Sony Vaio GT3/K: You Spilled Your Laptop on my Camcorder
Anonymous Howard writes "This article talks about Sony's new, limited production Vaio GT3/K. It's a mixture of laptop and full fledged camcorder that uses the Transmeta 600mhz Crusuoe chip. Weighing in at 2.4 lbs, this hybrid has an amazing battery life of up to 17 hours, 30 GB drive, ATI Rage Mobility-M1 and 128 MB of RAM, and a swiveling screen.
This is definately a very unique device, one that completely blows away Sony's previous attempts of the laptop/video combination machines, mainly due the fact that the video camera is not a wimpy little video lense, but an actual full fledged digital camcorder."
Is that a distinction of nobility? As opposed to the electronic devices for the laity, the lobread?
Education is a better safeguard of liberty than a standing army.
Edward Everett (1794 - 1865)
So, for your contrived example, for exactness in every detail, then perhaps every object is unique.
Something can be unique in more or less ways, but when you're talking about a laptop (named product) that can act as a camcorder, that product is either unique in that regard or not. "Very Unique", "More Unique", "Less Unique", and similar phrases are meaningless.
XML causes global warming.
Very unique is an oxymoron. By definition, if something is unique, it is one of a kind. Something cannot be "very" one of a kind.