:up
And if I hear the word "Apple ecosystem" one more time, I'm going to barf.
"Apple ecosystem". "Apple ecosystem". "Apple ecosystem"
Pepto-Bismal ?
Sent from an "Apple ecosystem" iPad.
:up
And if I hear the word "Apple ecosystem" one more time, I'm going to barf.
"Apple ecosystem". "Apple ecosystem". "Apple ecosystem"
Pepto-Bismal ?
Sent from an "Apple ecosystem" iPad.
If email/twiter/facebook is all pcs were good for, then we should just go back to mail, metting people at bars, etc.
My guess would be these people would not miss anything by moving to tablet-like computing.16 million households have had virus problems in the last 2 years, with 1.8 million just replacing their PCs because they were virus ridden.
8 Million households had spyware with 617,000 giving up and buying new PCs because of it.
It makes me wonder though. Are most apple products running antivirus and antimalware software? If most aren't then how do people know that they are uninfected?
My guess would be these people would not miss anything by moving to tablet-like computing.
Also, this is probably the number of people that do nothing but e-mail and some browsing.
If they did more, they'd know that a virus/trojan can kill an OS install, not a PC...
Diogen.
This has nothing to do with macs. All could easily be applied to any device.
You are using the cloud all the time. All the activities you mentioned are internet activitie:
1. Google maps - you are using Googles storage and servers you just are a display device. You do not have satellite maps downloaded to your device for this, it is all in the google cloud.
2. Banking - the bank's database is not downloaded to your pc, you are again just the display device
3. Online shopping - again just the display.
In fact not one activity you mentioned uses your PC for more than a display.
The thing that makes the iPad world (but it could be android or other world) is that the apps are prescreened and hopefully work as promised. The model is small (hopefully cheap) add ons to your device. They basically work.
It will be quite a while before everything you can do on a PC can be done on one of these devices. But, this is the turning point. Right now it is at the 80/20 rule point. 80% of PC users could probably use one of these devices and never miss their PC. This is why these products are coming to market now, it is finally at the point that they are useable.
As far as the cult of Apple point, Steve Jobs appears to have once again seen the correct time to enter a market. It is not like any of the technology is new or revolutionary like the Apple hype would have you believe, it is just the time where internet connections, hardware technology, and component prices are at the right stage for the market to be successful.
Going to the mailbox and going to bars usually requires me to put on pants.
And you trust all of your information, all of your records, that if breached could cost you years of bad credit, bankrupty, etc, on a pc everyone uses?
Good luck being homeless.
It is not a PC everyone uses. An iPad, or similar device, is something you own that is not a PC that you use to access the internet. I would not walk into a computer cafe or library and access my bank records over a public PC. When I connect to a public wifi I use a VPN to encrypt all my communications.
If spyware gets on your PC, guess what? Someone in Russia or China probably gets all your passwords that you use to connect to your bank, email, all your information... At least users of the iPad are safe if they do not jail break since all the apps that are installed are prescreened by Apple.
Here's a few simple facts:
Your data, your financial data is usually stored in strongboxes IRL, and in protected https servers, that require the password or hacking.
A cloud server would allow more user access, and would be alot easier to spy on what others are doing.
Lets also go inot a few more realistic details to shatter this dream:
Let's give two pc. One who has everything on their pc, and one who has everything on the cloud.
The owner of the company that houses your software goes bankrupt. What happens?
On a pc, you can continue using your current software. On the cloud, you can't connect to the internet anymore. And now your vital records are being sold off to the highest bidder because the company went bankrupt. Does this sound like a good idea?
Even if the company went bankrupt, they could cut corners if times get tight. You could find you suddenyl can't use certain software, your amount of space gets cut, etc.
Does this sound like a good idea?
If so, want to buy a bridge?
Do you even know what cloud computing is? Your software and os is stored on the internet in some server. Everything you do is done from some server instead of your pc.
And LOl at users being safe because apps are prescreened by Apple. The iphone has had malware, and you aren't safe just because Steve Jobs is looking over you.
7. Long-term viability. Ideally, your cloud computing provider will never go broke or get acquired and swallowed up by a larger company. But you must be sure your data will remain available even after such an event. "Ask potential providers how you would get your data back and if it would be in a format that you could import into a replacement application," Gartner says.