The HP Slate

Well, it has a better name.

This somewhat forlorn HP marketing piece is meant to buck up the salesmen at HP.

Some issues with the Slate:

  • HP uses the Atom CPU I used in my netbook the past two years (recycled two days after getting the iPad). I overclocked it from 1.6 to 2.0gHz and it was still slow. Not too bad (OS Leopard 10.5.6) but the A4 in the iPad is really special. Fast. (“Wicked fast” as Mossberg of WSJ put it). The iPad surfs almost as fast as my desktop which has thermonuclear power, five big fans and a Core2Quad CPU running Snow Leopard 10.6.3. The iPad’s apparently slow 1 gHz CPU speed does not make for meaningful comparisons – I know, I have used both CPUs.
  • The Atom CPU runs pretty cool but uses much more power than the A4. The result is a much lower battery life. 5 vs 12 hours. Huge difference.
  • The HP’s screen is same as on netbooks – 1024 x 600 vs. 1024 x 768 pixels on the iPad. You will be amazed how much difference those extra 168 pixels make – the iPad screen shows 28% more. Non trivial.
  • No 802.11n wifi on the Slate.
  • No App Store for the Slate.

The HP has a camera, SDXC card reader and USB port. Very nice. The iPad really needs a card reader built in, not as an add on. The HP can likely multitask (my netbook did) – multitasking is coming to the iPad soon with tomorrow’s announcement of iPhone OS 4.0. The Slate’s price seems far too high – aren’t Apple products meant to sell at a premium?

But the real deal killer is the OS. Windows 7, even it is better than Vista and XP, was not designed for touchscreen use. HP has rushed this out in 6m whereas AAPL has been developing the iPad with a ‘ground up’ designed OS for 5 years and has millions of users’ experience from the iPhone/iPod Touch (85.5 million to be exact). HP make nice pro printers. They should stick to that. The Slate looks like a very costly netbook to me.

I would hate to have to compete against the iPad with all that patented technology and wish HP well. They make some great hardware.

Update April 30, 2010: The rumor mill is reporting that HP has decided to cancel the Slate. No surprise there. Windows and 5 hour battery lives just don’t cut it any more.

The iPad’s IPS screen

Not half bad, as we used to say in school.

One of the iPad’s biggest advantages for photographers is it’s IPS (In Plane Switching) display whose singular advantage over TN (Twisted Nematic) LCD displays is that it suffers far less fall off viewed from acute angles.

A picture being worth a lot more than words, I imported a snap from a Panasonic G1 RAW file into iPhoto on the iPad using iTunes (boy, does that ever sound dumb, or what?), the only method available until the iPad’s SDHC card reader debuts later this month.

In the comparison pictures below you are looking at JPG renderings of the RAW file on both monitors, the large one being one of the two Dell 2209WA IPS displays on my desk.

Face on, the iPad’s image is a little warmer.

Off axis, reflections make comparisons tricky.

The Dell monitor is profiled using the EyeOne colorimeter. At present there is no way to profile the iPad’s screen but it’s close enough to be useful for preview and culling. Off axis, reflections on the iPad make comparisons difficult, (the Dell is, of course, matte), but the drop off in illumination intensity is far less than the picture suggests.

Some aver that off axis viewing is not something you do with portable devices. That’s largely true for the miniscule screens in devices like the iPhone but the iPad is quite capable of supporting multiple users – some games already provide that functionality – and obviously not everyone can have the screen dead front and central.

So the IPS technology in the iPad’s display is welcome and yet another technological step forward by the design geniuses at 1 Infinite Loop, Cupertino, CA.

The Unfair Advantage

With thanks to a great engineer.

As a kid, when I was taking math finals in school, one of the rich kids had an electronic calculator. The rest of us had slide rules and logarithmic tables. What struck me was that he was forced to surrender it at the door before entering the exam hall. You see, this being a very proper British establishment that believed in a level playing field, they thought it unfair that he should have that technology available to him compared to the paper and pencils the rest of us had. An attitude which has a lot to do with Britain’s fall from world leadership, this young prat’s use of technology was deemed unBritish. It was my first exposure to what I later came to know as the Unfair Advantage. What has not changed one iota since then is the resentment the owners of the Unfair Advantage engender in the deprived masses without.

The concept of the Unfair Advantage was made famous by a great American race car driver and mechanical engineer named Mark Donohue. His education and analytical engineering skills, something not possessed by any of his competitors, allowed Porsche to develop his race car, the 917-30, to a peak of perfection which saw it win all but one of the CanAm races in 1973. The format was subsequently changed and the car obsoleted, but Donohue had shown that having an Unfair Advantage was a winning formula.

Donohue’s Unfair Advantage – the 917-30.

I learned a lot from Donohue and have always been seeking the Unfair Advantage in whatever I do, be it business or pleasure.

Take Harvard, where I would like my son to get an MBA many years hence. He is male. Unfair Advantage. 98% of Fortune 500 CEOs are men. He will have the best education leading up to his Harvard MBA, commencing with four years at one of the eight elite New England prep schools with four more in a no less exalted college. Unfair Advantage. While the hard scrabbling ghetto kid can win, the odds are long. My son is white. Unfair Advantage, like it or not. There are four or so black CEOs in the Fortune 500. My son is an American. Unfair Advantage. He has access to teaching and technologies most would die for though few can afford. My son will have a substantial trust fund (if I don’t blow it first) which will allow him to take risks the poor cannot afford. Unfair Advantage. At a premier American college, even if his academic accomplishments are mediocre, he will leave with one of the best possible Contact lists on his iPhone. Unfair Advantage. It’s who you know …. My son lives in San Francisco which, with just two or three other US cities, offers access to culture and diversity. Unfair Advantage. Sure there are some successful people in Mississippi, but he will never have to suffer the miseries or lost opportunities of growing up there. My son is also physically beautiful. How many ugly CEOs do you know? Unfair Advantage.

So some of his Unfair Advantages are genetic – height, skin color, genes, looks, while others are man made – wealth, education, technology. But while I have no more idea whether he will be successful than any parent ever has, I have maximized his chances within the currently white dominated rule system by maximizing his Unfair Advantages.

In photography, technological change has always brought with it an Unfair Advantage. However, unlike with education where wealth correlates highly with access, the Unfair Advantage in photography lasts a brief time. Color film gave Life magazine an Unfair Advantage over its competitors then suddenly it was cheap and everyone had it. Life magazine folded. Early adopters of digital had an Unfair Advantage. They could process and deliver images faster than the film users but before you could say CMOS sensor, everyone had digital and it was dirt cheap. Kodak folded. The Unfair Advantage was gone and had become a necessity. Unless you want to be a target for hilarity, no self respecting professional photographer would be seen dead using film unless, that is, he is so successful that it can be shrugged off as a charming eccentricity. “That’s Bruce, man. That’s the way the dude rolls.”

When technology suffers one of its frequent seismic changes, the early adopters are scoffed at by fools like this – in today’s WSJ:

Not one moment’s thought has gone into that piece of nonsense, written by a guy who drives looking in the rear view mirror. What he does not know and likely will never understand is that, armed with an iPad, my eight year old son has a massive Unfair Advantage. He can both consume and create using the device in ways not a single one of his classmates can. By the time they have all caught up because they don’t get it, or their parents don’t get it more likely, or they are waiting for ‘the bugs to be worked out’, or because they want feature this or feature that, Winston will have had a one year lead on them which they cannot recover. His Unfair Advantage is conceptually identical to Mark Donohue’s.

Thank you Mark for teaching me one of the most important things I ever learned, and it’s not something I picked up in the storied corridors of academe. You can buy Donohue’s book from Amazon and, yes, it’s titled The Unfair Advantage.

One of Winston’s many Unfair Advantages.

Genetic determinism is a fact of life. Get over it and choose your parents well.

Mind blown

Another early adopter.

Dropped by the city today on a glorious spring day to pick up some slippers from the nice people in the Allen Edmonds store (America’s finest shoe maker) and was not only amazed by the profusion of iPod advertisements but by the number of people talking about it on the street as I ambled along. If you think this device has buzz, you are right.

Early adopter

This chap bought one the day it came out this past Saturday and, as you can see, his mind has been blown ever since.

On a related note I wrote the Macworld people asking, now that the iPad is here, why I should renew my print subscription? I’m not holding my breath for a reply, but then neither do I propose to renew.

iPad application issues

Fast fixes.

Two of the applications I find are essential on a mobile device, be it iPhone or iPad, are NetNewsWire and 1Password.

Both come in iPad versions at $10 and $9 respectively and both started crashing on startup after a brief period of functioning properly.

NetNewsWire on the iPad

1Password on the iPad

A quick email to the authors, a quick resubmission to Apple who equally speedily approved the revised versions into the App Store and a fresh download saw everything working fine by yesterday afternoon. Impressive.

This week the iPhone gets an upgraded multitasking system which should migrate to the iPad quickly. At that point I expect the 1Password folks should be able to integrate their application into mobile Safari for one click access to protected sites much as is currently possible with the desktop version. That will greatly speed up the use of the iPad.

As regards iPhoto, my experimentation has been limited to syncing a few albums from my desktop to the iPad and I must say the interface is to die for. A simple un-pinching motion magically expands an album on the screen. Another touch and a slideshow starts, with your choice of music from the iPod on the iPad:

Un-pinching ….

There are no processing controls at present and the only way to get photos onto the iPad is by syncing with your desktop. The SDHC card reader I have on order shows shipping as “late April”, so more practical use to preview and cull RAW images form my DSLRs will have to wait until then.

It’s obvious why nerds hate the iPad. By opening computing with a friendly user interface to a whole new population of technophobes, the nerd’s very existence is threatened, just as the existence of paid photographers is under fire. Why? Because now “anyone can do it”.