Why the iPad is the original Mac all over again


The iPad is remaking the PC industry. PC sales are falling. Microsoft and Intel are flailing. Tech-averse consumers are loving its always-on, 1-button simplicity.
At bottom, the iPad is the original Mac concept reimplemented in the latest technology with stellar industrial design. Why didn't the industry see this coming?
Key similarities
Screen size almost the same. No expansion (except for DRAM to 512k). Built-in productivity apps. Intuitive GUI interface. Portable. And even more affordable than the original - and unmet - goal of a $1000 computer. Here are the specs:
Mac 128k vs iPad 3
FeatureMac 128kiPad 3Delta
MHz81,300162.5
Processor Word size
internal/data
32/16
Single core
32/32
Dual core
Quad-core graphics
A lot
RAM capacity
std/max
128k/512k1GB8,000x
Display9" Monochrome9.7" ColorWay better!
Display resolution512x342 2048x153618x
Standard storage400k16GB40,000x
NetworkNoneWi-Fi, Bluetooth
ExpansionNoneNone
Weight16.5 lbs1.44 lbs1/11th
Cost (2012 dollars)$5579.12$4991/11th

(Mac specs courtesy of EveryMac.)

The Storage Bits take
The tablet concept goes back to 1968, when Alan Kay described his "Dynabook" concept, which he envisioned as a learning tool for children. But many technologies had to be developed to make it possible.
Compared to the 128k Mac, the biggest space saver is the flat panel display replacing the bulky and power hungry CRT, followed by the advent of flash storage - 40,000x capacity in a fraction of the space of a floppy - followed by the Moore's Law reduction in chip feature sizes.
Why didn't the industry see this coming? Bill Gates did, but he and Microsoft didn't draw the right conclusions from their tablet failures. Lightweight hardware needs lightweight software, and Windows is anything but.
Instead of assuming Windows, Microsoft needed to do what Apple did in 1984: build an OS from the ground up integrated with the hardware and the user experience. If I'm correct, Windows 8 on tablets will be no more successful than it predecessors. LINK