Comments on: Google conducting Netbook usability study
Future Google applications might have Netbooks in mind following the results of a usability study to be conducted next week in the Bay Area.
Future Google applications might have Netbooks in mind following the results of a usability study to be conducted next week in the Bay Area.
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The world may have thrilled to the potential for a Google Phone, but what Google actually unveiled is its plan for a new smartphone world order.
Photos: Unboxing Nexus One
faq Worms, Trojans, and SMS attacks are risks for mobile phones, but the biggest practical threat to users is losing the device.
Other Android bonuses include OTA OS upgrades, a touch-optimized UI, super long battery life, an app market for free/paid apps, etc.
Smartphones are leading the change to what could become a whole new paradigm for personal computing.
forever4now, I think we may see an Android phone that communicates over Bluetooth or WIFI tethered to or from an Android netbook, that is, one or the other has the cellular connection. [Both could use the same batteries (multiple in the Netbook) so in a pinch a battery could be swapped to give one device or the other more charge.] The phone then holds all contacts and e-messages, offloading storage and functionality from the Netbook. (I have nearly 2000 unique contacts collected over the years through Outlook/Palm/Phone syncs; some of that is to allow e-mail lists to not be filtered out as spam.) However, I thought T-Mobile's G1 would be able to make calls over WIFI using T-Mobile's Hotspot Anywhere feature. They didn't make that happen, so I still have a Blackberry.
- by edmetric May 29, 2009 1:51 PM PDT
- I'm using my netbook as a personal assistant. Using a SSD and SD card equipped Asus 1000HE, I have language study materials from Jump Start (needs MagicDisc virtual drive) and Transparent Language, diabetic health records using Life Form, Bible study with e-Sword, iPod movies using VLC, family/friend contact using Skype and the usual browsing/email with FireFox. If I could do all that on an iTouch because of the carry size and the virtual keyboard, I'd buy two of them! There're not enough free hot spots or affordable data plans to get excited about connectivity.
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