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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: August 5th, 2023

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  • They literally couldn’t pay the devs. Netflix for instance flat out refused to have blackberry pay for 2 full time devs to maintain an app.

    Netflix looked at the market share and determined that there was 0 benefit. The people that were on blackberry devices already had a Netflix account.

    Additionally Blackberry store apps were compelling for devs. Dev feedback included ease of development and more importantly they made a lot more money on the blackberry store than on iOS/android, both because the cut was better and they could jack the prices up because the customers were not nearly as frugal.

    To get into mobile would require a massive overhaul of windows apps to get them mobile-friendly

    Oh look, that’s exactly what they did and now we have PWAs for lots of apps. Maybe MS is getting ready to take a stab at mobile again.











  • You’re not wrong, legal software doesn’t require special hardware to run, but when your PDF editor with its document management system plugin no longer displays more than 2 pages when viewing them in outlook’s attachment preview and it’s seemingly related to dpi and the monitor, it’s helpful if you are using hardware that is used by many other law firms with a similar combination of hardware and software.

    Anyone in legal IT, or even other lawyers, would laugh at you for using a gaming laptop.


  • You’d want a Lenovo think pad or dell. They are enterprise-grade, with enterprise support and enterprise software.

    The legal industry is almost 100% Lenovo/dell/hp. All legal software runs on them, and the legal it industry collaborates on issues,testing.

    Lenovo and dell can spec an enterprise laptop that would be just as good if not better than what’s on that desk.

    This screams “buy me the most expensive laptop you can” but they were talking to their nephew who “knows computers”

    What a clown show.