Baker wrote:
Marin wrote:
Regardless, a four-inch screen is near worthless as a plotter screen in a boat as far as I'm concerned. *
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Yep...very worthless until it is the only motherf*&^%$g plotter on the boat!!!! *I know in "Marin's World" that would never happen. *In my world, it already has.
Well, if one can have only one plotter on a boat, I'll agree that even a 2" flip phone screen is better than nothing.* But you're correct, in my world there are no "single-plotter" boats, and the plotters that
are on board have the biggest, brightest screens I can fit and afford.* And given the dirt-cheap prices of dedicated plotters with decent size screens these days, I don't see any reason to put up with something with a little bitty screen.
Don't know the cost of an EVO contract, but a pretty basic iPhone contract is in the neighborhood of $200 a month last time I was in an AT&T store.* So that's $2400 a year for a phone.* For half that you can get a very nice plotter with a nice big screen that you can actually see details on even when the boat is bouncing around.*
Granted, you can't make phone calls, play games, or look up the menu of a new restaurant on a dedicated plotter.* But speaking strictly for myself, we didn't buy a boat to make phone calls, play Grand Theft Auto,**or see if that new restaurant in town serves a decent duck dinner.* We bought it to--- and I realize this is a radical concept for you*gizmo geeks out there--- actually get away from*phone calls and text messages and all the*digital racket we put up with pretty much all day, every day.* So to us, we could care less if our plotter tethers together 8, 10, or 100 internet devices.* We don't go boating to be tethered to anything but our anchor or a mooring buoy.
Maybe I've just lived long enough to outgrow the "I gotta be connected" obsession and have learned that being connected is generally* more of a pain in the a*s than not.* As I write this I'm sitting here*surrounded by three racked computers, a multi-terrabite server, two phones, two laptops and*eight high-definition video screens.* I am currently (tonight) dealing with customers in Australia, Singapore, Dubai, Beijing, and*southern California, to say nothing of all the people I'm dealing with here in Washington state.* I've just been told I have to produce a video about "A Day in the Life of the Dreamlifter" which are the ballooned-up, unpressurized*747s that we use to carry the 787 (Dreamliner) fuselage sections and wings between Japan, Italy, Wichita,*North Carolina, and the assembly plant in Everett.* So I've got to coordinate everything that goes with that sort of production. Couldn't do it without*good*connectivity.
What I DON'T want is to have all that connection crap in my face when I'm out on the boat.** All I want in a plotter is to know that I'm going from Point* A to Point*B without hitting anything other than water.* And I don't want to have to strain my eyes and my patience to pick out microscopic details on a tiny screen to make sure that water is all we're going to hit.
But that's just me.