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ARCHIVED FORUM -- April 2007 to March 2012 READ ONLY FORUM
This is the first Archived Forum which was active between 17th April 2007 and
1st March February 2012
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Beolink 7000 - Now there's an example of magic. Can anyone really claim that the rising mechanism in the 7000 was necessary for a remote control? No, of course not. But it was magical indeed. Software as magic, hugely important, but not the same. BTW, I'm all about software. For example, I have a Kindle and an Ipad and actually use them both
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Well, I'm not the wife of a B&O customer. I am the customer himself. The magical retractable lens. That's the kind of thinking that I we need. Form and function. Or is it function and form. Uh oh... I'm sure many of you read about Steve Jobs' views on focus groups, in fact it may have been discussed somewhere else in the forum. I'm
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I am all for rethinking the design paradigm, new fresh, bold. However, I can't agree more with Tim. There was something about the mechanical magic that is lost. It's not just B&O, in some perhaps lesser way this happens with others. Consider the original Ipods with the wheel as compared to the almost complete absense of anything mechanical
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@Tim - So true about Airplay. It has been mentioned before, but not much. Airplay really makes these dedicated docks a questionable purchase. Consider the combination of a $99 AppleTV playing the contents of your ipod through your choice of B&O TV/Speaker combination. I'm not saying it's the ultimate high quality music machine, I'm only
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I forgot about the David Lewis - ASUS relationship. Strange though, while it looks good a round mouse is awful. David Lewis should know better.
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Yes very good job indeed. Can't wait for the ipad version. ;-) Many thanks.
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Immitation continues to be flattering I suppose. A Beomouse 2 any one? Discuss.
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Just saw this. It seems reminiscent of Beo design... Samsung HTIB
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Just came across this story: Apple Patents The Invisible Button: "...One of Apple’s famous minimalist design principles is to get rid of buttons whenever possible. With touchscreen devices like the iPhone and iPad, almost all of the buttons appear when needed on the screen. But what about Macbooks with aluminum casings? A new patent application
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