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I always thought iBooks, iMacs, etc would be owned by the same type of
people who bought VW Beatle cars and shopped at the Gap.
Myself I tend to like Thinkpads just because they usually seem to run
Linux well and feel okay to work with. Very professional I think.
I'd love one that was made of paper and was recyclable like they claim
will be out in a couple years. That is the kind of person I am. A bum
nomad wanna be. :)
*^*^*^*
Michael McGlothlin <EMAIL:PROTECTED>
http://www.kavlon.com
On Wed, 13 Jun 2001, Neil Bradshaw wrote:
> It really wasn't the colors that bothered me to be completely honest. It
> was the shape and the way the colors on it were used. I almost bought one
> last year, and I couldn't bring myself to do it. It just doesn't look
> professional. I feel like I could use it at home, but I'd feel silly with
> it in class or at home. I have no problem pulling out a titanium white
> laptop, though.
>
> The new iBook is really sleek. Everything is tightly integrated, yet it
> has Active Matrix as well as a full-sized keyboard. The fact that the
> screen is 12.1 inches didn't bother me at all. It seemed big enough to
> work just fine.
>
> I prefer the new iBook designs over the old one. Everyone's different
> though. I need something that is extremely portable, and with built-in
> 10/100, 56K, firewire, USB, VGA out, DVD, AirPort slot (which I don't have
> or need now) The thing is really light, too.
>
> I'll shut up about the iBook now.
>
> Regards,
> Neil
>
>
>
>
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