Andrew,
All very interesting to read the "open letter" and it's very much appreciated that the developers here take this seriously.
There are other ways perhaps images can be imported directly into a PM app avoiding some of the interface problems/limitations Apple might have on the iPad as suggested in the open letter, perhaps using HTML5 etc. I'm no expert, but other apps use various ways to pull in files to their app directly, the same could be true with photos?
Also using HTML5 would only require a simple browser interface and perhaps a wireless card/card reader, so constructing a wireless workflow with something like EyeFi could also be very possible to avoid the ingest issues.
I don't think many Photographers want to have to use something like an EyeFi or a wireless transmitter unit for their camera. If they did, they would be using them now and really wouldn't need an iPad, they would have their device upload directly to their server.
I have actually tried a few download/edit/transmits from the iPad using the Apple Camera Connection Kit and although I can't add a caption, it was easy to browse the sd card, select the pix to upload to the iPad, use editing software like PhotoForge to do basic corrections and use a FTP app to drop to various FTP sites,
although all was not particularly fast as one had to navigate thru 3 apps, if this was all in one app, I imagine this would be very fast to do
It can't be done in one app. One must always use the Photos app to get the images onto the iPad. Then the app must always use the UIImagePickerController to choose one photo at a time which can only transfer pixel data (all metadata including the filename is lost during this hand off from the photos library, which is a complete deal-breaker for many users) and moreover all of this pixel data has to fit into the limited memory of the iPad. There are so many issues with the loss of access to the original file and the lack of easy identification of the images that one may be interested in transmitting as to only make a currently implementable solution nothing more than a novelty. If we spent the effort to make a product (wouldn't be an all in one app) users might buy it, but they wouldn't use it much after the first few tries and would revert back to using a laptop with a full version of PM.
What needs to be done is for
each and
every photographer that is interested in a pro-quality app to be created for the iPad to
call, email, or hand-write a letter to Apple requesting that they open up access to the media connected via the CCK to all apps, and not just Apple's. Moreover, they should request a Compact Flash CCK module be developed as well. Icing on the cake would be to request Apple to make the CCK modules physically lock onto the iPad when connected instead of their easily jarred connection.
Please, everyone, tell Apple you want this. It won't happen any other way. I am completely serious!
-Kirk