- Joined
- Dec 18, 2007
- Messages
- 3,411
- Gender
- Male
- HSC
- 2009
- Uni Grad
- 2013
Nah it was some mature ager's kid, he was like 10 probs.
Except disturb the lecturerYou can do whatever the hell you want in lectures, nobody cares
Similar thing happened to me.Me too, lol I spent a whole lecture watching some kid play GTA 3 half way across the lecture theatre cos it was 16436523526x more interesting than the lecture.
You can always buy a $50 keyboard extension for an iPad or most big name tablets, so I don't think it's worth investing in an Asus Transformer cost-wise.suggestion for something between a tablet and a laptop = asus transformer.
Word on iPad? That's already possible. It's called Pages and works perfectly like MS Word.Laptop for uni- preferably an ultrabook with good battery life.
I love my iPad and my Macbook Air but if I had to choose one for uni, definitely the latter. With the iPad you'll always be hoping you don't need to login to any websites which don't support it, or the horrendous uni intranet pages, etc... and you never know what crap the lecturers are going to put in there which may or may not display right (e.g. the gened courses and their very outdated multimedia). Safer to go with the laptop. It's also easier (imo) to take notes than the ipad which feels rather restrictive in terms of what you can do. Maybe when Word comes out it'll be better but nothing beats sheer convenience of a true laptop. Macs are great because you can always find a charger (since they are largely compatible) but a Windows laptop works fine too.
That's true. The Notes app on the iPad really is just for one off notes.Fair enough, it was only meant to demonstrate there are better methods of "note" taking, as you did mention the restrictiveness of note taking on the iPad in your previous post.
And I highly doubt anyone would be brave enough to do their assignment on an iPad. As you did mention note taking, I find using Pages is far better than the Notepad app on the iPad.