Desktop: 0%
Laptop (MacBook Air): 15%
Tablet (iPad): 80%
Phone (iPhone): 5%
I still have my old, dead 2003 Toshiba laptop with Windows 7. Must remove the motherboard and take it to the recycling centre soon!
50% A - Desktop Dell Win 7 (work/home)
30% B - Tablet Nexus 10
01% C - Notebook Dell Vista (work email web)
02% D - Desktop Dell XP (music/web edit)
01% E - Restore (linux, multiboot)
15% F - Phone iphone 4
01% G - Android phone (not shown)
Router shows 19 addresses. Not counted : spouse and kid devices, such as two notebooks and two more iPhones.You are a full-time sysadmin!
I try to decommission systems quickly when something new comes along. One desktop, one media system (desktop), one laptop, one tablet, one phone. That's enough for me!
But right now I have a second phone with a European radio, and I'm kind of sysadmin for DW's desktop, phone and tablet. So that's nine things to administer. I try to keep the decommissioned systems in a state where I can power them on and have them still work (unlike the old days where I'd yank parts out of the old one and stick it in the new one). So the unplugged systems are still at least mental admin "baggage".
I am surprised at the number of desktops still in use. I associate those with corporate jobs, not retired people. We just retired to Vista desktops last year. They had not been used in a couple of years.
I purchased my latest business desktop more than a year ago. I knew that I would need something for the consulting work that was to come. If not for that, may have purchased a desktop.I am surprised at the number of desktops still in use. I associate those with corporate jobs, not retired people. We just retired to Vista desktops last year. They had not been used in a couple of years.
I am surprised at the number of desktops still in use. I associate those with corporate jobs, not retired people. We just retired to Vista desktops last year. They had not been used in a couple of years.
I feel most productive with a full sized keyboard, monitor, mouse and hardwired internet and power connections. I'm sure some folks with a nice powerful laptop really don't need a desktop though.
I am surprised at the number of desktops still in use. I associate those with corporate jobs, not retired people. We just retired to Vista desktops last year. They had not been used in a couple of years.
It can be both.
I have a nice powerful laptop (MacBook Pro), but at home it's connected to a large (24 inch) display and a full size keyboard, along with the usual peripherals.
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It can be both.
I have a nice powerful laptop (MacBook Pro), but at home it's connected to a large (24 inch) display and a full size keyboard, along with the usual peripherals.
If I want to take the laptop with me when I travel, it only takes a few seconds to simply disconnect a few plugs and off I go. Same for re-connecting it when I return. Got rid of my last desktop (iMac) machine four years ago.