Become a MacRumors Supporter for $50/year with no ads, ability to filter front page stories, and private forums.

What OS do you think the Tablet will run?

  • iPhone OS

    Votes: 2 1.8%
  • iPhone OS beefed up

    Votes: 41 37.6%
  • Mac OS X

    Votes: 35 32.1%
  • Mac OS X watered down

    Votes: 17 15.6%
  • Not sure, could be either

    Votes: 14 12.8%

  • Total voters
    109

clevin

macrumors G3
Aug 6, 2006
9,095
1
its a poor situation if you think about the argument of 60,000 apps on iPhone OS.

as a major computer OS, apparent many people think that 60,000 offers more potentials as an OS, then OSX is kinda a failure in that regard.

The argument, IMHO, is ludicrous, iPhone OS apps are almost universally light weight, leisure, time killing, not really into serious productivity. Is that how you guys imagine iPad's targeted market would be? if yes, it would just be a cannibalization of iPT.
 

VirtualRain

macrumors 603
Aug 1, 2008
6,304
118
Vancouver, BC
The argument, IMHO, is ludicrous, iPhone OS apps are almost universally light weight, leisure, time killing, not really into serious productivity. Is that how you guys imagine iPad's targeted market would be? if yes, it would just be a cannibalization of iPT.

Agreed, but the iPhone model proved that if you build a platform that serves the needs of users and developers, you will get an app for nearly everything imaginable that the platform supports. Hence, the iPhone apps are only the start. A tablet will spawn 50,000 more new apps that are geared towards a tablet user. Build it, and they will come has never been more appropriate.
 

paolo-

macrumors 6502a
Aug 24, 2008
831
1
From what the rumours seem to be going about especially the secondary screen features make me think that apple won't market it as a small laptop but as something new. I would like to see the full fledged mac os on there but I have doubts as it would be all that great to use with your fingers.

If anything, I'm guessing it will be a mix of osx and iphone os. As they had mentioned, iphone os is somehow based on osx. So adding Cocoa Touch to os x should be fairly feasible. The iPhone was somewhat of a sure sell, where as I have doubts about how well the tablet would sell. Might as well reuse and have a symbiotic platform than have very independent platforms. I wouldn't be surprised if it could run both iPhone apps and OSX apps. IE it could run both, apple would modify some of the core OSX apps to work well with a touch interface and still allow you to run conventional apps. Yet if there are lots of multitouch features involved it wouldn't be that bad. I'm pretty sure apple could just make a new appearance theme loosely based on the iPhone's to further enable the use of touch : zooming where your finger is when it's on a list and so on, bigger buttons...
 

dmmcintyre3

macrumors 68020
Mar 4, 2007
2,131
3
I think it does run the full Mac OS X
 

Attachments

  • 143_01_fp_slice.jpg
    143_01_fp_slice.jpg
    39.8 KB · Views: 75

MacFly123

macrumors 68020
Original poster
Dec 25, 2006
2,340
0
I think it does run the full Mac OS X

Are you being serious lol? You honestly think Apple would make a tablet that uses a stylus and a desktop OS and GUI? Did you miss the entire presentation Steve gave about that and Multi-Touch when he introduced the iPhone? :rolleyes:
 

yamabushi

macrumors 65816
Oct 6, 2003
1,009
1
iPhoneOS+

It will probably be closely related to iPhone OS. I hope they add an Apple Remote Desktop app for it though. Plus lots of native heavyweight tablet apps.
 

sushi

Moderator emeritus
Jul 19, 2002
15,639
3
キャンプスワ&#
Are you being serious lol? You honestly think Apple would make a tablet that uses a stylus and a desktop OS and GUI? Did you miss the entire presentation Steve gave about that and Multi-Touch when he introduced the iPhone? :rolleyes:
You might want to check out this site before you pop a blood vessel. :)
 

TBi

macrumors 68030
Jul 26, 2005
2,583
6
Ireland
Xp

My gut feeling tells me that the new tablet will run Windows XP Tablet Edition. Why reinvent the wheel?



/sarcasm :)
 

Marx55

macrumors 68000
Jan 1, 2005
1,945
775
I think it does run the full Mac OS X

The Axiotron Modbook is:

Too heavy.
Too large.

Even the MacBook Air is too heavy and too large. Something pocketable (or almost) is needed to carry it with you ALL THE TIME on your pocket or your bag or purse. ALWAYS WITH YOU. Like the OQO or similar, or even like the Sony Vaio P but with Mac inside.
 

talkingfuture

macrumors 65816
Dec 4, 2008
1,216
0
The back of beyond.
I voted Beefed up iPhone. I think it will run on the Arm architecture but it may have a different interface. At the end of the day, software interface is everything on a device like this so the device can be changed quite dramatically without changing that much of the "under the hood" functionality.
 

dicklacara

macrumors 6502a
Jul 29, 2004
973
1
SF Bay Area
I voted for beefed-up iPhone OS X...

But, as I've posted elsewhere, it's almost a meaningless differentiation.

Apple has evolved OS X (and the SDK) so it is modular, portable and [relatively] platform independent.

Apple can package various components together to run a variant of OS X tailored to a specific device type, be it an iPod, AppleTV, iPhone, tablet, game console (or other future devices).

consider:

--Most iPhone (Cocoa Touch) apps can be made to run on Mac OS X (Intel) through the iPhone Simulator. You can pinch/zoom with the kb and mouse.

--Some components developed for a specific device, can be generalized/modularized to run on other devices, and become a component of the total OS X. GPS / Location Services is a good example. Developed for the iPhone, it can be useful for laptops.

--Cocoa Pen (or somesuch) could be developed for a tablet [OS X Variant], then added to the general OS X components, to provide that capability to desktops and laptops.

--Draw, Paint, Hand Printing Recognition, Handwriting Recognition could be developed for devices where they make sense based on either Cocoa Touch, Cocoa Pen or both,


Since the NeXT days, the OS has been enhanced, evolved, modularized, re-factored, and ported to run on:
-- Motorola 68000
-- Intel
-- PPC
-- ARM
-- maybe other CPUs like Cell, PASC

So, the CPU need not be the determining factor in which OS X variant runs on a device.


What goes into the OS X for a specific device should be determined by the needs and capabilities of the device and its probable uses, more simply "what makes sense":

-- multiple windows or multiple-column tables (ala Mac OS X) don't really make sense on a 3.5" [iPhone] display, but they would on a 6", 10" or larger tablet.

-- A touch or pen UI may not make sense on an iMac's display, but it would make sense with a horizontal accessory tablet display used for painting, drawing or as a light table or studio controller panel.

-- Location Services would not make sense for a fixed-location iMac, PowerMac, or AppleTV. But it does for many mobile devices.

-- Pen or Stylus input doesn't make sense on a mobile phone, but it does on a tablet.


The point of all this is that Apple already has an OS, OS X that can do all this, and it can be packaged (customized) to exploit the needs of a marketplace [device] with the greatest efficiency and utility.

Not: real soon now; later this fall; early 2010; end of 2010... but Now!

"It's the User Experience, stupid"


*
 

dicklacara

macrumors 6502a
Jul 29, 2004
973
1
SF Bay Area
Mac OS X and the app store

Others have posted that Apple needs to use the app store to distro Mac apps.

I am sure that is in the plans!

But, right now, Apple has got its hands full with the iPhone and iPod Touch app store services.

New Apple tablet devices would be easier to absorb into the app store: fewer new apps (to begin with); and established app portfolio (capability to run many existing iPhone apps on the tablet devices).

The Mac landscape is different. An infrastructure already exists, independent of the app store. Software vendors would need to add costs to change their existing apps and procedures for the app store.

When the app store is refined, a bit, and stabilizes, Apple will slowly start the ball rolling, say with iMac iLife and iWork. Then, the Pro apps. Later, third-party apps will be added to the mix.

Apple doesn't want to overload the app store and create another MobileMe fiasco.

*
 

johnhw

macrumors 6502
Jun 16, 2009
300
1
Mac OS X optimized for the "MacBook Touch"

I personally think having the iPhone OS on the tablet isn't quite decent for this level of computing, but having it water-downed is basically a baby version of it.
 

dicklacara

macrumors 6502a
Jul 29, 2004
973
1
SF Bay Area
Huh? How you figure that?

Easy! Take Adobe, Microsoft, Apple Pro apps, etc.

They currently mass produce Hard-copy software, manuals, DVDs, promotional materials for a known (and well understood) group of distro channels: their own online store; Amazon; Dealers; Vars; others;

They know how to schedule; manufacture and release with the current infrastructure.

Now, say they want to do electronic distro through the app store. Everything is new and different: packaging; DRM; support; customer inetrface.

For instance:

-- the current Hard-copy package includes multiple (Gigs) of DVDs, and thousands of pages of printed manuals-- what needs to be done to make it practical to find and electronically distribute this through the app store.
-- how do you implement DRM and registration codes
-- same for returns, updates and upgrades
-- will we (the software mfgr) need a new and different support organization

For these apps, any time and $ spent to distro through the app store will be additional costs. The established distro channels won't go away... not immediately, maybe never!

*
 

Mr.Jagil

macrumors newbie
Aug 24, 2009
6
0
The only solution i personally see to this dilemma, is to allow the tablet to run BOTH OS's.

Now THAT would make it stand out, and even entice me to get one.
 
Register on MacRumors! This sidebar will go away, and you'll see fewer ads.