>> How will Bluetooth help me when I'm taking photographs 1000 miles from my home, walking around a city or in the countryside without a laptop?
Now you want to come up with a scenario for a technophobe? Actually, you're not the market I'm concerned about, since I am a Gorilla gamer, and as Geoff says on page 24 of the fm,
<Skeptics> are would-be customers who simply never buy from anyone. The see technology investments as overpriced and overpromised, and prefer to spend their money instead on low-cost, nontechnical solutions <like acoustic musical instruments>. These noncustomers are most significant for their ability to block adoption movements from ever really taking off. The reinforce the inertia that high-tech market development strategies must overcome.
However, since you have the outside possibility of turning into a late adopter, how about you use bluetooth to port your picture files into an internet email via
a) your cell phone b) your pda c) a friend's computer, laptop or pda d) a computer at a cyber cafe
so it's waiting for you when you get home? Heck, maybe the camera itself becomes an internet appliance.
Also, realize that advances in flash memory density will mean that a photographer may be able to keep <pick a number> pictures internally on their digital camera. That would satisfy the needs of 99% of potential users, and the others could find their niche solution.
Think about removable disk drives. Now that internal hard drives have capacities in tens of gigabytes, and you can back up critical files on the internet, do prospects look good for IOmega?
uf@ihateitwhenyoumakemethink.com |