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Uncategorized

Contemplate experience

This piece is from 2020, but – as often with paper journals – evergreen:

One student, a slight girl with dark eyes, dark hair, and a sweet determined demeanor, had the most beautiful journal I had ever seen. It was a small red book inside of which she both wrote and made collages from the scraps of papers she shed just walking through her life—ticket stubs and business cards, a photograph, seashells collected on vacation, sand—it was all glued into her book. Words wove their way around the images.

Hers was a combination of scrapbook, journal, and artwork, mesmerizing to look at and, she told me, calming to create. She gave herself time each day to spend with the journal. It freed her, allowed her to contemplate experience, process it.

Why I (Still) Carry a Notebook Everywhere

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The Next Computer

The most reliable computer I own

Whether I’m heading out to a cafe, a week-long trip, or just around the house, my iPad Pro is what I reach for.

The iPad isn’t the most capable device I own, but it’s the most reliable. And increasingly, that’s what I value above all else.

Here is a short list of what I mean by reliable:

  • Applications won’t hang. They just won’t. Just as importantly, they won’t lag. Jobs may take a _very_ long time to run if I’m running something in parallel, but unlike any desktop OS I have run, the rest of the system won’t stutter. This is the epitome, I think, of Apple’s hardware-software integration.
  • Battery life is super-predictable.
  • Connectivity is guaranteed – I have a 4G SIM, so the iPad is always either on Wi-Fi or on cellular data.
  • It wakes instantly and is ready to go immediately. Always.
  • FaceID will always work – unlike a laptop, I’m not going to ever mistype my password.
  • Airdrop always works – at least, between my iPad and phone. I can tap Share on either device confident that the other is always visible.
  • A peripheral will either work or it won’t. Once I know it works, I can rest assured it’s going to work every time I plug it in.
  • Apps will never update while I’m using them or at launch.
  • This is rather niche – I know I can use it to sign and return any document in a pinch. I run into this only a couple of times a year, but when I do it’s extremely reassuring. Even if it’s a paper document, I can scan, sign and print/email it.

I think the most important design choice Apple made is setting very clear expectations about the user experience: both what to expect and what not. I can’t expect applications to run in the background, for instance, so I’ll make sure I’m running screen on any Termius session on remote machines so I can always reconnect and pick up from where I left off. This is as important as the expectation that the machine will always start instantly regardless of whether it’s been off a few seconds or a few days.

None of these is solely a result of the iPad’s form-factor as a tablet. It’s a number of things that come together. Several people have remarked that the iPadOS software does a disservice to the massively capable hardware on recent iPad Pros. They are right, but over time I have come to understand what Apple will not compromise when it builds new software capabilities.

The iPad is in fact a new kind of computer – just one that’s not merely portable and flexible, but completely reliable.