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Web Digest > IT Corner > Articles & Reports
Phones, May Replace Laptops
Devices such as the Treo 600 mobile phone-computer from Palm Inc. unit Handspring, the Clie handheld computer from Sony Corp. , and others from Dell Inc. and Hewlett-Packard Co., all have either the ability to play digital music MP3 files, play movies, surf the Internet wirelessly, do e-mail, calendaring and more.People want their stuff wherever they go to check there mails and other stuff from intenet. For example, Apple Computer Inc.'s iPod now has a voice recorder attachment, can store thousands of digital pictures, and allows users to manage contacts, calendar events, to-do lists. It even boasts an alarm clock feature and games.These are, of course, all things that a new, modestly outfitted laptop computer can do now, but they are cumbersome and heavier to cart around than the handheld.
For a number of years, a series of laptops known as "transportables," or desktop replacement notebooks, have been available. They weigh anywhere from 8 to 12 pounds and can now have a display up to 17 inches in diameter.They can do just about everything a desktop can do.That desire for everything in one place extends beyond having one's documents, PowerPoint presentations, e-mail access, digital music and other content on just a laptop PC. The same trend that prompted consumers and businesses to flock to the notebook is now hitting users of cellular phones that also have small digital cameras in them. By next year hybrid camera phones will be able to shoot 1-megapixel pictures suitable for e-mailing to a friend and carry flash attachments.Within two years, some camera phones will boast at least 2-megapixel picture quality, good enough to print quality 4-inch by 6-inch pictures.Soon People were leaving their digital cameras at home because the camera phone is good enough.And when it comes to the digital living room, if a personal video recorder -- basically a high-capacity computer disk drive with program-recording software -- can wirelessly transmit digital video to a handheld or smart phone and manage your digital library, what need is there for a traditional PC? |