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#30601 | |
Wizard
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Karma: 75825105
Join Date: Dec 2010
Location: PDXish
Device: Kindle Voyage, various Android devices
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#30602 | |
Just a Yellow Smiley.
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Karma: 83862859
Join Date: Jul 2015
Location: Texas
Device: K4, K5, fire, kobo, galaxy
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#30603 |
Grand Sorcerer
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Karma: 27919658
Join Date: Sep 2009
Location: Utrecht, the Netherlands
Device: Kindle Paperwhite Signature Edition
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I like to listen to podcasts on my Sonos before I go to sleep. I'm getting very annoyed with the fact that the length of the podcast isn't correct. It doesn't list the length in the selection screen, but in the play screen is does list it. I've had a podcast listed as 45 minutes only last 15 minutes. Last night I picked a new to me podcast and the first one should have been 53 minutes, it turned out to be almost twice as long.
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#30604 | |
Bookmaker & Cat Slave
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Karma: 158448243
Join Date: Apr 2010
Location: Phoenix, AZ
Device: K2, iPad, KFire, PPW, Voyage, NookColor. 2 Droid, Oasis, Boox Note2
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#30605 | |
New York Editor
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Karma: 16540415
Join Date: Aug 2007
Device: PalmTX, Pocket eDGe, Alcatel Fierce 4, RCA Viking Pro 10, Nexus 7
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But PCs have long since become commodities with commodity pricing. They are fungible, and it largely doesn't matter whose name is on the box. As long as the specs are equivalent, one will be as good as another, and purchase decision tends to come down to price, with Lowest Cost Producer winning. Vendors are all looking for ways to shave costs, and keyboards that don't stand up to really heavy use are examples. They're cheaper. IBM made the first PCs, but sold the PC division to Lenovo when they were losing money on it. They couldn't be Lowest Cost Producer. HP under its previous CEO announced plans to end PC production because they were losing money at it. . The market did not react well, and current CEO Meg Whitman reversed the decision. Dell went private in a leveraged buyout when they couldn't produce the revenues and profits the stock market wanted, and had already shifted production to China. In the PC business, you will make pennies on the dollar if you are lucky, and the goal is to take in as many dollars as possible to make pennies on. We want it cheap. You get what you pay for. What you're describing is one reason why my main system is a desktop with separate keyboard and monitor. ______ Dennis |
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#30606 |
(he/him/his)
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Karma: 80074820
Join Date: Jul 2010
Location: Sunshine Coast, BC
Device: Oasis (Gen3),Paperwhite (Gen10), Voyage, Paperwhite(orig), iPad Air M3
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Even my laptops have always had separate keyboard, mouse, and monitor. And I now have wireless kbd and mouse that travel with me. However, you mostly get what you pay for in the PC world. It's a highly competitive business, and if you insist on the cheapest, you get it.
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#30607 | |
New York Editor
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Karma: 16540415
Join Date: Aug 2007
Device: PalmTX, Pocket eDGe, Alcatel Fierce 4, RCA Viking Pro 10, Nexus 7
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But efforts to shave pennies bite in various ways. Several system failures here over the years have been the result of failed power supplies. An old friend built a high end system, with 8 core processor, 64GB of RAM, SSD, and other goodies. He carefully got a high end power supply that was normally picked by gamers precisely to avoid that issue. (He's not a gamer. His system is explicitly designed to suck down huge open source repositories currently in a distributed version control system like CVS and convert them to something like git to ease development and maintenance down the road.) When you custom build a desktop, you can pick and choose best of breed components. Laptops are more restricted. ______ Dennis |
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#30608 |
Illiterate
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Karma: 37848716
Join Date: Mar 2009
Location: The Sandwich Isles
Device: Samsung Galaxy S10+, Microsoft Surface Pro
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Which exactly why mom and pop white box builders have been able to scratch out survival, but they are few and far apart. I worked for one as a PC tech in the 1990's, it was one of only a couple left in the Honolulu metropolitan area that survived the big box influx.
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#30609 | ||
Grand Sorcerer
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Karma: 34000001
Join Date: Mar 2008
Device: KPW1, KA1
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And then, the Chinese use a bit thinner plastic here, and some less strong hinges there, or even a similar, but cheaper screen from another manufacturer... until you pay for high-end stuff but get mediocre products. Quote:
I could just get a new €600 laptop every two years and throw them away when they start falling apart, and I'd be cheaper... |
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#30610 | |
New York Editor
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Karma: 16540415
Join Date: Aug 2007
Device: PalmTX, Pocket eDGe, Alcatel Fierce 4, RCA Viking Pro 10, Nexus 7
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They have an extensive DIY section aimed at those who like to build from components, who are mostly gamers. I got cured of that bad habit. My needs aren't all that extraordinary, and an off-the-shelf system meets them handily. (The current desktop is a refurb off-lease corporate box. It had adequate specs, and came with Windows, Chrome, Adobe Reader and Java, but didn't have any of the trialware that bloats new offerings. The stuff it had were all things I'd want anyway, so I was pleased.) There are assortment of folks around where I am offering repair services, but no one I've seen lately offers custom building. If you need a custom built system you are probably somebody who can DIY. All you need is the parts. ______ Dennis |
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#30611 | |||
New York Editor
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Karma: 16540415
Join Date: Aug 2007
Device: PalmTX, Pocket eDGe, Alcatel Fierce 4, RCA Viking Pro 10, Nexus 7
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In this case, I suspect Dell signed off on the keyboard design used. Quote:
(The guy I know these days who does that is a developer whose $DAYJOB requires a fair amount of travel, like "We're sending you to Tokyo for a week!" unexpectedly. He does his development work on his laptop because he can do it while traveling, and pounds the crap out of machines.) There are several laptops here, but they don't get anywhere near that heavy a usage. I have gone through several replacement keyboards and mice for the desktop, but those are separate components. Quote:
______ Dennis |
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#30612 |
Grand Sorcerer
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Karma: 79436940
Join Date: Nov 2007
Location: Toronto
Device: Libra H2O, Libra Colour
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My long time companion Nexus 7 (2013) passed away this morning
![]() Power off and on didn't help. So I bought a Samsung WE instead. Now it's called getting used to a new device, new version of Android. Initial impressions are very nice device. Sent from my SM-T713 using Tapatalk |
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#30613 |
o saeclum infacetum
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Karma: 235678911
Join Date: Oct 2010
Location: New England
Device: Mini, H2O, Glo HD, Aura One, PW4, PW5
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#30614 | |
Bookmaker & Cat Slave
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Karma: 158448243
Join Date: Apr 2010
Location: Phoenix, AZ
Device: K2, iPad, KFire, PPW, Voyage, NookColor. 2 Droid, Oasis, Boox Note2
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I realize that this makes me the odd man out, but I freely admit, I love desktops far more than laptops. For the work I do, being able to use 3 monitors and have three browser windows open (where we run SAAS) at the same time is invaluable. I have a few laptops, yes--an older first-gen Thinkpad and a newer Thinkpad Yoga--and I use the latter often, but it's not for "serious" work, for me. I do things like post in forums, gab online, that type of thing. For the biz, I'd be bald from yanking hair out of my head if I had to constantly flip back-forth from one browser tab to another. (shrug) FWIW. Hitch |
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#30615 | |
New York Editor
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Karma: 16540415
Join Date: Aug 2007
Device: PalmTX, Pocket eDGe, Alcatel Fierce 4, RCA Viking Pro 10, Nexus 7
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But the nice thing about the desktop is the possibility of expansion. It has a 3.1ghz quad core Intel processor with a 3.4ghz turbo mode, which is adeqaute for what I do, but a processor upgrade is possible. It has 8GB RAM, which is quite adequate, but can be expanded to 32GB. I can add more disk storage cheaply. The built in Intel graphics are adequate, since I'm not a gamer (and actually better than the ATI video card from the machine the current one replaced), but if I want it, I can move to a higher end ATI or nVidia card. The machine didn't come with USB 3, and I haven't needed it, bit a PCI USB3 add-on card is a cheap upgrade option, and on my list. And the current machine is a refurb off lease HP corporate unit, designed for easy service, so if I have to pop the hood and fiddle with the innards, it's simple. There are several laptops here, but they are strictly travel machines with the exception of the SOs. It's her regular machine, but her needs are fairly simple and what she has meets them. She also doesn't pound hers the was Katsunami pounds his, so the keyboard has held up fine. And I'm almost at the point where an Android tablet could replace a laptop as a travel device. I'd want en external keyboard, and likely a real mouse, but that's easily done, and the result will be smaller, lighter, and easier to transport. A tablet has adequate horsepower for the subset of things I do while traveling. ______ Dennis |
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Tags |
creepy crawlers!, dell computers, monteverdi, thread that never ends, tubery, unutterable silliness |
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