I don't know if it counts but it sure makes me jealous! I'm gonna go ahead and make a bet death's hadow D) doesn't maximize his browser across all three screens. And that he probably had good reason to need to - which is to say he wanted other things available to his eyes even when he uses the internet. I think that last part also applies to the guy using his laptop with only one screen on the airplane. I've never seen any statistics for how many people maximize their browser but I bet it's below half.
You know, I have a question: Why the **** do all these statistic sites measure using screen x & y, instead of actually detecting the actual BROWSER width and height? I'm going to set up my highest traffic website to start logging document. body.clientWidth - that would be the REAL number to look at, not screen.width. Given that said site nets about 40K page views a day from 5,000 or so uniques, it should make a decent sampling. Of course, the 'fun' part is going to be that there could be over 2,000 different results logged.
I just read in the Dutch news that all the big telecom players are gearing up for the increase in mobile phone internetting. Someone here mentioned yahoo going to a 1024 width page-- yet in the articles here they talk of how MSN and Yahoo and google (some part of google, not the main search site) are all fighting each other to be the first to release "mobile-geared" pages. T-Mobile was one of the biggest hypers of the trend. Increase in mobile phone internetting in the Netherlands has been raising by a third each month (if I remember correctly). Dead for the PC maybe. But why force yourself to either have two sites or two imported CSS files, if it's possible to have one page work for most? (Some sites just have too much stuff crammed on the page to work good at tiny resolutions but I don't put these in the majority).