Indeed, which only reiterates my point that an IPad might actually be quite useful but as so called IT person you can't seem to grasp that idea.Quote:
Originally Posted by Daniel
Printable View
Indeed, which only reiterates my point that an IPad might actually be quite useful but as so called IT person you can't seem to grasp that idea.Quote:
Originally Posted by Daniel
No, I don't see how I could write any quicker with a laptop, or a pen for that matter. The iPad, app & stylus do the job perfectly well and are less obtrusive at the table.Quote:
Originally Posted by Daniel
For me the iPad is more functional than a laptop.
If you want to stick all sorts of labels on me for making that choice that's entirely up to you.
I think what you fail to grasp as a know it all user is that a laptop is cheaper and provides a lot more functionality. But then again you know everything :)Quote:
Originally Posted by GridGirl
I'm not trying to label you or anything :) Can you really write faster than you can type? I would say the vast majority of people can type far faster than they can write.Quote:
Originally Posted by ArrowsFA1
Quote:
Originally Posted by Daniel
Quote:
Originally Posted by Daniel
Daniel, you're making the classic mistake of "salesman" who thinks he knows better than "the customer" what they want. I've already said the iPad, app & stylus do the job perfectly well for me.Quote:
Originally Posted by Daniel
That's a shame. It's a very good looking phone, perhaps the best.Quote:
Originally Posted by CaptainRaiden
Daniel: I an not sure about Windows Phone, but I will look into it.
But that's the issue, at least for me. If the "writing" isn't OCR-able, if it can't be indexed and searched word for word, then it's a fail in my book.Quote:
Originally Posted by ArrowsFA1
IIRC, there is OneNote for IOS, it might have handwriting recognition.
Same UI, same apps, same processor... What exactly is different other than the screen size??Quote:
Originally Posted by ArrowsFA1
What is the difference between a 13" laptop and a 17" laptop? Does the smaller size of the former make it fundamentally different from the latter?
Save yourself some money, download a Linux live CD, get it onto a usb-stick and boot to that when you want to do naughty things on your company laptop. :)Quote:
Originally Posted by GridGirl
And/or buy an external dvd/blu-ray drive.
I don't have a problem with the iPad being a nice little toy for technologically-challenged people. The problem I have is, why should I pay the same amount or MORE for something with which I can do MUCH, MUCH lesser? I mean for 600 GBP you get a 64 GB capacity iPad, which is a robbery! It may sound nerdy to you, but I'm not really into getting shortchanged by Apple just to look "cool" in some circles. :pQuote:
Originally Posted by henners88
For example, for 600 GBP, I can get an amazingly amazing top of the line gaming laptop, which can play full HD 1080p or even 3D movies if I connect it to my 42 inch TV via an HDMI cable or even wirelessly these days. Or I can connect it to a HD projector and play a full HD movie on my white wall. I can connect an Xbox-360 controller to it via USB and play PC games on the TV while on the couch or the bed. With the new 12 hour batteries coming out, I can play HD movies and play games like F1 2011 or Assassin's Creed in full detail while in a train or a bus or a plane. The whole Adobe Suite with Photoshop, Premiere, Dreamweaver, which are essential to my work, are handled effortlessly by this little piece of device. I can store hundreds of HD movies or games on the 1.2 terabyte hard drive, and don't have to compromise on anything.
Can the iPad do all of this? Sure, it can play 720p videos on its dinky screen, but so can the Samsung Galaxy S, which costs half its price. If you wanna pay more than half a grand for a limited functionality toy, then be my guest. It's not my money you're wasting. :p
That statement wan't directed at you specifically, it was general statement :)Quote:
Originally Posted by ArrowsFA1
The point I was trying to make about typing on a keyboard is that most people can type a helluva lot more quickly and accurately with a keyboard than they can write on a tablet. Surely for note taking speed is of the essence as the slow you are the less detail you can put in.
I'm not trying to say that an iPad doesn't work for you, it clearly does and for for me to say otherwise would be rather rude.
My point is that whilst something might do the job, sometimes there are better tools for the job :)
Of course :s mokin:Quote:
Originally Posted by Daniel
Nor do I have a problem with the laptop being a nice little toy for technologically-geeky people.Quote:
Originally Posted by CaptainRaiden
(See, we can all do it :p )
A funny thing I've noticed on this forum is that some guys don't understand that people have needs that go beyond having the best spec possible for the price.Quote:
Originally Posted by Daniel
Personally when it comes to meetings I'm a fountain pen and paper man. Electronic stuff merely gets in the way especially when you already have reams of minutes of previous meetings, agenda and various summaries to wade through already. A laptop in such a situation is laughable and merely an annoyance especially given how slow they can be to start up.
Arrows' comment about using a drawing app to take notes on is appealing for me even if there is no writing recognition going on, because a tablet in such a situation could actually be handy and replace my easily lost scraps of paper.
Daniel, you keep going on at people who have iPads claiming that other options could perform some other tasks better. I'm sure you're right on paper, unfortunately people don't live their lives on paper.