Comments on: Start-up merges cell phone and PC into a handheld
Almost everyone has a cell phone and a notebook, but cPC says they will sell one box that does it all.
Almost everyone has a cell phone and a notebook, but cPC says they will sell one box that does it all.
November 30, 2009 12:07 PM PST
November 30, 2009 11:44 AM PST
November 30, 2009 11:14 AM PST
Add headlines from CNET News to your homepage or feedreader.
More feeds available in our RSS feed index.
Related quotes
Nothing like developing a powerful device fully PC capable and limit it to only receive a Narrowband (300Kbps)at best Cell signal, when it could be getting a 3-4+Mbps feed.
If we cannot get both WiFi and Cell (which i do not yet understand) go with WiFi it will have a solid VoiceIP capability and will not cost you the big per minute rate.
The device seems to take care of the screen size issue but misses the big pipe piece.
Jacomo
Few companies take the Apple approach to throw everything in there all at once and overprice it to cover your costs, but not worry about your market share. When it comes to cell phones, you need the penetration because you're competing with BILLIONS of cell phones that are already on the market. Give it time. The technology will mature if it's marketable.
The highway of history is littered with the carcasses of companies making integrated products based on the belief that they were the Next Big Thing. The most recent example (before the cPC came along)is the abortive Motorola Rokr cell phone/iPod disaster (well, if you think a device only capable of holding an anemic 100 songs qualifies as an iPod, and can't even download music over the phone connection - DUH!). This is so typical of the PC-think mentality that has had a stranglehold on the computing market ever since Microsloth started its felony monopoly strong-arm tactics with manufacturers and resellers. What's really needed is an industry standard for mechanical, electrical and software interfaces between cell phones, PDAs, pagers, PCs, etc., that allows anything to exchange any data with anything else automagically. The current rats nest of USB/Firewire/power cables, PCMCIA/Memory Stick/CompactFlash/SD cards, and insecure Bluetooth catastrophe is not it, either (although it may be possible to extend some combination of these to effect the required functionality). Customers are very leery (with good historical reason due to scorch marks on their hands from getting burned before) about buying into integrated products, and much prefer the ability to buy, mix and match components in a more incremental manner, because it allows for gradual absorption/adoption of additional features, and incremental upgrades and repair. The latter is especially important - how would you like to lose your PC, cell phone and PDA all at once when, not if, the integrated blob inevitably dies? As soon as someone cracks this nut, I'll be first in line to buy such products that can be integrated by the only ones qualified to do so - you and me.
All the Best,
Joe Blow
Your description of the history of "the next big thing" is a fit description of the history of all invention, not just the computer industry. Trial and error, market testing, many failures and fewer successes - all part of invention, innovation and business. The computer industry is no different than any other.
And, please, enough with the MS-bashing. Can't anyone here at CSet and ZDNet be more original than that? Bet you'd all sing a different tune if you were MS stockholders.
Any other hot air you wish to share?
Using a bluetooth USB key can provide faster wireless connectivity, but there is no slot for LAN.
For all the flaming done, I think the device is nearly there, and I would like to test it out when it is available.
- Velcro
- by December 20, 2005 7:56 AM PST
- You can always Velcro your cell phone, MP3 player, laptop, and PDA together. Just think of the convenience of individually dockable components. For example if you're going into church, you can just undock the cell phone and not have to drag an entire laptop along.
- Like this Reply to this comment
-
(10 Comments)