No problem. Just to be clear, I didn't just play with it for 30 minutes...that was just the store display model. I put it through its paces all week, THEN ended up returning it.
I would 100% buy it back in a heartbeat if it had handwriting support/stylus and I could get rid of the spiral notebooks I carry around at work. Which has me interested in Courier as well. I guess that would be my killer use-case.
Yes...my boss bought me one at work. If it had pressure-sensitive Wacom pen support, tablet-style, I would buy one in a heartbeat. But Jobs said that if it had a stylus, they did it wrong. Totally dumb approach. How exactly do I take notes in math and science class where I need to draw figures and diagrams? Imagine sitting there with your digital textbook...and a paper and pen. What the heck. I want a stylus even more than I want a webcam on the thing!
I do want to say, the iPad is NOT for reading. Sure it's for magazines and Internet, but it's not for reading books on. I've tried, and I just can't get into it. Even with the backlight on low - it just doesn't work. The Kindle is the best thing I've seen so far for reading digitally on (e-ink screen), but it doesn't do PDF's (at least not well, with conversion software), and I like that even better than black & white paper (dark gray text on a light gray background is soooo much easier to read), but even the Kindle doesn't nail it just yet.
I think that iBooks was (1) an afterthought, and (2) a marketing ploy to bring people into the iPad. "Oh yeah, yeah, read books on it, and then download some apps..." Most people I've talked to wouldn't be as inclined to look at an iPad if it didn't have an advertised book reading program, but once they try to read on it, it's not really so great, but there's so many cool apps that they're sucked in anyway - where they might have not been had it not been advertised as an e-reader. Reading on a computer is one thing, but reading on an iPad so close is another. Don't get me wrong - the screen is great - I just can't plow through a novel on it.
I think magazines and comics are pretty great on it. Internet surfing is fabulous. But even Jobs himself said "no one reads anymore". Marketing it as an E-reader is simply bait to get the initial population to buy it and convince other people to hop on board, and furthers Apple's desire to control the market of all things related to digital media. But really it's bait...hence Amazon having their own book app available for the iPad.
I'm up in the air about buying one myself. I do really, REALLY like doing video training on it - my Lynda.com tutorials load *perfectly*, and I spend at least an hour a day on that site doing software training. PDFs load decently in GoodReader, although I still don't like reading even technical documents that much on it. I DO love reading Engadget on it though
