I find myself going to appshopper.com almost every day and watching the iPad apps counter creep up. It is over 6600 now and there are a number of things I'd like to see updated for iPad that still aren't done yet. One is Olivetree Biblereader. Another is RemoteTap. Then there is DocsToGo.
I'm disappointed in the way I use my iPad. It has turned to mostly gaming and very little of anything else. Perhaps its just a phase. I went through the same thing on my iPod Touch. I got up over 250 apps, most of which were games. A hardware failure meant I had to restore everything and since I had NEVER backed up, I found myself only putting back what I really wanted since I had to "buy" everything over again in the app store and only after I clicked "buy" did I get the confirmation saying I already owned the app. So now my iPad is full of questionable apps that are cool but really don't need to be there and I find myself wiling away the hours on aircoaster xl, mahjong and sudoku. Not the primary reason I bought my iPad. At some point, I will delete those games just to get things into perspective.
I'm frustrated with the iPad as a note-taking device. Sundry Notes (was School Notes Pro) has some gimpy limitations. It wants to use my mobile me email account to send out notes. So I have to mail them to my gmail account and then use the gmail app on my iPad to forward the notes to my friends to avoid having them capture my mobile me email address and start sending to it thereby bypassing my primary searchable inbox at gmail. I agree that Pages and Numbers on the iPad are limited, though the recent updates improved things somewhat.
Will I be putting down my iPad over these issues? No. Was CNET right? Not entirely. It turns out 197,000 iPhone apps are not very compelling on iPad because running them in 1x or 2x doesn't work that well. It turns out 6,000+ apps is really not that many when so many compelling apps are still missing. So in a sense they are right, but it's only been a single digit number of weeks since iPad was introduced. Let's give it until the fall and OS 4 comes out and even if there are over 20,000 apps, if the ones I'm looking for are still missing, I'll have to come around to the point of view of the CNET article. Did the iPad successfully replace my netbook? Absolutely yes. I could run openoffice.org on my Ubuntu netbook along with Gimp and fprot. Evolution isn't that great but it's more powerful than Mail on the iPad. But it's a lot slower than Mail, so I prefer Mail for it's speed. So I'm deliberately making a sacrifice to use iPad over my old netbook but I like the form factor and battery life enough to live with the limitations.
There are those who criticize iPad as an ebook reader because it runs games. I can see the validity of that argument in my own usage pattern. I just need to bring my usage habits into line and that may require deleting apps that are just too tempting.
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Sometimes it is a lot easier to build and ride a rollercoaster or solve a sudoku than finish reading a book in the kindle app. (Maybe I need to grab a more compelling book.) I'm sure once the "novelty wears off", I'll be able to take the high rode rather than devolve into a habitual gamer. I hope.
So CNET you're jumping conclusions or you're all wet! We'll see in a few months...