rocketpig said:
I've said a million times but hating a company and wishing ill on them is folly, particularly a company like Apple. They have driven the smartphone market to where it is today. Everyone else has been playing catch-up. All they're doing is making Google, Microsoft, and RIM (lulz) work harder to release better products. Siri is merely an extension of that continuing trend. Within a year, we'll see everyone pushing to release a competitor for it, making all smartphones just a little bit smarter and easier to use. We're just getting to the point where Google is starting to push back, forcing Apple to improve in areas of iOS that they've let stagnate for far too long. With compression and h264 codecs, you can have have a relatively slow internet connection and still stream 720p content. Here in the US, I have a 16Mb connection (real speeds of about 2MB) and I can stream high definition content just fine... in fact, I can stream two sources of HD content simultaneously (but just barely). Most people don't care about 1080p and can't tell the difference between it and 720p (outside of animation, I often struggle to see the difference). Internet connections are good enough now where most of the public can take advantage of hosting little or no local content in favor of streaming everything from an outside source. PS. Note the difference between Megabyte (MB) and Megabit (Mb) in connections. A Megabit is 1/8th of a Megabyte. |
I hate that Apple are so dominant and their fans so elitistic. Their dominance doesn't give enough room for everybody else. If they release iTV they're going to dominate the market and even Xbox TV might become an insignificant player. Hopefully I am wrong.
I buy your competition argument though. It's just sometimes hard to immediately see the advantages that come from competition.







