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Comment Re:I want (Score 1) 85

Which is why I said I will probably end up getting something really cheap or try to make my current phone last until we see what happens with Windows 10. If Windows 10 turns out to be a huge flop, I can still get an Android phone. If Windows 10 turns out to be great, I'll get a Windows 10 phone.

Comment Not that much (Score 2, Interesting) 121

I just looked it up, and the water in the ocean weights 1.5 Quintillion Tons (1.5 x 10 ^ 17 tons), which means we are dumping the equivalent of 0.000000005% of the mass of the ocean in plastic into the ocean. At those percentages, I wonder if the effects are really any different if we halved or quartered our pollution of the ocean. Really it would all be about the same to the ocean. Sure we should try to reduce how much we dump, but there's way bigger environmental problems to be working on.

Comment Re:I want (Score 1) 85

So my only choices are to have a 6 inch phone, which is basically a tablet, or to go with the older model Nexus 5, which is still quite large, and doesn't even have an SD Card slot? The specs are decent for the price, but the phone is still a little high end for me. I like to be able to take my phone hiking or on a bike ride, and I don't quite see the appeal with carrying a $350 computing device while doing those activities. Getting updates shouldn't be a status symbol. It should be available to all Android phones.

Comment Re:I see what you did here (Score 1) 85

It will support running the same "Apps" as Windows 10. This is actually a nice thing about the way Windows is headed. I can write a single app, and have it run on XBox One, Windows PCs, Windows Tablets, and Windows Phones. Sure it doesn't support legacy software, but it makes a lot more tempting to write Windows apps if they will run on so many devices with very little extra work. If they were really smart they'd adopt similar technology to what Xamarin has and allow the C#/.Net code you write to run on Android and iPhone as well.

Comment Re:I want (Score 1) 85

I for one am very much not happy with Android on my Phone. My current Android Phone is only running version 2.3 even though I bought it 6 months before Android 4 came out. The lack of upgrades on Android is appalling. I'm due for a new phone in the next month (yay 3 year contracts!) and I'm seriously considering just getting a cheap phone or waiting it out to see what happens with Windows 10. The only Android Phone in my price range that I like is the Moto G, which currently doesn't have the update to Android 5 in Canada where I live, and although they say it is coming, they seem to be taking their slow old time with it. Meanwhile Android continues to do stupid things, like removing the functionality to move apps to the SD card. Apparently that's back in Android 5, but like I said, it's hard to be certain that phones will even be upgraded. Windows Phone (at least since 8+) seems to have a much better track record with updates, and doesn't impose stupid restrictions about where apps can be installed. I've bought a few apps and I'm used to the way that Android works, so I really don't want to abandon it, but the lack of updates seriously makes me want to avoid them in the future.

Comment Re:To me the Microsoft comparison can't be more cl (Score 1) 271

You can get the lowest end Surface Pro for $849 plus $130 for the keyboard. You can often find deals if you wait for a sale and get the lowest end version for $800 or less. So less than $1000. Still about double the iPad, but if you count it as a tablet and a laptop (which it basically is) you save money as a laptop with similar specs, plus buying the iPad. Even compared to buying a laptop and a cheap but good $200 Android tablet, the price is pretty reasonable. Like I said, wait a few more iterations until they can bring the price down. Apple won't be able to last long when their tablets and phones are asking a premium price and delivering the same experience as devices at half their price. It's interesting that you add in the price of the keyboard when the iPad doesn't come with one either. And even the lowest end Surface comes with 64 GB of storage, plus room for an SD Card (Or use USB3 Storage). The iPad base unit only comes with 16 GB of storage, and has no option for expansion. If you want more, you're going to be paying at least $100 more just for the privilege.

Comment Re:To me the Microsoft comparison can't be more cl (Score 2) 271

I want to see how long Apple can keep on charging $700 for a cell phone. I really don't see how that can be maintained another decade. In an era where a $200 Moto G or similar is enough for most people, I can't see Apple being able to maintain their allure much longer. Same goes for the iPad. Why pay $500 for a tablet that is so limited when you can get a Surface Pro that does so much more for only a little bit more. Give them a couple more iterations and I'm sure they'll have something at the same price as the iPad, but as a full computer, and not a crippled tablet that can only show a single app at a time. I can see how the iPad appeals to some people who never wanted a computer in the first place. But for people who actually want to get work done, or create something, it's a useless device.

Comment Re:To me the Microsoft comparison can't be more cl (Score 5, Insightful) 271

Personally I think that Microsoft has been doing quite well lately, but no matter what they do, people seem to find something wrong with it. I haven't heard anything particularly bad about their current iteration of their phone OS, other than the anemic app selection, but the OS itself is top notch. Everybody I know who has a Surface Pro seems to think they are amazing, the only general complaint being that they are too expensive. But I guess that you have to pay a lot of money if you want a proper digitizer built into the lightest laptop on the market. Microsoft has started to give away their OS on cheap devices because it's really the only option that works. You can't charge $50 or even $25 for a Windows license that sells to the end consumer for under $250. It just doesn't make the product competitive. This is a market that didn't exist 5 years ago, so of course they are going to have to make adjustments.

Comment Re:so... (Score 3, Insightful) 271

That, and their search engine is still the best around. By a long shot. Many times you don't even have to visit the pages it links to, and Google will simply give you an answer with before having to look at any of the results. When Firefox went and switch my search engine to Yahoo, I noticed by the quality of the results, not by the look of the page, because they were very careful to try to make the results page look as similar as possible.

Comment Re:I agree (Score 1) 677

It's similar to Djikstra's quote about Basic.

It is practically impossible to teach good programming to students that have had a prior exposure to BASIC: as potential programmers they are mentally mutilated beyond hope of regeneration.

This was at a time when BASIC didn't even support subroutines or many things, yet people still use it as a reason to be against things like VB.Net, even though it's just as capable as C#.

Comment Re:Yes (Score 1) 716

As long as you have hardware that Linux works well with, then you could probably have a very good experience. However, every machine that I've ever tried to run Linux on personally has had some nagging hardware issues that just don't get resolved. Had I bought a machine specifically with the intention of running Linux on it, then I might have a better experience, as I could verify that all the hardware is compatible before loading on the operating system. But using the machines I just happened to own, it's pretty hit or miss as far as what hardware will have good drivers. Usually the video card isn't very well supported. If it's not that, then it's some other piece of hardware I want to plug in, like a camera, or a scanner, or a printer.

Comment Re:Hard To Imagine... (Score 1, Insightful) 191

Really depends on how they price it. I have couple old machines that are still running Windows XP, because it's at least $100 for the most recent version of Windows and I can't justify spending $100 all at once on a machine that isn't even worth $100. Now if it was only $20-$30 a year, I might pay for a year or two of the current version of Windows. I might spend more in the long term, assuming I keep those machines around a long time, but it's hard to say.

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