Steve Jobs is like a brother to me and he's one of the founders of Pixar, and when the first iPad came out, I got one right away.
We make them [kids] earn the stuff they want. They're not going to play with their iPad today unless they do their chores.
If one percent of the people who take iPad or iPhone videos of concerts watch them, I'd be very surprised.
I live in Portland now. It's beautiful from day one. The Food and the beer, and no sales tax. Get your iPad while you're here.
Today, when you combine the web with the iPad, you have the most advanced medium for human thought and communication ever created.
Enterprises are just starting to adopt and integrate the iPad into their networks, but this is accelerating, and that's an opportunity for Infosys.
If you turn on ABC 7 in the morning San Francisco, you'll see them using an iPad with Waze on it, and actually talking about.
I love my iPad Pro and my Apple pencil. They have changed the way I work in really cool ways.
I'm a Philadelphia sports fanatic. I still watch Phillies games on my iPad, which is basically admitting to having daily torture sessions.
Madefire is igniting a new era by creating a modern, dynamic reading experience and bringing that to the millions of iPad users around the world.
The reason that Apple is able to create products like the iPad is because we've always tried to be at the intersection of technology and the liberal arts.
What the iPad does is it opens people's minds to a new way of doing things. They're actually thirsting for it.
During long car rides to the set, after I study my script, I go onto my iPad to read books and play games.
I went to college somewhere between the invention of the iPad and the discovery of fire... but I had gone to a women's college.
I'll Uber to who has the best expressos, and I'll take my iPad and go get a coffee... It's really given the touring situation a whole other layer of enjoyment.
Until you use the iPad for a couple of weeks, you can't appreciate it. But it quickly becomes your primary consumption device.
I do like to get away from technology. I still read a lot. Having said that, most of my reading is on computers or a Kindle or an iPad.
I'm not a techie, but I don't know how I lived without an iPad! Mine comes with me everywhere. As greatest inventions go, it's up there with electricity and cars.
When I'm on the couch, I usually have the TV on and my MacBook Air nearby. And sometimes, when my ADD is really kicking in, I have my iPad too. And my iPhone. And a magazine that I haven't gotten to. And a book under the pillow to my left.
It's a nice reader, but there's nothing on the iPad I look at and say, 'Oh, I wish Microsoft had done it.'
Compared to running apps on a smartphone or, more aptly, an iPad, the app experience on the Samsung Chromebook Plus is distinctly subpar.
It's interesting that the book publishing industry, on the iPad, has much more flexibility than the music industry had.
When you have an iPad and 75 books on it, it's so easy to go, 'I'm bored, I'm just going to read something else.'
Instead of getting an iPad, I now use my iPhone with a giant magnifying glass attached to my face.
It's the combination of marrying a beautiful woman three decades younger and my iPad that keeps me young.
The iPad! What is better designed than that? I read magazines on it, I play Scrabble. I use it for everything.
I still enjoy the tactile sensation of holding a book. But when I need to read fast for work, I use the Kindle App on my iPad.
I have got an iPad, what a joy! Van Gogh would have loved it, and he could have written his letters on it as well.
I get up every morning, and walk down to the Starbucks, sip my coffee and do some business with my iPad.
I have no system of writing. It's chaos. I could be upside down on my bedroom floor; I'll be scribbling on a pad that I'll then lose. I'll be on the toilet with my laptop on, sitting in the pub with my iPad.
Reading for me will be a combination of books, magazines, Tumblr, and just kind of the Web in general on the iPad.
I really believe you'll get a music video one of these days that I shot with an iPad because it's that consistent and that good. It's HD.
When they told me I couldn't sit on the Senate floor with an iPad - that the technology wasn't even permitted - I breathed deep and knew that I was going to have to start pushing.
What's encouraging is that the early new platforms - Kindle and iPad - are clearly leading to people buying more books. The data is in on that.
To rush to throw away your magazine business and move it on the iPad is just sheer insanity and insecurity and fear.
What's great about the iPad and iPhone is that they are easy-on, easy-off.
Computers tend to separate us from each other - Mum's on the laptop, Dad's on the iPad, teenagers are on Facebook, toddlers are on the DS, and so on.
We all know the future is mobile, right? And the iPhone and iPad are Perfect Expressions of Beauty, Ideal Combinations of Form and Function. Except they're Not.
We have three post-PC devices: the iPod, the iPhone, and the iPad, the revolutionary device that defined a whole new categoryit's outstripping the wildest of predictions.
If it's a good day, I get 'The New York Times' on my iPad, and if I have a little time in the morning, I like to look at that while I'm eating.
I use my iPad many times a day, and it has cut my use of my laptop by more than half.
I first learnt to program a computer when I was nine, when my dad got a ZX80, but I think I would have had to be a particularly perspicacious child to have foreseen the iPad or Twitter!
The future of screens isn't about the iPad. It's much, much bigger.
Myself, I really like the iPad mounted as a frame, with a happy slideshow cycling through.
If you can run your entire business on an iPad, like a food truck, then that's Square country.
I listen to Prince on my iPad. And I use a Chords & Scales app to warm up before performing.
Augmented reality, and even just the iPad-touch-screen technology, it was, you know, it still is extremely underused by entertainment.
I'm not really one for reading books. I have a very poor attention span. I'd rather listen to music, play games or watch films on my iPad.
Why would you go anyplace without your iPad? This is the greatest invention. When it gets a little more power, my God. It's like my office.
I think the screen size chosen for the iPad is perfect for publishers to render content beautifully, for games to be played.
We can't have iPads until after 7 p.m. Otherwise the entire day is, "iPad time? What about now?" It makes me crazy. And no TV on weekend mornings.
We want to let you use a Mac, or Windows PC, or iPad, or Android, without having to think about any of the technical details.
On the very same day that I ordered an iPad 2, I went shopping to buy myself a letter opener. I like to cover all my bases.
On the iPhone I tended to draw with my thumb. Whereas the moment I got to the iPad, I found myself using every finger.
I love physical books, can't bear to throw them away, and am drowning under the weight of my collection, but I do a lot of my work reading now on my iPad.
I love music, I'm very eclectic. On my iPad I have the complete works of Ludwig van Beethoven.
I see the iPad as a wonderful new drawing medium, but I am at a loss as to how to make it pay.
You can go from creating the design on your iPad to making the object on your MakerBot.
Reading for me will be a combination of books, magazines, Tumblr and just kind of the Web in general on the iPad.
I believe that tablets - and especially the iPad - are extremely versatile and productive tools for consumers, schools and businesses and are better for many tasks than the PC or the smartphone.
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