InformationWeek: The Business Value of Technology

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IPad Productivity Apps

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Even though there is an Amazon Kindle app for the iPad, one its
				limitations is that while you can download books, you cannot
				download newspapers and magazines. Just books. On the other hand,
				there are applications from the likes of The Wall Street Journal and
				The New York Times specifically for the iPad, and potentially more
				publishers will follow suit. Additionally, you can view those
				publications online using the iPad/Safari web browser, so one could
				argue that iPad users don't need newspapers from the Kindle store at
				all.

Even though there is an Amazon Kindle app for the iPad, one its
				limitations is that while you can download books, you cannot
				download newspapers and magazines. Just books. On the other hand,
				there are applications from the likes of The Wall Street Journal and
				The New York Times specifically for the iPad, and potentially more
				publishers will follow suit. Additionally, you can view those
				publications online using the iPad/Safari web browser, so one could
				argue that iPad users don't need newspapers from the Kindle store at
				all.  Although many think of the iPad as an information consumption
				device -- and it is -- it is also good for personal and professional
				productivity tasks, including for enterprise professionals. We found
				a variety of such applications already available for the iPad.  Adobe Idea is an iPad application that lets users sketch out
				ideas, and then send them to others via e-mail. You can start out
				with a blank slate and just start drawing with your finger, or you
				can pre-load graphics (photos) and sketch on top of them.  Using Adobe Idea to sketch out ideas is pretty simple, and has
				an intuitive, small menu of options. User controls let you select
				color (from a limited palette), the opacity of the line, and the
				thickness of the line.  Adobe Idea can be used to mark up a photo, in this case the
				painted side of the Yerba Buena Arts Center where Apple first
				unveiled the iPad. The Idea tool includes the ability to move your
				image around, and an eraser that works just like it should (you use
				your finger).  Adobe Idea is best used as a quick sketch application, and as
				such, it's very easy to e-mail the sketch to others. Just as with
				almost every iPad application the   Cube for iPad lets users track expenses and time spent on
				projects quickly and easily.  You can assign an item to a project or a task within Cube, and
				tie it to an expense or a date.  Cube uses a scrolling wheel interface for changing the date.
				Maybe it's overkill, but it feels a little like playing a slot
				machine.  Cube uses Google Docs, so your tasks and projects and expenses
				are tied directly into a Google calendar.  Evernote runs on several platforms, storing and syncing your
				documents (word processor) in the cloud for retrieval from any
				device. You can create documents in Evernote on the iPad just like
				you can with Evernote on any other system.  In Evernote, you can change your view of documents, based on
				date, on location, and then you can search for documents using tags
				or keywords.  SugarSync lets you take your laptop or desktop data and share it
				into the SugarSync cloud. From there, you can download documents and
				view them (and send them to others or yourself) right on the iPad.
				The file manager shows what files and folders you've synced.  Sugarsync lets you view your transaction history on your desktop
				or laptop computer, and you can add more folders as well.  Viewing files in SugarSync is pretty easy. The UBM Fnelson
				folder are all of the documents and folders I've chosen to put into
				the SugarSync cloud. There are also shared folders, web-only storage
				and sample files.  Getting to your files with SugarSync is easy on the iPad. The
				files actually get downloaded to your iPad and are cached locally
				(it can cache up to 100 MB, and starts replacing older files as it
				hits that upper limit. However, one of the downsides -- not
				SugarSync's fault, just the nature of the iPad's closed system
				approach -- is that the documents you download can't be accessed any
				other way -- say a Word document in the iPad Pages app. You actually
				have to e-mail it to yourself from SugarSync, then open the document
				from e-mail, triggering Pages, where you can then manipulate the
				content.  Mellmo's Roambi portal lets you organize and manage your
				reports. The application supports documents from IBM Cognos,
				Microsoft Reporting Services, Microsoft SharePoint, LifeRay, Excel,
				Salesforce.com, SAP BusinessObjects and Crystal Reports, Google
				Spreadsheets and CSVs. These reports are then viewed through
				visualization templates.  Using Roambi's Publish Manager, you can select from a list of
				visualization templates with which to view your data.  In Roambi's Publish Manager, you map your data into one of
				Roambi's templates, and you can manipulate the data in the
				visualization you've created.  On the iPad, you use the Roambi client to choose a template and
				view data stored in the Roambi portal.  This is the Trend Analysis view in Mellmo's Roambi for the iPad.
				You can select fine-grained views of the data, even doing
				comparisons by   Using the Pie Chart view in Roambi, you can select different
				data points by using the pie chart as a selection wheel, drilling
				deeper into the data from there.  The Roambi CataList view offers a different look at data. You
				get different views on the charts, and the summaries give you a
				sense of whether numbers are up or down, for example.  With Rackspace on the iPad, you can easily and quickly configure
				just about any type of server -- just a couple selections and away
				you go.  Rackspace supports several different server types, including
				various Linux distros, Oracle, Microsoft and more.  Once you've selected the type of server in Rackspace, you select
				its size. And that's it.  Once you've provisioned your server, Rackspace shows you the
				status bar as it gets created. This process takes about a minute or
				two.  After you've provisioned your server in Rackspace, you can use
				the iPad app to configure it, set up backups, reboot it, and many
				more options.  Users can create workspaces using the Citrix Receiver client for
				the iPad.  Setting up a workspace requires an IP address (or host name),
				user name and password, a domain, and away you go.  Using the Citrix Receiver client for the iPad, you can access
				Windows Apps. Dazzle is a self-service IT model, so users can access
				the apps they want.  The Citrix Xen Desktop lets users access their Windows 7
				desktops from the iPad, an iPhone, Android, Windows Mobile, as well
				as a Mac or PC; coming soon to the Blackberry.  Who says the iPad only runs Apple's Safari? Here it is running
				Internet Explorer.  Who says the iPad doesn't run Adobe's Flash? Here it is playing
				Flash video via Internet Explorer running on Windows 7. 


Even though there is an Amazon Kindle app for the iPad, one its limitations is that while you can download books, you cannot download newspapers and magazines. Just books. On the other hand, there are applications from the likes of The Wall Street Journal and The New York Times specifically for the iPad, and potentially more publishers will follow suit. Additionally, you can view those publications online using the iPad/Safari web browser, so one could argue that iPad users don't need newspapers from the Kindle store at all.