Two years ago, I wrote about my iPad 1:
For me, the iPad is the ideal machine when away from my desktop. E-mail,
news, and Wikipedia via the internet are all at my fingertips. I have no time
for watching films or playing games, but it seems that other people can well
find their fill with the iPad.
When the iPad 2 hit the market a year ago, I considered the improvements on this
machine marginal compared with what I already had. I decided that two mediocre
cameras did not make such a difference. Anyway, one of my habits is to skip one
generation of gadgets, just as I jumped from the iPhone 3S to the 4S. This also
means that I made an effort to be among the first to get the newest iPad
generation. As soon as the Apple website opened for preorders, I squeezed mine
in. Like thousands of other people, I got my iPad delivered on Friday, March 16.
The main reason for buying the new iPad was not its much-touted retina display
but rather the faster processor, for some of the operations performed on my iPad
1 took pretty long.
Before giving you my impressions of the new iPad, I would like to demonstrate
that even my first-generation machine fulfills most of the functions of a
notebook, at least for me, and that instantaneously without lengthy rebooting.
My favorite applications you will find below on my home screen. They are
available at the very moment when I wake up my iPad.
For managing my appointments, tasks, and contacts, I use Pocket Informant, the
application I have suffered so much over the last few years because it did not
and does not easily synchronize with MS Outlook. In the meantime, the people
of WebIS have included IOS calendars in Pocket Informant that are also
displayed in Outlook and stay synchronized in the Cloud. The next icon in the
first row of applications is Mail, followed by a homemade icon named
Wikipedia. Touching it takes me directly to my Wikipedia watch list to track
all changes to articles I have written or contributed to. On the other hand,
my activity on Facebook (next item) is limited to following my son's
whereabouts.
The first application in the second row is Flipboard, that gorgeous
newsreader. With Flipboard, I follow the most important national and
international news. However, the app seems selective, so I switch to the
slower and less shiny Pulp reader to avoid missing specific information. Next
come two browsers I chose from the good dozen available in the Apple store in
addition to the built-in Safari (last in the first row): Dolphin HD and
Mercury.
I change to Dolphin whenever, and for no apparent reason, Safari is ill- or
non-responding. Mercury is friendly for it sports a right-hand scroll bar
making browsing longish websites a breeze. Last but not least, the Wikipanion
app is unbeatable when looking up something. It allows switching quickly
between the German, English, and French versions of Wikipedia dealing with the
same topic.
Let us talk about text processing regarding the applications I placed in the
third row. Forget about a Word-like treatment of texts on the iPad. Apple's
Pages may perform wonders on a Mac but is useless for working on texts when
your desktop runs Windows. Document files created in Pages on the iPad end up
in obscure places like WebDIS, iDisk, and iCloud or are accessible on your
desktop only via iTunes.
There is Dropbox, the best invention for exchanging information between two
machines since Microsoft's ActiveSync, which almost kept a Pocket PC in phase
with a desktop PC. In Dropbox, you always work on the same file stored in the
Cloud from any machine that has access. No need for synchronization!.
Quickoffice connects to Dropbox, and you can happily work on your MS doc- or
docx-files on the iPad but beware! Not all formatting done on the PC is kept
when you make changes on the iPad and send your text back into the Cloud. A
fully justified formatted text turns to left adjusted, which I still accept,
but more serious is that all underlying information, like embedded links, is
wholly lost in the transfer.
While dreaming about MS Office for the iPad (rumors about it circulated two
months ago), I usually only need and use a simple text processor to jot down
my ideas, load them into the Cloud, and retrieve the text-only files on my
desktop.
Some text editors are available for the iPad, like iAwriter, Writeroom,
Textwriter, and Plain text; however, my favorite is Nebulous. It opens with an
additional row of freely programmable keys. Here I have direct access to the
umlauts, I find keys that allow me to move around in a text, and last but not
least, the row of keys has the sorely missed forward delete key.
The advanced Pons English dictionary is the next and most expensive item
on the home screen. Although I often use LEO on the web, Pons is always
available, even offline.
PhatNotes is one of the most cherished carryovers from my Windows Mobile
times. The database contains all my personal information and passwords.
PhatNotes is an iPhone app optically blown up on the iPad and synchronizes
data between IOS and Windows versions. In the meantime, I have transferred all
my non-confidential information to Evernote (see the apps bar at the bottom),
which will store anything. Evernote belongs to the ten apps everybody should
have on his iPad/iPhone. The same is true for GoodReader. It lets you read,
among other formats, pdf-files in book format and annotate, cut, and paste the
text.
Remember my hailing of Google? On GoodReader, I read, e.g., those scanned-in books about the Baden
revolution of 1848/49 that some revolutionaries wrote and published shortly
afterward in Switzerland, where they had found asylum.
The fourth row starts with my collection of weather apps. My favorite is
Meteogram, but if its forecast does not please me, I switch to others. In
Utilities, I have collected a couple of goodies like PCalc, a calculator
featuring inverse Polish notation, a fast way of calculating as promoted by
Hewlett-Packard in the 80s in their famous pocket calculator series. I,
therefore, cherish an emulated nostalgic iHP41CV available for both the iPad
and the iPhone. In addition, I placed apps for testing WLAN speed, the
TapDictionary, and TextExpander in Utilities. The last row on the home screen
is completed with a self-explanatory SPORT1 app and the DB Navigator. The
navigator allows me to plan German and European train trips and includes local
urban transport connections to the nearest train station.
The apps bar at the bottom starts with Musik containing most of my classical
CD collection and a couple of jazz oldies and evergreens, although I prefer
listening to them on my iPhone. Photo includes various photo apps I still have
to sort out for their usefulness. I also keep a private photo collection,
starting with the advent of digital picture-taking in 2000 and ordered by
years. In addition, an album called nostalgia contains scanned photo souvenirs
of yesteryear. I already mentioned Evernote, the database for collecting any
information you would like to keep and refer to later and synchronize with the
PC. Erinnerungen (Reminders) I usually fill in on my iPhone, mainly with
Siri's help. The last two items on the bottom bar are evident and essential to
those using Apple's IOS devices.
What are the most significant improvements of the new iPad compared with my
iPad 1? The strain on my ol' blue eyes is much less when reading text on a
retina display. The increase in speed is dramatic. Launching Pocket Informant
from scratch takes about 3 seconds on iPad 1; it takes less than a
second on the new iPad.
The other day, I read an article that we are entering the post-PC age with the
advent of the iPad. That is only partially true since the PC will remain my
main workhorse for all significant office work, editing photos, creating web
pages, and doing home banking. Just consider the size of the monitor screen.
However, post-notebook age sounds acceptable to me.
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