OK, I'll admit it. The iPad Mini hasn't left my hands in the last three weeks. It's been no contest, really. While the larger fourth-gen iPad
has sat alone by my bedside table, the Mini has gone on field trips on
the bus, gotten dragged in my jacket pocket while I dropped my kid off
at school, been coddled at the cafe over breakfast, and slipped
alongside my laptop on work excursions.
As I predicted when I
reviewed it, the Mini's had a hard time leaving my hands, because few
places seem inappropriate for it. At a
Kindle
size, it's bedroom-friendly. It'll set up nicely on a kitchen counter.
It slides into otherwise lesser-used front pockets on backpacks. And it
might be the best gaming handheld Apple's ever made, based on the sheer
size of the screen and its thin, two-hand-friendly frame.
But, what does that mean?
It means, I'm enchanted with the form. And rightfully so. You could make the argument that the original
iPad was all about screen size and form, more than anything technologically revolutionary. The same feels true here. The
iPad Mini would have been a shocking device a few years ago, but now it slides into a landscape of other small tablets. I love using it, but I still don't find it a surprising device. I do, however, find it to be an extremely addictive one.
Why
have I left my larger iPad behind? I can think of a few reasons. First,
the form's less seductive. I've lived with all previous generations of
iPads, and the fourth-gen feels too much like the third-gen in casual
use, so I find it a little less fun to play with.
Also, I commute
to New York City from New Jersey. Sometimes I take my laptop back and
forth. The iPad Mini is the more commuter-friendly device, hands-down.
In that regard, I'm actually pretty curious about the LTE model that's
arriving in stores soon.
Limitations: A matter of perspective
Much
like the original iPad, the Mini lacks a much-desired feature, but it's
not nearly as effective. The first iPad didn't have a FaceTime camera
-- or any camera at all. It was a buzz kill because the iPad seemed
ideal for casual video chat. The iPad Mini lacks a higher-definition
Retina Display, which is frustrating because the Mini is perfect for
reading, and deserves the best display tech possible to improve that
experience.
But you can live without Retina Display on an iPad
Mini, far more so than you could live without a camera on the iPad. The
display is fine for reading. I've read books, magazines, and even
written reviews. It's just not as good as it could be. Oddly, older iPad
apps that don't rely on Retina seem to shine the brightest: I dusted
off and redownloaded The Elements and found it looked wonderful on the
Mini. It's all a matter of perspective, and Retina-conditioning. Of all
the people I've shown it to, those who don't seem to follow tech or own
previous higher-def or Retina Display devices didn't mind at all.
Techies, those who care about the fine details of screen quality, did.
Form wins out over specs for many people. For others, that finer screen
matters more
Has anything changed over the last week?
I've
learned to live with the screen. It works. It's not a showstopper, but
it's perfectly good for what it does, has excellent sharp viewing
angles, and, well, I've learned to live with it. I have dreams of a Retina Display Mini,
but I know that's not happening now. It could even affect battery life
and size/weight. I understand that. So, I accept the Mini for what it
is, which is pretty excellent otherwise. And if it means better battery
life over a sharper screen, I appreciate that decision -- even if I wish
that screen could be crisper and richer every time I look at it.
What I use the Mini for
Reading,
playing games, watching videos. In that order. I don't find the Mini as
compelling for video because the screen isn't as pitch-perfect. I love
Web browsing on it, for obvious reasons. And games seem to shine more on
the Mini than on the fuller iPad. The Mini crosses over just on the
side of "handheld device" as opposed to "laptop replacement," and it
feels more like a PlayStation Vita or Nintendo 3DS
in that regard. I've found few games, virtual-thumb-control or
tap-based, that don't fit the Mini's tweener size perfectly. And its
size, so similar to the upcoming Nintendo Wii U's Game Pad, makes it feel like a direct competitor.
But I think it's so good at playing games that the
rest of industry, handhelds and consoles alike, need to pay attention
even more than before. The Mini feels like it's really conquered the
best gaming space between the too-limited-for-most-fingers iPhone screen
and the cumbersome larger iPad.
Using the iPad Mini outside
isn't a fun experience because of glare, but I've never found iPad use
in broad daylight to be fun. That's why I bought a Kindle.
Battery
life has held up admirably. I never need to recharge after a single
day, or even two, but I do because I worry about dipping below 50
percent charge. The battery feels more like the original iPad's than the
third-gen one, something I don't need to ever babysit.
Tweener regrets?
The
iPad Mini's closer in feel to an iPhone. Do I feel absurd using it? Not
really, because the difference in screen size is still considerable.
I keep thinking about the iPod Touch.
Has the iPad Mini made it vestigial? Not yet. The Mini's still bulky by
comparison, and not ideal for controlling music. The Touch (and the
iPhone) are pocket-size and feel more organic for audio and headphones.
For some reason, I always use my iPad in my home with speakers, not
headphones. It feels like a shared device.
No, I haven't spoken
about the larger iPad, the one that we awarded an Editors' Choice. I
stand by it as a technological milestone, and a strong overall package, a
polished one. It's just not something I'm currently using. That could
change -- after all, very few apps and games even exist that take
advantage of that faster A6X processor in the fourth-gen iPad. When they
appear, I'll be interested. Of course, if the iPad Mini becomes the
go-to iPad, developers might find it less critical to make A6X-optimized
games. I still think the presence of that industry-shifting Retina
Display matters, especially on a tablet, and the larger iPad is the
place to go for it. But it's become a premium feature in the current
iPad lineup, not an essential one.
Too many devices?
Maybe it's just having been through reviews of the iPhone 5,
iPod Touch, and both iPads in the span of just two months, but Apple's
unleashed a lot of gear for the holidays. That inevitably forces people
to make tough decisions. Buy the iPhone 5 or the iPad Mini? Skip this
iPad generation and wait for a possible sooner-than-expected refresh? Or, maybe go whole hog and keep buying, as I've been somewhat surprised to hear some followers on Twitter doing.
The
iPad Mini is the most fun new device Apple's released all year, and
it's the one I most love showing off. It also seems, to my surprise, to
be the device most people are most curious to see for themselves. Yet,
if you love new tech, it's the least exciting under the hood. I felt the
pull of both those feelings in the past few weeks -- but I have to
admit, it never made me stop using it.
Source : cnet
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