September 01, 2009, 2:31 PM — Why do some IT people get so upset about netbooks? Story after story from “real IT” people accuse netbooks of trying to take over the world by fraud or trickery or magic. What IT pundits, like the writer of Forget Netbooks, Desktops Rule, forget is that "normal” people don't care about ideology when they buy a netbook, they care about price, portability, and getting their work done. If a netbook does that for them, why does that upset the IT people?
If you want to play modern PC games, like the writer of the latest negative netbook slam, then buy a desktop. Want to have multiple monitors on your system? A desktop does that, a netbook doesn't. Want to encode video, like our snobbish writer? A netbook is not the tool for that job.
The key point these netbook haters forget is that smart people choose the tool for the job, not adjust the job to fit the tool. If a netbook does what you need, buy a netbook. If you play games and edit video, buy a high powered, and high priced, desktop. Pick the tools for the task at hand.
Hey, Mr. Desktop, how easy is it to put your desktop on the tray table in the airline seat when you travel? How easy it throw your desktop into a backpack so you can check your e-mail when at the coffee shop?
There is no perfect computer for every job you might ever need to do. There are, however, excellent choices for specific jobs. Don't look now, but your job may be handled perfectly well by a netbook.















