Apple had a solid start for its first tablet on the first day of sales on last Saturday—sold 300,000 iPads. Slightly better than the 270,000 iPhone units sold on its first day in 2007. Apple also announced that 1 million apps and more than 250,000 e-books were downloaded for the iPad on Saturday.If you buy an iPad, what will be your primary use?
To surf the web and email? Play videos or music? Play games? Or develop and test applications? Watch and share pictures? Or some other reason(s)—for example, sticking them on shelves,
. *I tried to create a poll but I couldn’t find a convenient plugin for my script…
For most people, I think iPad needs to be more than a gadget for occasional use, probably only for looking around.
Scott Stein gave us 10 things netbooks do better than iPads, if you knew all of them, would you still buy iPad? Or if you have taken one, how did the iPad impact your lives?
1. Video chat
Most Netbooks, even low-end ones, now have webcams enabling basic video chat over Skype or any other program. The iPad, however, does not. We wish the iPad had a camera and iChat, especially since it would make the tablet a unique communications device to rival the iPhone. Perhaps cost was a factor, even though most Netbooks manage the feat in a package under $500.
2. Run Flash
While Steve Jobs called the iPad "the best web experience you’ve ever had," there is a big missing piece right now, and that’s the whole web. Browser-based apps and Flash-driven content are a huge element of cloud computing and of many websites. While HTML5 is rapidly gaining ground to offer alternative streaming video solutions for the iPad, and sites like Netflix and CBS are crossing over to provide iPad video solutions, the selection of content right now doesn’t come close to matching what’s available via Flash. While Atom Netbooks can be slow and stuttery when playing web video, at least they can.
3. Program
Most people aren’t programmers, or anything close to it, but most Netbooks do run on a full Windows 7 OS that can be used for programming or modification. Linux-based Netbooks are even more hack-friendly. You can even install Mac OS on a Netbook, should so you so wish. For the friendly hackers out there, that’s a dealbreaker on the iPad.
4. Upload photos or video from a camera
No USB ports on the iPad mean no connecting cameras or other peripherals without a $29 camera attachment dongle, and even then, you can’t simply drag files to the desktop like you can on a Netbook. It could be a drag if the iPad is meant as a portable computing replacement for bloggers. Netbooks have at least 2 USB ports standard.
5. Store more than 64GB of data
We expected a little more memory on the iPad. Even the most basic Netbook has a 160GB hard drive. Cloud storage can assist with data, but it’s still no replacement for onboard capacity.
6. Play Facebook games
Without the aforementioned Flash, browser games aren’t really possible on the iPad. Those looking to play Farmville will have to wait for the App or just flock to a Netbook.
7. Swap batteries
Sure, the iPad is slim, attractive and very showy, and boasts a significant battery life. But its battery is fixed, while a Netbook can not only swap its battery, but upgrade from a three to a six-cell or more.
8. Install CD media (or any media other than from an App Store)
With the addition of a simple USB DVD/CD-ROM drive, disc-based software can be installed on a Netbook even without an optical drive built in. Netbooks can also install files off USB drives, or via any other input method. The iPad wasn’t designed with this flexibility in mind, but it’s still nice to be able to do.
9. Type on your lap
Yes, the iPad has a virtual keyboard, and even a cool keyboard dock that turns the tablet into a quasi-desktop device. But the dock can’t be used for lap typing, and the iPad lays awkwardly flat on a table unless you’re using an elevated case. For long-term writing on the go, a physical Netbook keyboard with an attached angled screen still wins.
10. Upgrade
Netbooks can upgrade their RAM–albeit slightly–and with a little effort that hard drive can be swapped too. The iPad is a fixed entity, so there’s no going back once you’ve picked 16, 32 or 64GB.

April 7th, 2010
Ntt.cc
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I love my ipod. I got one as soon as possible and do not repent it at all. Its so light to use and the technology is solid. I use it about every minute.
lol,Why don’t we just use my camera? offered that it’s much more convenient to use.
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