. I just broke down and got a laptop. It frees me from my office but it is bulky. It is also redundant because I don’t have the same content and access to documents on both laptop and desktop. (I know that I can solve that with cloud storage but I only have so many hours in the day and I did commit to that crazy PreWriting Challenge. I don’t like the Apple close systems and have avoided their products for that reason (as well as the fact that you have to think backwards to use a MAC if you are a PC guy). Anyway Wired magazine this month has an article on tablets – the Ipad and some new Google OS devices on netbooks to be released later this year. The Google OS is apparently redesigned to accommodate the way we use computers now rather than files and folders. I don’t know what that means but maybe you will.

    • Deacon says:

      Coordinating access to documents among many devices is a whole ‘nother can of worms entirely! I have 3 computers I use regularly, my desktop, my laptop, and my computer in the office of the DayJob. Moving documents around each of those has been a bit of a pain to figure out, and my system is in no way perfect.
      .-= Deacon´s last blog ..Skater Series Printing is Done =-.

  6. Ralph says:

    Sorry, Deacon. I’m slow on the pickup. I didn’t realize that you were the author. Anyway. Enjoyed it and interested in your take on the Google OS based tablets.

  7. Kelly Diels says:

    Sean,
    here’s where you sold me (Apple should be cutting you an aff deal):

    “I’ll read your blog and drink my coffee on a couch every morning, without the pain of balancing a laptop on my lap.”

    Done. I’m in.

    And you were specifically talking about *my* blog, right?

  8. There’s always going to be some hissing and booin’, Doolie. Better to be hated than invisible, right? Not that anyone hates you:)
    .-= Josh Hanagarne´s last blog ..I Am The Movement =-.

  9. Bert Padilla says:

    I don’t know when exactly this device will be available on my country… The concept is great, might be good for mobile blogging too, but I would prefer saving my pennies than buying this… (LOL) One more thing, I’m not a fan of most Apple products that hit the market…
    .-= Bert Padilla´s last blog ..The Pre-writing Challenge is over; Let’s talk about it =-.

  10. Larry Herrin says:

    Deacon, you’ve just echoed the same stuff I’ve been trying to tell my family and friends ever since January 27th.

    The point is NOT that the iPad will do stuff that no other device can do (it can’t).

    The point IS that what the iPad does, it will do best. At least it had BETTER do it best, or there’ll be a lot of explaining for Jobs to do. And Steve Jobs don’t like explaining things he don’t wanna explain. Like the lack (so far as we know at this writing) of a webcam in the iPad.
    .-= Larry Herrin´s last blog ..Sprint Releases 1.4 Update to webOS: Videocam & Editing, Email Upgrades are Here; Flash 10.1 Awaits Adobe =-.

    • Deacon says:

      People have been saying that the iPad will squeeze in between the iPhone and the laptop, but I don’t think it will squeeze at all. I think it will jump and chomp out a huge chunk of space between those two.

      Or else I’ll be looking to Mr. Jobs for some ‘splainin’ too.
      .-= Deacon´s last blog ..Skater Series Printing is Done =-.

  11. Dave Doolin says:

    I love my new iPad.

    Everyone should have one. Just because I said so.

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