A Cloudy Afternoon Atop Mount Magazine

Mount Magazine Lodge (click image for a slideshow)

My first real vacation of the 2010 summer break began today with a thunderstorm breaking out above Bartlesville as I fled south for yet another journey down the Muskogee Turnpike.  I finally left the rain behind as I exited the turnpike, heading east on I-40 into Arkansas.  I turned south at Ozark and drove to Mount Magazine on a cloudy and hazy afternoon that began in the 70s and reached up into the mid 80s.

I drove straight to the latest lodge, a $32 million structure which opened in 2006 and thus finally replaced a CCC lodge from 1940 which had burned in 1971.  It is a striking structure with a commanding view of the Petit Jean river valley 2000 feet below.  It has 60 guest rooms and, more important to me for this trip, a large restaurant.

The lodge featured another beautiful painted welcome sign like those adorning other Arkansas state parks I’ve visited this past year.  It is a nice touch and this tourist appreciates the effort.  I could see a hazy view of the river valley peeking behind the stone foundation of the lodge.  The poor viewing meant I would have little company on this Wednesday afternoon, which was fine with me as I was escaping from inservice and bargaining work which had preoccupied me since school let out over two weeks ago.

A few vintage vehicles were pulled up in front of the lodge, including a tiny yellow trailer even smaller than the little unit my grandparents towed about for years to raccoon hunts in southwest Missouri.  I especially liked one green machine, although I know it would not be half the car my trust Camry has been for me.

The big wooden double doors of the lodge silently swung open for me as I approached – the invisible doorman is another nice touch.  Familiarity breeds contempt: I take automatic sliding glass doors for granted but was surprised and gratified by this simple gesture.  I quickly made my way downstairs to the Skycrest Restaurant, which had only one couple by the big windows overlooking the valley, although some more groups joined us before I finished my tasty hamburger and fries.

Despite the nice viewing platform at the restaurant, the view was too hazy to delay me from my day hike.  I pulled on my hiking boots, inundated myself in sunscreen and insect repellent, swung up my baby backpack, and set off on a seven-mile loop around the central portion of the mountain top, which I tracked with my iPhone MotionX GPS app and later mapped in Google Earth.  The park’s trail maps, which I had previously downloaded to Dropbox for convenient access on my iPhone and iPad, were quite accurate.  I grabbed a hard copy at the lodge, which turned out to be not only more convenient for reading but also much better for fanning away bugs!

I ascended the Signal Hill trail to Arkansas’ highest point at 2,753 feet above sea level, where I indulged in a self-portrait, posing in one of my newly acquired UnderArmour wicking T-shirts and Magellan shorts.  The shirt worked fine today, but I should have stuck my wallet in the shorts when I was trying them out in the store – the deep back pockets smacked it up against the underside of my buttocks to my displeasure.  I had the front pockets too stuffed with the iPhone and a power supply (the GPS drains its battery very quickly) and my superzoom camera to accommodate the wallet, and the little backpack was bursting too.  So I had money on my mind much of the afternoon, alas.  I’ll try a different packing strategy for the rest of the trip.

There were no views on the wooded Signal Hill trail, which I followed for a mile to the Cameron Bluff campground, which I traversed.  A trail descends the mountain’s north face there to Cove Lake, 9.5 miles away.  I had no interest in rapidly losing and then later working hard to regain so much gravitational potential energy on that trail, opting instead for the North Rim trail, which headed eastward for over two miles to the park’s Visitor Center.

The views were limited from the leafy North Rim trail, although there were frequent glimpses of rock bluffs jutting out from the forest across the way and some views of the hills to the north.  I saw many ox-eye daisies and tickseeds (lance-leaved Coreopsis).  If you’re wondering about my sudden botanical expertise, I’ll confess that I bought a sturdy pocket guide to Arkansas trees and wildflowers at the park’s visitor center.  So I’ll speculate that I spied some Closed (and Open?) Gentian as well.

The view opened out big at the escarpment called Dill Point, where I exchanged greetings with the only other hikers I encountered on the North Rim Trail, two young men who looked like they could have used some wicking T-shirts as the temperature and the humidity soared.  My trusty Tilley hat was another advantage I had over them, although I doubt they considered it very stylish.

Soon I was at the visitor center where I enjoyed a cold Sprite while a butterfly posed nearby.  I then headed south down an old wagon road for 0.3 miles to Turkey Spring.  As I approached several frogs hopped off the rocks around the spring down into the water.  I could not coax them back out, although they did crawl out from the rocks and pop their heads up out of the water to keep an eye on me.  I was rewarded with another pretty plant on the southbound Greenfield Trail, although my pocket guide couldn’t identify it.

I then headed back west for over a mile along the Mossback Ridge Trail, which had grass growing up across the trail that thankfully wasn’t too tall for comfort.  This stretch of trail was a tad monotonous, as was my audiobook of the day, The Big Short by Michael Lewis.  It tells the story of various investors who made a killing selling short on the credit default swaps and similar real estate gambles of the recent housing bubble.  I was ready for a break from my other audiobook, The Subtle Knife, the second book of Philip Pullman’s His Dark Materials heretical fantasy trilogy.  But I think I perhaps went too far the other way.  It may be a relief when I finish up The Big Short on tomorrow’s day hike.

Arriving back at the lodge, I walked along its south side overlooking the Petit Jean River, where I found the Old Lodge Trail, a short loop down the bluff.  I found a rocky perch where I had a splendid panoramic view of forested mountain slopes descending to the river valley below.  My surroundings reminded me of my scrambles on the bluff at our vacation home above Table Rock Lake in the Ozarks, and I shut down the technology and settled in for a relaxed spell.

Sufficiently recuperated, I climbed back up to the lodge and walked eastward to the rock climbing area, where I found another short trail offering a glimpse of Blue Mountain Lake down below and nice examples of Queen Anne’s Lace, which is actually a domesticated carrot and often has a dark purple flower in the center of the lacy blooms.

I was then glad to return to the car and switch back to tennis shoes and allow the air conditioning to assist my wicking T-shirt as I drove on the Cameron Bluff Overlook Drive.  But I’d already seen the views from the various trails, so soon I was driving down the mountain’s south side, headed east to Russellville for my lodging.

I found my jacuzzi room waiting for me at the La Quinta, although I put off a dip in the tub until after a quick wash-up to prep for a yummy dinner at the Brick Oven Pizza Company.  Then I took my well-deserved jacuzzi break before embarking on a several hours of photo editing and blogging, with a slow upload to Flickr via the hotel’s weak WiFi.  I’m using my Asus Eee PC again for those tasks, although I used my iPad at the Skycrest Restaurant on its WiFi signal and at the pizza parlor, although it only had a slow AT&T Edge data connection, so I mostly read a book on the iPad there: Duchess of Death: The Unauthorized Biography of Agatha Christie by Richard Hack, who writes better than one might think from his name.

Tomorrow I’ll return to Mount Magazine for another day hike loop, this time on the eastern side of the rim.

Click here for a photo slideshow of today’s day hike or click here for individual slides

Next day hike: Misty Mount Magazine –>

Posted in day hike, photos, travel | 1 Comment

Mount Magazine Beckons

14 miles of trails atop Mount Magazine

Midway into next week I’ll be a full two weeks into my summer break and will have spent the equivalent of a full work week on school business. I spent a day at school helping other teachers, the equivalent of two more days leading contract negotiations, and next week calls for two more days at school leading some test development. Interruptions for school business will continue throughout the summer, so the only way to really decompress and get some true vacation time is to get out of town.

The weather is already quite warm, so I’m pining for a sixth summer trip to the cool Pacific Northwest.  But that would interrupt my long-term savings plan for a new car, so instead I’ll have to settle for some hot mountain hikes closer at hand. I could save a lot of money were I willing to camp out, but in this heat that doesn’t appeal to me one bit.

So in less than a week I’ll be heading back down the Muskogee Turnpike and I-40 to Arkansas. I greatly enjoyed circumnavigating Mount Nebo over Spring Break, so I’ve set my sights this time on Mount Magazine just west of there. It boasts the highest point in Arkansas, promises temperatures 6 to 20 degrees cooler than down below, and has a great lodge. I can’t afford to stay there, but I’ll certainly make use of its restaurant. For a nice shower, bed, and blogging support I’ll make use of a room an hour’s drive away in Russellville.

I am grateful to the lodge for its high prices in one way – they shifted my internal price meter. The heat had already shifted me from a $25 per day camp site to a $60 budget hotel room. But the prices at the lodge and the hour-long commute to escape them gave me mental permission to splurge on a jacuzzi-equipped room at a recommended hotel, since I told myself it was still $77 less per night than what a great suite up on Mount Magazine would cost.

I’ve bought some stronger insect repellent after picking up four ticks on a hike last week at Elk City Lake up in Kansas. As a kid I found ticks physically revolting, but now I just see them as a disease vector I need to dodge. And I’ll remember to carry a lot more water than what I was packing on my winter day hikes. Who knows, if I have enough fun in the sun I can always extend my stay in Arkansas for a few extra days…but at a budget hotel.

UPDATE:  I’ve decided to add two days to my trip, spending two nights in an inexpensive cabin at the Ozark Folk Center in Mountain View, where I can not only recover from my day hikes but also enjoy food and music in the evenings.  That will allow me to add hikes at Pedestal Rocks, King’s Bluff, Indian Rockhouse, Rush Mountain, and Tylers Bend to my Mount Magazine adventure.  That could add over 17 miles to my hiking total, hitting over 31 miles over the five days if I do them all.

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A New Look

When I shaved off my beard on Halloween 2008, most people told me to stop frightening them and grow it back, which I promptly did for their sakes.  So I am cautious about altering my appearance, including my virtual one.

I shaved for Halloween 2008, frightening everyone

Nevertheless, MEADOR.ORG has changed its appearance many times since it went online almost 15 years ago.  For the first decade I called it Meador Manor and used a floorplan motif to organize it:

Meador Manor was open from 1996 until 2007

After a decade of handwritten HTML updates at the Manor and many other websites, I decided it was time to use online posting services to simplify my life.  It was too much effort to hand-code new ‘musings’ on my personal website and various news items on my websites for the high school and the BEA.  So I created the BHS News Feed and beaok.org on Google Sites.  Then I broke off into separate websites my collection of information on Bartlesville history and various school items, keeping them as hand-coded customized sites.

Finally I closed the Manor entirely, redirecting MEADOR.ORG to the online Blogger service, focusing it on my personal interests:

One of my Blogger themes

That worked fine, but Blogger wasn’t keeping up with the times and was too slow to add social networking features.  So I switched to WordPress, experimenting for awhile and settling on the three-column Garland theme:

My most recent WordPress theme

And then Facebook came along.  Hundreds of people befriended me there, so I knew I’d have to link it somehow to MEADOR.ORG.  And thus I import my blog posts as ‘notes’ on my personal profile at Facebook and export my Facebook links and status updates to FriendFeed, where I can then export them to Twitter and MEADOR.ORG.  That seems to work okay, although sometimes I have to refresh or rebuild the links to get things to update properly.

After Facebook added fan pages, I unsuccessfully tried to segregate my personal and professional life there by creating a public page where I stowed all of the Fluffy photos and the like.  I still post science-oriented things on the public page and offer it as a link on my bhsphysics.org website, but most people still befriend me in my personal Facebook profile instead of simply ‘liking’ my public page.

Meanwhile, I was increasingly dissatisfied with my WordPress site, thinking it was too busy.  But I couldn’t find another theme I liked better and so much more feedback came through the Facebook outlets that I didn’t pay much attention to updating the look of MEADOR.ORG.  However, the recent Facebook privacy kerfuffle reminded me that having my content hosted on a public service where I have more control is important – I certainly don’t want Facebook as the sole mediator of my personal web presence.

So I took another look at the WordPress galleries and found the relatively new Enterprise theme. I liked how it focused more attention on the blog posts and its default setting had a second menu line composed not of permanent pages but instead of post categories.  However, I did not care for its pop-up menus.  So I took a deep breath and switched to that theme on MEADOR.ORG.  Happily, I could use WordPress.com’s new Menu feature to customize both menus to my liking.

My latest WordPress theme

What next?  I’m happy with MEADOR.ORG but confounded by Facebook.  I make just about everything on my so-called personal profile there public, since it is obvious that you can’t trust Facebook to keep things private and folks keep befriending me there (630 and rising…).  But my public Facebook page has 380 people on it who aren’t my Facebook friends, so I’ll hang onto that as well, which means I’m now maintaining more websites than I can count on both hands.  That should be enough to keep me busy…

Posted in technology, web design | 1 Comment

Old school scifi fans needs to see MOON

If you’re like me and loved 2001: A Space Odyssey, Silent Running, Space: 1999 and other old-school scifi, you need to see Moon. Take a break from the brainless popcorn films in the movieplexes and watch this homage to classic science fiction of the past.  Great plot and acting, superb visual design, and an interesting mix of old-style models with CGI, all done on a very low budget of $5 million – and every penny is there on the screen.  And its 89% on the Tomatometer tells me I’m not alone in this recommendation.  I didn’t know they made movies like this any more…and I’m so very glad they do!

At this writing you can catch Moon on the Netflix streaming service, Amazon Video on Demand, or rent the DVD or Blu-ray.

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Granger’s iPad Review

My iPad is now part of my daily routine

Regular readers know that I have sold off a slew of old media to raise the funds for a new iPad with 64 GB of storage and both 3G and WiFi connections.  I’ve had the iPad for two weeks now and am ready to report on the experience.

Music?  No.

To ensure I didn’t shortchange myself on its eventual uses, I paid for the top-of-the line model, maxing out the memory.  And I’ve filled up more than half of it with music, podcasts, a few photos, and apps.  But the vast majority of that space was for music and I have almost never played any music on it.  The built-in speakers are pretty good for their size, giving far better sound than the built-in speakers on my ASUS Eee PC 1000H netbook.  But I prefer to listen to my music with my iPhone 3G on the road and on the Apple TV around the house.  However, I have listened to audio podcasts on the iPad and watched both video podcasts as well as one Netflix streaming movie on it.

Audio/video podcasts and streaming movies? Yes.

Video podcasts and streaming movies make sense on the iPad when I don’t want to be tethered to the couch to watch them on my HDTV via the Apple TV or the Tivo.  I can start one while lounging in the living room, keep it playing when I’m doing some spreadsheets or word processing in my home office, have it going in the kitchen when I’m pretending to cook, and even take it to bed with me to cap off a late night.  The Netflix streaming is great, and I enjoyed catching highlights of Betty White’s recent appearance on Saturday Night Live via NBC.com.

Photos

Photos look great and make fun manual or automatic slideshows on the iPad, and they really don’t take up much room compared to video files.  It is fun to open the photos app and hand the iPad over to a friend who can then browse through the pictures in a very intuitive fashion.

One of the most interesting apps I’ve installed is Camera for iPad, which lets you link your iPhone’s built-in camera via Bluetooth to the camera-less iPad.  You can see the camera’s output in real time on the large iPad screen and even use the iPad as a “flash” to better illuminate the scene if you like.  I was pleasantly surprised that it took a great snapshot of some friends at a diner, even though my iPhone 3G’s camera is pretty lousy.  I’ll be upgrading to the expected new iPhone 4G/HD in late July when my current two-year contract expires.  It will have a much better camera and it will be interesting to see how much I use it for shots which I can then edit and post via the iPad.

Speaking of photos, I bought Apple’s $30 Camera Connection Kit for the iPad, a dongle which lets you plug in SD cards and USB camera links.  I haven’t even tested it yet, since I prefer using my desktop for photo editing and posting at home.  On an extended road trip I expect I’ll still use my netbook for those purposes.  But I will have the option of importing photos from my Panasonic Lumix camera into the iPad for editing and posting if I can locate a really good photo editing app.  Reports are that the Camera Connection Kit also lets you plug a USB keyboard and use it with the iPad, but the on-screen keyboard has been good enough for me so far.  If I start composing blog posts on the iPad, however, I’ll likely give the USB keyboard option a try.

Bigger Better Apps

Many apps are better on the iPad

Many of my iPhone apps have been updated for use on the iPad and they are almost always better on the bigger screen, even if they cost more.  The built-in email and calendar apps are much more useful on the iPad than on the iPhone, keeping my appointments at my fingertips and making it easy to not only read but also respond to messages with the larger on-screen keyboard.  (Although I do make more uncorrected typos on the iPad than on my desktop or netbook with their hardware keyboards.)  The Weather Channel’s iPad app is another great improvement.  Having become accustomed to the landscape mode on the large iPad screen, I am disconcerted when I don’t have it and instead resort to the tiny screen on the iPhone with its many portrait-only apps.

Newspaper Killer

My favorite use of the iPad is reading online newspapers and web articles I’ve saved with Instapaper.  The New York Times has an Editor’s Choice iPad app that has a great selection of top stores in different categories.  I love finger-swiping through them on its Home and Technology pages, tapping a story to read it and swiping right-to-left to read more of it.  USA Today also has a good iPad app, although you swipe vertically to read more of a story, while swiping left and right takes you from one story to another.  And I like reading the Tulsa World in regular webpage mode on my iPad with its Safari browser, although I worry about the World and hope they can get an economic model that keeps them afloat – I’m no longer a subscriber but still get all of their great content, and I doubt their online ad revenues are making up the difference.  My local Examiner-Enterprise paper can also be viewed in story form or in full-page mode on the iPad, although the Examiner’s E-Edition PDF mode has poor navigation where you have to manually load in another page to read longer articles.  Finally, I also catch up on the local radio station’s newsbrief in the iPad browser.

Occasionally I’ll scroll through the print/audio stories on NPR’s great iPad app, but I’ve been terribly disappointed, again, by AP News, another lousy app from the folks who brought us AP Mobile.  The post on the Unofficial Apple Weblog about AP News says it all better than I can.

Eventually economics may force my favorite news sources to hide behind paywalls and subscriptions.  And I’ll gladly pay those fees if they keep them cheap enough.  But since I am only skimming a few key articles each day, I have no intention of paying the equivalent of a full newspaper subscription just to access them on the iPad.  Eventually I might have to resort to free news aggregators, but I sure hope not.

E-Reader

The question those who know me best ask me ask about the iPad is how I like reading books on it.  They know I’ve been a big fan of the Kindle, having used for the past two years a Kindle 1 and then a Kindle 2.  In fact, my initial review of the Kindle 2 is by far the most popular post on my blog.    Naturally I’ve installed the Kindle app on the iPad, and I’ve also purchased and read books using the built-in iBooks app.

The most important thing for me when reading long-form articles or a novel on the iPad is to turn down the screen brightness.  I like it set really low so that it minimizes eyestrain, and in that mode I can read for quite awhile.  I also wish Apple’s iBooks had a sepia background like the Kindle app offers. Happily, the wonderful Instapaper app makes reading saved web articles on the iPad just like reading an e-book.

As many other reviewers have noted, the iPad is considerably bigger and heavier than the Kindle 2, and I find myself propping the iPad up in its case for reading.  I know I’m not reading my novels for as long at each sitting on the iPad as I did on the Kindle.  In part that might be the screen and the unit’s weight, but it is also due to temptation of switching over to the iPad’s excellent browser – and the Kindle’s awful experimental browser would never tempt me that way.

I’ve successfully read books on the iPad in my favorite reading chair at home, in bed, and out at restaurants.  It is a good experience, although I sometimes have to hold the iPad in a certain position to avoid glare.  I’m certainly grateful for the $40 iPad case from Apple which I bought with it, since it props the iPad up at a good angle for both viewing on a table or other flat surface or in my lap.  [The only real downside to that case for me is that it certainly isn’t pretty and it gathers marks and dirt, as noted by iLounge.]

But the iPad is horrible for reading in the bright outdoors.  I haven’t turned my Kindle on since the iPad arrived two weeks ago, but I suspect I will use the good old Kindle 2 whenever I want to read a book outside or for a truly extended period where its reflective screen and smaller size and weight will come in handy.  Hopefully Amazon’s promised update to improve some of the Kindle 2’s fonts, which are worse than those on the Kindle 1, will help a bit.  The iPad’s color illustrations, however, make the Kindle’s graphics look truly pathetic.  Apple knew this and thus bundled the illustrated Winnie the Pooh for free in iBooks.

Reviewers have noted that the Kindle has far more books to choose from than iBooks.  Sure enough, I could get His Dark Materials on the Kindle but not in iBooks.  However, it was a surprise to find that the Kindle doesn’t offer Robert Heinlein’s Stranger in a Strange Land, but I could buy it in iBooks.  So it is certainly nice to have both of them to choose from.

Finally, Marvel Comics’ iPad app does make reading a comic book on a screen more than bearable, but I have read darn few comics since junior high, and the only graphic novel I truly have enjoyed was Watchmen.  If I could somehow find some of the comic books I remember from childhood, such as particular Superman story where a test pilot’s ‘spirit’ took over the electronics in a plane or some of the old Hawkman comics, I’d love to read them again on the iPad.  Maybe DC will eventually make that possible, but I won’t hold my breath.

Games

I’m no gamer, although I did play Godfinger on the iPad a few times before giving up, too bored and annoyed with it to continue.  I don’t like games that continue to run in the background and effectively punish you for not playing them regularly.  That’s why Facebook’s Farmville never tempted me – I want a game to play while I’m there and pause completely when I’m done.

Everyone says the iPad is great for driving games like Real Racing HD, but a guy who drives a Toyota Camry in real life has enough excitement already…no, actually my Camry is so old it was built back in the good old days before Toyota lost sight of quality, and thankfully has had virtually no recalls.  In fact, that 2001 Camry is by far the best car I’ve ever had.

Anyhow, Granger the Non-Gamer has only regularly played two games on his iPad.  My favorite is Pinball HD, which I think is fabulous, especially enjoying its The Deep table.  And The Solitaire is fine – I like how you can drag the cards around (unlike SolFree, which only lets you tap to move them and on the iPad is stuck in its small portrait-only iPhone mode).  But I don’t like the background nor the card fonts on The Solitaire, so I may look for an alternative.

Productivity Apps

Here is where the iPad fails against the netbook.  It just isn’t well suited to productivity apps like word processing or spreadsheets.  Getting your documents into and out of the iPad is too hard – the last thing I want to do is have to sync the iPad to the godawful iTunes for Windows on my desktop computer via a USB cable and then hand-select which documents to make available.  And while I have bought Apple’s Numbers, Pages, and Keynote iPad apps, what little use I’ve made of them left me frustrated.  I don’t like the touch interface for spreadsheets, and the incompatibilities of the Apple programs with the files I’ve created with Excel or, god help me, Word (I still do things in WordPerfect whenever feasible), remind me of why I never bought a Macintosh – I want to edit my files in their native format and forget about it.

DropBox thankfully makes getting documents onto the iPad for viewing far easier, but I can’t envision editing work documents and spreadsheets on the iPad unless Microsoft creates Excel and Word apps that make good use of both the touch interface and an attached keyboard.  I doubt that will happen anytime soon, and I think a mouse would still be great for spreadsheets and we know Steve Jobs won’t let us heretics use a mouse on the iPad.

As for blog posting on my day hike trips, it is looking sketchy on the iPad for now.  I’d want a better photo editor app than I’ve been able to locate thus far, and the WordPress blogging app is only useful on the iPhone.  When editing a previous post it isn’t WYSIWYG but instead has a graphical preview-only mode.  I haven’t tolerated that since WordPerfect for DOS, folks.   Thankfully I can simply edit my blog in the iPad’s Safari browser.

Syncing

Don’t – except when you have to.  You need to sync the iPad with your desktop computer to activate it and install your initial apps, data, and the like.  But I’ve rarely synced my iPad since then.  iTunes for Windows is a slow buggy mess, and since I don’t listen to music on my iPad, why sync it regularly?  I can buy and update its apps through its own App Store app, download podcasts onto it via the iTunes app, send myself documents via email or Dropbox, and so forth.  If Apple ever enables wireless syncing (why they have yet to offer it for the iPhone and iPad is a mystery to me) I’d probably sync more often.  But until then, I’ll just sync my iPhone with the desktop, and that now requires a bizarre set of arcane procedures to get iTunes for Windows to recognize my phone.  Apple’s suggestion to reinstall iTunes worked only once and then the troubles recurred.  Sometimes I wish I had a Mac…but that would require more lucrative employment.

Screen

The iPad screen is bright, colorful, and very crisp.  In fact, it is gorgeous, and has a very wide viewing angle.  I’m glad to find out that IPS screen wasn’t just marketing.  And the touch response is superb.  One of the nicest things about the iPad over the iPhone is how its faster processor makes it very quick – you almost never see those pauses that one encounters so frequently when using an iPhone.  Your fingers do leave smudges all over the screen, especially if you’re eating, but they aren’t all that noticeable until you shut off the display, and the oleophobic coating means you can wipe the smudges away easily on your clothing if, like me, you don’t want to bother carrying around a cleaning cloth.

Battery Life

Unlike my experience with the iPhone, battery life has been a non-issue with my iPad.  It goes for hours and hours between charges, so every few days I hook it up to the wall overnight and I’m set.  I usually only have to charge my iPhone every few days as well, but whenever I use the TomTom GPS app or the MotionX GPS app to track a dayhike, I know I’ll need to have my DEXIM BluePack handy as well as my Griffin iTrip Universal Plus.

Which Accessories and iPad Model to Buy

My advice is to get a case that can prop the iPad up and then forget about it.  As previously noted, I have Apple’s iPad case and camera connection kit.  I like the case okay, although I do dislike the grime-attracting material they used for its exterior.  I’ve yet to have cause to use the camera connection kit, but it may eventually come in handy.

I also bought the iPad Dock and do NOT recommend it.  You can charge or sync the iPad with the free cable that came with it, and a case with a prop-up feature will let you use the iPad as a digital photo frame while you are charging if that appeals to you.  The biggest bummer about the iPad Dock is that you can’t use it when the iPad is in Apple’s case, and I’ve never once been tempted to yank the iPad out of that protective tight-fitting shell.  I’m selling my iPad dock online to get some of my money back.

As for which model of iPad to buy, with its current functionality a 16 GB model with both 3G and WiFi should be fine.  I haven’t made effective use of the extra 48 GB I paid an extra $200 for, although perhaps when iPhone OS 4.0 arrives on the iPad in the fall the multitasking features and more ambitious apps will change my tune.

3G Plan

I opted for the unlimited $30 a month plan for my iPad’s 3G cellular connection, but checking my account under Settings > General > Usage reveals that in two weeks I’ve only used 85.6 megabytes in the first 15 days, so at that rate over the thirty days I’ll only have used 171 MB.  So next month I’m canceling the unlimited plan and going to try out the 250 MB plan.  If that holds up during June, when I’m not at work and thus out-and-about with the iPad much more, that will shave the cost of keeping the iPad connected at all times from over $360 per year to half of that.  And if I do need more data, I can just pay another $15 for another 250 MB or jump back to the unlimited plan.  That’s a far better deal than I expected, given my $80+ monthly AT&T bill for my iPhone.  That’s only fair, however, since AT&T still won’t let you tether your iPad to your iPhone.

UPDATE: After AT&T restructured their iPad/iPhone data plans in early June, I checked my usage history and switched from the $30/month unlimited plan on my iPhone to the $15/month 200 MB DataPlus plan, which will cover my typical monthly usage on the device.  I had already switched to the $15/month plan on my iPad, so my total monthly cost for the 3G connections on my iPad and iPhone is now the same as it was for the previous two years for the iPhone alone.

End Result

I’m very happy that I bought the iPad – it is more than a toy and is quickly integrating itself into my daily habits.  It doesn’t replace my iPhone, my netbook, or my Apple TV, but it does pretty much displace my Kindle.  And hopefully it’s the last portable electronic device I’ll carry around, or I’m going to need some of Andy Ihnatko’s tactical pants!

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