| Alex - I think this is more than a little debatable. I look at "computer like devices" and think OK, we're going to be dealing with stuff upon which you can install applications, open and edit files, some form of textual input is probably there. Something that duplicates a large chunk of the functionality of, well, my computer. Which my iPod isn't. The iPhone is perhaps a computer-like device. But I think "computer like device" is a poor definition - especially when the quiz is "computer product lines," which the iPod, iPhone, and Apple TV aren't. The fact that, looking at the results, 45% of people are not getting iPod, which is Apple's best-known brand, suggests that I am not alone in this confusion. |