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The Constant Defragger - Transcript - Hour 1, Segment 8

[Transcriptions provided by Datalyst] Hour 1: << previous |1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | next >> | Hour 2 | Hour 3 You can read the entire transcript here online. You may also purchase either an electronically-delivered PDF of this transcript, or a printed copy, sent via the mail:

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the area. Analogue was beautiful, over the analogue broadcast brilliant then comes digital and everything is a little bit more convenient but a little less quality same thing with cell phones. Digital comes in little more convenient, little less quality. The old days of cell phone calls yeah you drop cell phone calls. You would move from cell to cell but they sounded better. The reasons they don*t sell them so well today is because the more people that use the system that much less bandwidth for everybody and so there is a degrading of the sound, there is a degrading of the voracity and the hardiness of the system. And the manuals when I got my mother a cell phone I didn't get her my Treo 650 you know we went to the cell phone store at Verizon and then we looked for a just a nice little basic phone. I think we found the Motorola V670 or 690 or something like that nice little phone, Lilly has one you know works out fine. There were 3 manuals with this phone. When I opened up the box when the phone came in the phone was tucked away in the lower left hand corner of the box and inside the box was all this paper. What is going to have to happen is companies like Microsoft that come out with XBox Live, the companies like LinkSys they come out with routers, companies like Motorola and you know Nokia and Samsung and all these cell manufacturing companies they are going to have to come out with easier to use devices. And it started; it started this week with the Motorola ROKR. The Motorola ROKR does what the iPod did for music players for cell phones because it uses the same interface. I should have included the iPod in that list of you know Replay and other devices that started to you know chip away at this whole technology you know muddle because the iPod is really easy to use. It really is, once you get used to it the flywheel and the select button very easy to navigate around, very easy to use. Same thing with this ROKR phone I am not real happy with the ROKR phones limit of a 100 songs. I wouldn't buy a phone I wouldn't buy that phone now. I am going to stick with my 650 and my iPod Photo and my iPod Color. The Nano on the other hand what a brilliant little piece of technology. First generation technology like that and it*s so well done, so well done, so I am with you. I am with you Caesar. I hate having to burrow through all the manuals to be able to get stuff done. But please bear this in mind. People that would steal your identities, people that would take advantage of you with worms and viruses and Trojan horses they count on you using default settings for your technology. They take advantage of that so although it is a pain please everybody make the attempt to read those manuals. I know sometimes you won*t be able to make hide nor hair of it. I would get that but make the attempt anyway because you just might stumble across that one manual and it*s sad to say but you might stumble across that one manual that is written well. It starts off with an overview of the technology what it can accomplish for you and how to get it to do so and the dangers involved with the technology and how to avoid that. So I am not the only one that feels this way. Guys are right for newspapers like the Wall Street Journal and Washington Post and other of My Brother and the two radio shows and television shows they all decry this. Even though we love technology it is getting hard for us to use. So 180039 online is our telephone number 18003966546 Jeff thanks for being patient during my rant. What can I do for you?

Jeff: I appreciate your rant.

[Transcriptions provided by Datalyst]

Hour 1: << previous |1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | next >> | Hour 2 | Hour 3

You can read the entire transcript here online. You may also purchase either an electronically-delivered PDF of this transcript, or a printed copy, sent via the mail:

The Constant Defragger - Transcript - Emailed PDF:
The Constant Defragger - Transcript - Printed and Mailed:

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