I should probably mention that I was in my local Apple retailer last week and the manager had in iPad that he let me play with for a few minutes. Reading comics on this thing is quite, quite lovely and all the reviews that say "You can't really understand the device until you've held one" are completely right.
I won't be buying one because I really can't find a niche in my computing needs that it fits. For the 90-odd percent of people who own a computer at home, the ones who really only use it for leisure activities ... e-mail, web, media consumption, some light gaming, for all these people it'll meet their needs in a smaller form factor with a ten-hour battery.
I was dubious about whether people would view it that way, but since Apple
have sold a million of 'em in 28 days and can't make them fast enough to meet demand, it appears that they do.
I think we're seeing a pivotal moment in the development of the computer: the desktop as we understand it will be relegated to a pro-tool for video editors and CGI houses, a laptop (and possibly an external monitor) will do for the rest of us that use our computers creatively, and everyone one else will be happy with low maintenance sealed appliances like the iPad.
Interesting times. Worth reading
Charles Stross's thoughts on the matter, too.*
Cheers!
Jim
Actually, Stross' blog is worth a bookmark -- it's always a good read.