Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2014/08/17
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Hi Peter, I suggest you look on line at the Apple store and check out used/ reconditioned units - the would help a lot on the price question. I have bought used a couple of times and have been very pleased with the units. I usually buy apple care because I travel so much and so far and I have had to use it three times in 15 years and was very glad to have it. Have just upgraded my (used) 15 ? Macbook Pro to the smaller 13? Macbook Pro with Retina display - and Apple gave me $700 on the trade. So as Sonny suggests, there may be more than one way to skin the Apple in this case. Hope your hand is better soon, Howard Date: Sat, 16 Aug 2014 22:46:48 -0700 From: Peter Klein <pklein at threshinc.com> To: lug <lug at leica-users.org> Subject: Re: [Leica] Hand troubles Thanks, Phil, Sonny and everyone else. I went to the local Apple store today and looked at the iPad Mini Retina. While I liked it, two things stopped me: 1. Price, especially when the salesperson started steering me towards the more expensive iPad Air, informed me I'd need a $60-90 case, and by the way, let's set you up with an Apple ID, and how much Cloud service are you going to need... 2. The voice recognition software doesn't let you find a word or phrase on a Web page and click on it. So I still would be using my fingers for browsing beyond the initial lookup or URL. And in that case, why pay Apple prices since I'm a PC guy and not already in their orbit? Both iPad and Android will let you answer an email using voice dictation, and both will search the Web and open an app via voice. For a good deal less cash, I can pick up a current Nexus 7 tablet, which appears to do what I want, and has very good reviews. It will still get me off the PC and mouse for mail and casual browsing, which is the point of this exercise. So if somebody thinks that this choice is really dumb for some reason, please let me know, because the Nexus 7 is looking very good to me. As far as alternate pointing devices and ergonomic setup, I'm corresponding with a hand doctor who is also a musician, and will check with my own doc for a referral next week. I'm going to play with Windows' voice recognition to see how I like it on the PC before springing for Dragon, but that's a possibility, too. A cell-enabled tablet is not necessary for me, because my little Tracfone can do rudimentary Web over the cell network--it's just that the tiny screen makes most picture content too small. --Peter