I admit it, but it's not my fault. I have an iPod Touch, which I use exclusively to listen to music - I tried some apps, and I gave up, because I simply lost interest. It's great for listening to music, and to see the weather forecasts, and that's it. I tried the iPad, and I saw nothing there appealing either - I felt like I had a gigantic smartphone (or iPod). The little time spent with it didn't make me want more - for what it does, I prefer the iPod Touch. And it always stunned me how people can be enthusiastic with a synth that, if released in Mac OS or Windows, would be simply something to laugh at. Why would that be different in an iPad?polaris20 wrote: I can completely understand wanting a full computer for a tablet, however stating tablets like the iPad or Android tablets are "toys" is extremely short-sighted, and makes me think you've never really spent any considerable time with one.
I know Android also from the smartphones too, and I think it's OK... for smartphones. I would never consider making any serious work in something like that either.
So, there's only Mac OS and Windows. Since there isn't a tablet that works like a real computer with Mac OS, the answer is easy... if I ever need a tablet, which I don't think I will anyway