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The story I like to tell for the Newton is that it was launched before the technology was ready yet. Like the Sega Game Gear. Old video phones. All those tablets that launched before the iPad.

They’re good ideas, but they shipped a few years too early, and the technology to make them work well at a good price point wasn’t available until later. Like, the Sega Game Gear had a cool active matrix LCD screen, but it took six AA batteries and the batteries only lasted like four hours.



The Palm Pilot V had a dockable cell phone modem, but the connectivity wasn't integrated into the OS. It worked but only as a demonstration. Then Palm released a model with integrated data, but the BlackBerry came out the same year. You can be first and still if someone comes along with a much more compelling product, that's the end of you.

Google has a few years left as a search company, but their enshittification of results has doomed them to replacement by LLMs. They seem to have forgotten Google pushed out their predecessors by having the best search results. Targeted advertisements don't qualify.


>and the batteries only lasted like four hours

Still more than the OG Steam Deck today :)


Vastly depends on the game played and the settings. In a plane (so airplane mode, with Bluetooth headset) I played Hitman Absolution for 3 hours and still had 50%+ of the battery left. It was on minimal brightness because it was dark and didn't need more, but still.


Yeah, no need to take a (semi)joke literally and go all technical to debunk it. Though without optimizations, battery life on the deck was lucky to hit 2h at first before valve brought in updates and people learned they had to cap resolution and FPS to increase battery life.




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