iPad 2 as a serious writing machine (how-to)

By | December 9, 2011, 6:28am PST

Summary: I write thousands of words a day in my work, and find the iPad 2 with a keyboard to be a serious writing machine to get this done.

I knew when I bought the iPad 2 a while back that it would provide a number of uses for me, but I quickly discovered it fills more important roles in my work than I believed it would. One of those, a key for me, is as a serious system to use for a lot of the writing I do in my work. I write 3,000 words most days for all of the projects I have going on, and the iPad 2 has stepped up to handle a lot of the task quite nicely.

I wrote about using the iPad 2 for writing a while back, and contantly receive questions about how I use it in this role. The best way to deal with those questions is to detail how I use the tablet as a writing machine on a daily basis.

Writing as much as I do means a good keyboard is required, and the Logitech Keyboard Case (made by ZAGG) is as good as any I have tried. It is a touch-typist’s keyboard without compromise, and turns the iPad 2 into a workhorse for any wordsmith. It runs for weeks on a single charge, and in addition to being a typing system without issues, it makes it easy to control the iPad 2 with special keys provided.

Harry McCracken, the writer behind Technologizer, TIME articles, and CNET contributor, has adopted the iPad 2 as his writing machine and explained why in a recent article. He has taken it even further by using the iPad as a full laptop replacement. Harry uses the ZAGGfolio keyboard case, which I haven’t tried, and he finds it as good as the Logitech Keyboard Case.

What makes the iPad 2 and keyboard combo so effective for my writing is the “one app at a time” nature of the tablet. The running app takes up the entire screen, and thus my focus. There are no distractions presented while writing, just inputting words on the screen.

This is liberating for a writer, and I find I can write more, and better, on the tablet system than on a “real” computer. There are no menu options competing for my attention, no updates needing to be run, just an app on the screen. Those of us who write for a living know how precious it is when you get “in the zone” while writing. The zone is that mental place where the words just flow as fast as you can type them. I find I get in the zone far more often on the iPad than on other computers. I attribute that to my focus being forced to the task at hand, and that is priceless.

How I use the iPad 2 as a writing machine

The iPad 2 and the Logitech keyboard are the two hardware pieces of my writing machine, but it requires apps to get the job done. The best way to explain how I use this system to get real work done is to step through the process I normally use, and detail the apps that make it work well.

Writing an article starts with research of the current news. I start with the Reeder app on the iPad to spin through my Google Reader feeds. Reeder lets me spin through thousands of items in short order. I follow that up by using both Flipboard and Zite, which presents current events and my social networks in an appealing visual style. I get a lot of inspiration for articles using these three apps.

Once I have a topic to cover I need to lay out the organization for the article. I know I am not alone in my hatred for outlines, but they are critical for proper planning of a big writing project. Instead of a traditional outline, I use mind maps to do the same organization in a visual way. I use iThoughtsHD on the iPad for this work. I can lay out a sophisticated map in just a few minutes, and the visual process stimulates the creative juices. This mind map for a recent article took me just 15 minutes to produce.

For those who like traditional outlines, iThoughtsHD lets you build the mind map and then email it to yourself which produces a text outline.

Once I have the article laid out, I jump into Evernote to write it. I have tried other editors, including Pages, but I like the simple editor of Evernote for producing the article. It gives me a blank page to write on, which helps with that distraction problem. I can write as fast as can be using Evernote, and the article is automatically saved to the cloud when I’m done. I can then access it from every phone, tablet, and computer I use. I always have a number of works in progress in Evernote, and frequently edit them on one phone or another as the mood strikes me.

Note: A recent update to the Evernote app broke my ability to use it on the iPad 2 with the Logitech keyboard. It was so bad I had to scramble for an alternate editor. Fortunately, the folks at Evernote provided me with a private beta version of the iPad app that addressed the issues. I have been able to use Evernote again for my heavy writing needs without any problems. Evernote tells me this fix will appear in the App Store shortly as an update to the app.

Short blog posts I write for my personal blog are done using the great Blogsy app. This editor works with multiple blog platforms (including WordPress which I use), and make blogging as easy as can be.

Mobile Safari on the iPad is quite good, and truth is I could write articles directly in the browser. I prefer the simplicity of Evernote, however, and once an article is complete I simply copy and paste it into the ZDNet editor in Safari. To avoid any problems I paste the entire article into the HTML editor in the CMS editor, and in just an instant the entire thing is ready for final editing or publication.

Mobile browsers like Safari don’t allow for uploading images and a few other functions, so when I need to do those I fire up LogMeIn Ignition on the iPad. This lets me tap into my Mac or Windows system back in my office to do any of these special tasks. It works quite well and is as easy as being at my desk in the office, no matter where I might be working.

This system is working very well for me and I am constantly amazed at how much I can get done using the iPad 2 and keyboard as detailed. Sure I could haul a laptop around with me everywhere I go, but I would still have that distraction thing to contend with while working. This method is not for everyone, but it is working superbly for me.

I have also used the Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1 with its version of the Logitech keyboard, and it works well too. I believe the upcoming ASUS Transformer Prime with the keyboard dock could be an amazing writing machine too. I find the iPad apps I use work better for me than the Android equivalents, but your mileage may vary.

See also:

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Topics

James Kendrick has been using mobile devices since they weighed 30 pounds, and has been sharing his insights on mobile technology for almost that long.

Disclosure

James Kendrick

James Kendrick has no affiliations or relationships that need to be disclosed.

Biography

James Kendrick

James Kendrick has been using mobile devices since they weighed 30 pounds, and has been sharing his insights on mobile technology for almost that long. Prior to joining ZDNet, James was the Founding Editor of jkOnTheRun, a CNET Top 100 Tech Blog that was acquired by GigaOM in 2008 and is now part of that prestigious tech network. James' writing has appeared in many print publications: Smartphone and Pocket PC Magazine, Information Week and Laptop Magazine to name a few. James' coverage of the mobile technology sector has regularly appeared in the New York Times, Salon.com and CNN/ Fortune online. Not just a writer, James has filmed numerous video reviews and how-tos that have garnered well over a million viewers. He has appeared on local news segments and been interviewed by the Associated Press on mobile technology topics. Additionally, James has been podcasting about mobile technology for years.

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Call me old fashioned
rbethell 12th Mar
But I like a keyboard connected by some sort of serial bus. I've tried blue toothing it... and it just isn't the same.
Yeah, sure. The keyword is keyboard. TV can be a serious writing machine too if it has a keyboard.
@ZenithY No kidding. What do you get when you put a iPad on a stand and add a keyboard? Answer: A desktop PC! How about that! And they say the desktop PC is dead!
Excellent article. I'm going to look into some of the apps you mention and definitely grab the keyboard. Thanks.
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@tora201 @JamesKendrick

"Mobile browsers like Safari don???t allow for uploading images and a few other functions, so when I need to do those I fire up LogMeIn Ignition on the iPad. This lets me tap into my Mac or Windows system"

I, too, use remote access, but instead use MochaVNC & RDP. They have nice trial versions you can try before buying the full version.

But more importantly, when I need to upload an image in a web form--a function you rightly noted Safari cannot do--I use another iPad web browser called iCabMobile.

iCabMobile does what sounds impossible, since there is no accessible file system on iOS, by showing the photo library with Camera Roll, etc., whenever you touch the "select file" dialog. You can use this to upload a file on your iPad, without having to first transfer the image to a remote machine and then remotely connecting to upload it via a desktop web browser.

Add to that, the fact that iCabMobile has Instapaper integration, customizable gestures for dozens of features, ad-blocking, definable web filters, and the ability to zoom web text size separate of pinch-and-zooming the entire page, and you have an outstanding full-featured web browser for the iPad.

iCabMobile also integrates with DropBox, so you can touch a link that would download something, and save the file to DropBox where you can use it later on whatever computing device you like. You can also save entire web pages there, as well.

Just another way to greatly enhance capability, by adding a browser that is more customizable than some full desktop versions.
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What a CROCK!
IT_Fella 9th Dec
If you need to add an external keyboard for the dumb thing...then why not just buy a laptop/netbook/ultrabook, and be done with it.

And besides, for what you spent for the iPud & Logitech keyboard, you could have had a laptop anyway...and ALL of the previous three will be able to do a LOT more than the iPud can do.

So what you are essentially carrying around IS a laptop computer...without a mouse/trackpad. What's the point?
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@IT_Fella: So what you are essentially carrying around IS a laptop computer...without a mouse/trackpad.
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@ye

A laptop isn't a full screen touch pad.

A laptop has a very limited physical placement usability envelope. By that I mean, a laptop essentially must have it's bottom case resting on a near horizontal surface. A tablet can be used in any physical orientation the user places it in.
@ye

"A tablet can be used in any physical orientation the user places it in. "

Not if you are writing on it with a keyboard attached.
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@IT_Fella "iPud".

Ow my sides from laughter.
@IT_Fella Quite, ITF - a laptop works fine for writing, I find.
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I too am a big fan of this keyboard but single keypresses result in double entries of that letter on a not so infrequent basis. I'm not at all suggesting it makes the keyboard unusable, only wondering if you've noticed the same thing?
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@toddybottom I can't speak for James, of course, but I use the same set up and don't have any double-press problems like you describe. Is it with a single application or all of them? If its the latter, you may have a faulty keyboard.
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Contributr
@toddybottom I don't have that problem at all. Must be a bad keyboard.
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@toddybottom

I'm with the other two.

I use a Bluetooth keyboard and haven't had this issue. Does it seem that certain letters do this more than others? Do you have another Bluetooth keyboard--like one from your desktop computer--that you could connect for troubleshooting?

I can definitely see how that would be maddening for you!
...if you're lumbered with a laptop. Here are the macaroniums:
http://mac.appstorm.net/roundups/productivity-roundups/6-minimal-full-screen-writing-apps-for-mac/
But I now use iPad2/Evernote with a cheap no-name eBay keyboard that looks just like yours.
@kenift

But if your talking iPad or iPhone, Scripts Pro writes screenplays in the standard screenplay format without you doing anything. It's compatible with the industry standard Final Draft software too.

Tried using Evernote and such, but it was a pain in the arse to get breaks and formatting down properly.
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Sounds like a do it yourself laptop.
databaseben@... 9th Dec
Sound like you simply built yourself a ultra thin laptop with a touch screen display. So why are you so excited?? A ultra thin laptop would give you more power and options.
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@databaseben@... Couldn't have said it better myself! If you're gonna lug around all that extra $hit then you may as well haul a laptop.
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@bartblocker I hope you're not one of those guys that is pissed that the iPhone doesn't have a removable battery.
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RE: iPad 2 as a serious writing machine (how-to)
lelandhendrix@... Updated - 10th Dec
@bartblocker "lug around all that extra $hit"

???

It's a case with a built-in keyboard, and one that can be easily set aside and left off when just reading or browsing/using Facebook. Nothing thinner, or with better battery life.

The only thing remotely comparable would be an 11" MacBook Air...but that's still larger, still heavier, and not usable with one hand or as versatile. That's the only thing that comes *close*, and still doesn't have as much battery life.

Plus any ultra-portable notebook coats twice the $
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@bartblocker

"The only thing remotely comparable would be an 11" MacBook Air"

With Ultrabooks hitting the market there are now MANY things comparable to the macbook air.

"Plus any ultra-portable notebook coats twice the $ "

Depends. A top end iPad + Keyboard vs a bottom end (vastly more powerful) Air/Ultrabook is only 10%.

But you are correct that, undocked you have something handy to carry for light duty like walking trade-show floors. It's a trade-off between an on demand tablet, and a more capable workstation.
@bartblocker Plus, a 10" screen? Seriously? And "distracted" by a word processor? Whatever, but how serious can anyone be typing on anything but a good keyboard? By default excluding laptop keyboards and their ilk. Plus, what is more distracting than writing in your backyard!

Spend five minutes investigating Word and you find you can hide most menus anyway. Use WordPad if you must!
I really don't understand what the benefit of this set-up is over an ultra laptop? I am not a fan of Apple but very impressed with the MBA. It seems to me that this is a preferable solution than an iPad2 plus keyboard/case. You also get a browser that works with ALL websites.
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RE: iPad 2 as a serious writing machine (how-to)
lelandhendrix@... Updated - 10th Dec
@alangblake True, and the MBA is awesome as a notebook, but it still has an un-removable keyboard, is still larger and heavier so therefore not as portable, and doesn't have as much battery life. The MBA is a perfect ultraportable, but it's just not a tablet, and like any ultra-portable, costs 2x as much as an iPad.
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10+ hour battery life, ability to also use it as a tablet, and most portable solution currently available (size and weight).
@JamesKendrick

I think you're trying too hard to justify the $800+ for what is basically a media consumption device. I have no doubt that there will be specific uses where workers need a mobile device with a custom app (although I can see that being replaced by smaller devices than the iPad using rf and bar code technology), but I just don't get the iPad other than an expensive media device.
@JamesKendrick

Sure its size and weight are great until you start using a keyboard with it. At that point you might as well be using a laptop.

By the way it its a simple and mindless task to hide your notifications and status bar on a PC. No distractions whatsoever and a much larger screen to work with.

On top of that if you are going to by a tablet, get one with a full size usb and you can simple use whatever keyboard you would like. No buying specialized boards. Foolish money spent. I must have ten keyboards lying around the house.

Of course that would mean getting out from under the shadow of the fruit.
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@heathman
You can connect any Bluetooth keyboard to an iPad, and you can also connect any of those ten USB keyboards you have to an iPad, if you spring for the camera connection kit that includes a USB dongle.

No need for "specialized" board. You won't need a hardware keyboard all the time, either. If you do, you won't be buying an iPad in the first place.

By the way--you can get an iPad USB dongle for less than $5, aftermarket. You don't HAVE to buy only the Apple-branded accessories like dongles for USB and card readers and keyboards. Just use what you like. James said in his article that he is using a Logitech one, anyway.
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NT
It's amazing how many tech people still *just don't get it*. I say this as a tech person. Predictably, tons of comments about how an ultrabook would be more powerful, have more features, and therefore be better. And anyone who disagrees is 'mind controlled' by Apple. Or rationalizing an expensive purchase, when they could have bought (other super advanced tech commenter likes) even cheaper.

How about actually reading, listening, and trying to understand? In many ways using the iPad for writing is closer to the experience of a typewriter. And in many ways, that's a good thing. Yes, you can make a similar experience on a laptop. If you disable a bunch of stuff every time you write. And don't care about the longer boot up/hibernation time. And put up with antivirus, system update, and OS notifications. And the temptation to click over and waste time browsing the web for awhile (perhaps commenting on a ZDnet post) is always there, but if you lack focus, that's your problem, right? Weak willed Apple-loving hack...

Being sarcastic here. More and more people are finding the 'limitations' of tablets, and especially Apple products, are actually helpful to usability. And more and more, technical people are riled up to protest since they just don't understand. Which is sad, because these technical people are the ones designing the software and systems that continue to favor everything-but-the-kitchen sink featuritis over... getting work done. Which is what technology is for, for most people.

How is an iPad and keyboard different than an ultrabook? It's simpler. And yes, that means limited. It also means you can prop it up, hit a button, and seconds later be writing without distraction. It's not something I do, not a way I use my device, but I can understand how for many, many people that is exceptionally powerful.
@xxyl The author intentionally say "serious" writing. Who would ever choose to write for any length of time in such a manner. Regarding the typewriter comment, that is not true, keyboards are much larger and smoother on typewriters. The essence of writing digitally is two things (besides your brain of course!) inputing and viewing, the iPad is horrible for both. A desktop PC with a large monitor and an excellent keyboard would be optimum. His proposal seems to be that an iPad is the go-to choice for writing, well it may be for him, but for most it would defy all logic, even a ultrabook would too.

And let's face it brand does not matter when writing, there is no benefit to Apple or Windows to the experience (as most will use Word anyways).
"Distraction free" writing is silly. That's like saying "If only I could live on walden pond, where there are no TVs, then I'd really be a good writer".

Not saying you're wrong (I certainly wouldn't prefer it), just saying the "one app at a time" focus of the iPad is probably not what makes you a serious writer.
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If you're not a writer, there are things about writing you just won't get.

It's about more than touting the limitations, it's about context, it's about frames of concern, it's about a lot of ineffable things.

When writing, it's often the case that one must have things "just so". That "just so" can be as particular to the person as a fingerprint. Neurotic? Maybe. You haven't heard of authors being neurotic?

So Kendrick has found a new "just so" and it suits, and there also happen to be a lot of upsides along the way.

I LOVE using an iPad in a keyboard dock. The portrait orientation, the keyboard feel, the feeling of tucking in to do the writing. The lack of distraction.

The feeling that the iPad has become my writing tool.

And when I'm not writing, I'm on one of my Macs, developing software for my iPad and the Mac suits best. Giant screen. Necessarily at least two apps going at once.
@God of Biscuits The the blog should say "The iPad is my serious writing machine"
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The "Why" question...

I have read several articles about writers switching to the iPad, and the most common reason is the battery life. With a laptop after 2-5 hours they are looking for an outlet. The iPad allows a writer to get on a plane, write while flying, use it for an interview or show at their destination, go back to motel and write or play angry birds, or travel home, etc., all without ever worrying about an outlet. The battery life really is the killer feature stated.

The second I have noticed is the simplicity. Writers do not like distraction, hence many writing apps that are essentially a blank page. Where power users are pulling their hair do to lost abilities, writers are made happy.

Ease of use has also been mentioned by most. While power users would go crazy if they could not edit the registry for example, writers just want the simplest solution that lets them get their job done. The iPad is likely the simplest to use computer in existence, as noted by the numerous stories of them being used by 96 year old grand mothers or 5 year old kids with Down Syndrome for example. For writers this is a feature.

Somewhere down the list is portability, as this combination that is essentially a 10" laptop is very easy to travel with. But realistically a 11" MBA is not much bigger or heavier. the one advantage over a laptop is the ability to pick them up and use them while moving.

Cost, some believe you could buy a laptop cheaper. You could buy a low end laptop for less, but not the real alternatives like a MBA.

I'm not a writer, but anyone attacking the article's writer as crazy should stop and think before posting.
Thanks for your article on how this device help you. I'm about to go down your path as well.

What I don't understand is some of the rants (comments) you've received! The criticisms or the out and out comments that you are out of your mind would be funny if they weren't just actually rude.
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Contributr
Great post
mkrigsman@... 9th Dec
I also use my iPad for writing but with the Apple bluetooth keyboard. It's full size and has a nice feel. The main problem is that many apps do not support all the usual keyboard commands that I am used to.
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disregard
Wheat Williams Updated - 10th Dec
disregard
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HA! Not! Total deal-breaker.

I type with the Dvorak layout, which I've used for 25 years. iOS 5 does not provide a Dvorak layout. I can type 90 wpm on Dvorak, but I can only hunt and peck on a standard keyboard layout.

Mac OS, Windows and Linux have provided Dvorak layouts since the beginning, but iOS has not.

iOS 5 added support for a Dvorak hardware keyboard, but there is only one, count them, one Dvorak hardware keyboard on the market today, in the entire world, for any platform. It's made by Matias, and it's not at all portable, or in my price range.

It would be so incredibly trivial for Apple to provide a software Dvorak keyboard layout for iOS, but they won't do it.

I own an iPod touch and an iPad 2, but I cannot type on them, unless its slowly and fitfully.

I have written to Apple about this and I've posted on everybody's Web site that I can find to post about it, but nothing gets done. I'm left out.

And did I mention that I'm a professional technical writer and journalist?
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@Wheat Williams

Hello Mr Williams!!

I decided to strike out and see if I could help you, and I have found you some economical solutions!!

If you go to Amazon.com and search for B004DBA3OK, you will find a DVORAK keyboard that is affordable. It has a switch to change between QWERTY and DVORAK, and has skins that cover the unit to change the labeling so it would even be labeled correctly should you or a friend need or want to change the layout at some point.

Almost every single USB keyboard out there works with the iPad, and this one would connect the way the rest of them do--by using the USB port adapter that ships in the Camera Connection Kit.

If you want to cut down on cost further, you don't have to buy the Apple-branded Camera Connection Kit, and instead buy a third-party iPad USB adapter for ~ $5 on ebay or similar.

Speaking of eBay, check out item number 330654193937, which ALSO happens to be a USB DVORAK keyboard for the tidy sum of $15!

These keyboards are slimline models, and easily transportable though not as tidy and wireless as the Bluetooth ones mentioned earlier.

But, for around $30 on eBay, you could have a nice way to type whenever you wanted to! I hope this helps you out. happy
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Um, thanks, but
Wheat Williams 11th Dec
@lelandhendrix@... The Amazon item you mention is a $20 SKIN for a $110 keyboard that is quite nonstandard in its shape and layout, meaning I'd have to change my touch-typing technique quite a bit to use it. The actual keyboard is on eBay, used, and the opening bid is $15, but I'm not sure a used keyboard with a nonstandard layout is anything I'd like to try.

With Windows, Linux, and Mac OS, I can use any "standard" keyboard I want, and have it switched to Dvorak layout in software. I don't worry about what's printed on the key caps because I never look at them. I've been doing this since about 1988.

Why Mac OS X supports any keyboard and can remap it to Dvorak in software, but iOS cannot, is truly beyond me. It's baffling and disappointing.

Thanks for the suggestions; I'm still looking.
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Sorry--I was hoping the one on eBay might be a good fit for you...and I wasn't sure if the ~$120 mark on Amazon was what you were looking for or not. I saw what you meant about prices, though. My gosh, the bigger, non-skinnable, and split versions on Amazon are several hundreds of dollars!!! Ouch!

I'm still hoping they will add DVORAK for you...it seems that with so many various international keyboards offered, it would be a cinch to offer the dvorak layout.
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I admire your enthusiasm James, but it appears you're trying to justify that $650+ purchase. There are more elegant, less-expensive ways to get what you want done!

$400 can buy a just-as-light-and-portable 10" netbook with a hardware keyboard to do your typing. More so, you're not relegated to jumping through hoops to get a blog post up, since you can edit images and insert video on-the-fly effortlessly. No need to remote-in to a "real PC" to finish your work, rely on cloud data, nor have to finish your work when you get home.

No need to even exit your writing app, since you can properly multitask and get everything done from one spot using a single device.

I've written enough material already on my blog about the 10" HP 210 Mini netbook and how well Intel's N570 Atom works for productivity and entertainment, never mind tasks that slates can only dream of. Today's best netbooks are FAR FROM the cheap, useless toys people continue to make them out to be, and those who continue think otherwise know little about current technology.

For anybody considering purchasing a slate for the sole purpose of pairing it with a hardware keyboard and magically having a "notebook replacement" - you're not only being clueless and ignorant, you're using the wrong tool for the job!
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Cannot dump keyboard when unneeded
bjl17 Updated - 10th Dec
@lgpOnTheMove,
As other posters have said, that $400 notebook does not let you leave the keyboard behind and enjoy the light-weight multi-touch only interface when that is enough, like for reading (or typing short messages, like this post from my iPad, from my sofa).

P. S. about multi-tasking: iPads handle that just fine, despite some forum trash talk you might have read. A four-finger swipe moves between open apps, and when you swap out of an app, it stays in RAM, ready to be resumed instantly with that swipe, even when it is not programmed to do a background task and so is not consuming cycles while in the background.
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@bjl17 You get it. Some don't, and I think they don't want to get it.

And that's fine. Tablets aren't the best tool for everybody.

Even the author himself has stated emphatically before that a tablet would never be a way for him to get things done. But it turns out it serves his needs quite well.

Netbooks are hardly the latest in current technology. And typing on abbreviated/altered keyboards is a massive pain, a pain you don't have to deal with when using a quality Bluetooth one with an iPad, and you can ditch it when you're done.

The netbook is never as small and portable as an iPad, nor does it have as much battery life. AND, an iPad is never going to render a flash website, browse its own file structure (except for uploading pictures from a browser as I mentioned above), and it's never going to run Microsoft Office.

They are two different ways for going about something. And for many, the trade offs are definitely worth it--and in some cases, quite positive!
A lot of naysayers in here. As a software developer, I spend a lot of time on my Macbook, but when I'm writing blog posts, I love writing on my iPad. I prefer the iPad for blogging for 2 reasons:


  1. The fullscreen apps help me avoid distraction
  2. The Apple wireless keyboard allows me to set the iPad on the coffee table and still fit 2 cats on my lap


YMMV.
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@coxandrew Hahaha!! Brilliant.
You'll pry my Microsoft Natural keyboard out of my cold, dead hands.

"There are no menu options competing for my attention, no updates needing to be run, just an app on the screen."

Set up Windows to auto-hide the taskbar.

Open Microsoft Word 2010.

Double click one of the tabs on the ribbon to collapse it.

Enjoy.

Is the rest of the interface really that distracting? Because I'm finding I have no issues at all. I've written countless papers for college on Windows without any issues.

I think you're actually feeding us a bunch of bull. Computers have been word processing machines since their invention, and you're just trying your best to convince yourself that the tablet is better than it actually is.
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@CobraA1

No, many writers appreciate the focus of not being able to access distractions.

Just as how Steven King, or JK Rowling would check him/herself into a hotel room for long periods in order to write. I've done the same when I need to work on music.

If there is something I'm the next room easily accessible, my subconscious will find a need to twiddle with it. Same thing with something in another window, another blog post to check, hit the news site, why do I hear my computer fans spin up slightly--let me check the process viewer, etc.l etc., etc.

Some writers, not for academic work but for stream of consciousness and purely creative types, really do need to lock the doors and turn OFF the phone, and separate themselves from even the ABILITY to distract themselves.
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RE: iPad 2 as a serious writing machine (how-to)
Robert-Dowell Updated - 22nd Dec
@CobraA1

I believe, if you are going to leave comments, you should check your history. Computers were not as you mention, used as word processors since their invention, instead this implementation did not become commmon till the mid 70's with Electric Pencil. Digital computers have been used since 1944 as scientific, clerical, maths and cryptography systems long before then.

As for the original article, and to paraphrase someone else, 'You just don't get it'. If he wants to use it like that, and I can see why as I also use it for these purposes, along with music creation and painting, then more power to him. As for you, no one invited you to the party, but you still chose to come along anyway and throw in your 10p worth.

Question is, why is your opinion anymore valid than his, I mean it's for his own personal use???

I don't like the MS Office Ribbon, it's not my cup of tea, but you do. Doesn't mean it is wrong or right, just a personal preference. Like james, I found the more I got to know how I worked, the more I found the tablet works for me. It does not get in the way of what I want to do. I also have a Laptop, that is used for other things, but as previously mentioned in this post, battery life trumps all other things. I can leave the house with less than 30% life left and still get 3 hours. You can't do that with a laptop, without either extra baggage or a power outlet.
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Call me old fashioned
rbethell 12th Mar
But I like a keyboard connected by some sort of serial bus. I've tried blue toothing it... and it just isn't the same.

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