• JokeDeity@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    I’ve hated tablets since they first came out and never really changed on that. It’s just a miserable way for me to do anything when I have a phone and computer already. I would be into a Kindle for reading on eink, but outside of that I can’t stand tablets.

      • triclops6@lemmy.ca
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        1 year ago

        Most --> moet autocorrect suggests you are a combination of French, a drinker, or rich

        I have no dog in the tablet trace however

      • kratoz29@lemm.ee
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        1 year ago

        because they don’t need space for a keyboard.

        You know, that is fair, but the lack of a physical keyboard on a tablet is what hinders my good experience with them.

        Yeah, I like to browse or read comics/manga on my iPad, but sooner or later it is gonna be time to type, and I can’t do it in a natural way just like I can from my phone (which should be the device I use to type the most).

        Sure, you can use a BT keyboard or some other attachment, but that kinda breaks the portability of it.

    • TurtleTourParty@midwest.social
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      1 year ago

      If small phones were still a thing I could see myself getting a 7 or 8" tablet again (RIP Nexus 7) but with 6+" screens being the norm there’s no point.

      I do love my kobo libre 2 for reading but also wish it was smaller.

    • Pxtl@lemmy.ca
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      1 year ago

      e-ink isn’t (edit: good) color.

      Tablets are the ideal form factor for things that would traditionally require a large, full-color book. That is: passing around a photo album, reading magazines, textbooks, comics, playing turn-based games like board-games and strategy games. If you use a stylus they’re excellent for things that require free-form pen-and-paper like math homework and creating art.

      Now, when they were a $600 luxury item that didn’t really make sense as a product. But now that they’re like $150 for a solidly good tablet they’re absolutely a worthwhile purchase for those use-cases.

    • Captain Aggravated
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      1 year ago

      Back in 2014, I had a Samsung Galaxy S4 Mini, a 4-inch phone, and a 15.6" Dell laptop. That size of phone was difficult to do anything important on especially with no slide-out keyboard. There just wasn’t a lot of real estate for texting and emailing but it could do it. And laptops…you need to set up a station to use a laptop. Find a table or chair or something and spend a minute settling in. My tablet had a larger screen, louder speakers, it was easier to hold because it actually had some bezel, and the battery was excellent.

      Now that I have a 5+ inch phone, whatever a Galaxy S10e is, a tablet is less useful.