Word for an Internet-enabled computing device

Benjamin Barrett gogaku at IX.NETCOM.COM
Mon Sep 26 21:35:38 UTC 2011


According to your citation, the term has called out of use. I'm not familiar with it, though I think it's no less unattractive than "computing device" :)

BB

On Sep 26, 2011, at 2:30 PM, Victor Steinbok wrote:

> I thought the generic term was "appliance"--as in "internet appliance".
>
> From Wiki:
>
>> An Internet appliance is a consumer device whose main function is easy
>> access to Internet services such as WWW or e-mail.[1] The term was
>> popularized in the 1990s, when it somewhat overlapped in meaning with
>> an information appliance, Internet computer, network computer, or even
>> thin client,[2] but now it has fallen out of general use.
>>
>> Internet appliance was contrasted with any general purpose computer.
>> The basic design idea behind Internet appliance is that it can be made
>> cheaper and much more usable by narrowing its functionality and
>> limiting available configuration options. Modern smart phones and
>> tablet computers do approximately the same things, but are more
>> powerful, more successful in the market, and generally not classified
>> as Internet appliances.
>
>     VS-)
>
>
>
> On 9/26/2011 5:21 PM, Benjamin Barrett wrote:
>> At Diva Espresso, there is a notice that if you register your coffee card online, you get five dollars. It says that the wizard will guide your "computer or phone" through the process. Not reading the notice with much attention, it took a second take to figure out that by "phone" they meant "smart phone," but on further reflection, feature phones might be able to handle something like this as well.
>>
>> Clearly, the phrase "computer or phone" is trying to describe an Internet-enabled device with computing capacity, which clearly includes tablet computers and perhaps feature phones. Even though a "tablet computer" is a computer by definition, I have trouble with idea that an iPad is a computer. I've only touched an iPad once or twice, but my understanding is that they are more like a large-screen smart phone.
>>
>> Perhaps "computing device" is the wise choice for being inclusive.

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