On iPad Intuitiveness (Again)

iPad intuitiveness is the source of eternal debate. One might ask: If the iPad is more intuitive than the Mac, why is it more difficult to use overall? Good question. Well, Gruber offers an interesting view on this subject.

On iPad Intuitiveness (Again)

iPad intuitiveness is the source of eternal debate. One might ask: If the iPad is more intuitive than the Mac, why is it more difficult to use overall? Good question. Well, Gruber offers an interesting view on this subject.

Source of constant debate

Daring Fireball

Again, my criticism about iPadOS has little to do with intuitiveness. If anything, what the iPad gets right is clearly more intuitive than the Mac — direct manipulation with touch vs. indirect manipulation via mouse pointer is clearly far more intuitive and natural. That’s what makes the state of iPadOS so crushingly disappointing — it has an inherent leg up on MacOS on intuitiveness by nature of its conceptual foundation. The problems with the iPad are about consistency, coherence, and discoverability. Launching the first on-screen app with a simple tap, but the second on-screen app with a tap-and-hold-then-drag-to-the-side-but-make-sure-you-drag-it-all-the-way-to-the-side-or-else-you’ll-get-Slide-Over is inconsistent, incoherent, and requires unnecessary dexterous precision. iPadOS should be less finicky than MacOS, but all of the multitasking features are the other way around.John Gruber

This linked article is a follow-up on Matt Birchler’s blog post on iPad intuitiveness, where he states:

I’m just saying that humans have a tendency to mistake familiarity for intuitiveness.

Final answer?

So, again, is the iPad intuitive or not? Like many things in technology, it depends on whom you ask that question. On the surface (no pun intended), the iPad does look intuitive, but am I the typical iPad user? No. But as you start to ask more from this device, this is where it gets complicated, and iPad intuitiveness starts to be a source of debate. The lack of discoverability, as I wrote in my post “My 10 Years of iPad,” is one of the main issues affecting the iPad's intuitiveness. Why? Because Apple uses many hidden gestures to make it look intuitive and approachable.

Sometimes, I do feel the iPad doesn’t fulfill its initial promise. Is this Apple’s fault? You bet. Even after ten years of iPad, this platform is still in search of its balance: being as powerful as a traditional computer yet being simpler. That is not an easy balance to achieve.

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Even a few later, in early 2024, the debate still rages. More than ever, the iPad's capabilities is questioned. Even worse, the iPad's future still questioned because of Apple's management of the product line: over complicated, overlaps, iPadOS is still confined to its iPhone's root. It is far from certain that 2024 will bring a change to this.