I did, $400for a $99 laptop with the bottom half ripped off, discreet video removed, and the sound quality of an alarm clock speaker..not sure how else I can express that "paying more for less" is a bad thing.
and for the argument "how much power do I need exactly" sure you don't need all that power, but if you can buy all that power for x amount, or spend that same amount of money for 1/10th of that power..how is the latter option a good call?
say Lowes had a 1/2 horse cordless drill for $99 bucks, and one that could barely screw in a drywall screw for $99 bucks. who in the right mind would go "I don't need the extra power, the less powerful one, is a better deal". just because its electronics doesn't mean the "value to power ratio" isn't applicable to it also.
not saying I wouldn't get one as a play toy...or that people FIND a use for them,but until the price comes into the "gadget toy' range of $100 bucks for one that doesn't slow to a crawl running more than 3 applications at once, its an overpriced, gimmicky gadget that has no real purpose other than "paying more money for the convenience of having less power on hand".
hell for 400 bucks I could hire a guy to hold a pdf and read it to me, or transcript whatever notes I want to take while I lay on the couch if that's all I needed a tablet for.
but to each their own, 400 bucks to save from walking 10 feet to the PC, or reaching for a smart phone to type something, or 400 bucks to do what a $50 portal DVD player can do seems a bit carefree on your purchasing ideas.
but as your said its thier own money, people still pay the extra cost at walmart for a crappy PC for the "convenience" of not having to put one together for the same price. doesn't mean I don't see them as wasting money also.
and for the argument "how much power do I need exactly" sure you don't need all that power, but if you can buy all that power for x amount, or spend that same amount of money for 1/10th of that power..how is the latter option a good call?
say Lowes had a 1/2 horse cordless drill for $99 bucks, and one that could barely screw in a drywall screw for $99 bucks. who in the right mind would go "I don't need the extra power, the less powerful one, is a better deal". just because its electronics doesn't mean the "value to power ratio" isn't applicable to it also.
not saying I wouldn't get one as a play toy...or that people FIND a use for them,but until the price comes into the "gadget toy' range of $100 bucks for one that doesn't slow to a crawl running more than 3 applications at once, its an overpriced, gimmicky gadget that has no real purpose other than "paying more money for the convenience of having less power on hand".
hell for 400 bucks I could hire a guy to hold a pdf and read it to me, or transcript whatever notes I want to take while I lay on the couch if that's all I needed a tablet for.
but to each their own, 400 bucks to save from walking 10 feet to the PC, or reaching for a smart phone to type something, or 400 bucks to do what a $50 portal DVD player can do seems a bit carefree on your purchasing ideas.
but as your said its thier own money, people still pay the extra cost at walmart for a crappy PC for the "convenience" of not having to put one together for the same price. doesn't mean I don't see them as wasting money also.
