Tech companies are now superfluous and a dime a dozen. This AI bubble should wipe out enough of them and leave us with a manageable level of dystopic tech goons. Then we can work on tightening up the foundation with planning that is beneficial to society, not filling up pockets of a few to finally end up in an enshittification vacuum.
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Then we can work on tightening up the foundation with planning that is beneficial to society, not filling up pockets of a few to finally end up in an enshittification vacuum.
And how do you propose we do that? More protests?
Asus driving slow and still missing the warning signs.
Uhg. Just die, AI. It's so anti-consumer at this point.
I had no idea Asus made Android phones.
They made Asus Zenfone and ROG phone.
Mostly gaming focused ones. They were not very good for their price anyway.
They seem good on paper - every time I look for a phone on gsmarena's phone finder I get a few of their rog phones in the results. But then I look at the price tag and the gamer aesthetic, and I ignore them.
Asus has always just chased after the short term goals. This reminds me when they suddenly made android tablets, and mini pcs, and every stupid tech fad. They're always after the latest fad, they release a subpar product, and then it fizzles.
they release a subpar product, and then it fizzles.
I'm disappointed they're jumping on AI bullshit. But I have to wholeheartedly disagree with you about the "sub par product".
- My Asus desktop has been chugging along for a decade.
- My Asus Chromebook Flip has been going with no issues for at least four or five (though it's long since been flipped to Linux)
- The Asus laptop I had before THAT is older than the desktop and quite happily living it's retirement as a home-theatre PC connected to my television.
I have quite literally never had Asus hardware break down on me.
On the other hand they seem to be the only one alongside lenovo that tries to do something different with laptops. Like dual monitor laptops. They've been at that for years and keep improving.
But maybe I'm misunderstanding what a fad is, and I'm just easily fooled by gimmicks lol
Asus also had a smartphone that you could dock to a tablet screen and transform your phone into a tablet. That was like 10+ years ago.
Oh yeah I remember that. Along with Motorola back then
It's funny how everyone is trying to shift towards AI when the most hyped smartphone atm is one with a physical keyboard by the blackberry designers
Is it? Because I work in mobile app development so I’m surrounded by phone nerds and I haven’t seen any hype about it at all.
Any other phones that are really hyped? They're all the same
No. Like you said it’s all the same. Not much interesting going on at the moment.
When the new super thin iPhone launched there was a little bit of interest, as in: people had to check it out and see how thin it was, and then everyone was like ‘yeah, it’s super thin but so what?’.
So arguably, since the bar is low, the keyboard phones are by definition the most hyped smartphone?
Nah, there is definitely more hype around the launch of a new iPhone. I think some of you guys are guilty of living in a bubble here, the Clicks Communicator received nowhere near the level of attention or interest of the iPhone 17 Pro. It's like 22+ million views of the iPhone trailer vs 700+k for the Communicator.
No, those aren’t even on the radar. Not low hype but zero interest.
The only thing that has some people paying attention are foldables but even that is meh.
The iPhone Air is actually surprisingly nice. The drawback of horrible speakers is a deal breaker though.
It feels nice in the hand but at the end of the day it’s just another iPhone.
It's such a humbling moment, to see the company that revolutionized PCs with their EEE netbooks come to a slow end, becoming the lemming follower (and seeing that from Lemmy, no less).
If I'm thankful for one thing in the IT sphere, it's the end of the netbook era. Those machines should never have been made in the first place.
While the form factor was great in theory, the performance was lacking, and the cooling was inadequate.
Yeah, my first laptop was an Eee PC and it was pretty terrible. I have a soft spot for it but it couldn't do much. I played Baldur's Gate I and II on it, though. Very fond memories of staying up in bed late at night traversing those worlds on the tiny screen.
True, true - but they shocked the marked into drastically lowering prices for small form factor laptops. Until the EEE came out, anything under 3 lbs was thousands of dollars and considered premium hardware. ASUS showed there is a market for cheap, small, lightweight laptops.
come to a slow end
In what way? Their laptops are still pretty good and even though they are overpriced, their PC components seem to be doing well despite that.
It's not about the current state, it's about deciding on an AI-first approach. And even there, it's not that in itself, but the fact the erstwhile innovator is now just a bandwagon follower unable to see the signs the bandwagon is going down the hill.
What in the Devil's name are "A.I. glasses"?
A means to collect even more personal information for sale to data brokers.
Smart glasses with a rebrand.
I'd be wary of smart glasses though, they're the holy grail of data harvesting. Companies will be able to see exactly what holds people's attention, what they look at most, what tempts them most, as well as see any personal information you look at, what physical goods you own and interact with, etc.
There's a reason Google chased it so hard, and why companies like Meta are trying to do it now.
And people basically just used it to film themselves fucking and awkwardly record social situations without consent. Hence the users got the name glassholes.
While the snark is very much deserved, it's most likely augmented reality glasses. Either providing virtual screens like say XReal or Viture, thus smaller and less cumbersome than Apple Vision. Or something a lot more wearable like the Meta Rayban sunglasses with POV camera and speakers.
They can cram any kind of AI fluff in there.