Wheelie
Active Member
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It is funny to hear all the nay sayers saying this won't ever happen when all our corporate leaders are already moving full steam ahead toward the "post-PC era" right now. It is not a choice we have when the marketplace is already embracing it.
WILL YOU STILL BE ABLE TO OWN AND USE A DESKTOP PC? YES!! But their numbers in your marketplace will be markedly reduced and you will be a minority (people may even chuckle at you). The really big reduction will be in the residential marketplace. I am already seeing this in my area. One day, our kids will mock a "PC" collecting dust in a corner of the basement.
The installed numbers of desktop PC's will be reduced in your area such that your business must evolve in order to survive (but there may or not be anything for "us techs" to transition to). When will this transition complete? I do not know. Possibly within the next 5 years? But I do know the transition has started and is happening right now as we speak (see ComputerDave's post above ^^^).
All that has to happen for this transition is (and it is now in full swing):
And the leading technology corporations are working feverishly toward those goals as we speak (Motorola, AT&T, T-Mobile, Microsoft, Verizon, HTC, Samsung, Apple, etc, etc, etc). We already know the mobile communication companies can reliably deliver 5+ Mbps broadband Internet to portable devices. I use mine daily and love it.
If you want to discuss intelligently how this transition cannot happen then it would be good to hear a discussion about why the four bullet points above will NOT happen.
A very good primer on this topic written by Forrester Research analyst Sarah Rotman Epps: "What the Post-PC Era Really Means" "The post-PC era is real," Epps wrote in the report, "and its consequences will revolutionize computing product strategy."
WILL YOU STILL BE ABLE TO OWN AND USE A DESKTOP PC? YES!! But their numbers in your marketplace will be markedly reduced and you will be a minority (people may even chuckle at you). The really big reduction will be in the residential marketplace. I am already seeing this in my area. One day, our kids will mock a "PC" collecting dust in a corner of the basement.
The installed numbers of desktop PC's will be reduced in your area such that your business must evolve in order to survive (but there may or not be anything for "us techs" to transition to). When will this transition complete? I do not know. Possibly within the next 5 years? But I do know the transition has started and is happening right now as we speak (see ComputerDave's post above ^^^).
All that has to happen for this transition is (and it is now in full swing):
- Have a dual interface: the tablet's/smartphone's interface itself AND the same interface as a with desktop PC (full-sized keyboard, mouse & LCD)
- The same/similar computing power as a desktop PC
- The same availability to applications as the desktop PC (Excel, QuickBooks, Quicken, AutoCAD, etc)
- The slow, klunky, problem-prone Windows OS is replaced with significantly more reliable, easy-to-repair Operating Systems (like Android and iOS). Those OS's do not need a computer tech in order to maintain it (press 3 buttons and **poof** the OS is reloaded).
And the leading technology corporations are working feverishly toward those goals as we speak (Motorola, AT&T, T-Mobile, Microsoft, Verizon, HTC, Samsung, Apple, etc, etc, etc). We already know the mobile communication companies can reliably deliver 5+ Mbps broadband Internet to portable devices. I use mine daily and love it.
If you want to discuss intelligently how this transition cannot happen then it would be good to hear a discussion about why the four bullet points above will NOT happen.

A very good primer on this topic written by Forrester Research analyst Sarah Rotman Epps: "What the Post-PC Era Really Means" "The post-PC era is real," Epps wrote in the report, "and its consequences will revolutionize computing product strategy."