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by arminiusreturns 272 days ago
No, because it became a locked down ecosystem that is user-hostile and not user-controllable. I realized this when I observed the younger generation, who I thought would be much better than us at computing, who had not a clue how anything worked because they never had the ability, need, or desire to tinker with the underlying systems, with only rare exceptions (roms, etc).
1 comments

You are right, in a way. But losing your smartphone is like losing all your personal information. In that sense it is a personal computer.
Depends on your lifestyle and location. The only thing I use my cellphone for is text messaging and looking at wikipedia or part numbers when im not at home. It is definitely useful, but 95% of my computer work is still done on a PC.
> In that sense it is a personal computer.

No it is a "personal", but not "computer".

Not a general purpose computer, but still a computer.