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Steve Jobs, kiss your PCs good bye!

motormafia

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他妈的!I think this guys is trying to oversell his i-Pad. Sanitary Napkin Pusher!:biggrin:

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http://beta.thehindu.com/sci-tech/gadgets/article445394.ece

S & T » Gadgets
San Francisco, June 3, 2010
Steve Jobs: The PC is dying, long live the tablet
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Apple CEO Steve Jobs
AP Apple CEO Steve Jobs
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science and technology IT/computer sciences

The prophet has spoken, and his words provide both hope and fear to the computer world.

In front of a rapt audience of tech executives at an industry conference on Tuesday night, Apple maestro Steve Jobs predicted the end of the PC era.

And what will replace the device that has transformed every aspect of business and society over the past 25 years? Well, it just so happens that Jobs believes the next phase of the computer revolution will be dominated by a device that looks a lot like the iPad tablet he introduced so successfully two months ago.

You could write off Jobs’ prediction as just some more of the infectious hyperbole that seems to mark every pronouncement the Apple founder makes. But if you subscribe to the mantra of another great American visionary, Abraham Lincoln, who famously remarked that “the best way to predict your future is to create it,” Jobs’ comments could quickly turn into reality.

“When we were an agrarian nation, all cars were trucks because that’s what you needed on the farms,” Jobs said at the D: All Things Digital conference. “But as people moved more towards urban centres, people started to get into cars.

“I think PCs are going to be like trucks. Less people will need them. And this is going to make some people uneasy.” This may sound like a crazy rant to people who haven’t used tablets. Their portability and touch screen interface offer an easier, more intuitive and altogether more pleasant way to surf the web and interact with media content of all kinds.

Other more complex tasks, such as video editing and teleconferencing will soon become possible with improved processors, while hybridised and dockable tablets will offer all the advantages of keyboard and mouse controls.

Since the success of the iPad, such an evolution of the dominant computer form factor seems long overdue. While manufacturers can make PCs faster and faster, and pack in ever more features, consumers have realised that for the usual tasks of surfing the web, sending emails, doing things on Facebook and watching YouTube clips they don’t really need the newest super-charged data crunchers.

That’s what led to the explosion in low-cost netbooks in recent years, and to the decline in laptop and desktop purchases. It’s also the dynamic that will fuel the surge in tablet computers, according to tech analyst Carmi Levi.

“It’s pretty darn clear that putting everything in a box and keeping it isolated there is very much a creation of the 80s,” he said.

“The net has rendered that model obsolete very, very quickly.” It’s not just the advances in computer hardware that are making this generational technology shift all but inevitable. It’s also being driven by the increased ubiquity and speed of Internet access, which within a few years will allow people almost everywhere in the developed world fast and wireless access wherever they may be.

Stiff competition

Jobs acknowledged that the iPad, which has sold 2 million units in its first 60 days on the market, may not win the new platform war. There’s certainly lots of competition.

Google, of course, has readied its own operating system for tablets, which Dell debuted last month on its Streak device. HP is also coming out with a tablet, while up-and-coming Taiwanese computer maker Asus unveiled its own Microsoft-powered gizmo earlier this week.

Last week, the non-profit organisation One Laptop Per Child, whose initiative to launch the 100-dollar laptop for children in developing countries spurred major computer makers to come up with their own cheap netbooks, announced its new target — the 100-dollar tablet to debut next year.

Even Intel, a company synonymous with the rise of the PC, has seen the writing on the wall, announcing a new chip architecture for tablets, which marks its largest-ever deviation from its traditional PC products.

But while companies like Intel and Microsoft may be threatened by the rise of a new form factor, it will be good for consumers and a computer industry hitting the limits of a mature market. “Computer makers should be thanking their lucky stars,” Levi says. “The new tablet form factor will give them a powerful hit.”

Keywords: Apple iPad, Steve Jobs
 

Alamaking

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He might be right you know? who would expect Apple to overtake Microsoft as no.1 tech company in the world, look what happens now? :biggrin::biggrin::biggrin:

Apple rocks :p:p:p
 

uncleyap

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Tablets are essentially battery devices like laptops & notebooks & netbooks. They are not going to take the places of desktops which are strictly non-battery devices and tap mains power always, just like servers and workstations.

I think laptops are already over used and abused.

If tablets is going to take away market share significantly from others, it would be laptops that would be replace by them mostly, not desktops.

Besides being a battery device, the feature of tablet is similar with notebook / laptop that they are Display-Integrated, that means there is a screen that can not be removed away from that computer. You may attach an additional screen, but you are not able to remove away that screen which it came with.

Desktop PCs always can change screens, or be used with multiple screens like workstations. The key feature of desktops are desk-bounded; non-mobile; lower-cost; modularly upgradeable; regularly used with wired LAN (Ethernet) part of these features are security features.

Mobile computers such as netbooks laptops & notebooks are essential security hazards. Tablets can be worst. Why? Because not just that it can be easily stolen (walked away with sensitive confidential / secretive data), it's screen is the least protected from the view of uninvited and unauthorized viewers. In the case of laptop & netbooks and notebooks, there is at least a base keyboard area nearer to hands of owner, and held closed or placed on lap, less risk of being stolen, the screens of laptops is controlled by the keyboard base to be facing the authorized user, verses the unauthorized viewers. In the case of tablets - it is usually laid flat on the table / desk for all to view from every sides of the table / desk. There is a serious lack of privacy!

These days the PCs have too much of sensitive and important information, to silly to be put in the form of a tablet, to leak away sensitive info so causally like this, very naive users only will do that.

The security of Desktop PCs, are protective towards their info and contents. They are sometimes locked or chained or physically secured to their furnitures, their networks are wired form to ensure security.

I see a lot more improvements coming for Desktop PCs, size & weight reductions; modularity; power savings; easy of maintenance and cost reduction can be achieved. Asus for example is already making Eee-PC type tiny boxes that attach to back of LCD monitors which are miniture PCs.


Eee Box:
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Asus Eee keyboard PC:

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amadeus

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"Tablets are essentially battery devices like laptops & notebooks & netbooks. They are not going to take the places of desktops which are strictly non-battery devices and tap mains power always, just like servers and workstations."

What talking you?!
 

Alamaking

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I will switch over when they solve the battery life of a tablet, why cant they make a longer lasting battery? i really dunno why :o:o:o
 

Watchman

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Steve JOBs just over-rate himself after spending too much time at the operating theater having his bypass .

The Japanese already are there in year 2000 .


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I gave them up because they have lousy battery life .
 

Einfield

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Sure they can, how about one that last 1 week without recharging?

The battery comes with a trolley.


I will switch over when they solve the battery life of a tablet, why cant they make a longer lasting battery? i really dunno why :o:o:o
 

uncleyap

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"Tablets are essentially battery devices like laptops & notebooks & netbooks. They are not going to take the places of desktops which are strictly non-battery devices and tap mains power always, just like servers and workstations."

What talking you?!


Talking about batteries lah.

Desktops are non-battery computers, tablets & laptops etc are battery computers. That will make the difference. Battery devices are mobile devices, desktop are used at fixed locations, almost fixed to their furniture. e.g. the bank's counter, the kiosk at CPFB where you print your CPF statements, your ATM machine etc.

If you still can not understand then consider this, will the bank make mobile and battery powered ATMs so that you can easily cart them home? :biggrin::biggrin::biggrin:

There will be however a bunch of blind followers thinking trends only, and just follow what they think is trend. These people can be even considered very qualified or professional, but quite empty and don't really deserve their positions. :rolleyes::cool:
 
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