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Doctorow on the iPad

While I don’t agree with Cory Doctorow on comic books (I rarely, if ever lend mine out), this is exactly why I won’t be getting an iPad.

Then there’s the device itself: clearly there’s a lot of thoughtfulness and smarts that went into the design. But there’s also a palpable contempt for the owner. I believe — really believe — in the stirring words of the Maker Manifesto: if you can’t open it, you don’t own it. Screws not glue. The original Apple ][+ came with schematics for the circuit boards, and birthed a generation of hardware and software hackers who upended the world for the better. If you wanted your kid to grow up to be a confident, entrepreneurial, and firmly in the camp that believes that you should forever be rearranging the world to make it better, you bought her an Apple ][+.

But with the iPad, it seems like Apple’s model customer is that same stupid stereotype of a technophobic, timid, scatterbrained mother as appears in a billion renditions of “that’s too complicated for my mom” (listen to the pundits extol the virtues of the iPad and time how long it takes for them to explain that here, finally, is something that isn’t too complicated for their poor old mothers).

(…)

If you want to live in the creative universe where anyone with a cool idea can make it and give it to you to run on your hardware, the iPad isn’t for you.

If you want to live in the fair world where you get to keep (or give away) the stuff you buy, the iPad isn’t for you.

If you want to write code for a platform where the only thing that determines whether you’re going to succeed with it is whether your audience loves it, the iPad isn’t for you.

Categories: Apple, Gadgets, Internet, Science, Technology.

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4 Responses

  1. I agree with Doctorow on all the points, including the comic book one (although I think he meant that for books as well). I am very very psyched by Notion Ink's Adam tablet. The specs on that are phenomenal (Tegra 2 dual core, Pixel Qi 10" display, Camera, Mic, Speaker, USB ports, HDMI 1080p video output, GPS, WiFi, 3G, blah blah)…. and it runs Android but can support Ubuntu and Chrome OS.

    I am quite concerned about a tablet market that will only have the iPad as the dominant product.

    • Interesting link.

      Honestly, I'm still not sold on the 'tablet revolution'. I'm very comfortable with my Nexus One and I can pretty much do everything I could on a tablet PC except read ebooks. Then again, I prefer my books, um, paper based.

  2. can’t afford one but liked what i saw at the apple store here.

    (btw in chicago for a month)

    did you change your number?



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