There were two lines: one for people who did not pre-order, and one for those who did.
Here is the line for those hoping that the iPad doesn't sell out...
... and here is the line for those who pre-ordered. You can see the Apple Store in the background, all the way to the left.
It took me about an hour to get through the line, and that was fine because I could meet the other Apple fans.
So far, I am not sure what to think of the iPad; I have only played around with it for a couple of days. However, there are two iPad programs ("apps") that I want to mention.
The first app is based on those wooden mazes that you have to tilt back and forth to move a marble through. The app is a digital version of those, and it's called, "Labyrinth 2 HD Lite." ("Labyrinth 2" is the sequel to the app "Labyrinth"; "HD" is a convention to show that the app is for the iPad, and "Lite" is a convention to show that this app is free but there is a more expensive version with more features.)
My grandma used to have one of those wooden mazes, and I remember spending hours every summer trying to conquer it. The app does a great job of simulating the wooden maze: you simply tilt the iPad to move the marble, and the physics and sounds are spot-on.
But what's really cool is how the app does things that can't be done in the physical toy. For example, there are multiple mazes (hundreds in the $8 version of the app, and you can make your own). Even crazier, there are all sorts of gadgets in the maze that do things that are, well, magical. For example, one gadget resizes your marble, and another gadget duplicates your marble. But again, everything else seems so realistic, that it looks like . . . magic.
The second app that I want to mention is one I haven't even used: it's an astronomy app called "Star Walk." Star Walk has a feature that is just mind-blowing to me: you can go outside at night, point the iPad (or iPhone) up at the sky, and the app shows you that portion of the night sky . . . enhanced. By enhanced, I mean it labels stars, constellations, planets, and I think it can even show you things you *could see* if you had a better telescope, like nebulas and galaxies. And the program's only like $5.
From iPad debut |
Perhaps for my dad, the Mac was not really a more expensive PC; perhaps the Mac was qualitatively different, and qualitatively better.
I wish my dad were around to see the iPad. Maybe he would have bought two. He would have brought them to Blue Canyon to help us find the planets and learn the constellations. He would have gotten a kick out of that.
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