I don't think I can help you then. Hey let me know how that YouTube + Pandora experiment works out for ya.
If you don't understand it by now, I guess enjoy task switching.
Yes, I saw them, so what?
My question still stands.
I saw the picture and my brain asploded.
Lol, that cracked me up. It's not everyday you get to say you made someone's brain asplode with a screen shot.
...and the Nexus 7 with one and a half Android apps running at once.
One word... no
O
Rim is a dying company and IMO only bleeding heart fanatics still like them.
I have always hated blackberry/rim products because I always thought they tried to hard to only appease one group of people... the business sector. All of their products look like old PDAs and are almost all geared toward business/professionals. IMO rim doesn't design products that an average every day user would want to buy.
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This is one of the most unintelligent statements ever posted. Seriously. Why do you think even mid-level Droid phones have 7 homescreens? Nexus 7 can run can run as many simultaneous apps as you can stand to keep track of.My phone can run 12+ at once, and the Nexus is more capable...
Aside from the last sentence (I've never gone there lol), this is 100% accurate. They're justifying buying a device for an unsupported an chaotic platform.
This is one of the most unintelligent statements ever posted. Seriously. Why do you think even mid-level Droid phones have 7 homescreens? Nexus 7 can run can run as many simultaneous apps as you can stand to keep track of.My phone can run 12+ at once, and the Nexus is more capable...
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I guess I will have to explain my unintelligent comment for you. Even though it is seriously unintelligent, you didn't seem to understand it. Kind of odd but ok.
How many apps can you interact with or use at one time. With its 12+ running apps. How many of those apps can you see running? How many of those apps can you hear running? The answer on my Nexus 7 is 1.5. I can see 1 app running and I can hear 1 app running. Making the app I hear a half. The PlayBook you can see and/or hear several apps running at once. It really wasn't that hard was it?
Please explain to me how you are using 12+ apps on your N7 all at once, cause that's some magically stuff right there. I'd love to see screen shots of your 12+ opened and running apps all at once. All of them just sharing that same screen space. I mean since you can run all those apps at once, I guess the YouTube + Pandora test is no problem for your N7. I sure can't do it on mine. But what do I know.
Background processes don't equate to multitasking. You do realize that right? My PC has 84 background processes running right now, yet I only have firefox open. That's crazy man I'm using 84 programs right now. Just multitasking like a beast. LOL
With Go! Launcher, I can have as many homescreens as I want. 20? 40? 90? I don't even know there is a limit. And I don't care. Because it's utterly irrelevant.
I can't run more than one thing in the foreground at once. Background? Sure. Foreground? Not so much. Show me Firefox and World of Goo each running taking up half the screen. Show me those two each taking up a quarter of the screen with Facebook taking up the other half. Show me all three of them taking up a quarter of the screen each while tuning a piano with AutoTuner on 1/8 of a screen and running a level app on the other 1/8 screen. That's what the Playbook brings to the table that Android simply cannot do - Android can run plenty of things in the background. And I love that. But...
Simultaneous as in "on the screen, running side by side, at the same time" is a completely different ball game.
Don't get me wrong, I love Android, and I run Linux (the kernel upon which Android is based) at home. I jumped for joy when our Blackberries were taken away and I could finally have an Android.
But the PlayBook does have some distinct features not available on any other current tablet. Multiple Android KERNELS running simultaneously with separate memory instances and subwindowing of them is huge. Perhaps not very useful for most of us, admittedly, but it's leaps and bounds above what Android can do from a kernel management / preemptive multitasking point of view.
You can have my Nexus when you pry it from my cold, dead hands. But the geek in me, the same one who loved OS/2 over Windows 95, loves the audacity of virtual machining on a tablet platform. That takes some serious chutzpah.