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Partly Cloudy ~ High: 85°F ~ Low: 67°F Saturday, May 18, 2013 |
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The difficulty of predictionsPosted Thursday, April 5, 2012, at 4:02 PM
I enjoy John C. Dvorak's columns in various computer magazines and web sites and always look forward to his frequent appearances on Leo Laporte's This Week In Tech podcast. But in a recent Forbes article about the seeming demise of Blackberry, someone pointed out a 2007 column by Dvorak as an example of how difficult the world of technology can be to predict, and how rapidly it changes:
These phones go in and out of style so fast that unless Apple has half a dozen variants in the pipeline, its phone, even if immediately successful, will be passé within 3 months. Dvorak was sure that Apple's soon-to-be-introduced product would be a flash in the pan, unable to compete with then-dominant Motorola and Nokia. Something called the iPhone. Comments Showing most recent comments first [Show in chronological order instead] |
John I. Carney is city editor of the Times-Gazette.
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I agree with Johm I got the Kindle Fire for my birthday and I love it.. I too seem to be reading more now than I ever did. I am just finishing up the Hunger Games and all I can say is WOW
Seriously. I bought the basic $79 Kindle with part of my tax refund, and it's one of the best purchases I've ever made. I found out today that a co-worker's spouse has just gotten one, and I was so excited, giving him all the links where you can find out which books are free or on sale, or where you can borrow Kindle books through the library. My brother in North Carolina feels the same way you do, but the Kindle has been great for my reading.
John, John, say it isn't so!
I have to say, I love my Kindle -- and I've done more reading in the past two months than I did in the past two years.
I can understand, I am still betting on the printed word against the Kindle and such.
I don't know. Of course, I doubt he was the only one expressing such opinions.
Did he ever acknowledge his lack of futuristic vision?