Kory
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- Joined
- Nov 29, 2012
- Messages
- 28,941
- Reaction score
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can we just skip to the part where you tell us the acceptable alternative
the alternative to spending a thousand dollars on a phone?
buying any other phone.
can we just skip to the part where you tell us the acceptable alternative
the alternative to spending a thousand dollars on a phone?
buying any other phone.
y'all gonna get the new thousand dollar iPhone?
willing to spend $1000+ on nerd computer but not wizard technology that puts similar capability into one's hand
Fuck that noise. I'll take my free upgrade when I'm eligible.
-Middle American by phone, not by conspicuous consumption
$800 for six-year running investment
$1000 for maybe two-year running investment
one device can hold multiple TBs of data and render particle-based physics
the other holds GBs and renders Snapchat filters
>similar
Huh? Roommate was just a silly ha-ha way of referencing the woman who I live in sin with
can we just skip to the part where you tell us the acceptable alternative
TK, you got strong at an NBA game, which was very cool and chill but you're being not chill now worrying about what type of phone everyone has.
lol itc.
I'm not over financially, so I assume you're talking about time? Once it's built (a few hours) - the only hardware time requirements is replacing faulty components - infrequent with proper air circulation. I don't do a whole lot of programming either? Some python/social network analysis stuff. Are you holding that time against me?
With regards to phone life, American users held onto their smartphones for an average of 22.7 months before upgrading in 2016.
I fundamentally disagree with your final made-up statistic. At this point, if you still own a PC, you're probably using it for something past C&M. All the lay computer users migrated to mobile over the last few years.
Not sure why we're discussing my PC though. The point that Apple charges a premium still stands.