• Technosailor.com
  • Desk of the Editor
  • Venture Files
  • Tech Policy
  • Contenido Español
Technosailor
  • Authors
  • Twitter Pitch Me!
  • Disclosures
Dec
30
2005

ExtremeTech - Top Failed Tech Trends for 2005

Posted by: Steven Fisher

While everyone is working on predictions for 2006, ExtremeTech has looked back at 2005 and picked the real lemons for the year that had such bright futures at the beginning of the year. Some may still have potential (High Def video on the PC) but some are just real turkeys.

My favorite turkey for 2005? iPod competitors. They just keep innovating and dominating. This will probably be the case for the rest of the decade as long at Steve Jobs stays.

Read the entire list here.

  • Add to Mixx!
  • Stumble it!
About the Author: Steve is currently Managing Consultant for Appsolve, Inc., a Product Development, Management and Marketing firm. Steve is also an expert in personal branding and is an avid pilot, musician and photographer. He currently resides in Columbia, MD, USA.
Tagged: Predictions, Tech Industry, Venture Files at 11:27 am -
discussion by DISQUS

Add New Comment

  • Subscribe:  This Thread
  • Go to:  My Comments ·  Community Page
  • Sort thread by:

    Viewing 1 Comment

    Thanks. Your comment is awaiting approval by a moderator.

    Do you already have an account? Log in and claim this comment.

      • ^
      • v
      • Permalink
      • Admin
        • Remove Post
        • Block email
        • Block IP address
      alzcjvoxxn 1 year ago 1 point

      Please login to rate.

      Do you already have an account? Log in and claim this comment.

      Hello! Good Site! Thanks you! otbvbxrksihy
      reply  edit  flag   record video comment
      http://alzcjvoxxn.com /people/7d27b95005ca31c8c8d69eb5b9043e2e/
    discussion by DISQUS

    Add New Comment

    close Joe Chill(joechill)
    konvict

    status via twitter

    Murdering the Wayne parents, creating Batman · 2 minutes ago

    recent comments (follow comments)

      View Profile »
      Powered by Disqus · Learn more
      blog comments powered by Disqus
      Powered by Defender Hosting
      Freshbooks
      • Recent Posts

        • “Citizen Journalism” — a label for recklessness that has to go.
        • Making it Into the Big Leagues
        • Sucks to be a Blog Network These Days
        • Chapter 11, Pt. 2: Hard Lessons from the Chapter
        • Facebook Shows New Life and Value
      • Recent Comments

        Powered by Disqus
      • Tags

        Aaron Brazell Advertising Apple b5media Blogging book conferences Design entrepreneurship Facebook Finance and Funding Google guest_blogging holidays humor hurricanes_and_natural_disasters interesting job Links Marketing Music nfl Op-Ed Perfect Pitch personal politics pr Predictions productivity Programming Security Social Issues Social Media Social Networking social_issues Sports Tech Industry Technology Technosailor Travel twitter unix Venture Files WordPress you_can_blog

      • License Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 | Copyright © 2004 - 2008 - Aaron Brazell | Lisa helped out | Privacy Policy

        Twitter Pitch!

        <p>Twitter pitching is a form of pitch that requires succint "what does this mean for me" kind of pitching. It is the ultimate efficiency of words. You have 140 characters or less to tell me why your pitch matters to me or my readers. Please include a means of contacting you. This is included in your 140 characters. If you send successive pitches, you will likely be ignored, unless it's obvious that the first pitch was a case of "accidental send", etc.</p> <p>This form of pitching does not mean I'm being a diva. It means that my time is valuable, and you want a piece of it. It's good practice for you, and delivers your pitch in a format I want. Win-win.</p>


        (X) Close

        Twitter Pitch Me!