Yup, pretty annoying about it too. He doesn't simp for google anymore, at least.Was he also a 'Glasshole'? That was probably one of the products that shut down Google simps the hardest, from what I remember.
Yup, pretty annoying about it too. He doesn't simp for google anymore, at least.Was he also a 'Glasshole'? That was probably one of the products that shut down Google simps the hardest, from what I remember.
Mini discs actually were cool, and they were like Saturn in that they found a lot of success in JapanMy friend couldn't shut up about his mini disc.
It did sound cool though.
I don't have a friend, but I did know a person who assumed that this device was the revolution in mobiles.
Remember dedicated Aegia PhysX cards?
I remember arguing with someone at work who thought this was the big next thing and soon it will be standard on all PCs.
I correctly predicted that as GPU became more general purpose these kinds of tasks would just move there. Or just move back to CPU as they became more and more parelel.
This was back in 2024/2025
Laserdisc did have uncompressed audio and sounded far better than dvd. The picture was also almost as good as dvd on good prints too.I had a cinemafile friend that wouldn't shut up about how Laserdiscs were better in every way than DVDs.
I loved Windows Phone OS, but yea, the app support was a death knell for the platform. They were working on that compatibility layer that would allow Android apps to run natively on Windows Phone OS, but they never released it. Probably had lots of security issues and problems that they didn't want to spend money on by that point.
Sure, I guess in a few specific metrics you could argue that it was better, but the discs were huge and impractical to collect/store, and very fragile. It was just never gonna be a technology that caught on with the mass market. And I don't think it could have lived long enough to become a hot retro item like vinyl records, either.Laserdisc did have uncompressed audio and sounded far better than dvd. The picture was also almost as good as dvd on good prints too.
Vinyl isn't a format that lasts long either. Both vinyl and laserdiscs are analog technologies.Sure, I guess in a few specific metrics you could argue that it was better, but the discs were huge and impractical to collect/store, and very fragile. It was just never gonna be a technology that caught on with the mass market. And I don't think it could have lived long enough to become a hot retro item like vinyl records, either.
They actually DID pay for ports of apps. The problem with this strategy is how do you pay all 400,000 small devs on the App Store and Google Play? And for the big guys like Facebook, do you have to keep paying them forever to do more than just release the app once and then abandon it? Turns out, that's exactly what happened, and MS refused to keep paying. So the Facebook app never got updated and eventually stopped working entirely.Yeah, even something as simple as the stock messaging app was significantly better than the competition at the time.
The lack of third party apps though was infuriating. In retrospect Microsoft should have straight up paid to start porting popular apps because if they did they might still be a competitor.