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TECH SPACE
SciTechTalk: Are PCs desktop dinosaurs?
by Jim Algar
Washington DC (UPI) Aug 12, 2012

disclaimer: image is for illustration purposes only

Read a good review of a desktop PC system lately? In fact, read anything at all about a desktop PC system lately? Probably not.

Those who write about the tech world today go where the excitement is -- smartphones, tablets, laptops and such. So where does that leave the humble PC to which we grant a considerable amount of our desktop real estate?

There are those who argue the big desktop tower and its peripherals are going the way of the dinosaur.

Certainly sales are slowing as the PC reaches commodity status, purchased with little thought to anything except the lowest possible price.

"Who out there now needs a PC and doesn't [already] have one?" one analyst asked.

So will we abandon them, turning all our computing needs over to the smartphones and the tablets?

Permit me to suggest we won't, and to offer at least one reason that's likely sitting on your desktop right now.

The configuration of a desktop PC has changed very little since IBM debuted the first "personal" computer, its model 5150, in 1981.

There's the tower, of course, and a monitor, probably a printer, and for input a mouse and -- fanfare, please -- my offering for why we will always want to have a desktop PC around: the keyboard.

Bear with me, if you will, while I rhapsodize on a seemingly mundane activity: text input.

Need to compose an e-mail? Any smartphone can do it, although the tiny on-screen keyboard will demand a bit of care as you single-digit or swipe your way through the creation of your message.

A tablet's on-screen QWERTY keyboard is easier, and can even offer two-handed touch typing, if a bit awkwardly in your lap.

So, granted, nobody really needs a PC to e-mail or use Twitter.

But how about that book report for high school English class?

No one's going to try that on a smartphone or even a tablet (although a number of intrepid reporters have over the years filed a story or two by BlackBerry). For that you're going to have to move up to a laptop, at least, with its physical keyboard.

Although it must be said laptop keyboards can vary widely in ease of use -- or lack of it. You wouldn't want to keyboard "War and Peace" on a laptop.

But what if that's exactly what you want to do? Not write "War and Peace," of course, but what if you're intent on creating the next Great American Novel?

I suggest it will be the dinosaur to the rescue in the form of your desktop PC and most particularly its full-size, typewriter-form-factor keyboard.

People who write for a living, who pound out thousands of keystrokes day in and day out, want -- demand -- a keyboard that will let them speedily and accurately accomplish just that.

Admittedly, keyboards sold with desktop PCs can vary in quality, in their "touch and feel," which is why the Holy Grail for those seeking a good computer keyboard is one that hasn't been manufactured for more than 20 years.

I refer to the IBM Model M keyboard, first manufactured in 1984 when IBM was still making its own PCs before turning the market over to the Dells, the Compaqs and the Hewlett-Packards that have become today's generic PCs.

Known colloquially as the "clicky keyboard" and prized by heavy keyboard users for its tactile feedback, they're a staple of eBay auctions to this day and many are still going strong on desktops after nearly 30 years.

Yes, they're dinosaurs, like the PCs they came with, but I pounded out the keystrokes for this piece on one.

I rest my case, and my dinosaur PC is not going away anytime soon, thank you very much.

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RIM off the hook for $147 mln in US patent case
San Francisco (AFP) Aug 9, 2012 - Research In Motion (RIM) will not have to pay a $147.2 million damages award after an American judge tossed out a jury verdict in a patent case brought by Mformation Technologies.

US District Chief Judge James Ware late Wednesday issued an order stating "there was no legally sufficient evidentiary basis on which a reasonable jury could have found for Mformation on the issue of infringement."

Ware also endorsed a motion by RIM that would call for a retrial of the case before a new jury in the event a higher court overturn's his ruling.

"We appreciate the judge's careful consideration of this case," RIM chief legal officer Steve Zipperstein said after the Canada-based company learned of Ware's ruling on Thursday.

"RIM did not infringe on Mformation's patent and we are pleased with this victory."

Edison, New Jersey-based software firm Mformation sued RIM in 2008 in US District Court in San Francisco, claiming it had disclosed details of its technology to RIM during licensing discussions.

After choosing to not buy a license, RIM modified its software to include Mformation's patented systems allowing companies to manage workers' mobile devices from an enterprise server, Mformation said in its complaint.

RIM denied any wrongdoing and said the patents were invalid.

A jury in California came to a unanimous verdict in July backing Mformation's claim that RIM used the firm's technology for remotely controlling and managing wireless devices.

Ware said in his ruling that "the jury's verdict as to infringement is against the clear weight of the evidence."

RIM saw the legal reverse as evidence that the current patent system leads to expensive and unwarranted litigation and urged that it be reformed.

"The purpose of the patent system is to encourage innovation, but the system is still too often exploited in pursuit of other goals," Zipperstein said.



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San Francisco (AFP) Aug 10, 2012
The perils of modern dependence on Internet-linked gadgets and digitally-stored memories remained a hot topic on Friday in the wake of a hack that wiped clean a Wired reporter's devices. Mat Honan laid out at wired.com in gripping detail how his "digital life was destroyed" right down to irreplaceable photos of his baby daughter. Honan next week is to share his quest to repair the damage. ... read more


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