crazyscot: Selfie, with C, in front of an alpine lake (Default)
crazyscot ([personal profile] crazyscot) wrote2012-10-17 09:01 pm
Entry tags:

iCame iSaw iPondered

From time to time I contemplate the notion of a tablet PC of some sort. Yes, yes, I know, Apple's offerings positively exude a level three glamour, but I do hear rumours of people out there who do serious useful stuff with them. As a tool for getting things done, in other words - not just a plaything. But Apple's blurb proclaims there to be over 250,000 apps in the App Store. Right. How on earth am I expected to navigate that?

Of course there is the other option, of a much cheaper Android device, but there is such a profusion of devices to choose from, and no single unified App Store, making the problem much worse. (Side note: commodity hardware is dead.)

What, dear readers, might I do with such a device? What do those of you who have them do? (I also have some notes from folk at work.)

There is also the question of 3G or not. My lifestyle doesn't currently put me in situations where I think "hey, if I had 3G and a tablet right now I could do X", so I don't see much utility in paying the extra - but of course this is a chicken and egg situation. What can I do with a 3G device that's useful, cool or both? I appreciate that you can't answer for me, but you can at least tell me about cool stuff that you'd do, which is hopefully going to give me ideas...

(Side note: I have a PAYG 3G stick; I don't currently see the benefit of a 3G subscription. Casual data is eye-bleedingly expensive here. The least awful rate I have found is with Telecom NZ, who charge $1 for the first 10MB in any 24 hour period, then $1 per MB after that; and if you go a-roaming, then (in most parts of the world) thirty bucks per MB is what they will be a-charging. If RevK is reading this paragraph, he's probably had kittens by now and/or spotted a market ripe for exploitation. But griping about mobile data rates is not (really) the purpose of this post.)
alitalf: Skiing in the 3 Valleys, France, 2008 (Default)

[personal profile] alitalf 2012-10-17 01:23 pm (UTC)(link)
I got an iphone 3gs when they were recent, and that is what persuaded me that when I wanted a tablet, it would be Android. I am heartily sick of itunes, and find it much more convenient to plug the tablet into any computer that has a document or media file that I want, and drag and drop it into tablet memory. It is sometimes more convenient to load stuff I want to use onto a micro SD card and plug that in instead. Neither of these actions is possible with an i-anything. You can sync with itunes on one computer, and if you have to change computers itunes will erase all your content and start again.

I think it is worth choosing a tablet with a sd or micro sd card slot. Then you can carry a spare card with different things on it if you want.

Unlike ios, android has an actual file manager so it is possible to make use of extra storage. Google maps remains much better than apple maps, by all reports.

The tablet I use is a wifi Motorola Xoom. For 3g access for that, or anything else I happen to want to use, I have an unlocked Mifi which I bought from Amazon. Periodically I buy a new sim preloaded with 3GB of data transfer valid for 3 months. That is how I stayed in touch from hospital.

I did need to download a third party app to make the particular imap email flavour that Numenor uses work, but that cannot be said to have been onerous.

I use the tablet for playing media (with bluetooth earphones), reading books, web access, email, wordprocessing (with a small bluetooth keyboard), spreadsheets, and now I am evaluating the free version of a circuit simulator. I will probably invest the slightly over £10 for the full version. Sometimes it is handy to have a pdf data sheet on the tablet while I am working on the cad on another machine, so I can keep all the screen space for cad. The aspect ratio is more useful than what the ipad uses.