This means that the way I organise my workspace needs really to take account of that shift in what I use most of the time. Over the last few years, I have gravitated to using laptops as my primary systems (as I’m sure many other people have also done). I have a little project at the moment to try and reorganise my desk in my room to actually work a little better for how I use it now. I will certainly be interested to hear how well it works for what you can do with it in a real-world setting. I think like many people, I need to work out how it would fit into my workflow and how I’d justify my need for it. Will I be getting one? I answered this question on the roundtable episode of The Stealth Mac podcast that I just participated in (podcast download not yet available). But it will force all the other companies doing tablet computers to rethink their approach. I don’t think the iPad is going to be as revolutionary as the iPhone was for the ‘smartphone’ market and I think it might take a bit of time for it really to find the right market (beyond early adopters) people need to work out how to fit it into their computing workflow. It feels to me to be a scaled-up iPod touch in many ways, but with software and an interface that are really capable of taking full advantage of the extra screen space and form factor. The name aside, though, this looks like a cool device. MacBook Air, iPhone 3GS and even the original iPhone name I didn’t like (drop the ‘i’ prefix already!) Over the last few years I haven’t really found myself liking the names of major new products from Apple.
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