ilovetofu
ilovetofu
ilovetofu

I couldn't get used to it. I don't watch much sports, and it made movies look like TV shows. It's not a feature I care about when I shop for TVs.

Pretty neat, but I'd like to see the Energy Star rating on this thing.

I know, and to make things worse they had to print that ugly AT&T logo on the front of the phone.

2012, finally the year of the OLED? I hope so!

I want a no holds barred comparison between these and the new OLED TVs (which are made for the 1%, but still).

I'm crossing my fingers.

I'd give ThinkPads and Panasonic Toughbooks the highest chance of surviving a fall, but not deliberate damage like shown in that picture though.

Thanks. Poor phone, never had a chance.

Proof? Even if they were trying to find tax loopholes (what major corporation doesn't?), they are still responsible for a significant number of jobs both at its Silicon Valley campuses and Apple retail stores worldwide. What kind of jobs have the likes of Samsung, LG, HTC, etc. spawned here?

Does it come with the white gloves to handle this thing?

That looks more like deliberate damage than an accidental drop. Source?

Unless you think buying Samsung products is more beneficial to the U.S. economy, I don't see what conclusion you're disagreeing with me here.

I agree. Although I'd rather have a detachable keyboard like the Asus Transformer tablet.

Ah, true. I'd forgotten about those old times, heh. :)

Thanks. Apple gets a lot of flak from haters for being too controlling and whatnot, but many people fail to realize that they have a much more positive effect on the American economy than foreign smartphone manufacturers like Samsung, HTC, Nokia, RIM, etc.

Well, unfortunately some of us need to run Windows for work related reasons. While I could use my work provided ThinkPad, it's just a pain to lug it around all the time. It's much simpler to log into Windows via Bootcamp or Virtualbox/Parallels and do my work from my MBA.

See my response to waclark57. I doubt if Apple suppliers' profit margins are even 1/10th of what Apple manages to get. They are more likely to be razor thin, the same as they get for PC manufacturers.

I realize that, but who do you think takes the largest percentage of profits from Apple's products? Its suppliers, or Apple? Similarly with Samsung phones.

I know people who buy Macs and only run Windows on them. I like my MBA but love my (personally) custom built PC.