300lb. Samoan said:
I believe you misunderstand my point, which is that one day a Tablet will be as powerful as today's PCs. It's obvious that a desktop system, unencumbered by the practical limitations of portability, will always be more powerful. But that innovation trickles down over time, which is why cell phones now are every bit as powerful as desktop systems from just a few years ago.
And please, stop with the condescending remarks and lectures about PC technology - I've been a PC user since I was 5 and have learned all I care to about desktop technology. I do not care what someone overclocked a Pentium to 10+ years ago, that couldn't hardly be less relevant to what I'm talking about. Desktops will always be cutting edge, that's why we love them, but the average user doesn't have a desktop - they either have a laptop or a tablet now.
Multiple edits: sorry about that
I understand your point, I'm trying to tell you that believing in that point is shortsighted. See, my graphing calculator is as powerful as a PC from the late 80s. My laptop as powerful as a six or seven year old desktop. These machines maybe quite capable of running games from those times, but they are not capable of playing the current generations of games or doing whatever the current 'needed' computation is.
The benchmark constantly changes and it always WILL constantly change. If you agree that desktops will always be cutting edge, I fail to see how you can make a logical leap to that cutting edge being obsolete. You seem to be making the assumption that we will be playing current games, or games designed for current desktop machines in the future. We won't. And since the desktop is the arena of 'cutting edge' then we will playing those future games on future desktops.
I apologize if I appeared to be condescending, that was not my intent. My point with the anecdoctal history about overclocking was to point out how far progress in the PC desktop market has come, and how, at every step of the way people have constantly presumed that there would be no more, or that because the hardware could run the current software well enough, there would be no need for any further improvement. Which has been proven time, and time again to be false.