siwex80-old
siwex80
siwex80-old

Jobs didn't have licence plates on his cars and it was perfectly legal. Check into the facts

Yep, Windows tablets have been around for years and have sold in tony number because they have very limited uses to a very small number of people.

Depend what you mean by enterprise software. At a management level most enterprise software is for accessing information - spreadsheets, financial reports, drawings, project plans, proposals. All of these a tablet does superbly.

Because SSD's are much more expensive than HD's and touch screens are much more expensive than non-touch screens

A brand name at the price point where most Android "tablets" are being sold. Should do well.

VOIP anyone?

My ex-boss has an iPad and terms it his "window on the business". He runs Citrix Receiver, he runs the SAP reporting tool, he has Autodesk WS. He has his IT people talking to Solidworks about E-Drawing viewers.

No, that is not "complex" in this sense. Complex is things way beyond that like "Find me a Chinese restaurant near Joe Blow's office and book a table for three for dinner at eight o-clock tomorrow"

It is of you are in your car our otherwise hand-free. Voice recognition technology has been around for a long time but has never lived up to its promise. How many Sci-Fi movies have you see where people talk to their computers?

All the current Android phones but with Windows Mango on... yawn

Well, considering they had patents submitted for a tilting desktop and laptop that converts to a tablet like the Asus one, I guess those are the obvious ones.

Pile 'em high, sell 'em cheap!

People who live in glass houses...

Makes mark of a cross

I have one of these - uses reverse Polish notation

Marketing is worthless if you don't have the product and service to back it up and despite all the keynote bull and the billboard adverts, Apple's best advert is satisfied customers telling friends

Apple's great success was realising that the advances in tech could produce a device that would appeal to a mass market.

Yeah, I remember it and its a prime example of what was wrong with thinking in the PC industry. Apple's skill has always been at cutting thru the jun and focusing on what people will actually use and making it easy to use.

Nor any more true. My personal opinion is it is very unlikely to be true but other may hold different opinions.