Android tablet
-
@scottalanmiller said:
I don't buy that. They are almost always single user. Not always, but neither are phones. Lots of families share phones in the same way. You have to be way, way richer to not share phones than you do to not share tablets. Phones are the big money, tablets are practically free by comparison.
So if the need exists, it would exist in phones too. And I see no one clamouring for that.
I don't know a single person who shares a phone, but I know of at least 10 families that only have one iPad and they all share it. And in all 10 of those families, there is no sharing of phones. Sure they don't all have iPhones, they have cheap Android phones, but so what?
-
@Dashrender said:
@scottalanmiller said:
I don't buy that. They are almost always single user. Not always, but neither are phones. Lots of families share phones in the same way. You have to be way, way richer to not share phones than you do to not share tablets. Phones are the big money, tablets are practically free by comparison.
So if the need exists, it would exist in phones too. And I see no one clamouring for that.
I don't know a single person who shares a phone, but I know of at least 10 families that only have one iPad and they all share it. And in all 10 of those families, there is no sharing of phones. Sure they don't all have iPhones, they have cheap Android phones, but so what?
Well, to quote you, we can't all be that rich
-
@scottalanmiller said:
@Dashrender said:
@scottalanmiller said:
I don't buy that. They are almost always single user. Not always, but neither are phones. Lots of families share phones in the same way. You have to be way, way richer to not share phones than you do to not share tablets. Phones are the big money, tablets are practically free by comparison.
So if the need exists, it would exist in phones too. And I see no one clamouring for that.
I don't know a single person who shares a phone, but I know of at least 10 families that only have one iPad and they all share it. And in all 10 of those families, there is no sharing of phones. Sure they don't all have iPhones, they have cheap Android phones, but so what?
Well, to quote you, we can't all be that rich
Are you saying you know of families who share cell phones? (and I'm assuming all other technology in the house)
I only said 10 families, because I can list 10 who don't share cell phones, but do share iPads/Android tablets.
But not a single person/family I know shares cell phones between family members. -
@Dashrender said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@Dashrender said:
@scottalanmiller said:
I don't buy that. They are almost always single user. Not always, but neither are phones. Lots of families share phones in the same way. You have to be way, way richer to not share phones than you do to not share tablets. Phones are the big money, tablets are practically free by comparison.
So if the need exists, it would exist in phones too. And I see no one clamouring for that.
I don't know a single person who shares a phone, but I know of at least 10 families that only have one iPad and they all share it. And in all 10 of those families, there is no sharing of phones. Sure they don't all have iPhones, they have cheap Android phones, but so what?
Well, to quote you, we can't all be that rich
Are you saying you know of families who share cell phones? (and I'm assuming all other technology in the house)
I only said 10 families, because I can list 10 who don't share cell phones, but do share iPads/Android tablets.
But not a single person/family I know shares cell phones between family members.I've known people to share phones, have not known them to share tablets. As phones are more necessity and safety, I see poorer people trying to use them. Tablets, being purely a luxury items, are less likely to be shared because, I would assume, people with that kind of disposable income tend to get more than one and those without tend to get zero.
-
I know of a few families (with teens) that have one cell phone for the whole family. They do not have a home phone either. A monthly contract on multiple phones is really expensive. So one phone and when you get a text you have to ask who you are talking to. I have like 4 families that I know of that do this.
-
@Minion-Queen said:
I know of a few families (with teens) that have one cell phone for the whole family. They do not have a home phone either. A monthly contract on multiple phones is really expensive. So one phone and when you get a text you have to ask who you are talking to. I have like 4 families that I know of that do this.
OK so you know 4 that share phones, how many do you know that share tablets?
-
@Dashrender said:
@Minion-Queen said:
I know of a few families (with teens) that have one cell phone for the whole family. They do not have a home phone either. A monthly contract on multiple phones is really expensive. So one phone and when you get a text you have to ask who you are talking to. I have like 4 families that I know of that do this.
OK so you know 4 that share phones, how many do you know that share tablets?
AND care about user accounts.
-
I'm starting to think I should tell my kids they are even luckier than I had previously told them they are!
-
@Dashrender said:
@Minion-Queen said:
I know of a few families (with teens) that have one cell phone for the whole family. They do not have a home phone either. A monthly contract on multiple phones is really expensive. So one phone and when you get a text you have to ask who you are talking to. I have like 4 families that I know of that do this.
OK so you know 4 that share phones, how many do you know that share tablets?
Oh man at least 5 or 6 (I have set them all up so). One user account per family thankfully
-
@Minion-Queen said:
@Dashrender said:
@Minion-Queen said:
I know of a few families (with teens) that have one cell phone for the whole family. They do not have a home phone either. A monthly contract on multiple phones is really expensive. So one phone and when you get a text you have to ask who you are talking to. I have like 4 families that I know of that do this.
OK so you know 4 that share phones, how many do you know that share tablets?
Oh man at least 5 or 6 (I have set them all up so). One user account per family thankfully
Do those people all share a single email account? a single pictures repository, etc?
-
OK I'm frustrated!!!
I have setup a second user account on the device (the doc brought in the tab over lunch), but I can't figure out how to choose what user to log in as on the lock screen.
I can only do it from the settings screen - which makes it pointless.
-
HOLY SHIT!
well I found how to do it.
You have to swipe in from the top while on the lock screen, which then shows you a tiny picture of the currently logged on user. press that picture, then choose the new profile.
The crappy thing - I did swipe in from all 4 edges earlier... and I guess I just didn't wait long enough between edges.. sigh!
-
Sorry I just saw this now, I could have chimed in.
-
@Dashrender said:
@Minion-Queen said:
@Dashrender said:
@Minion-Queen said:
I know of a few families (with teens) that have one cell phone for the whole family. They do not have a home phone either. A monthly contract on multiple phones is really expensive. So one phone and when you get a text you have to ask who you are talking to. I have like 4 families that I know of that do this.
OK so you know 4 that share phones, how many do you know that share tablets?
Oh man at least 5 or 6 (I have set them all up so). One user account per family thankfully
Do those people all share a single email account? a single pictures repository, etc?
Of course. Remember, in the non-tech savvy world, people actually don't use email much any more. The US, like Italy, has actually moved dramatically backwards in technology. Today teenagers actually think it is "cool" to be luddites. Using texting is far more popular and texting is by device, not account, so sharing of accounts is just assumed once you share devices.
I know lots of people with shared email accounts for the family. That's common, sadly. And shared Facebook, less common.
Even our family with 2+ tablets per person, 1+ laptops per person, a domain for each family member, etc. shares things like picture collections.
-
@Dashrender said:
@Minion-Queen said:
@Dashrender said:
@Minion-Queen said:
I know of a few families (with teens) that have one cell phone for the whole family. They do not have a home phone either. A monthly contract on multiple phones is really expensive. So one phone and when you get a text you have to ask who you are talking to. I have like 4 families that I know of that do this.
OK so you know 4 that share phones, how many do you know that share tablets?
Oh man at least 5 or 6 (I have set them all up so). One user account per family thankfully
Do those people all share a single email account? a single pictures repository, etc?
Yup one email account for the whole family. As Scott said kids thing not having email is cool...
-
@johnhooks said:
Sorry I just saw this now, I could have chimed in.
I found a video on Samsungs website when I search for this specific tablet and it showed a completely different change account process - much easier in my mine.
Right there on the lock screen it showed you a picture for each profile that existed on the device. touch the picture of the account you want to log into.
So this was a failing because the video didn't what this tab was showing me.
-
@scottalanmiller said:
@Dashrender said:
@Minion-Queen said:
@Dashrender said:
@Minion-Queen said:
I know of a few families (with teens) that have one cell phone for the whole family. They do not have a home phone either. A monthly contract on multiple phones is really expensive. So one phone and when you get a text you have to ask who you are talking to. I have like 4 families that I know of that do this.
OK so you know 4 that share phones, how many do you know that share tablets?
Oh man at least 5 or 6 (I have set them all up so). One user account per family thankfully
Do those people all share a single email account? a single pictures repository, etc?
Of course. Remember, in the non-tech savvy world, people actually don't use email much any more. The US, like Italy, has actually moved dramatically backwards in technology. Today teenagers actually think it is "cool" to be luddites. Using texting is far more popular and texting is by device, not account, so sharing of accounts is just assumed once you share devices.
I know lots of people with shared email accounts for the family. That's common, sadly. And shared Facebook, less common.
Even our family with 2+ tablets per person, 1+ laptops per person, a domain for each family member, etc. shares things like picture collections.
shakes head Fine I can accept that kids today don't think email is cool with things like snap chat and intragram, etc.
Not sure how you hang onto any history of information, but hey, maybe they don't need to. I didn't have email as a kid (didn't get my first email account until I was 18 I think) and I survived just fine.
But even so, parents frequently do. And while I do know a few, like two couples, that share a single FB account and email account, this is extremely uncommon in my peer group. It's hard to imagine that parents would want their children to have access to their email - but maybe the parents just don't use their email (or use webmail) from the shared device.
As for kids sharing the same social media accounts - WHAT? no way!
-
@Minion-Queen said:
@Dashrender said:
@Minion-Queen said:
@Dashrender said:
@Minion-Queen said:
I know of a few families (with teens) that have one cell phone for the whole family. They do not have a home phone either. A monthly contract on multiple phones is really expensive. So one phone and when you get a text you have to ask who you are talking to. I have like 4 families that I know of that do this.
OK so you know 4 that share phones, how many do you know that share tablets?
Oh man at least 5 or 6 (I have set them all up so). One user account per family thankfully
Do those people all share a single email account? a single pictures repository, etc?
Yup one email account for the whole family. As Scott said kids thing not having email is cool...
But what about all of the other kinds of accounts? twitter, Facebook, Instragram, SnapChat, etc
As I mentioned, I do know of a couple (married couple) or two who share a single account, this seems completely against any conventional though for kids to do so. -
Each of them generally have their own Facebook accounts. But at least a couple of them do not allow anything like instagram and SnapChat. These are parents who are very careful with their girls and make sure they keep watch on all that is done online.
-
@Minion-Queen said:
Each of them generally have their own Facebook accounts. But at least a couple of them do not allow anything like instagram and SnapChat. These are parents who are very careful with their girls and make sure they keep watch on all that is done online.
Sure, for now. When those girls are 16+ (heck, maybe 12+) I bet they start rebelling against that lack of communication that all of their friends have. Then what?