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New Poll: Are you ready to do most of your computing on a netbook?

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Last week's announcement of Google Chrome OS is another move in the direction of netbooks and the cloud. Software as a service providers are working hard to move you away from the desktop and client-side apps and towards hosted services for your applications. Personally, I don't feel like hosted applications are mature enough to work totally in the cloud, but they are improving all of the time. So, what do you think? Please let us know by answering our poll question and leaving comments where necessary.

Are you ready to do most of your computing on a netbook? Please click here to vote.

Read more from Rich Tretola. Rich Tretola's Atom feed richtretola on Twitter

Comments

11 Comments

Mike said:

I think netbooks is just a fad. The cellphone will soon replace it. Netbooks won't last longer than 3-6 years. I personally perfer a laptop to take on trips.

Garth Braithwaite said:

I'd need two computers - a netbook for the little side stuff and the full laptop/desktop for development and work.

Benji Smith said:

Under-priced, under-powered laptops (some with small screens) have existed for at least ten years. Nothing special about that.

The only thing that defines the current "netbook" category is that a few of those low-powered laptops have fallen below the magical $500 price point without being excruciatingly slow to use, as long as you're only doing some light web browsing.

Three or four years in the future, lightweight portables at the $300 price point will be fully capable of gameplay and multimedia, and will therefore shed the "netbook" moniker.

To me, Google's strategy is ridiculous: developing an operating system for a form-factor defined by limitations that will evaporate in a few years' time.

Reminds me of the set-top "internet appliance" devices that were being (unsuccessfully) marketed in the mid 1990's. A few people bought them, for a few years, but before long the notion of spending $400 on an inherently crippled device became laughable. As desktop computer prices reached the $500 - $800 price range, no one was willing to lay down the benjamins for an internet device that couldn't support general-purpose computing tasks.

Rich Tretola said:

Similar to when iPhone first launched, I believe that once Apple enters the netbook market it will change the game again.

Josh Tynjala said:

I'm happy with my 15 inch MacBook Pro. I don't see any value in owning a laptop that's smaller. If I need to check my email or do some quick browsing, my iPhone can do it. Both devices are portable, and I don't think I can ever see myself in a situation where I'll feel that something sized in the middle would be better.

Steve Howard said:

I plan to be able to do a lot of work on my new netbook - but not by using cloud solutions. I do not and can not trust them - on a personal level and on a business/security level.

todd said:

As a developer, I'll never have enough processor power, therefore as long as something more powerful exists, I'll prefer to use that as my main computer.

However, most business users will eventually be able to do everything they need on a simple portable phone/computer that drops into a docked keyboard and screen.

ryan said:

@mike netbooks are not a fad at all... they are here to stay and i hope to see them remain for sometime...

yeah i might not want to code entire flex apps, great little tool for doing all sorts of other stuff... need to log a client meeting on basecamp... i'd rather use my netbook...

netbooks even give ebook readers a run for their money... you can do so much with a netbook and the price is not that bad...

i know my parents laptops are a total waste all they do is check email and surf the web, that makes netbooks the perfect computer for them...

yeah i might not be able to carry it in my pocket but its light enough to carry in my backpack, even my girlfriend loves them beause they actually fit inside her bag... on a netbook you can experience the web in all its glory including flash, a far better net experience than an iphone in my opinion...

@rich btw apple did enter the netbook arena with macbook air and completely failed because of they just didn't get the fact that people don't want spend that much money on a technology that is supposed to be really cheap and accessible...

would be cool to see apple catch a wake up and significantly drop the price of the macbook air...

Ross R said:

I am, for the most part, already doing most of my work in the cloud. The rest I am ready to move there, and am just waiting to be able to.

I feel a "netbook" is really just a cheap, small laptop. I remember in the late 90's when my neighbor had one of these (they called it a booktop then, and it was really expensive rather than cheap) So, regardless, I am ready and willing to move to the region, and would already be there if I had the extra money to throw around.

james braselton said:

HI THERE MY ANSWER IS NO OR NOT UNTILL FASTER SSD NETBOOKS COME OUT OR NETBOOKS USEING 10,000 RPM VOLOCI-RAPTOR OR A 15,000 RPM CHEETA FROM SEAGATE OR HAS A HYBRID FLASH OR SSD WITH A HARD DRIVE A LASER HARD DRIVE AT 160 TERABYTES PER SECOND RACE TRACK MEMORY NANOSPHERS AT 2.5 TIMES FASTER THEN LIGHT SPEED OR TURBO MEMORY BECUASE A 4,2000 5,400 AND 7,200 RPM HARD DRIVES ARE TOO SLOW

ryan said:

THANKS JAMES! I BUT COULD YOU SPEAK UP, I COULDN'T HEAR YOU UNDER THE NOISE OF THOSE 15,000 RPM SPINNING HARD DRIVES YOU MENTIONED!

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