You know that classic scene from one of the Star Trek movies in which Scottie visits Earth and walks up to a computer, saying "Computer:" in a ready for action voice and is momentarily confused when it doesn't answer him?
It occurred to me that we are on the edge of the no-computer generation. Yes, just like they are now writing articles about people getting rid of their TV access and just relying on the net (I do that), soon they will be writing about people getting rid of their computers, meaning those huge, clunky behemoths many of us have been taking for granted most of our lives.
Here comes the "computer? What's that?" generation. We will be switching to a cluster of smaller devices.
So when future generations see Scottie say "Computer!" in the movie, they will laugh like we did, but they will be laughing at the idea that people ever had such clunky devices around.
Nokia 3390 (top of the line in its day and age; snake, solid, faceplates...what more could you want)
Nokia 3595 (T-mobile branded after a douche broke my screen :-( )
Nokia 3650 (nothing much to say)
Nokia 3620 (got when former was run over by a car; accident I swear)
Nokia 6260 * 2 (The first just randomly bricked)
Nokia 9500 (HAd many nicknames..."The brick", "Remote"...)
Nokia 770 (All well and good til the white screen of death)
Nokia N91
Nokia N91 8GB (music galore)
Nokia N800 (is still used to this day)
Nokia 3250 (just liked the swivel, what can I say?)
Nokia E90
Nokia N900 (The best phone browser ever in my opinion; REAL pages ALL the time from maemo to youtube, screw the mobile sites)
Nokia N8 (Awesome camera)