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2005-12-01
, 14:12
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Posts: 949 |
Thanked: 14 times |
Joined on Jul 2005
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#2
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2005-12-01
, 16:28
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Posts: 1,436 |
Thanked: 3,144 times |
Joined on Jul 2005
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#3
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2005-12-01
, 17:42
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Posts: 949 |
Thanked: 14 times |
Joined on Jul 2005
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#4
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2005-12-01
, 18:38
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Posts: 191 |
Thanked: 9 times |
Joined on Nov 2005
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#5
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....Sure, it's not an Uber Geek device....
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2005-12-01
, 18:54
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Posts: 1,361 |
Thanked: 115 times |
Joined on Oct 2005
@ Toronto, Ontario, Canada
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#6
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2005-12-01
, 21:50
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Posts: 48 |
Thanked: 0 times |
Joined on Sep 2005
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#7
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Did you mean it IS a uber geek device here? It runs Linux and supports open source development and isn't a call phone (which is what the masses want). I don't see how you could make it any geekier
You're right about the attitude of sites towards mobile devices. Unless they have actually put some effort into them then generally they don't work in small format. It's a shame the whole WAP thing happened when it did. Too early really. Before there were devices around to make use of sites developed specially for limited screens.
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2005-12-02
, 00:40
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Posts: 6 |
Thanked: 0 times |
Joined on Nov 2005
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#8
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I disdain the Treo. I've called it a White Castle hamburger screen -- but it recently occurred to me that this comparison is far too generous.
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2005-12-02
, 04:28
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Posts: 5 |
Thanked: 0 times |
Joined on Nov 2005
@ London
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#9
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2005-12-02
, 13:03
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Posts: 59 |
Thanked: 1 time |
Joined on Nov 2005
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#10
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In a similar fashion, this snobbery towards the 770 is paradoxical. Sure, it's not an Uber Geek device. It's not an OQO. It's not even a Palm Lifedrive. It lacks a hard drive. It is plainly a 1.0 device. But so was the original Palm. (I won't cite the original "Palm-Size PCs" -- which weren't even 1.0 devices!) And the original Palm went on to create an entire new way of doing things.
I think it stems from the Net Culture. If you primarily derive your living -- or spend a lot of your time -- on the net, you tend to think the net is the world. Well it ain't. Just ask all those cheerleaders for Howard Dean's candidacy who met Real Life when Dean met the Real World. It was like a car going 80 mph suddenly facing a wall! Suddenly all those bloggers and sites got an awakening they never expected.
In a similar fashion, this snobbery towards the 770 is paradoxical. Sure, it's not an Uber Geek device. It's not an OQO. It's not even a Palm Lifedrive. It lacks a hard drive. It is plainly a 1.0 device. But so was the original Palm. (I won't cite the original "Palm-Size PCs" -- which weren't even 1.0 devices!) And the original Palm went on to create an entire new way of doing things.
I think the 770 has that potential too.
All of these sites that sneer at the 770 make me wonder: who the hell are these sites targeting?! Are they masturbatory playgrounds for the 1337? Don't they want millions and millions of people with the power to get on the net comfortably and freely nearly any time? Don't they want more people to have the ability to visit their sites? What the hell do they expect people to use on the go to access their sites -- a lousy cellphone screen?! I disdain the Treo. I've called it a White Castle hamburger screen -- but it recently occurred to me that this comparison is far too generous. That screen is the size of a bloody cheese cracker! It's smaller than my TE screen! Sure you can get the net anytime anywhere -- but do you really want to hit BoingBoing or ITT or PIC or Engadget or any other Uber Geek site with it? Or even the New York Times site? Puh-leeze! I think you have to be seriously desperate or seriously self-delusioned to think a cellphone is the way to get on the net when away from the desktop.
The 770 is the way to go. It's time for the Net Avant Garde to wake up to the Real World. It's time to stop being so thunderously gallopingly stupid!