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No hearsay here
24 Comments
Apple Earnings: What to Expect (And Who Not to Believe)
Apple-Microsoft Ad Wars Heat Up Again
What better way to acknowledge this than the annoying TV commercial from FinallyFast.com, a utility to "speed up PCs that have slowed down." The first two machines they show in the ad? An iMac and a G4 iBook! Later on we see the iMac's white keyboard, then we finally see a "fixed and now faster PC" on the iMac's screen. Redmond, we have a problem: www.youtube.com/watch?...
Nokia: Profit Down While Aiming at Apple
My prediction: doomed to go down in flames, like all others.
No Leadership from Apple Right Now
I work for Apple because I love the products and I love how we make 'em. You would have others wrongly believe that we're not a proud group. You think we don't care about what we make?
Your mindless, sweeping generalizations are breath taking.
P.S.: it's "hearsay," not "heresay". Your command of the language is as good as your Apple knowledge.
[comment edited for abusive language; commenter put on watch]
Apple's Problems - Bad to the Core?
This weekend I saw a Toyota Camry on the side of the road and it was on fire. Hey, one Toyota on fire and ALL Toyota owners are at mortal risk, right? Does this mean that Toyota has lost its way? Apparently it does in Shelly's World. Tin hat, anyone?
Yes, one class action lawsuit proves that Apple has a major problem. Gee, an ambulance-chasing profession (lawyers) that might be a tad tempted by a $20 billion cash pool. I would never have thought it. Particularly when the idiot customer filing the suit had 30 days to return the product, no questions asked. (This isn't a relative, is it? The IQ-resemblance is remarkable.)
I am willing to concede that Apple may be releasing products before they are ready for prime time. However, Apple has proven time and again that while there may be initial-release issues, they DO get it fixed in short order. Example: OSX 10.5.0 was buggy when released on 10/26/07 --- some could not even install it. 10.5.1 was released 3 weeks later, but it was still buggy. Those disenchanted with Leopard, at this stage, simply stuck with Tiger (10.4.x). With 10.5.2 on February 11, Apple got it right, fixing most of the major annoyances with the original release. Since then we've gotten 10.5.3 on 5/28, 10.5.4 on 6/30, and 10.5.5 on 8/19. Five major updates (and one more rumored on the way in a bit) to the major release, all in the course of 10 months. Result: Leopard is now a magnificent OS and is finally all that it was touted to be. It was quite good and acceptable with 10.5.2 and has only gotten better since. I find Apple's update pace to be exceptionally good. How many updates has Vista had in its 21 month existence? I count one. (But gee, Vista works so well that it doesn't need any sort of update. And to prove it, why not launch a $300 million ad campaign to convince you of it?)
We see a similar level of support with Apple's iPhone firmware. Released on June 9, we are have the second update in the intervening 11 weeks. Yeah, Apple should not have released it when they did, but their record of updates already tells me that they're in the shop working on it. In Steve we trust.
Is there any wonder about the millions of hits for "iPhone brick" with the first iPhone when all but this foolish .... author? .... knows that a very small but very vocal group of hackers made a very public attempt to jail break their phones? And broke them in the process (aka "bricked them")? Two million iPhones were bricked? Because of this gang of software vandals, Apple was "unprepared" to release the original iPhone? Are you really that dumb, Shelly?
(Incidentally, if you do a quick Google search for "Shelly Palmer idiot" you get 13,000 hits. If it's of any consequence, "Shelly Palmer moron" only returns 4,350 hits. I guess you're more of an idiot than a moron.)
And of course, my favorite: "security flaws." That always gets a headline, doesn't it? Care to name just one Mac user whose machine was corrupted by such a flaw, Shelly? Just ONE. I don't want some purported hole where if one group of security experts did this and then got me to go to this page on that browser using that guy's 3rd party driver, all at a conference specifically convened to attempt to do this task (they couldn't do it, I should add). Just one "John Smith from Scranton, PA" who has had his Mac violated .... oh, I dunno .... in the last five years. Come on, Shelly, the list must be HUGE .... you can name just one guy, can't you? (Crickets chirping.)
Yes, millions of happy, loyal Mac customers (fanatics, actually) and exponentially growing daily. How can markets speak so loudly but not hear your learned pleas, Shelly? Frankly, I'm surprised that your iTunes playlist got Donnie Osmond mixed in with your Milli Vanilli standards.
I've seen a lot of remarkably bad blogs in the last year, but this one takes the cake as the worst of the worst. After reading your bio fluff piece, if I could name my response it would be "National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences: President's Upstairs Office Vacant."
Apple Will Iron out the Wrinkles -- or the Irony
The phone is another example of fast response. Jobs is absolutely driven and will not accept anything less than full quality and functionality. I'll wager that inside Cupertino headquarters, there are war rooms set up all around his office to address all of the iPhone issues. Not because he HAS to fix problems, but because he WANTS to fix the problems. "In Steve I trust."
Compare and contrast this to Microsoft. They (MSFT) have now launched a new $300 million campaign to promote Vista. Rather than correct their many problems, their response is to try to convince you that the problems their customers have encountered are all in their heads, that the software is just fine as is. Ballmer calls this "fighting back." Ha! Steve Jobs recognizes when his products are less than ideal, admits it, and corrects it (MobileMe, for instance, is a work in progress). My prediction is that in 6 months time, all of this 3G phone and MobileMe trouble will be ancient history and long forgotten.
If Apple is guilty of any sin, it's probably that they are under too much pressure to release a product too soon. Part of that is Jobs' responsibility (schedules are schedules) while the rest of it is public pressure. Let's not forget who was clamoring the loudest for 3G iPhones only 3 months ago despite Jobs' admonition at the 2G introduction that 3G phones are power hogs.
I'll trust Apple any day over Microsoft.
Is iPhone Heading to Russia?
Microsoft Gets the Blogging Community
Research In Motion's 3G Counteroffensive: The Smartphone Arms Race Escalates
With MobileMe, Apple Bites Off More Than It Can Chew
Apple's 3G iPhone Has Some Kinks to Resolve
3G iPhone Impact on AT&T and Verizon
Sorry, but I don't trust you, User 191984. Your analytic skills are blinded by price tags, as BS Detector has pointed out. Those who see Apple products as just hardware don't understand the Apple phenomenon, much less its customers. It's the overall experience that people purchase, which includes not just the hardware but also the software and the ease of use. The REAL ease of use, not some silly advertising bullet point that all hardware manufacturers claim. Apple's claims are the real deal.
For instance, I gladly pay twice as much for an Apple CPU because my time is worth money to me. LOTS of money. You look at a CPU purchase as a one-time investment; I see it as a long-term investment. You spend hours monthly, maintaining your cheapo Asian PC clone in an effort to thwart viruses, as if your time is worth nothing. I, on the other hand, have NEVER had to concern myself over such nonsense. Instead, I can spend my time doing my work rather than trying to keep this electronic "tool" oiled, greased, dustfree, and out of the sun.
So go ahead and buy your cheap junk hardware. I'm sure you'll be delighted with it. But Apple customers think on a different plane than you do.
$1.2 Billion in iPhone Apps? Not Likely.
I'm not saying that there is a Visi-Calc for iPhone in the wings, or that one will ever be there. Only that one never knows what sort of clever and useful applications will be offered by the thousands of developers who have signed up to write for the iPhone.
I'm especially skeptical of any journalist's ability to see into the future.
Which Is the Better Investment, Apple or Research In Motion?
Apple Links Higher Sales with Higher Prices