Tech Used to Be Bleeding Edge, Now it’s Just Bleeding | After a decade of scandals and half-assed product launches, people are no longer buying the future Big Tech is selling.::After a decade of scandals and half-assed product launches, people are no longer buying the future Big Tech is selling.
Please what info is it missing? I added the iPods for that reason.
Basically, I don’t think think monthly cost of ownership is a good metric for value.
I probably used an old cell phone maybe 3 hours a week. I use my smartphone at least 3 hours a day communicating with people, reading news, studying, games for kids, work, etc. I don’t think monthly cost of ownership reflects the value that those devices bring me. Your table needs a different column that measures the value more appropriately. Perhaps ownership cost per hour of usage?
You have another issue in that smartphones replace cameras, radios/Walkmen, maps, and even laptops In many cases. An iphone doesn’t just replace an old Nokia, it replaces all those other items as well.
I don’t think you need more rows, you need different columns.
Please what info is it missing
The entire android ecosystem
Very good pint.
Device Release Price Lifespan Monthly Cost of Ownership Release Date Nokia 3310 (Adjusted) $67.15 8 years Approximately $0.70 2000 5th Gen iPod (iPod Video) $299 6 years Approximately $4.15 2005 iPod Touch (7th Gen) $199 6 years Approximately $2.76 2019 MacBook Air (M1 chip) $999 5 years Approximately $16.65 2020 Google Pixel 5 (Base) $699 4 years Approximately $14.56 2020 iPhone 13 (Base Model) $699 4 years Approximately $14.56 2021 Samsung Galaxy S21 (Base) $799 4 years Approximately $16.65 2021 iPhone 13 Pro (Base Model) $999 4 years Approximately $20.81 2021 Apple Vision Pro $3,499 4 years Approximately $72.90 2024 Maybe add a popular budget android phone too as opposed to flag ships.