I've been in the information technology analysis and observation game for more than 30 years. In all that time, I've never bought a first-generation anything. That streak has now been broken by the iPad. Why?
1. With the Documents to Go app, I can read, edit and create Microsoft Office files in their native formats, compatible with everyone with whom I work who uses Office or anything compatible with it.
2. Documents to Go also lets me synchronize copies of files with the Google Docs online file management service (and with several others). Another app, SimpleNote, lets me synchronize copies of files with SimpleNote servers. By saving copies of my files in the cloud, I can always get to them from any device I have that can access the Web, nit just my iPad (or my wife's -- we got her one, too).
3. I spend hours on buses each week and elsewhere between my home and office. Now, I can always get to my e-mail and my most critical work, even when there's no Wi-Fi where I am. (I'm still not a big fan of the AT&T network, but it is improving, it's better than no connectivity, and the iPad does enough offline to make occasional network hiccups tolerable.
4. I have almost all of my critical documents and notes, all of my critical contacts and appointments, and all of my favorite music and entertainment with me or accessible to me wherever I am, along with navigational assistance, local information and other resources, in a package I can fit and take almost anywhere.
5. The iPad is basically the coolest, most elegant piece of technology I've seen since the lever and fulcrum. (Yeah, I know. Geeky. I went to the Bronx High School of Science and M.I.T. I can't help myself. Sue me.)
I know all about its challenges and limitations. By the way, the on-screen keyboard is not the challenge it's sometimes made out to be. It takes some practice, but in landscape mode at a comfortable angle, it's pretty usable. And if you disagree, the Apple Wireless Keyboard may be worth the additional investment, and adds to the coolness factor. And yes, I also know that future versions are coming with more features. But the first-generation iPad does enough of what I want and need, and enough more cool and neat stuff, in ways even better than I'd thought or seen described before seeing and touching one.
It may not be for you, but it might be more for you than you think or have seen, especially if you rely on a computer and the Internet for work or other important aspects of your life. Ignore the political, religious and ideological arguments, and just check one out. Or ask any of the growing number of iPad users you'll soon see at your local coffeehouse, waiting for a shopping spouse at the mall, or on an upcoming flight. And if the user you run into happens to be me, please forgive my nearly irrational exuberance.