Linked by Thom Holwerda on Mon 27th Sep 2010 22:17 UTC, submitted by poundsmack
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Good point: I had not thought about viewing it in that way - I was more concerned about the prospect of having to carry around two devices.
Just wondering now whether face-2-face video conversations might in fact sit ever more comfortably with people, rendering the need to have a tablet *&* a smartphone therefore ever more unlikely?
Good point: I had not thought about viewing it in that way - I was more concerned about the prospect of having to carry around two devices.
Just wondering now whether face-2-face video conversations might in fact sit ever more comfortably with people, rendering the need to have a tablet *&* a smartphone therefore ever more unlikely?
Just wondering now whether face-2-face video conversations might in fact sit ever more comfortably with people, rendering the need to have a tablet *&* a smartphone therefore ever more unlikely?
The way I see things moving into the future is both types of devices becoming more powerful and feature rich, to the point were most people abandon laptops for tablets. That's why it makes sense for tablets to have a 9-10" screen.
I don't think that they will(should) ever converge into one category,




Member since:
2005-07-06
For me, the tethered option is far better. It means I dont need 2 network contracts in order to browse the web.
Instantly this 'feature' (i see not reason why this isnt a standard) has saved me £30 per month compared to having 3G built in