The New Zealand Herald

Apple’s iPad hones in on school sector

Company hopes it’s a better option than Google Chromebook­s but poorer schools might struggle with pricing

- Juha Saarinen comment

It’s true that you can use the two Apple devices and make some slick digital creations, with 1080p video and high-quality audio, but poorer schools might struggle with the pricing: even with the $30 educationa­l discount the new iPad 9.7-inch costs $509 for the Wi-Fi only version and 32 gigabyte of storage.

There’s a $14 educationa­l discount for the Apple Pencil, which the new device supports, borrowing that screen technology from the iPad Pro, taking the cost to $145 including GST.

This means the cheapest iPad 9.7-inch option with an Apple Pencil is $654. Students will need a keyboard cover as well, like the Logitech Rugged Combo that’s not yet available in New Zealand, and which sells for US$100 in the States.

A nice new iPad in other words, but it’s not cheap, nor are high-end Chromebook­s.

For schools, pricey IT gear — and don’t forget, there are many more costs on top of the devices themselves, such as training, ongoing management, software, staff pay, and more — are both a necessary evil and tools that open up new opportunit­ies.

Getting their gear and software into schools and bending the tree, or the students at least, while they are young, is hugely important for tech companies though.

For instance, if Apple can push its Swift open-source programmin­g language to the fore (and it’s rather nice and free as well) in schools, that’s a major mindset win for the company.

With Swift comes Apple hardware and software, and the company’s ethos that users are not the product, propagated through the privacyori­ented iOS operating system version 11.3 upgrade. The thought of that will make Google, which feeds on user data, wince.

Young minds trained to use and to code on a particular platform while in the public educationa­l system must be what tech companies like Apple and Google want more than anything.

Why do schools have to pay for iPads and Chromebook­s though? Why don’t the tech giants simply give their goods to educationa­l institutio­ns for nominal charges or even free? Unlike schools, tech companies are swimming in cash thanks to huge, largely untaxed revenues, and that would be one way for them to give something back to society while investing in their own future.

— Juha Saarinen attended Apple’s educationa­l technology event as a guest of the company.

 ?? Picture / Juha Saarinen ?? Apple boss Tim Cook gives an educationa­l overview at the event.
Picture / Juha Saarinen Apple boss Tim Cook gives an educationa­l overview at the event.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand