Friday, April 23, 2010

The Sporadic Blogger Pilot: Redefining Revolution

The Sporadic Blogger Pilot: Redefining Revolution

The sporadic blogger  thinks that people need someone to dictate  what is good, hip and sexy. Most people would leave this burden to the corporate companies who are raking money from  the cottage industry companies may have created. One obvious example is the birth of the Ipad. This is a revolutionary device because it only do one task at a time. It is a revolutionary device because it does not support flash. It is revolutionary because the Ipad is awkward to use when one has to do word processing, spreadsheets, excels and other productivity tasks. It is revolutionary because the task one can do on the Ipad, are easily done and more on a regular PC. It is revolutionary because as Antone Gonsalves, Information Week columnist, communicates that the components and other materials used in building the low-end 16 GB, Wi-Fi-only iPad cost Apple $250.60. Add manufacturing costs, and the device cost $259.60. It is revolutionary because Apple profits 50% on every Ipad sold, and it is revolutionary because Apple made the Ipad.

The sporadic blogger notices that the notion that early adopters of the Ipad are slaves to the great and mighty marketing and spinning techniques of a company with the hidden dubbed motto: "Be evil." This is a very noble notion. As the sporadic blogger communicate on the first paragraph, people would like companies to dictate and proselytize what is good, hip, and sexy. Apple devices are tools for world domination, marketing and deception are its masters. It seems that most companies are adapting to the new revolution that Apple establishes with the Ipad. Few example of the revolution may  anti-multitasking, anti-flash support, anti-productivity. This is the new revolution, and it is the Absolute right thing.

The Ipad revolution is one of the many example that most people are slaves to a corporation to whom they consider as an unerring demigod.The sporadic blogger thinks that people submitting themselves to a company is beneficial. After all, thinking for oneself has arguably run out of supply.

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