The functionality of the XP has been brought into question. Do we
need to prize the tiniest over the more typically-sized gadget? Trying
to fix these miniscule techno-wonders may also be a daunting but
unnecessary challenge.
It’s new. It runs Windows XP and blends in PC features within the
palm of your hand. But is it really useful to have a smartphone so
small? The pocket-sized XPPhone blends smartphone, PC and mobile
Internet device into a do-all. Microsoft’s Windows XP Operating System
never had it so good. Or maybe not, you techno Dr. Know it all.
In the middle of the bug-sized device is a Geode LX chip, running at
533MHz and drawing less than a single watt of power as if it were
Picasso in a Spanish outhouse.
Enthusiasts proclaim that a demand exists for devices smaller than
netbooks that can deliver the functionality of a much larger PC.
Smartphones are changing into Internet surfers and readers of Word
documents. This thing may be pushing a similar “one-box” envelope. But
is it too laden with resources for such a Lilliputian contraption?
Some experts are daring to ask the fifty-cent question: “Why would
anyone want a phone that runs XP?” How often will you have to replace
its batteries? I’m thinking a mechanical version of Flomax on steroids
might be an apt comparison of what we’re dealing with here. Also,
personal computers have had their own issues running XP. Why make a
mechanical mini-me vulnerable to the same family of problems? The blue
screen of death comes to mind; only it buzzes and stings in a peculiar
annoying way because it’s so freaking little. Try to load Microsoft
Office on it if you’d like your own immediate cardiovascular event as a
way to put frosting on frustration. Add some of the other components of
the Windows arsenal and you might just be asking for a convulsion.
There’s also a follow-up fifty-cent question. What if it breaks?
Isn’t any repairing a questionable proposition if the unit’s
functionality is questionable in the first place? Makeshift repairs
might accomplish more harm than good. How can you tell what “works” if
you can barely see it? What about warranties? It seems that an
independent repair shop might be your only solution, but make certain
that the techno-nerds employed as service technicians there have their
magnifying tools handy.
Jeff Gasner is with CPR-Cell Phone repair. The leader in Cell Phone
Repair and iPod repair offering cell phone repair services nationwide.
To learn more about Cell phone repair, ipod repair, cell repair services, visit Chicagocellrepair.com.
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