Linked by Thom Holwerda on Thu 23rd Aug 2012 12:48 UTC
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Member since:
2005-07-06
Hm, but I didn't claim that ads were what killed OS/2. Conversely, I said that it was ultimately about IBM being IBM ("good old IBM" and all, used to how they were always doing things on ~mainframes) versus Gang of Nine dynamics - things on which you, yeah, elaborate a bit more
I think CF lives on in more ~pro usages... But what makes it still suitable there, is also why it was surpassed by SD in consumer gear? (and generally, being a bit too large physically, NVM costly)
USB - more ubiquitous, the pendrives more handy.
TV card was great for a poor student living in a dorm* ...but, other than that, PC just didn't fit too well with how people watch TV (the typically horrible software didn't help; or how a group would block PC usage by one person, also while TVs are often kinda "in the background" on) - and they didn't even really move to watching on the net (Netflix and such have limited reach; and YT is a bit distinct from the TV - just glance over the top clips there). Hell, meanwhile people were moving to more "very TV" & expensive setups, with the explosive growth of pay TV.
*and quite useful, in a way, when some major turmoil unfolded in the country of my room mate, and he was able to follow the situation via CNN coverage.
Though I'm still not quite sure how I was able to receive CNN over-the-air... my best guess: since the Flakturm-like dorm is adjacent to a neighbourhood of old (antique-protected?) large villas, it's plausible that one belongs to some diplomatic mission which set up a small-scale repeater, for the reception throughout the property - quite easily picked up also by the nearby large antenna on dorm roof (I certainly wasn't able to detect any CNN broadcast while moving to another place just ~1 km away)
But even though I had, supposedly, a TV card among the best-supported ones (bt848/878 series, compatible with dscaler or K!TV), there were some lingering issues... (most notably with sound under dscaler)
Still, I must hook it up again one day, to digitise some old VHS tapes... (luckily, in this case the highest-quality dscaler won't be a problem, since audio from the VCR can be handled by the soundcard line-in; OTOH, some of the older tapes are probably in SECAM, which my TV card likely doesn't support, arghh)