Has anyone bought an IPAD yet?

neverteaseit

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Curious as to what all the hype is over? It looks like a laptop to me. I can by ibooks for it and read them:shrug:

I don't see the value in it other than saying look I have a small penis but I have an IPAD. Take that MFR's!

Curious as to what someone who has one thinks about it.

Thank You in advance.
 

airportis

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I love my Macbook Pro and iPhone but the iPad looks like the biggest waste of money ever to me.

It just looks like a huge iPhone and from what I understand, thats pretty much what it is.

The biggest thing people are doing is confusing it with a laptop. It is not a laptop and will not work like a laptop. It will run "apps" just like the iPhone does....this is not a replacement for a computer.

I cant imagine who is going to haul this thing around and what for.
 

vinnie

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How My $499 iPad Purchase Became a $1,170 Credit Card Bill :sadwave:

I went shopping for my very own iPad at 8:30 AM March 12, the moment it first went on sale. Having had a chance to try out the iPad at the January 27 launch, I had wanted one for weeks. What follows is how what started out as a $499 purchase ended up with my putting $1,170.58 on my credit card.

When I entered the Apple Store, I scrolled through the prices for the various models. Although the most affordable model, a 16GB Wi-Fi iPad, cost only $499 (excluding sales tax), after some soul-searching, I decided on a 64GB 3G model, even though it cost $829 and wouldn't ship until late April.


Here's why: I've had a 32GB iPod Touch for a couple of years. I love it, but I was always frustrated by having to hunt for an unprotected Wi-Fi connection wherever I went.

Confession: I have repeatedly downloaded e-mail by freeloading on unprotected connections in various places in and around NYC. For example, when eating at a diner I frequent on New York's Upper West Side, I used to mooch a connection from what appeared to be an unsecured router in some apartment above the diner. One week, without warning, someone secured that connection and I was left to eat without being able to read e-mail or browse the Web.

Eventually, I tired of the Wi-Fi hunt and began using my Touch less and less. When the Motorola Droid smartphone came out last fall, and it was compatible with my existing carrier (Verizon), I scooped one up and signed up for Verizon's data plan. Although not as elegant as the iPhone, the Droid is good enough for my purposes-and no more having to mooch bandwidth!

After my Touch experience, I no longer wanted to be limited by a Wi-Fi only device (laptops excluded). That's why I opted to spend $130 more for a 3G iPad.

As for stepping up to the 64GB iPad, my philosophy is that you can never have too much memory. I have no doubt that I will fill much of that 64GB within the next year or two. Speaking only for myself, the breathing space was worth the extra couple of hundred dollars.

So, how did I go from an $829 iPad to a $1,170 tab? In a word: Accessories.

Knowing I'll want to do some serious typing on the iPad, I sprung for the $69 keyboard dock (ka-ching!). To protect my iPad (and prop it up on any flat surface), I went for the $39 case (ka-ching!). I added the $29 USB power adaptor because I will want to charge my iPad in multiple locations, and the $29 VGA adapter so that I can view it on any display I own (double ka-ching!).

Oh, and I took the $99 AppleCare Protection Plan, which extends the 90 days of tech support and 1 year warranty (including the battery) to two years. (Big ka-ching!) Shipping was free, but sales tax added another $76.58 to the tab (ka-ching! to the State of New Jersey).

So there you have it. I admit that I willingly slipped down a slippery slope that wasn't so apparent when Steve Jobs first seduced me with that $499 price tag. (Full disclosure: My birthday is coming up soon, so at least I have a flimsy rationalization to offer my wife.)

If you buy an iPad, but have other priorities (like the groceries or kids), by all means don't spend as much as I did. But be aware how easy it is to spend more than you originally intend-especially since Apple now offers more iPad accessories than it did when I made my purchase, including a $29 USB adapter to connect your digital camera card reader.
 

MadJack

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How My $499 iPad Purchase Became a $1,170 Credit Card Bill :sadwave:

I went shopping for my very own iPad at 8:30 AM March 12, the moment it first went on sale. Having had a chance to try out the iPad at the January 27 launch, I had wanted one for weeks. What follows is how what started out as a $499 purchase ended up with my putting $1,170.58 on my credit card.

When I entered the Apple Store, I scrolled through the prices for the various models. Although the most affordable model, a 16GB Wi-Fi iPad, cost only $499 (excluding sales tax), after some soul-searching, I decided on a 64GB 3G model, even though it cost $829 and wouldn't ship until late April.


Here's why: I've had a 32GB iPod Touch for a couple of years. I love it, but I was always frustrated by having to hunt for an unprotected Wi-Fi connection wherever I went.

Confession: I have repeatedly downloaded e-mail by freeloading on unprotected connections in various places in and around NYC. For example, when eating at a diner I frequent on New York's Upper West Side, I used to mooch a connection from what appeared to be an unsecured router in some apartment above the diner. One week, without warning, someone secured that connection and I was left to eat without being able to read e-mail or browse the Web.

Eventually, I tired of the Wi-Fi hunt and began using my Touch less and less. When the Motorola Droid smartphone came out last fall, and it was compatible with my existing carrier (Verizon), I scooped one up and signed up for Verizon's data plan. Although not as elegant as the iPhone, the Droid is good enough for my purposes-and no more having to mooch bandwidth!

After my Touch experience, I no longer wanted to be limited by a Wi-Fi only device (laptops excluded). That's why I opted to spend $130 more for a 3G iPad.

As for stepping up to the 64GB iPad, my philosophy is that you can never have too much memory. I have no doubt that I will fill much of that 64GB within the next year or two. Speaking only for myself, the breathing space was worth the extra couple of hundred dollars.

So, how did I go from an $829 iPad to a $1,170 tab? In a word: Accessories.

Knowing I'll want to do some serious typing on the iPad, I sprung for the $69 keyboard dock (ka-ching!). To protect my iPad (and prop it up on any flat surface), I went for the $39 case (ka-ching!). I added the $29 USB power adaptor because I will want to charge my iPad in multiple locations, and the $29 VGA adapter so that I can view it on any display I own (double ka-ching!).

Oh, and I took the $99 AppleCare Protection Plan, which extends the 90 days of tech support and 1 year warranty (including the battery) to two years. (Big ka-ching!) Shipping was free, but sales tax added another $76.58 to the tab (ka-ching! to the State of New Jersey).

So there you have it. I admit that I willingly slipped down a slippery slope that wasn't so apparent when Steve Jobs first seduced me with that $499 price tag. (Full disclosure: My birthday is coming up soon, so at least I have a flimsy rationalization to offer my wife.)

If you buy an iPad, but have other priorities (like the groceries or kids), by all means don't spend as much as I did. But be aware how easy it is to spend more than you originally intend-especially since Apple now offers more iPad accessories than it did when I made my purchase, including a $29 USB adapter to connect your digital camera card reader.

No printer and 24" monitor :shrug:
 

King69

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Playing with it right now.
Guess what.
Im returning it tomorrow or Monday.
Glorified IPHONE with a 9" screen.
My netbook at 11.6 is way more functional.
Screen is bright and nice but who cares.
I can run Windows 7 and any program I want for $399 with 500gb and 4gb of ram.
Oh and get a FREE 3G usb card from Sprint and pay $49 a month.
Apple is a rip off for this item. Can you imagine the money they will really make off this device. Forget add-ons but when people BUST THE SCREEN and Apple charges them $200+ for a new one.

If you are the person who needs to be cool and whip out the latest technology so everyone wants to be your friend then go for it. Me I'd rather whip out my 9" pocket rocket for the ladies than the 9" Ipad. :kiss:
 
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The Joker

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For those who don't know......an ipad is not a computer in terms of a laptop nor a desktop. If you need to ask "what does it do" or "why would anyone need an ipad" then this device is not meant for you.
 

neverteaseit

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For those who don't know......an ipad is not a computer in terms of a laptop nor a desktop. If you need to ask "what does it do" or "why would anyone need an ipad" then this device is not meant for you.

Well I am asking because I am in Afghanistan and I don't have an Apple store around the corner where I can have a sales rep give me a demonstration.
 

The Joker

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Well I am asking because I am in Afghanistan and I don't have an Apple store around the corner where I can have a sales rep give me a demonstration.

Shit. My bad - no disrespect.

The Apple iPad has the ability to display movies, e-mails, Web sites or electronic books in a larger format.

Has same functions as iPod touch with an emphasis on apps in the app store that are specifically designed for the ipad.

Hope that helps - take care.
 

EXTRAPOLATER

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An unreliable source told me that 700,000 sales were made in one day for this shiite.
Not sure what the hype is but when I'm on the road--hey--I'm on the road...and don't need to be connected to whatevas.

This pseudo-socialism (not that ... nevermind...) can be restricted to my home life. $500 for what a quarter can buy me? Pass.
 

The Joker

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An unreliable source told me that 700,000 sales were made in one day for this shiite.
Not sure what the hype is but when I'm on the road--hey--I'm on the road...and don't need to be connected to whatevas.

This pseudo-socialism (not that ... nevermind...) can be restricted to my home life. $500 for what a quarter can buy me? Pass.

In all honesty - I WISH I could feel this way about technology.

I don't hate it - but I think things would be much less complicated if the world were reverted back to the 1950's era.

Then again - the human race is smarter because of technology.........:shrug:
 

jhawksoon

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In all honesty - I WISH I could feel this way about technology.

I don't hate it - but I think things would be much less complicated if the world were reverted back to the 1950's era.

Then again - the human race is smarter because of technology.........:shrug:

Tell that to the kids that reach for a calculator when asked what 8x9 is.
 

dawgball

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Tell that to the kids that reach for a calculator when asked what 8x9 is.

This bullshit response could have been said about the abacus as well.

Bottom line is most people are pretty inefficient when it comes to math.
 
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