Just As Gas Prices Are Coming Down, It Might Get Harder To Fuel Your Laptop
from the fill-up dept
This year has seen more than its fair share of laptop battery recalls and explosions, the fallout from which has hit computer manufacturers, business travellers and of course the battery makers themselves. The lack of breakthroughs in battery power had already been a major drag on computing, particularly mobile computing, so the whole thing has been rather fitting. It looks like the problem may compound itself as some manufacturers are warning of a laptop battery shortage to continue through the rest of the year and into next summer. Sony's massive recall is causing customers to wait an additional two months for orders to arrive, while competitors have no spare capacity to build more. Eventually, things will get worked out, and the situation might even prompt more R&D into batteries. But in the meantime, if you see big lines at the Apple store, it might not be due to popularity of the new iPod, but rather an old fashioned buying panic.Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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Battery vs. Plug In
I plug in at home, and plug in at the office. I use a laptop for portability between two fixed locations.
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Re: Battery vs. Plug In
1) Letting me put my laptop in suspend mode while I drive to and from work (hibernation still causes problems for the occasional driver).
2) Serving as a UPS during power outtages.
My style of work demands I use a laptop. Or at least it would be extremely inconvenient for me to work from a stationary desktop PC.
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The post-laptop era
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Re: The post-laptop era
GOM
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Re: The post-laptop era
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Re: The post-laptop era
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Re: The post-laptop era
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Re: The post-laptop era
Laptops would be MUCH more secure. Using a PC in an internet cafe is much less secure than using a wifi hotspot.
PC in internet cafes can have all sorts of stuff on them (keyloggers, malware...).
If you don’t have control of the hardware you cannot be fully secure.
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Re: The post-laptop era
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Maybe...
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Hmmm
I don't think I'm ready to trust all my data to a USB stick. My laptop is set up for me, with my apps, and my data. I never have to install anything or re-customize a desktop. There's never incompatibility or legal hassles.
But, if you can get away with it, I can understand it.
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Dude !!
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Re: The post-laptop era
Have you never given a powerpoint presentation? Most conference rooms dont have desktop computers stationed at their podiums.
Have you ever traveled on a business trip? Checking your email from a "cybercafe" is one thing, finding a computer with Photoshop, Dreamweaver, TOAD, etc is another.
Perhaps, yes, I never use my laptop's battery but I would totally screwed if I didn't have its portability.
Plus, my laptop pwns your desktop box in coolness any day.
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I need a laptop....
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Portable apps
I have Portable FireFox and Portable Thunderbird on a USB drive, along with all my critical data, so it's only a short step from there to not needing my laptop at all. For word processing, I don't even need the app anymore -- Google now supplies what I need.
I can see a LOT of money being made in supplying a minimal computer with a couple of USB 2.0 ports and an internet connection at airports, on planes/trains, in hotels, or just about anywhere you would want to go. Most public libraries already have public-use PCs, and just about any hotel that I'd want to stay in has some sort of PC availability. USB drives are now cheap enough to carry a spare or two for backup. And I'd gladly pay a reasonable use fee not to have to lug my laptop -- or not to even need one anymore. Even with the prices plummeting, having a laptop costs me $400-$600 a year, not counting any extra hassle involved in transporting it.
And since I'm using Gmail more and more these days, that's a step towards not even needing the USB drive, although it probably would continue to make a convenient mechanism for keeping personal setups, private encryption keys, etc.
Then, of course, the main problem would be how to keep malware from spreading via USB drives. However, one way to do that would be to have the minimal OS in the ubiquitous (thin-client) PCs entirely in ROM, which would make it more or less immune to malware. And if nobody actually ran anything from the USB drive, that could make virus-writing somewhat more of a challenge than it is now. (Although the new 'thing' is phishing, not virus-propagation)
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Re: Portable apps
why the hell does your laptop cost you $400-600 a year? It's not a car, you don't need to fill up the tank with gas - good lord, i think you're doing something wrong. perhaps your laptop priviledges should be revoked!
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Re: Re: Portable apps
As I mentioned, the costs are coming down, and many of the things I used to buy separately are now included in the base unit. But did you think laptops were free? I have one I got for free, and it is slow, obsolete, and such a hassle to use that I plan to replace it with a MacBook.
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Maybe I'm Thinking Differently....
I disagree that laptops are going out, on the contrary I think you'll see more laptops now than ever before. Even this comment is typed on a laptop.
I can understand the viewpoint from someone who has computers and wants to move between them...a computer programmer, for example, that just has to move project files between home and the workplace. In that case a laptop may not be needed, sure. But that's not the rule at all.
Laptops allow you to have YOUR computer with you wherever you go, even if you still plug it in. Your computer will have all of your files, your programs, your settings, etc. Have you tried using a public library's computer, for example? Given the choice between using their computer or taking your laptop, which do you think is most user-friendly?
Laptops allow travellers to entertain themselves...I've played movies and PC games in the back of the car in long rides and I must say it's much more pleasant than just staring out the window. My laptop allows me to go home from college with my computer in a handled bag. I've taken my laptops on trips to family members' houses so I can entertain myself when I'm there. My LAN-party equipment fits in a 12"x15"x2.5" bag on my side, not 2 trips to and from the car tangling cables and plugs.
Portability is still the issue, even if thumb drives are getting bigger. Although I do see most people plugging in their laptops when in use in a "desktop" environment. But you can't do work on the couch with a classic desktop. You can't read techdirt in the car on your desktop. You can't write C++ code on the toilet with your desktop (unless you've got an amazing setup). You can't easily take your desktop everywhere with you.
Also, I fail to see how a thumb drive reaching 4GB of storage is the anti-laptop, whene there have been portable harddrives for a long long time now with much more capacity? If it were as simple as bringing files with you and finding a computer that's "available just about everywhere" then why have laptops been continuously been becoming more and more popular over the past several years? Wouldn't you expect the opposite effect?
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Laptops going away?
Maybe if we lined up all the stupid people, even the ones in this thread only, and publicly kicked the tar out of them for being morons, people would start thinking again...at least before speaking in my presence or posting on boards that I read
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Burger, Fries, and a Wireless Connection... (Or Re
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I could not imagine being locked down to a desktop. Laptops are perfect for such a wide range of uses. Even policemen use laptops in their cars.
So you have to spend an extra 2 minutes dealing with TSA or customs, big freaking deal. Stop your whining and get up 2 min earlier.
Those of you who say, “I don’t even take my laptop with me when I travel anymore”, are the same people who should not have wasted yours or your company’s money in the first place.
Go to an Internet Café or Library???? Are you kidding me? I am not even sure how to respond to that. Maybe your problem is that you think a portable is solely used to check email or write a word document. What about those of us needing to write some code or actually use the device to get some work done? I have yet to see an internet café or a library pc with the tools we need to do our work.
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The solution is right there in the title:
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Re: The solution is right there in the title:
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School
Now that I'm graduated, the laptop sits on a cardboard box next to my bed, and doesn't move. I take my 75 lb full tower to LAN parties, even though my laptop can play most of the games I play at LAN parties (albeit not quite as well).
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It's about space
I can go for days without even looking at the computers and that's just ducky with me.
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remote desktop
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lol
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Initial cost of my current laptop: $2450. Expected lifetime, 5-6 years. Do the math. If I didn't have to have it at all (and I suspect that I will not buy another even when -- not if -- mine fails again), then I would save the amortized cost of owning a laptop. Or I could have 3 desktop systems with similar specs instead.
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Re:
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REALLY need it?
If people just want to get their email, a Blackberry or T-Mobile device is much better than trying to hook up with a VPN from somewhere and, it fits in your pocket.
I am constantly replacing people's desktops with laptops. From my vantage point, they're not going anywhere. At this rate, in 2 - 3 years, I'll be supporting the whole organization while the rest of the help desk is hanging out on MySpace! And, then everyone here will be kewl with their laptops! :)
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Good enough solution...
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Personally....
PS Screw Apple. Shiny boxes w/ hacked OS's don't make me want run out and pay twice what it's worth for one (let the hate mail ensue!!!)
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Who needs a desktop?
And my laptop is used 90% of the time.
Of course I work in IT so I need my laptop for many things a USB of phone cannot dream of doing.
And I can without question tell you that laptops are surpassing desktops in popularity at a staggering rate. I've configured entire corporate networks with ZERO desktops in the entire network.
Just laptops and wireless routers and nothing more...
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College
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As a student, i cant simply take a usb drive to all my classes, as none of them (save for a unix programming class) are in computer labs. My laptop is neccesary for me.
As far as desktops go, i have one that i am using right now, and it fit prefectly in my dorm room last year, with dual crt's.
I used my desktop in the room, and left my laptop in my bookbag unless it was needed.
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eerie
I was writing Java code on the toilet just 2 minutes ago(with my laptop.)
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Don't use your battery?
Both household laptops here have non-functional batteries. If the cord gets unplugged, it's a hard reboot if it was running at the time. Wanna carry it upstairs? Better be sure you shut down first. Wanna pass it to a friend to show them something? Better mind that power cord. Truly a pain in the rear.
Even if you don't use the battery for extended periods, the ability to momentarily interrupt power and not lose everything (like a mini-UPS) is more valuable than you realize.
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Laptops going away? Not at all
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