Posted on 07/07/2013 6:01:08 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
I use a PC for graphic design.
It’s almost always the case that old technologies die slower deaths than expected after an eclipsing generation has been introduced.
RE: I use a PC for graphic design.
Yep. The small, portable computers have been with us for over a decade ( Tablets are small computers by any other name ).
I still do all significant work on a computer with a HUGE screen.
I use one for video editing. However I am probably on my last laptop. I go months now between uses. The droid does 80-90% of what I need for mobile use.
Sort of a dumb argument from the start since laptops have up to 17" screens and aren't so different from desktops. I think the real divide is between computers with full sized keyboards and decent sized screens compared to tiny keyboards and screens from larger tablet size down to tiny smart phone screens.
The full size keyboard and decent size screens aren't going away. They'll be around for a long time in some configuration.
These things are not static. They will all change. That is not to say they will die.
My tablet has a HDMI output port—I attach it to my 70” big screen. Slightly bigger than most computer monitors.
The next invention I want to see is a HDMI, 1080i-capable wireless video/audio connection to attach to the big screen TVs. The HDMI cord I have can be a PITA when trying to get comfy on the couch!
For about 15 years now I’ve used a laptop.
When at work I plug it into a large monitor, which I use in conjunction with the laptop sitting beside it as an auxiliary monitor.
I also plug in a standard keyboard and use a wireless mouse.
For the life of me I can’t see how this experience is any different from using a “regular” desktop PC.
Except I can easily take the whole thing with me when I leave the office.
The thing is the tablet is becoming capable of running those big screens and full keyboards. Just plug them in when needed.
1080p or the coming 4K would be preferable.
I do the same thing at home. My desktop is seven years old now and I bought a new 17” laptop a year ago. So, now I use the laptop with my 21” monitor and full sized keyboard I used with the desktop. I keep the desktop in working order because it’s XP and I have some programs that won’t run on Windows 7.
To talk strictly about the old desktop configuration is a pointless argument. As I said, I think the divide is between full size keyboards and screens compared to the touch screen keyboards and small screens configurations of tablets and smart phones.
And these new All-in-Ones have large screens and keyboards, but are a very different configuration from the older desktops, but funcationally are about the same.
And when you do that you're just reproducing the old desktop configuration, and still purchasing all the components that made up that older configuration.
Yup, Screen size is the primary issue for me to use the PC for graphic work. In fact I often use the TV as a monitor for photo post processing to get a more accurate idea of how they look blown up to poster size.
I bet I’ve worn out 10 keyboards in the ten years I’ve been using this computer. The PC is kind of like a low tech hotrod that I can work on and upgrade as needed.
It’s not any different. I use my laptops 90% of the time and my beastly gaming rig sits gathering dust in my home office.
When I’m at home I even PC game on my newest laptop because it has a dedicated graphics that runs with most higher end desktop cards.
Tablets are still considered toys by many in IT including myself. It’s proven that unless they are strictly locked down with an MDM solution they are epic time wasters in the office.
Laptops and desktops in the work environment are still far more productive at this time.
I think in a few years we still won’t see the elimination of desktops for enterprises, but we will see more VDI, and streaming access to your desktop where nothing is actually kept or stored locally. If you have a computer problem we just swap out your terminal/laptop/tablet and you login to your VDI session and continue on where you were.
Yes you are but you also have portability with it. You can do your work at the base with the big monitor but can unplug a.d take it with you.
My lap top with Windows 7 has WiDi, so I can connect to a Push2TV wireless device that uses HDMI to plug directly into my surround sound system.
It is capable of both 1080p as well as 5.1 surround.
Sweet and very easy to set up/use.
I could give up the PC if they ported MS office to tablets. You can plug the tablet to an IPS panel TV and get your big screen for a lot less than a computer monitor of equivalent size. Same panel.
Whatever, but when you use a full sized keyboard and monitor with these small devices, you’re just reproducing the old desktop configuration.
You have portability with your small device, but you aren’t sticking your full sized keyboard and 20” plus monitor in the carrying case with your tablet or smart phone, and you aren’t holding those two full sized components in your hands when you use them with your small device.
The point is, very few are actually abandoning the old desktop configuration and doing all their work on the smaller devices. And all these articles about the death of the desktop are pretty pointless. People are just setting up the desktop computer with different components than the old desktop setup that’s been around since the 1980s.
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