The Wonder Of Apple’s Tablet
25 Dec 2009 // 28 comments // Internet Development
In 2007, just prior to its launch, I was absolutely positive I wasn’t going to buy an iPhone. My rationale was that I didn’t even like using a cellphone, so why would I want a $600 one? What I wanted was a touch screen iPod — basically, an iPhone without the phone. In other words, I wanted an iPod touch, but that didn’t exist yet, so I would sit back and wait, I told myself. Then came iPhone launch day: June 29, 2007. Curiosity about the launch day hoopla drove me to an Apple store. There was a line around the block just to get in. So again, there was no way I was getting an iPhone. But then I started to wonder why so many people were lined up for this device — what was I missing? A few hours later I returned to the Apple Store. I waited in a much shorter line to get in. I walked up to the iPhones out on display, picked one up, played with it for all of 10 seconds. I left the Apple store $600 poorer.
My point in telling that story is that all signs indicate that we’re closing in on another new Apple product, a tablet computer. And the hype around it is already palpable. But so is the skepticism among many — skepticism similar to what I felt with the iPhone. “Why would anyone want a tablet computer?” “It will be way too expensive, no one will buy it.” “This is all just nonsense Apple hype.” Those are a few of the more common reactions against the still-mysterious device. But I’m not going to be tricked again. Conventional wisdom suggests that Apple will not be able to succeed where so many others have failed. But Apple makes billions defying conventional wisdom.
The truth is that most of us don’t understand the allure of a tablet computer because they’ve all sucked up until now. It’s the exact same reason that I didn’t understand the iPhone at first. My cellphones leading up to the iPhone ranged from “okay” to “junk.” The idea of getting one with such a high price tag was insanity to me. But within seconds of using the iPhone, I was able to tell that Apple had made something completely different. It wasn’t a cellphone as I had known them. It redefined the category. And while there are no sure things in the tech world, I would bet that Apple’s tablet will do the same.
If an outsider were to look at the tech news coverage of the past few days, they’d think there is an oddly disproportionate amount of Apple tablet talk. Why is that? The lazy answer is that everyone is a bunch of Apple fanboys. But the reality is that it’s dozens of blogs and all the mainstream media sites covering this news about a product which no one is even 100% sure exists. Everyone is covering it because there is a huge amount of interest about the device among each site’s readership. And it goes far beyond that. People outside the tech world, those who don’t ever read tech blogs, have been asking me about it recently. And Apple’s stock is at an all-time high based on the rumors of this device.
Part of it is that Apple has a sterling record with consumer-oriented products. Sure, there are some duds, like the Mighty Mouse. And yes, there are some slip-ups, like my new iLemon. But overall, Apple commands attention in the consumer space because more often than not, they nail it. Going deeper, Apple is not afraid to step outside of the traditional comfort zones to try to create a new product — even if others have failed there before, as is the case with tablets. While this stirs skepticism in some, in many more people, it creates a sense of wonder. What if Apple can do it right this time? It’s exciting partially because it’s no sure thing. It’s exciting because the payoff is potentially huge. By this time next year, we may have a whole new genre of computing. It’s an undiscovered country.
But it’s also familiar. There’s a quote from the first season of Mad Men that I think applies in this regard. “But he also talked about a deeper bond with the product. Nostalgia. It’s delicate, but potent,” Don Draper says leading up to his Kodak Carousel presentation. The core idea of a tablet is interesting to people on a fundamental level. At least as far back as Moses with the Ten Commandments, it has been a part of the human psyche. It’s something that couldn’t be simpler. It’s a slate that displays information. It’s not a computer with a mess of peripherals and/or physical buttons. If a media and web-centric computer were being designed today with no thought to what the computing norms of the past were, it would be a tablet.
It also points to the future of interacting with computers. The mouse and keyboard will one day die and everything will be touch and gesture-based.
We’ll be living in a future with Minority Report, Star Trek, and Avatar interactive technology. To many of us, few things are more exciting. To others, that concept is foreign and as such, scary. Regardless, it will happen and the tablet computer is the latest, and perhaps most important step in a line of technology taking us there.
I think a lot of people understand that, even if they don’t realize it. That’s why we saw so much interest in the CrunchPad. It was to be a simple, touchscreen device that you could surf the web on. For many people, that’s more than enough of a computer.
And the truth is that Apple has already proven the concept. The iPhone is a tablet computer, just smaller. Recently, a former Apple employee was quoted in the New York Times as saying that much of the early work on the tablet exists today in the iPhone. The iPhone is the computer I use the most now day in and day out. And again, I never thought I’d want one. So while the immediate use of the tablet in our homes already riddled with computer may not be apparent just yet, I have no doubt that it will prove itself to be very useful.
I have no idea what the tablet will be called (Robin lays out a comprehensive tale of why it may be the “iSlate”), what its specs will be, or how much it will cost. But I’m not going to make the mistake of dismissing it like I did with the iPhone simply because its practicality isn’t immediately apparent. If it succeeds, it will likely redefine the role of computing in our lives just as the iPhone has. That’s exciting. And that’s why we care so much about it.
[images: 20th Century Fox and Paramount Pictures]
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This entry was posted on Friday, December 25th, 2009 at 8:45 pm and is filed under Internet Development. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
when a writer for TechCrunch sez “…I didn’t even like using a cellphone..” Well, I stop reading.
Please, do take some time to find some writers who use and abuse technology.
I have to disagree with your statement that today’s tablet PCs suck. I use one daily, and while Apple’s fabled tablet may be what will sell tablets to the average consumer, they’re not what I’m looking for. Microsoft’s Courier, on the other hand, is.
Today’s tablets have very small marketshare for two reasons: they’re expensive and they’re very specialized. My tablet, for example, gets used as a replacement for paper notebooks. All my notes get synced up to Dropbox. But I only have it because I found one used on eBay for $250.
Consider that Apple’s tablet will likely not take handwriting and written notes into account. If anything, it’ll be a media pad. That may be what most people want, but it’s certainly not what I want, and I’ll be sticking with my Windows-based tablet in the short term. (As much as I love Linux, it just can’t match a combination of Windows 7 and OneNote 2007/2010.)
” I still don’t have a [mobile] phone”.
To each his own, I guess. Hope you don’t get stranded with a broken down car in a storm on the side of the highway. Flagging people down doesn’t work so well.
There must be *something* cool about not having a mobile phone.
I went through the same thought process in 2007, except nothing ever convinced me that i needed an iPhone or any phone for that matter. So I still don’t have one. The closest thing I have to a cell phone is the 3G in my Kindle, but that doesn’t really count.
These are not the the tablets you’re looking for…
Never bought into the whole iPhone hype and still won’t buy one ’cause I am looking for something different. Maybe android but not Apple. Not that I hate it or anything, the laptop I am writing this on is an Apple laptop and I like it. Might buy the tablet too for the seamless experience if it has one to offer, but I won’t let Apple make choices for me.
If it will be a closed system like the iPhone then I am gonna have to reject it. Yes, I might miss on the “coolest” gadget of the year or something but I still value the illusion of choice. With apple having a choice is itself an illusion
It isn’t about you.
ergonomics of mouse and keyboard and priceless… there is no way I will hold my hands and arms up in the air just to command (touch) something on my screen. I do have tabletPC. Mouse and keyboard ALWAYS works faster. Sorry.
“Apple makes billions defying conventional wisdom.”
That’s the ONLY way to make billions, didn’t you notice? If you run with the pack (like TC does) – you make millions, not more.
An Apple Tablet might be slick and have a few neat bells and whistles (to go with that rumored $900.00 price tag), but I think that I will get much more bang for the buck by going with the Edge Dualbook. E-reader, and Tablet melded together, running Android. That means that there will be apps for it, (though not as many as for the Apple Tablet at first). Oh, and while the Apple tablet does not have a release date, The Edge is in it’s pre-order stage.
So, yes, the recent hype over Apple’s tablet is more about viral marketing and an attempt to smother the launch of a competitive product that, while lacking some of the bells and whistles Apple will have, is clearly the winner when looking at productivity.
The release of the tablet will enable Apple to make inroads in several industries simultaneously.
I hope they use the full Snow Leopard rather than the iPhone O.S. though.
I believe they will integrate gesture recognition through the air and voice commands as well.
A more complete analysis is here:
http://www.yash…it&post=372
When the iPhone came out, I was quite ignorant when it came to “to-be-released” products by Apple. I didn’t really follow blogs as closely on future products. Namely because I was based on PC’s for the most part.
I miss it though, because now – I (we) find out about these products way way before they come out (and in this case they sometimes don’t) back then I would occasionally go on the Apple website and be greeted by a product that I had no idea even existed, which I could buy immediately if I wanted it. Now, I play the waiting game.
I’ve been thinking for awhile that Apple should just make a touchscreen that you can attach your iPhone to. That way you can just pay for the bigger screen and reuse everything else when your at home.
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If the iSlate looks like the one in Avatar…I’m buying it!
Sigh. This is exactly the kind of article that this post was aimed at:
http://j.mp/7OxcO0
I’d recommend everyone go and read it.
I’m Steve Jobs and I approve this message.
what is the latest with Crunchgate? has a court date been set? will the trial be streamed live via UStream?
nice little christmas story there.
waves hand in front of face.
Apple does have a great record of creating consumer trends. However, just like iTunes relied on musical content to gain traction, the tablet will rely on specific industries to reach a tipping point of consumer perception. Those industries will be mainly education and rich media (ie newspapers and magazines). The question is whether or not the tablet cannibalizes Apple’s laptop sales.
TechCrunch = Apple Fan
He was right again. It’s 0.5mm thicker now. Good source.
http://www.yout…h?v=ybsRCQy_3xQ
this explains this article better
[...] This post was Twitted by mobilewhackcom [...]
looking forward to Jan 26..
Surprise us Steve
It sounds like he meant larger in terms of physical size, not storage size.
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