Mine! Mine! Mine! Mine! Mine!
Yep, those seagulls. And like those seagulls and their cries for food, the people have become seagulls calling for more.
More! More! More! More! More!
Cries for more options, more features, more services, faster processors, more apps, more cores! Why? Why do we need more cores and faster processors? Why can?t developers of our mobile platforms make their operating systems work within the limits of the hardware? Apple does the best of this. In this world of quad and soon to be octa-core Android devices, Apple still sits at dual-core and is still toe to toe and better in some cases. Why do we need more? Apple finally changed the screen size of the iPhone and was immediately met by cries of it being too small, now offer multiple versions of the iPhone with different screen sizes, why isn?t it five inches, the next one is going to be five inches. Really? Why can no one be happy with the vast improvements the mobile world has made in the past decade. Brought into play by Blackberry and made fun by Apple and overrun by Samsung with gimmicks.
Everybody wants the next thing and as soon as it hits they are immediately calling for the next thing. The people are never satiated. The world is progressing too fast and no one can iterate fast enough to be far enough ahead to meet the demands of the people. We are still limited by the hardware. Is there no bounds? Is there no point where people can be happy with what he have and what they?ve been given to choose from? Some people are only just now upgrading to phones like the iPhone 4 and the Galaxy S2, yes the S2. Why? For these people, these phones do everything they need them to; they aren?t caught up in what the latest features are and what could come next. My dad is still using a Droid X2 and before that on T-Mobile a Garminfone. Yes, you read that right, a Garminfone.
There are enough phones, enough different phones, on the market now that should never be a need to want more. The newest is out now, and people should be content to wait patiently to see what new hardware was developed that can support the new features and speeds that they want. We have what we have, get over it. Operating systems can really only iterate as fast as the hardware. Until the hardware can support whatever science fiction needs people have that aren?t met, they will remain unmet. Developers of operating systems can only do so much with the hardware they have. When it can be done, it will be done, believe it. Until then, enjoy what you have.
Yep, those seagulls. And like those seagulls and their cries for food, the people have become seagulls calling for more.
More! More! More! More! More!
Cries for more options, more features, more services, faster processors, more apps, more cores! Why? Why do we need more cores and faster processors? Why can?t developers of our mobile platforms make their operating systems work within the limits of the hardware? Apple does the best of this. In this world of quad and soon to be octa-core Android devices, Apple still sits at dual-core and is still toe to toe and better in some cases. Why do we need more? Apple finally changed the screen size of the iPhone and was immediately met by cries of it being too small, now offer multiple versions of the iPhone with different screen sizes, why isn?t it five inches, the next one is going to be five inches. Really? Why can no one be happy with the vast improvements the mobile world has made in the past decade. Brought into play by Blackberry and made fun by Apple and overrun by Samsung with gimmicks.
Everybody wants the next thing and as soon as it hits they are immediately calling for the next thing. The people are never satiated. The world is progressing too fast and no one can iterate fast enough to be far enough ahead to meet the demands of the people. We are still limited by the hardware. Is there no bounds? Is there no point where people can be happy with what he have and what they?ve been given to choose from? Some people are only just now upgrading to phones like the iPhone 4 and the Galaxy S2, yes the S2. Why? For these people, these phones do everything they need them to; they aren?t caught up in what the latest features are and what could come next. My dad is still using a Droid X2 and before that on T-Mobile a Garminfone. Yes, you read that right, a Garminfone.
There are enough phones, enough different phones, on the market now that should never be a need to want more. The newest is out now, and people should be content to wait patiently to see what new hardware was developed that can support the new features and speeds that they want. We have what we have, get over it. Operating systems can really only iterate as fast as the hardware. Until the hardware can support whatever science fiction needs people have that aren?t met, they will remain unmet. Developers of operating systems can only do so much with the hardware they have. When it can be done, it will be done, believe it. Until then, enjoy what you have.