Old resistive touch screen tech can't be compared to modern capacitive ones.
Old resistive touch screen tech can't be compared to modern capacitive ones.
Hm...
Maybe I should just say this:
Virtually all "new" technology that arrives in the sector at any given time has been around for a few decades at least.
The only tech that becomes commercially available is the kind of tech that's so whittled down that no (normie, at least) typical person could feasibly be all that competent with it (competent, in this case, meaning able to do something that isn't well understood by most, if not all, Militaries, Governments and Royalty).
I see no reason for any intellectually honest person to expect any of [them] would allow us one of their toys that they haven't grown bored with yet.
Hm...
Maybe I should just say this:
Virtually all "new" technology that arrives in the sector at any given time has been *around* for a few decades at least.
The only tech that becomes commercially available is the kind of tech that's so whittled down that no (normie, at least) typical person could feasibly be all that competent with it (competent, in this case, meaning able to do something that isn't well understood by most, if not all, Militaries, Governments and Royalty).
I see no reason for any intellectually honest person to expect any of [them] would *allow* us one of their toys that they haven't grown bored with yet.
(post is archived)