 espaethDigital PlumberPremium,MVM join:2001-04-21 Minneapolis, MN kudos:2 Reviews:
·Clear Wireless
| reply to Matt
Re: they aren't going after the legal stuff said by Matt:Actually, yes. Dell, HP, IBM, Lenovo and Apple have all reported record growth and minus the past couple years, record sales. Many of those sales were to both business and personal customers that already had a computer to begin with. You don't honestly believe we went from an average of 0.5 computers per household to 2+ computers per household in 7 years, do you? |
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 MattAll noise, no signal.Premium join:2003-07-20 Jamestown, NC kudos:12 | said by espaeth:said by Matt:Actually, yes. Dell, HP, IBM, Lenovo and Apple have all reported record growth and minus the past couple years, record sales. Many of those sales were to both business and personal customers that already had a computer to begin with. You don't honestly believe we went from an average of 0.5 computers per household to 2+ computers per household in 7 years, do you? I personally know 4 households that did. Mine went from 1 to 3, so yes. |
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 espaethDigital PlumberPremium,MVM join:2001-04-21 Minneapolis, MN kudos:2 Reviews:
·Clear Wireless
| said by Matt:I personally know 4 households that did. Mine went from 1 to 3, so yes. Again, I'm not saying things aren't improving, but we're not to a household average of 1+ computers yet in the US. Heck, according to a study done this year about 20% of US head of households have never sent an email.
Source: »newsroom.parksassociates.com/art···_id=5067 |
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 MattAll noise, no signal.Premium join:2003-07-20 Jamestown, NC kudos:12 | said by espaeth:said by Matt:I personally know 4 households that did. Mine went from 1 to 3, so yes. Again, I'm not saying things aren't improving, but we're not to a household average of 1+ computers yet in the US. Heck, according to a study done this year about 20% of US head of households have never sent an email. Source: » newsroom.parksassociates.com/art···_id=5067 What does 20% of households never sending an email have to do with whether the average number of households with more than 1 computer has increased? |
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 | reply to espaeth said by espaeth:said by maartena:But you should also look at the bigger picture. These days, an average American family has 2 to 3 PC's, sometimes even more. According to Census bureau in August 2000 only 51% of US households had one or more computers, and only 41% of households had Internet access. Granted it's been 8 years, but do you think the other half of the country went out and bought not just 1, but multiple computers *AND* high speed Internet in the last 8 years? Source: » www.census.gov/prod/2001pubs/p23-207.pdf Bought? Not necesarilly. Some did, prices have come way down since 2000. But what do you think has happened to all of the computers that have been replaced during that time? Many have been given to friends or relatives who didn't have a computer. I know plenty of people on welfare that have 3 or 4 computers (including laptops) and broadband internet. (And we'll leave the issue of whether welfare should pay for brodband for another topic). And in most cases, those 3 or 4 computers are all better than what I had in 2000 (after all, a 1 GHz machine is pretty well considered obsolete now, but was the top end in 2000). |
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