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Do you use a laptop fairly regularly?

Do you use a laptop fairly regularly?

  • Yes

    Votes: 29 87.9%
  • No

    Votes: 4 12.1%

  • Total voters
    33
My only computer is a laptop (ASUS 1215n EEEPC). I turn it on maybe 3 times a week. 90% of my internet is done on my iPhone.
 
As a student I have a desktop and a laptop. Some guys are switching to an ipad, but they buy a keyboard and attach it to the ipad. I think that should count as a laptop as well.

I agree. That's more laptop than not. I don't own a laptop, but 99% of what I use is with a desktop.
 
I used to until I got my Asus Transformer Tablet. Once Microsoft releases their Surface tablet with Windows 8, I can see laptops on their way out. At which point I will sell my transformer and get the Surface.
 
Hey moron, I never said they would be obsolete for business or work use. I said the average HOME user would move on to phones instead, and specified that tablets are considered smartphones since they have the same form factor and same OS. I was also clear that this would really start to take shape after Windows 8 was released (which runs on phones/tablets).

If you aren't just out to make yourself look like an idiot, why don't you compare the pc sales of today to the projections you idiots kept posting as your main argument? Why don't you mention that MS just had their first EVER quarter where they lost money? Why don't you mention that in 2011 Apple sold more iOS devices than they have sold Macs in the entire history of their company?

Despite your futile attempts to make me look foolish, all signs point to me being correct.

By the way, how is that BlackBerry working out for you? I believe I said some things about that a couple years ago too.
 
As a student I have a desktop and a laptop. Some guys are switching to an ipad, but they buy a keyboard and attach it to the ipad. I think that should count as a laptop as well.

I agree. That's more laptop than not. I don't own a laptop, but 99% of what I use is with a desktop.

Uh no, that's not a laptop, lol. If you recall, the first post in the thread where I made my prediction had a video of a phone docked with a keyboard and monitor. I went on to explain that the ability to use a full sized keyboard and mouse with your phone is a big reason why people will stop buying computers for home use.

If you're considering those computers and not phones/tablets, then computers have either already been antiquated, or at the very least are well on their way out.
 
perhaps a better way to phrase the question/statement would be:

"Physical keyboards will be obsolete in two years." (or something like that)

because Salty seems to be one of the few posters who thinks that a phone connected to a dock and a keyboard is still primarily a phone. It seems most posters seem to feel that something like that is not strictly a phone anymore.

Whatever you want to call it, once you have to connect it to all that equipment in order to get the functionality, you have a system of equipment that needs a desktop or a tabletop in order to be of any use. It will not be simply a hand-held device.
 
Hey moron, I never said they would be obsolete for business or work use. I said the average HOME user would move on to phones instead, and specified that tablets are considered smartphones since they have the same form factor and same OS. I was also clear that this would really start to take shape after Windows 8 was released (which runs on phones/tablets).

If you aren't just out to make yourself look like an idiot, why don't you compare the pc sales of today to the projections you idiots kept posting as your main argument? Why don't you mention that MS just had their first EVER quarter where they lost money? Why don't you mention that in 2011 Apple sold more iOS devices than they have sold Macs in the entire history of their company?

again, maybe more a matter of semantics than anything, but I think many people consider a phone to be a hand-held device. Once you get beyond something simple that you carry around and can basically use one-handed, you need to call it something else. Some of us are using "computer" in a very generic sense, the way we call a tissue "kleenex" whether it is actually that brand or not.

Maybe it should be referred to as a "primary processing device" to avoid confusion.
 
perhaps a better way to phrase the question/statement would be:

"Physical keyboards will be obsolete in two years." (or something like that)

because Salty seems to be one of the few posters who thinks that a phone connected to a dock and a keyboard is still primarily a phone. It seems most posters seem to feel that something like that is not strictly a phone anymore.

Whatever you want to call it, once you have to connect it to all that equipment in order to get the functionality, you have a system of equipment that needs a desktop or a tabletop in order to be of any use. It will not be simply a hand-held device.

again, maybe more a matter of semantics than anything, but I think many people consider a phone to be a hand-held device. Once you get beyond something simple that you carry around and can basically use one-handed, you need to call it something else. Some of us are using "computer" in a very generic sense, the way we call a tissue "kleenex" whether it is actually that brand or not.

Maybe it should be referred to as a "primary processing device" to avoid confusion.

I was clear about this when I made my prediction. As I stated, the post where I made this prediction was showing a video of the Motorola Atrix phone, docked with a keyboard and monitor.

Anyone who says it's no longer a phone and is now a computer obviously doesn't program anything on either platform.

If you lay your phone on the table it's still a phone. Just because you aren't holding it in your hand at the moment doesn't mean it's no longer a hand held device.
 
LOL Salty, Phone, schmone - it's a war of words that nobody's going to win! At any rate, I picture the entire system, not just the processing unit.
 
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