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Have tablets jumped the shark?

I use hand-me-down or hand-me-up devices: laptop and phone.

In 2009, we bought a new HP laptop for my wife's daughter as she graduated high school. A year or so later, my stepdaughter purchased a new laptop, so I took the the HP that we bought her to replace my old Gateway laptop that I bought in October 2002. My Gateway started with Windows, but later, I installed Ubuntu Linux.

I still use the 2009 hand-me-up laptop, and it still runs Windows XP. I do all my programming on remote Linux servers. But this year, I would like to replace this HP laptop with a new thinner, smaller laptop that runs Linux.

For several years now, the cell phones that I've used were phones that my wife or stepdaughter formerly used. And for a couple of those years, I used a Tracfone.

For about a year now, I've been using a dumbphone that's an LG flip phone. It's small but bulky. I like using it to test my web apps, which all run fine on this phone after installing the Opera Mini browser last summer (2013).

I've held off upgrading my phone because I couldn't decide whether to buy an iPhone or an Android phone. My wife uses the iPhone. My stepdaughter used to use the iPhone, but in the spring of 2013, she changed to the Samsung S4. In 2013, my wife exchanged her work phone, which was an old-style Blackberry, for a Samsung S4.

In November of 2013, I tried to buy an iPhone 5C, but I was not eligible for an upgrade yet.

I bought my first cell phone in 1997. I bought my second cell phone in 2001 or 2002, and after this two-year plan expired, I did not renew it, and I've never purchased a new phone since.

So it's a bit funny that I was not "eligible" for a cell phone upgrade in November 2013. That's our Verizon plan. I think this spring, I can upgrade my phone.

I'd like to get a smartphone, but I would still like to own a dumbphone or a low-end feature phone that has web access for testing web apps.

In August 2011 when HP decided to exit the tablet market, HP unloaded their 16-gig and 32-gig 10-inch tablets in a firesale. I managed to buy a 32-gig HP tablet for $150. This tablet runs WebOS. I received the tablet in October 2011, and I've used it nearly every day.

I like reading websites on my tablet. I despise typing on the tablet's screen keyboard. I have used my tablet with a bluetooth wireless keyboard, and this makes for a nice, portable writing machine.

But for heavy writing, searching, cutting-and-pasting, linking, etc., I find the laptop superior to a tablet.

I have found that I no longer like the larger 9.7 inch or "10-inch" t

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