Which covers a significant proportion of the computer using world. An increasing number of younger computer users I know have started to view facebook as the internet, for instance. Everything they do stems from that one site.
Yes, but are they going to stay that way? The specific reason I was exempting pre-adults is because there's a lot of things they don't have to be concerned with at their age that a desktop or laptop is currently much better-suited for than a tablet. That is likely to change as they grow up.
Err, yes it does blur that line. As does the Asus that I pointed out to you previously. Your arbitrary and mobile set of complaints is just that. Oh look, moving goal posts!
Uh, I was complaining about everything you mentioned within my first couple posts in this thread.
I'll bet you were one of these people who bitched about Netbooks being useless because they weren't well suited to using photoshop too when they first came out.
No, I was one of the people who waited through the roughness of the early models and then bought one, because it was small and inexpensive but full-featured enough to fit my needs (and in fact my Eee handles Photoshop quite nicely.) In fact, it remains my primary computer to this day, and the only PC I use regularly outside of my workstation at my job. You seem to have an erroneous mental image of me as some sort of MIPS-hungry power-user just because I think that tablets and smartphones are underpowered for modern computing.
Will they take over today? Doubtful, though even then there are probably some users who could get on. But consider how far netbooks have come, they're now touting dualcore processors and in the high end models very respectable gpus in the shape of ION. How long do you really think it's going to be before tablets, which in their current guise are first gen effectively begin to update and improve?
Again, I don't doubt that tablet horsepower will improve in the future. But so will desktops (and thus, so will the horsepower requirements for up-to-date applications, though this is a trend that I myself find annoying,) and there are still key differences (once again: KEYBOARD) that will make them less well-suited to many tasks than a netbook, mid-range laptop, or modest desktop.
The writing is on the wall for the big box system and as in another thread, whilst lifestylePCs, laptops and netbooks are leading the way currently, it'll be mobile devices that eventually come to the fore. Consider the capabilities of even a budget Android smartphone these days.
Okay, see, once again, when I talk about desktops I'm
not talking about big-iron liquid-cooled gaming rigs - I'm talking about
anything that is not portable, including what you're calling "lifestyle PCs." You can keep throwing around that term all you want, but that won't make it
A. relevant to the discussion, or
B. not a meaningless marketroid buzzword.
And you still seem to be under the impression that "will become more popular" necessarily means "will overtake and replace everything else." Ownership and regular use of a tablet and a desktop PC are anything but mutually exclusive, and I suppose it's even possible that some people might use a laptop and a tablet concurrently (though I still can't fathom why they would.) Is there room for tablets becoming more popular in the future? Quite possibly. Does that mean that they are the sum total of the future of computing? Hell no! Does that even mean that they will be the primary computing devices of the public? Not necessarily - we'll have to wait and see what happens to know.