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ios 6 not compatible for ipad 1?, ios 6 not compatible for ipad 1?

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iPad

Posted on Jun 12, 2012 8:26 AM

Reply
645 replies

Jan 29, 2013 4:42 AM in response to motox33

Imagine if Dell or Microsoft stopped supporting their products after it was purchased for 3 yrs. You could have bought a brand spanking new ipad1 3 years ago. Others have said I and would like to know the difference between the ipod touch and the ipad1. Why update the 199.99 product and not the 700.00 product? Great customer care!

Jan 29, 2013 5:35 AM in response to Yodadragon

No need to apologize. Those of us that have notifications active still have the original post sitting in our inbox. ;-)


I can understand that there are hardware limitations that prevent iOS6 from being deployed on the original iPad. I can live with that.


The whole software update thing has me annoyed, however. Apple's made a big stink about how their store allows them to control software quality. If they allow my iPad to be updated with software that requires iOS6, then that claim is utterly and completely false.


Of course it's not very eco-friently to be telling consumers to toss a billion iPads/Pods/Phones onto the landfill every couple of years either.

Jan 29, 2013 5:58 AM in response to Buzzfuster

What fact proves you are right about your argument that the iPad 1 processor can't handle the load.

The iPhone 3GS has even less CPU power and yet the iPhone 3GS is supported.


By leaving out Siri for iPad 2, iPhone 3GS/4, Apple shows us that they can conditionally enable or disable certain features.


For developers this decission is not a very welcome one. We (the developer community) would very much like to continue to support iPad 1 users. But now we are faced with supporting multiple branches of development. The transition between iOS5 and iOS6 did no go very smooth cause of major changes in the underlying framework. Many Apps stopped working properly because the supposed backward compatibility didn't really work.

That meant al lot of extra coding (read spending money) on fixing issues and people started blaming us for poorly working Apps. Not very nice.


When we get bored of our first generation iPad and buy a next generation, what will happen with these "vintage" ones. They probably end up being used in developing countries (I know of one such program). Whilst the hardware is still quite capable, if we (the developer community) stop supporting iOS 5, these iPads become useless and toxic waste. The iPad is an expensive luxury product and should be given a longer lifecycle then just 3 years.


For us developers in order to support multiple branches of our software we need to increase the price of our products. Customers in general are not willing to pay for Apps. I have received reviews from people telling me that $1.00 is expensive and yet they spend a couple of hundreds on a shiny new gadget. I also need to work hard to earn a living. So I have to invest more time (read money) in making Apps compatible with iOS5 and iOS6 and yet Apple still cashes in on iPad 1 sales for which they dropped support themselved. Isn't that ironic. Brilliant marketing strategy.

Jan 29, 2013 6:25 AM in response to Ximinez

"What fact proves you are right about your argument that the iPad 1 processor can't handle the load."


I said nothing about the processor. From what I gather from 5 minutes worth of google research is that iPad's 256 MB of RAM isn't enough to drive both iOS6 and the 1024x768 display. I don't work for Apple, I don't know if this claim is fact or marketing fluff but my 30 or so years of software development experience tells me it's at least a plausable reason if not probable one.


As for your lament about the imaginary increased cost of branching your code. If you're not already doing that at every release, I suggest you take a few courses on configuration managment.

Feb 3, 2013 6:46 AM in response to imryanmac

I paid for the 64GB 3G unit plus insurance. I didnt pay $1000 for nothing. I am not an Apple sheep that is going to buy something just because it is "New".Apple should remember the customers that help spark the record iPad sales for years to come.


There is a legal term for what they are doing and it is called: Planned obsolescence


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Feb 3, 2013 6:52 AM in response to Djayed


APPLE why do you keep editing/deleting my posts!! Becuase I am right??




Planned Obsolescence:

For an industry, planned obsolescence stimulates demand by encouraging purchasers to buy sooner if they still want a functioning product. Built-in obsolescence is used in many different products. There is, however, the potential backlash of consumers who learn that the manufacturer invested money to make the product obsolete faster; such consumers might turn to a producer (if any exists) that offers a more durable alternative.


Sounds really familiar!


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ios 6 not compatible for ipad 1?, ios 6 not compatible for ipad 1?

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