Moderator: Soñadora
Orestes Munn wrote:I have a high school friend who has a small tech company. He asks to be telephoned or written to on paper when I wish to communicate with him.
BeauV wrote:Orestes Munn wrote:I have a high school friend who has a small tech company. He asks to be telephoned or written to on paper when I wish to communicate with him.
Does he use a fountain pen? I do.
BeauV wrote:Ajax, for many many years I've bought Apple products because I'm willing to pay more for higher quality and security. They seem to be continuing to do that, we'll see.
I think that the tech industry is about where the auto industry was in about 1920. There are dozens of really terrible products, reliability isn't great, and only the absurdly expensive products (like a Packard) are reliable. I'm guessing that we'll be able to get to something like the 1980s in another decade and maybe the year 2000 a decade after that. Debugging complex things takes a long time.
In the meanwhile, there are WAY too many jobs for folks that sound like yours, Ajax. Fixing stuff that never should have been allowed to escape as a "product". BTW, I have noticed a big improvement in quality over the last 10 years in various areas. Keeping old tech is a lot like me keeping my old '65 Morgan and complaining about how unreliable it is.
LarryHoward wrote:Woke up this morning to IOS 11.1. That's 5 software drops in 5 weeks. Love that Apple pre release testing program.
Ajax wrote:...snip...
Consumers get caught up in hype and marketing all the time, against their own best interests.
Ajax wrote:So... you don't believe that several people who have been working in tech industries for decades don't have a special insight that millions of consumers who do NOT work in tech industries might lack?
Ok, I concede that it's arrogant to assume that I know what someone else's "best interests" are, and I shouldn't be telling someone what those best interests are, but I do believe that as people who work in the industry, that we just *might* know something about these products that the burger-flipper who has spent her precious money on the iPhone X with the rhinestone-studded case might not know.
Orestes Munn wrote:Ajax wrote:So... you don't believe that several people who have been working in tech industries for decades don't have a special insight that millions of consumers who do NOT work in tech industries might lack?
Ok, I concede that it's arrogant to assume that I know what someone else's "best interests" are, and I shouldn't be telling someone what those best interests are, but I do believe that as people who work in the industry, that we just *might* know something about these products that the burger-flipper who has spent her precious money on the iPhone X with the rhinestone-studded case might not know.
The guy making 150 K/yr who leverages a 80,000 SUV is a bigger sucker in my book
Ajax wrote: So... you don't believe that several people who have been working in tech industries for decades don't have a special insight that millions of consumers who do NOT work in tech industries might lack?
Ajax wrote:Interfaces are extremely important but for me, the priorities are security and reliability.
The slickest GUI isn't worth squat if it lets people steal your data or finances.
Panope wrote:I use a shitty little $29.99 Google phone. Slow and glitchy but it fits in my pocket and is indestructible.
The slow, non fuctionality is actually a good thing as it deters me from using it!![]()
I wish it had a better camera.
Whatever tech savviness I now possess will certainly evaporate as I advance in years. Destiny.
Steve
kdh wrote:I'm with Ish. All the cameras on phones suck.
Ann has a flip phone and a tablet. The phone is a phone with great battery life and the tablet is for google maps traffic or email or all the stuff for which a big screen is nice. A phone doesn't need a screen at all.
BeauV wrote:kdh wrote:I'm with Ish. All the cameras on phones suck.
Ann has a flip phone and a tablet. The phone is a phone with great battery life and the tablet is for google maps traffic or email or all the stuff for which a big screen is nice. A phone doesn't need a screen at all.
I'm pretty sure a phone won't have a screen at all in the near future; indeed I don't think it will exist as an object, only as an application running on something else. I currently do telephone calls from my laptop, iPhone7, Apple Watch, and iPad. A "telephone call" is just one of many applications for these devices and is really not the most important one. Here's some data I dug up while thinking about all this. It's pretty clear that a "telephone" as a freestanding device is fading away from my life. There were periods in the logs of more than three days where I made and received zero telephone calls. There were zero days when I sent less than 20 emails and zero days when I received less than 80 emails.
Daily Rate for:
Telephone calls - 3
Text messages - 16
Facebook messenger - 0 (I'm weird most folks use this)
Twitter messages - 4
Apple iMessenger messages - 42 (includes the 16 which are text sent through iMessenger)
Email messages - 52 (sent across accounts at Apple, Google, and Yahoo
(Funny footnote: Upon examining the Apple Watch tech specs I discovered that while the screen size is smaller, the pixel count of the Watch is almost exactly the same as the pixel count on the original iPhone. Also, the CPU speed in the Watch is about 3x the CPU speed of the original iPhone and the wireless networks the Watch runs on are over 10x the speeds of the wireless networks the original iPhone used. Fun to put things into perspective.)
Chris Chesley wrote:BeauV wrote:kdh wrote:I'm with Ish. All the cameras on phones suck.
Ann has a flip phone and a tablet. The phone is a phone with great battery life and the tablet is for google maps traffic or email or all the stuff for which a big screen is nice. A phone doesn't need a screen at all.
I'm pretty sure a phone won't have a screen at all in the near future; indeed I don't think it will exist as an object, only as an application running on something else. I currently do telephone calls from my laptop, iPhone7, Apple Watch, and iPad. A "telephone call" is just one of many applications for these devices and is really not the most important one. Here's some data I dug up while thinking about all this. It's pretty clear that a "telephone" as a freestanding device is fading away from my life. There were periods in the logs of more than three days where I made and received zero telephone calls. There were zero days when I sent less than 20 emails and zero days when I received less than 80 emails.
Daily Rate for:
Telephone calls - 3
Text messages - 16
Facebook messenger - 0 (I'm weird most folks use this)
Twitter messages - 4
Apple iMessenger messages - 42 (includes the 16 which are text sent through iMessenger)
Email messages - 52 (sent across accounts at Apple, Google, and Yahoo
(Funny footnote: Upon examining the Apple Watch tech specs I discovered that while the screen size is smaller, the pixel count of the Watch is almost exactly the same as the pixel count on the original iPhone. Also, the CPU speed in the Watch is about 3x the CPU speed of the original iPhone and the wireless networks the Watch runs on are over 10x the speeds of the wireless networks the original iPhone used. Fun to put things into perspective.)
I haven't kept records but I daresay that my communications distribution is not much different than Beau's...
Many days with 0 phone calls, preponderance is text messages, followed by most internal corporate communications via Slack and Slack calls. A not insignificant number of calls and txt are now taken over my computer--more all the time but then, that mostly means I'm on my computer too much....![]()
Funny thing about the watch, a couple years ago a millennial guy said to me, "Who needs a watch when you always have your phone?" (I haven't worn a watch since....)
As I understand it, the Apple Watch still needs to be near a phone or on wifi, yes??