Posted on 07/07/2013 6:01:08 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
As for internet speeds. I get about 20 mbps from a cable provider at home, and fast enough from other hot spots that I don't notice it. I generally don't notice particularly fast or slow connections. So it seems our speeds are good enough that there is no significant impetus to make changes.
Broadcast tv is dead/dying. But cable is how a lot of content is delivered. I don't think they care if I'm watching something they are sending as tv, or if I'm using their bandwidth to pull it from a server in a different format.
As for Apple, who knows. They are definetly not the same company they used to be. They can't be, companies, particularly in their markets, have to change. They wouldn't be around if they had tried to simply stick to making macs, or IIes, or Lisas, etc. Are they still "innovative?" That remains to be seen.
I have been spammed with ads for the new PC workstation. It’s revolutionary. It is for the Obamavoters.
It has no changeable stuff that you need to know. The OS is fixed/set, and the screen has four or maybe it was eiight icons. Facebook was one of them. It’s named, in Norwegian, the “DukaPC” - in english that would probably be the “You Can PC”.
The low-information-PC.
I’m typing this on my phone. In the future I believe the phone will become a full fledged pc device. You will be able to dock it at work or at home. I do think there will still be a place for the desktop for graphics and other intense computing but most will opt for the more portable device. Desktops won’t go away but their numbers will keep declining.
Tablets are great for reading, but you’ll always need a mouse like device, a keyboard, and a large display for creating documents, presentations, or number crunching.
The advantage of desktop PCs is that they can be easily upgraded. Need a bigger hard drive, more RAM or even a new processor..no problem. Most components can be installed with no more than a screw driver. I just upgraded my 7 year old desktop with more RAM and a new processor and mother board to accommodate Windows 7... everything else was reused. To upgrade a laptop you buy a new laptop and throw the old one away.
You are arguing a different point from mine. I’m simply saying that sales of the three decades old desktop configuration are irrelevant. Most people still set up desktop computing with their newer, smaller devices by hooking up large keyboards and monitors.
Deaktop computering is not going away and you are agreeing with me when you “dock” at work or at home.
So, in adding up sales, where do you include the sales of individual keyboards and monitors people buy so they can do desktop computing with their smaller devices?
Desktop computing is here to stay. This silly argument is just over which components have the highest sales.
Microsoft has already done that for you. Check out Office 365.
hummm I don’t think desk top PC’s will ever lose it allure for those that use productivity software everyday for a living. Laptops are wonderful 2nds to the PC in that they are useful for those that must be productive.
Tablets....meh! yeah they are a convenient diversion but surfing with them is a constant exercise of Madison avenue gypsy, trinket, hotlink ambushing. Then you have to constantly request a desktop site so you can read the print.
A big FU to all the annoying android code writers out there.
Same here, and for HD video editing too. I use a tablet outdoors as a monitor screen when recording with a video camera with a WiFi back, but for real work; video editing, graphics work in Adobe, etc. I use my powerful, quad core i7 PC.
Large screen is still desirable for many uses and will remain desirable, TV and computer monitor have merged, it had become a redundancy anyway. “Screen” as hardware might eventually become obsolete, but large format viewing capability for both work and pleasure isn't going anywhere.
The remaining vestiges of visible “computer” as previously understood, the full size keyboard and mouse, remain necessary for many and likely will for several years to come. We have virtual keyboards now, I'm typing on one. It's functional enough for limited applications such as e-mail and memos, or field use filling in data. It's nothing I'd want to use for graphic creation. So, it's no replacement, just a make-do. But, eventually, there will arise a functional, desirable alternative as well, that will complete the “computer” migration into the woodwork, into apparent invisibility.
So, you won't see a box and a monitor set up in a discrete, separate environment but it'll still be there, still perfectly capable of performing any task for which you've configured it. It'll just be part of a larger communications system with a fixed component and a portable component, all the same system though. Extensible for highly visual-intensive or input-intensive tasks, I guess is a way to describe it.
If I still gamed or just plain wanted more memory,s I could leave more wimdows open, I’d own a tower.
Just about all laptops serve my needs these days.
Cost is always a factor. Laptops can be double the amount of a PC. Many jobs are still at a desk. The laptop is needed for portability. If the job is static, why pay the extra cost?
The tiny screens are going to damage eyesight in the young. Don’t throw away your desktop.
Rather not require internet access to use the app, and I trust myself more than the cloud to keep my data private and backed up.
Everytime I hear this I remember that a coworker in 1985 proclaimed to me that COBOL and the Mainframe computer would be dead by 1990, 1995 at the latest. When I retired from the military and walked into my civilian job position in 1993 I was greeted by a IBM 3270 dumb terminal and worked on a mainframe using COBOL and Assembler. COBOL and Mainframes are still here and in use. Now days I work with PCs, laptops, and tablets using C#, a little Java etc but there are still mainframers out there and COBOL hasn’t completely died either.
I agree with him on the first 3. As for number 4, I’ve never really found Apple that innovative in the first place. Very rarely do they make anything first, they just tend to make the first version that appeals to the masses, they sexify a lot more than they innovate, which is an excellent skill but shouldn’t be confused for actually making new things.
Thanks SeekAndFind.
Computing at home means the luxury of a real keyboard and mouse, usable monitor, and always-on connection.
But the truth is, people under 30 years of age will prefer mobility over capability. Once their eyes start to go, and they have more homebound responsibilities, they’ll need a desktop machine.
But the days when desktop machine sales were in continuous enormous growth are gone. Margins are just not there. The result of so much mobile computing, in fact, has been the miniaturization of the components (particularly the CPU box) and deeper integration of the electronics. Smaller power supplies and footprints, plus the merging of monitors with our flatscreen TVs have also been results of this.
The money has been in mobile computing, and that development has been spun off into cutting costs on desktop machines. This means that desktop machines use cheaper, last-gen stuff that is tuned up a little. It reminds me of those home phone services which use regular phone hardware plugged into a small box, which communicates using previous-gen cell phone networks. It’s a brilliant way to compete in a rooted market and to help pay off sunk costs.
A friend showed me his Hackintosh, for which he uses the integrated Intel graphics. Works more than acceptably.
the cloud is secure.
the cloud is safe and private.
HA!
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