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"Me, myself and I" pad?

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iPad users 'are the selfish elite', claims survey

 

 

By Daniel Bates

Last updated at 12:30 AM on 30th July 2010

 

 

 

article-1298722-09D2B37B000005DC-948_233x402.jpg Stephen Fry attends the photocall to launch the Apple iPad in May

 

Are you wealthy, sophisticated and smart but don’t care about anybody else?

The chances are you own an iPad.

A survey has revealed the typical person who has bought Apple’s latest gadget is unkind and has little empathy for others.

They have been branded the ‘selfish elite’ by a poll of 20,000 consumers carried out by an American research company.

The £429 device has become the most desired gadget in Britain since its launch in May and 600,000 are expected to be sold before the end of the year.

 

But the next time you see someone sitting on a train smugly using theirs, take comfort from the fact they are probably not a nice person.

According to Tim Koelkebeck of MyType, which carried out the survey, iPad owners are are six times more likely to be ‘wealthy, well-educated, power-hungry, over-achieving, sophisticated, unkind and non-altruistic 30-50-year-olds’.

They are self-centered workaholics with an overwhelming interest in business and finance who cherish ‘power and achievement’ and will not cross the street to help others, he added.

Mr Koelkebeck said that the high price was one reason why the iPad attracted such a specific clientele.

 

More...

 

 

 

It also appeals to people who spend all day working in front of a computer screen and enjoy interacting with new technology.

In their free time they are so used to computers they want another screen to ensure continuity in their lives.

 

article-1298722-08EC85D6000005DC-512_468x341.jpg Apple's iPad can be used to browse the internet, read books and watch TV shows

 

Apple founder Steve Jobs says it will revolutionise everything about our lives, from the way we travel to how we read books.

It sold out within hours of its launch in the UK and initial problems with the Wi-Fi connection have not diminished the relentless demand for the device, which costs up to £699 for better models.

Whilst those that own an iPad are uncaring and selfish go-getters, those who criticise the device are branded by the survey as ‘independent geeks’.

Attacking the device gives them an ‘identity statement’, said Mr Koelkebeck, that helps them cope with their own failings.

 

‘As a mainstream, closed-platform device whose major claim to fame is ease of use and sex appeal, the iPad is everything that they are not.’

  • 3 weeks later...

Bullshit :freak: It sounds like people who say that if you listen to Coldplay you're a stupid gay guy, but with more numbers, too look credible.

*goes and views a site which employs the usage of flash*

I completely agree with you on that point. Actually, that's the main reason why I didn't bought it.

 

Still, that's not the point. How the hell can a "journalist" write something like that ? It's nonsense.

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