When Laptops become Hardcore

Skeptics in the 1950s wouldn’t believe of a phone that we could carry along anywhere we want. Nor could they imagine handheld devices that could allow us to listen to music, write mail, or even read books. Now, with this new technology being developed by Lenovo, are we going to be skeptics as well? Lenovo, the Chinese company that recently bought out IBM’s Thinkpad, is developing a killer of a laptop. Hence, to see them develop this hardcore laptop technology could be either a cheap AD campaign, or it could be the reality of our dreams.

Lenovo magicJust what do these controversial Lenovo tapes show us? Well, nothing particularly spectacular. We have seen coffee being spilt over a laptops before. Yet unlike the usual laptop, this Lenovo laptop managed to survive this incident without bursting a circuit. More so, we’ve seen holographic images before. But to see a laptop projecting holographic images is another issue altogether.

To see technology being developed like this shouldn’t be met with great skepticism but rather with openess to the great possibilities that we could develop. Hopefully, these tapes aren’t merely things to fool us consumers but rather give us hope on what we could someday use in society.
Skeptics in the 1950s wouldn’t believe of a phone that we could carry along anywhere we want. Nor could they imagine handheld devices that could allow us to listen to music, write mail, or even read books. Now, with this new technology being developed by Lenovo, are we going to be skeptics as well? Lenovo, the Chinese company that recently bought out IBM’s Thinkpad, is developing a killer of a laptop. Hence, to see them develop this hardcore laptop technology could be either a cheap AD campaign, or it could be the reality of our dreams.

Lenovo magicJust what do these controversial Lenovo tapes show us? Well, nothing particularly spectacular. We have seen coffee being spilt over a laptops before. Yet unlike the usual laptop, this Lenovo laptop managed to survive this incident without bursting a circuit. More so, we’ve seen holographic images before. But to see a laptop projecting holographic images is another issue altogether.

To see technology being developed like this shouldn’t be met with great skepticism but rather with openess to the great possibilities that we could develop. Hopefully, these tapes aren’t merely things to fool us consumers but rather give us hope on what we could someday use in society.

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