On 3 June 2013 19:55, Dave McGuire <mcguire at neurotica.com> wrote:
On 06/03/2013 02:41 PM, Liam Proven wrote:
I live
in a VERY high-tech
area and even I don't see stuff like that given away. (well, actually,
thinking about that a bit more...There are "clueful" people around here;
stuff like C2D machines are more likely to be found running Linux or NetBSD
around here.)
It's rare and I got lucky. Also, I think some people recognise my name
from my written stuff.
Hey, whatever it takes!
Very well-written as always, but this time I couldn't get past the first
paragraph. I have great difficulty imagining a day when I could do my job on
a tablet.
Then don't.
Imagine it's a laptop. Imagine it's a dual-head desktop with 24"
displays. Whatever it takes.
For now, the old form-factors will stick around, but in a decade, if a
"PC" is a flexible A4 tablet, the thickness and weight of thick card,
which connects wirelessly to its peripherals and is driven by touch,
speech and the view from its multiple cameras, I submit that few will
prop it in a stand and drive it from a keyboard. But some will, and I
am sure that for them it will be perfectly possible - possibly driving
a tiled array of large screens which are the thickness (and
approximate power-draw) of paper and similarly can be rolled up for
transport or storage.
Computers are shrinking and using less power. This is more or less a
fact of life. They are not going to remain humming beige desk-side
boxes; those are already in decline, have been for a few years now,
and it's steepening.
The press (as a whole) really needs to understand
that "what sells best in
department stores" does not define the entirety of, or even a significant
part of, society's computing activities. Everything is WAY too tainted by
journalists' personal (and sometimes myopic) points of view, something that
journalism is, well, sorta supposed to be about not doing.
You're right. In businesses, increasingly, the beige boxes are being
replaced by graphical terminals to OS instances running in VMs on
remote hosts.
But either way...fantastic writing, as always.
Thank you.
--
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