agreed its cool but not particularly usefulSilentVirus said:And can we please get out of the touch screen era please?
agreed its cool but not particularly usefulSilentVirus said:And can we please get out of the touch screen era please?
The latest Atoms (Pine Trail) have onboard GPUs as well. Some of the SoC GPUs are actually quite powerful; nVidia's much-hyped Tegra 2 is an ARM+GeForce SoC.Ph33nix said:apple says its an intel atom or atleast the website did a few weeks ago so i was going off of that info. and an all in one chip is even worse dropping performance so i was being generious based off of the a4s specs
i just remember the atom from about a year ago which could barely run internetHorticulture said:The latest Atoms (Pine Trail) have onboard GPUs as well. Some of the SoC GPUs are actually quite powerful; nVidia's much-hyped Tegra 2 is an ARM+GeForce SoC.Ph33nix said:apple says its an intel atom or atleast the website did a few weeks ago so i was going off of that info. and an all in one chip is even worse dropping performance so i was being generious based off of the a4s specs
Early reports actually indicate that the iPad's graphics performance is very good.
virtual books cost just as much and most text books are not online because alot of professors (atleast in my experience) use the books that they wrote. also being an apple app developer sucks they really mistreat those guys. I looked into getting the software in order to develop for apple because it looked like a good way to make some extra cash and keep my skills sharp but you are lucky to break even making those apps with in the first 3 years. Apple wants you to buy their software pay a annual fee for them putting "your product" on their servers and then they want a cut of everything you make and they take a big cut.OmegaXzors said:I don't care to read anymore than the OP.
The purpose of the iPad is innovation. Have any of you heard of the "App Store." It's a brilliant ingenious place where people like you and me can find things made by other people. Price isn't the topic here.
For example, "Jimmy" here is college student with a spinal injury dating back to the early years. He still has the intentions of being a successful being to develop for the future world by going to college. Those text books sure are heavy for him, however. With this glorious iPad storing all his text books and his notes he's taking during class, he's now the coolest kid in class. It's a shame that everyone else is lugging around their $1,500 dollars worth of text books. Jimmy got all the books at a fraction of the price all in one convenient little device.
Sure, you may not be going to college. You may be beyond that. There are alternative uses yet to be developed. The iPhone has applications to use the camera to scan bar codes, be a friendly GPS while driving, tell you what the song is on the radio, help you solve any problem on a piece of paper EVER with measurements you've never even heard of. It's all in due time.
interesting read but i think the writer missed the point of computersNeptunus Hirt said:I am currently lusting for one of these. At the moment, I have a Macbook Pro as my workstation. It's a fantastic machine and I love it dearly (especially after installing Snow Leopard on it), but it's little more than a portable desktop. I don't use it for more than email, internet, writing and media when I'm lugging it around town or around the house. I have no need for such a powerful machine away from my desktop. The iPad is absolutely perfect for my needs: A lightweight machine that I can use for a myriad of things.
Someone mentioned sketching, I think. This is a great point. I have a Wacom at my work-desk, with its spiffy pressure-sensitivity and large drawing surface. The iPad I could use for casual sketching using a rudimentary tool, anywhere I'd like, and then I could import my sketches into my desktop machine and do the heavy-duty work there. Perfect.
My dream scenario is owning an iMac as a desktop machine, and an iPad for everything else. I'll probably end up selling my laptop, as it seems I'm not actually in the target demographic for one of them. I don't do any heavy graphics work, programming or heavy-duty gaming outside the house.
I'd like to point naysayers to an interesting article I just stumbled upon:
http://stevenf.tumblr.com/post/359224392/i-need-to-talk-to-you-about-computers-ive-been
It's quite interesting, and very relevant to this discussion.
Really? What, pray tell, is the point of computers?Ph33nix said:interesting read but i think the writer missed the point of computers
Computers are meant to do everything the holy grail of computing is AI a computer that can do so many things at once it becomes alive essentially and can make our lives easierNeptunus Hirt said:Really? What, pray tell, is the point of computers?
Today, the computer is a versatile, ubiquitous tool. You see computers used for number crunching, databases, research; as well as e-mail, gaming, web-browsing and the list goes on.
There is no one point of computers. As computers get cheaper and more wide-spread, they get delegated to more mundane tasks. Tools that were once mainly used for scientific research are now used to consume media and spread social interaction.
So, tell me. What is the point of computers?
My friend is co-founder of an LLC developing apps for the iPhone and iPad. Because his brother is working on the new "Transformers: War for Cybertron" game, he gets the development app free of charge. A lot of developers in big name companies work in an environment already where Apple provides the program in hopes of creative material.Ph33nix said:virtual books cost just as much and most text books are not online because alot of professors (atleast in my experience) use the books that they wrote. also being an apple app developer sucks they really mistreat those guys. I looked into getting the software in order to develop for apple because it looked like a good way to make some extra cash and keep my skills sharp but you are lucky to break even making those apps with in the first 3 years. Apple wants you to buy their software pay a annual fee for them putting "your product" on their servers and then they want a cut of everything you make and they take a big cut.