Are their any fortunetellers or superheroes who will like to bet on the latter?
Choose the odds yourself.
I've just bought i7 Asus TP300 LA hybrid laptop/tablet. So far it really is the best of bothImage-Line wrote:It has an x64 core i5 processor.Kalamata Kid wrote:I had assumed that the Surface Pro had a 64 bit processor not x86. Oh well!
BTW why is this thread obsessed with the Surface? There are now lots of i5 & i7 tablets on the market from other manufacturers.
Regards Scott
Yes. But it depends on your soundcard driver rather than Windows.basic channel wrote:Does ASIO4All work on Win 8.1.1 ?
It's always good to have fun. I had a lot of fun when I read several articles quoting that tablet sales decreased a lot more than predicted this year, and that growing will slower even more next year, while light notebooks (real computers) will increase sales a lot.dformd wrote:+1gamecat666 wrote:lol @ thread subject, every time
The whole thread is pretty humorous.
But many, many people don't need (or want, or can handle) all the functionality of a full computer. They just want to check their email, browse the net, do some online banking.fmr wrote:it really does not do nothing that can be compared to a real computer running a real OS.
Sure, but those will have phablets, that are more portable, do more (you can make phone calls, send sms, mms, etc), and presumably will cost around the same price (the iPhone is an exception, but I suspect it is because Apple doesn't want it to be a menace for the iPad, which it will, at the same price).T-CM11 wrote:But many, many people don't need (or want, or can handle) all the functionality of a full computer. They just want to check their email, browse the net, do some online banking.fmr wrote:it really does not do nothing that can be compared to a real computer running a real OS.
Personally, I don't see the appeal. They're too big as a phone - I want to be able to operate a phone with one hand - and if not used as a phone, a bigger tablet is better to be used as a PC alternative.fmr wrote: Sure, but those will have phablets, that are more portable, do more (you can make phone calls, send sms, mms, etc), and presumably will cost around the same price ...
You maybe don't, but a lot of people do. And a tablet is not a PC alternative, as more and more people start to realize.T-CM11 wrote:Personally, I don't see the appeal. They're too big as a phone - I want to be able to operate a phone with one hand - and if not used as a phone, a bigger tablet is better to be used as a PC alternative.fmr wrote: Sure, but those will have phablets, that are more portable, do more (you can make phone calls, send sms, mms, etc), and presumably will cost around the same price ...
Anyway, I have an iPad, for music production (synths, fx), and only for that. I have no other use for a tablet.
Already happened... Windows 8.chk071 wrote:I think desktop OS's will merge with mobile OS's.
good pointT-CM11 wrote: I think it's more likely that tablet sales decreases because a lot of them... already have a tablet, and it still does what they want from it. There's no such thing as neverending exponential growth.
At CES this year there are a slew of full Windows 8, 8-10" tablets in the $200 to $400 range, but the difference is that the processors are now keeping up with Windows (particularly the Core M and other Broadwell CPUs). Interesting times ahead.chk071 wrote:I think desktop OS's will merge with mobile OS's.
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