Andrew,
But doesn't it seem like having 16 or 32 GB of capacity on the iPad would be severely limiting when today's flash cards are pushing 32 GB? You'd have to send the data and delete it as the new photos are coming in since you'd run out of space (assuming you don't already have several GB of iTunes on the device or iBooks.) You can download the images faster than you can upload them, and pausing to caption them would only slow things down.
The iPad is just an iPod Touch with a bigger screen and a few bells and whistles thrown in.
-Kirk
Hi Kirk
I think the real user who would need Photo Mechanic on an iPad would be news and entertainment snappers who always have a need for the fastest, quickest solution to send out a selection of images early in the field rather than just the use as 16 or 32 GB of storage need, as you're suggesting.
(BTW: Have you seen the AirStash device, its a wireless SD card reader (CF version in development) working as a wireless file server, easy to set up through any browser (HTML5 compliant) so actually one wouldn't even need to store any images on the iPad if the photgraphers goal was to send masses of images off a big card)
This early send can make a huge difference; its odd to think that any person with an iPhone in a few clicks can just syndicate his/her pix to social networks or wherever, but a working photographer cannot do that for his/her syndication needs without having to boot up a laptop and plugging in numerous devices like a card reader, 3G dongle etc. I certainly can see sense on a deadline to be able to get out an iPad work in a familiar software work flow (Photo Mechanic), have visual/touch confirmation on editing, built in 3G and a wireless card reader.
The whole emphasis of Photo Mechanic on the iPad would be as a quick and visual/touch work flow; imagine this, pinch/expand to enlarge/reduce the image to check on focus, swipe to rate the image, tap its corner, the pix turns over you can add your headline, caption etc, tap again returns you to the pix and then drag the pix over to an FTP shelf, a very visual and intuitive confirmation in editing.
I suspect many a photographer in the coming years will use the iPad also as a portfolio device for client meets and that's also something Photo Mechanic could be useful for in the iPad app!
- Paul, glad you're on board with this wish, I know we all been so long talking about the need for something like this - hope this gets into the realms of reality! See you down in Cannes for the Fest soon!
Cheers
Andrew