Once again, an article on Tech Republic got me thinking.
Specifically, it was the following lines at the end of the
article.
‘Between now and the next "crucial holiday buying
season," it's imperative that PC makers who want to avoid that fate put
together product lineups that aren't so, you know, PC-like.’
This got me to thinking about the whole concept of the PC,
and what a post-PC era might be.
First, I didn’t buy the post-PC era BS when Steve Jobs said
it, and I still don’t…well, maybe not.
PCs are not going anywhere. We
are going to be using PCs for the next several decades. There is still a need for powerful desktop
PCs.
The problem is that most of us are learning that we don’t
really need a PC for most of what we have done on a PC for the last couple of
decades. We really do not need PCs to
surf the web, to check our email, check Facebook, watch a video or two. Netflix and Hulu Plus are both available on
tablets and smartphones (Hulu too, if you work at it). Some tablets even have HDMI ports, so you can
push it to your TV. You can even do Word
Processing on a tablet, if you add a keyboard.
It is beyond these simple tasks where I start to see the
weakness of my tablet, but I do not do them very often. Picture editing is possible, but I find
nothing to match Paint.net, which I have on my PC (it’s free). But, as I said, I do not need Paint.net very
often.
I can easily imagine a future where there is one PC in my
house. Right now there are 4. As a family, we have not made the switch to
tablets. My son likes PC games too much,
and I am the only one with a tablet. But,
I can imagine each of us with our own tablet, and one PC for the things that
require a PC. I cannot yet imagine not
having a PC at home.
The PC has dominated for the last two decades because of its
versatility. It could be anything. It could be a lightweight portable for
hauling across the country. It could be
a multimedia machine for listening to music, watching videos, even recording
and producing them both. It could be a
graphics workstation, handling the largest pictures with ease. It became our window to the internet, to
email and webpages, to social networking and Wikipedia and all those other
things. For many, that window to the
internet is really all a PC was…at home.
That job is being taken over by smartphones and tablets.
I quoted the end of the article above, but I am now going to
quote the beginning.
“PCs are for work, tablets are for fun.”
And he quickly followed with…
“No one climbed on Santa's lap and asked for a new laptop.
They wanted a Kindle or an iPad, or maybe even a cheap Android tablet, all
of which cost less than a PC and are easier to wrap.”
Tablets were the hot gift of the season. Now, it could be that tablets are just this
season’s Tickle Me Elmo, but I don’t think so.
The momentum has shifted away from PCs towards tablets, but the real
momentum is for the hearts and minds of users.
Lots of people still use PCs, but people don’t want PCs. They may still need them, but that need is
like how some people actually need Minivans.
They may need it, but it is not what they want, what they desire, what
they dream about.
So, maybe we have entered the post-PC era. The era when the PC slips from being an
object of desire, like a sports car, and becomes the tool that we use because we
need it, like the Minivan.