PC Users Switch to Apple 173
JHromadka writes "Apple has setup a special website with real users explaining why they switched from the PC to the Mac. There's a full compliment of commercials, Mac OS X reviews, the works. Now we know why they didn't renew that agreement with Microsoft. :)" I like the commercials, they're funny, though probably not so much intentionally. Apparently the commercials begin airing this week.
The Problem (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:The Problem (Score:3, Interesting)
However, the XServe is the first of a set of products aimed at the IT segment of the industry - you can bet that further down the road you'll see in-depth coverage of why people should move infrastructure from Linux, Solaris, and so on to Mac OS X.
Re:The Problem (Score:2)
So either way, advertizing to the Linux crowd is kind of pointless.
In addition to that, a Linux person is running a free operating system, probably on an old, cheap, home-built computer, so it's not even enough to provide a better OS experience. To sell even one Mac to a Linux guy, you need to provide something that is enough better (in their opinion) to justify a lot of added cost. The fact that even a few Linux people are either switching to Mac, or are using Macs along with their Linux Boxen, says a lot about what Apple must be doing right.
Re:The Problem (Score:2)
Linux in it's present state of development and present degree of desktop penetration is a totally different beast aimed at a radically different market.
And please don't fool yourself into thinking that Apple is "out to steal" Linux desktop marketshare. There's not enough there to bother with. Now Xserve [apple.com] muscle in on Linux server spaces? Sure I think they would like that. But that's another discussion.
Re:The Problem (Score:1)
My Thinkpad 600 has been nothing but one hardware nightmare after another. While it may not be a widespread problem between the contast repairs and windows dying on me twice a day I gladly plunked down the extra cash to get myself a G4 tower.
full story at... (Score:2, Informative)
hm, good idea... (Score:1)
Re:hm, good idea... (Score:1)
What do you mean switched? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:What do you mean switched? (Score:4, Insightful)
Whenever I have a relative or non-geek friend who wants to have a computer, for pretty much any reason other than gaming, I always encourage them to buy Macs, for the very selfish reason that I don't want to spend my free time as their personal tech support hot-line. The few times in the past that I had helped a people buy a Windows PC's, they ended up needing constant assistance and complaining of baffling glitches. With those who bought Macs, all I did was spend a couple hours showing them the basics, and told them to "guess" whenever they are unsure of how to do something. In spite of being total newbies, and not very tech-inclined, they get by fine without my help after that, and often derrive enough pleasure from working with their Macs to want to learn more, and become experts.
As for myself, I'm with you. I like having lots of systems running lots of OS's. These ads are not targetting me, either.
Re:What do you mean switched? (Score:2)
After all, why would you want mulitple OS's if the OS your using does everything you need? It seems to me the only reson people use multiple OS's--even you--is because their isn't one OS that suits all your needs.
Question #4... (Score:5, Interesting)
Speaking as a mac-convert within the past year, this point holds a lot of people back. Not will software run on the Mac, but will software I have previously purchased work on the Mac? If Apple had some service where they and the vendors had a PC for Mac trade-in program (and some do, like Adobe), it would get more people over the hump to switch.
Re:Question #4... (Score:1)
I think between Appleworks and Apple's bundled iApps, they've got most mainstream applications covered already.
Re:Question #4... (Score:2)
when they Wine Is Not an Emulator, they mean it.
---
Apple has compelling products (Score:5, Interesting)
One of my co-workers was annoyed that she'd be without music while she was re-assembling her office, so I loaned her my iPod for a couple of hours with a pair of speakers that was lying around.
I was simply amazed at how ecstatic she was over this little device. She had no trouble figuring out how to use it.
She was so smitten that she is now planning to purchase an iBook, Microsoft Office, more RAM, 3 years worth of AppleCare (due to one of Apple's promotions, buying the AppleCare and MS Office at the Apple Store with the iBook is actually $11 less than without AppleCare) and, of course, the iPod.
She wouldn't hear of waiting for someone to finish a program to interface the iPod with a PC. She was already contemplating a new laptop, and she's very excited with the features of the iBook.
I was never sure that I truly believed the stories of people buying Macs just to use an iPod, but that's exactly what she's planning!
Re:Apple has compelling products (Score:1)
$400-$500 for the iPod and $800 for the iMac to go with it.
I'm switching this week (Score:5, Insightful)
Laptops are another story...
I've owned 3 PC laptops in the last 5 years, and never had Linux working 100% on any of them.
Power management has never worked 100% properly for me. Even though I can get hardware video acceleration, switching to a tty, then back, breaks XFree and freezes my machine. etc... Basically the Open Source community can't keep up with the proprietary innovations going into new laptops.
Enter OSX. Now I know I can get a cutting edge Laptop, who's hardware is 100% supported by a UNIX based OS, at a reasonable price. I don't remember an opportuinity like this existing before.
I'm trading my (almost) new PC laptop for an (almost) new iBook this week.
Re:I'm switching this week (Score:3, Informative)
Re:I'm switching this week (Score:2)
Or, you can just check Linux on Laptops [linux-laptop.net] before buying.
All my laptops over the last few years have run Linux very well (mostly IBM and HP). I'm also pretty happy with my OSX PowerBook, although there is a lot more software available for Linux (at least of the kind I'm interested in).
ok apple listen up (Score:2)
Re:ok apple listen up (Score:2)
No, don't do that. (Score:2)
No, he shouldn't.
Tenon has all but abandoned [tenon.com] Xtools. There hasn't been an update since last September, and the currently available version (1.0.4p1) is horribly unstable.
Xtools was useful for the 6-month window between the initial XF86 port to Darwin and the release of XFree 4.2 (which integrated the rootless quartz server into the main code tree). Since then, however, it's rotted. At this point, OroborosX [ic.ac.uk] is faster, better-featured, and much more stable.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Here's why that won't happen. (Score:2)
Apple loses nothing by making X11 a standard component of every shipping Mac. Quite to the contrary, they make their machines easier to use by their fastest growing user segment: UNIX/Linux users and scientists/engineers. And even the rather primitive X11 implementation we are getting right now is faster than Quartz. Imagine how much more performance the Mac could gain if X11 were tightly integrated into the system.
If, on the other hand, Apple thinks they can grow a new community of developers devoted to their proprietary APIs, they are sadly mistaken. They are only losing sales that way.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Here's why that won't happen. (Score:3, Informative)
You are getting a biased sample because you talk to the traditional Mac developers and maybe some OpenStep developers. People who don't use Carbon or Cocoa for applications development have no need to talk to you.
I don't think you realize how much of a drag X windows has been on UNIX, despite the heroic efforts of SGI and others to make it usable.
That statement makes no sense. X11 is the equivalent of Quartz. You could put the current Mac UI on top of X11 and the only user-visible difference would be that it would run a whole lot faster than Cocoa on Quartz and that it would be network transparent. Furthermore, X11 won the UNIX market because of end user preferences; if it had been up to the workstation vendors, we'd be using DisplayPostscript, OpenLook, or something similar.
Nothing but the quality of the UI, which after all is a principal competitive advantage of the platform..
The quality of the UI doesn't depend on Quartz, Carbon, or Cocoa. The quality of the UI depends on user interface guidelines that people follow no matter what graphics API or toolkit they use.
There won't be a mass conversion to Cocoa. It's just not going to happen. Even assuming for the sake of argument that Cocoa is a good API, people just don't have the time or interest to develop to such a niche platform if they can just as easily use a toolkit that will work on all the major platforms. A large fraction of OSX applications, commercial, open source, and in-house, will be developed using cross-platform toolkits or X11, whether Apple likes it or not. The only choice Apple has in the matter is to help those toolkits and X11 to look their very best on the OSX desktop.
X11 and UNIX toolkits are crucial to the future of OSX. The more and the better you support them, the better the end user experience will be. If, on the other hand, you try to force people onto Cocoa, you'll just lose again many of the recent converts to OSX. As an OSX developer, I can only hope Apple won't make that mistake.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Here's why that won't happen. (Score:2)
Neither you nor I know for certain whether the sample of developers you talk to is biased or not. But I do know that there is a large number of people developing software for OSX that never talk to you. I also know that most of the software I and my coworkers use on OSX was developed by such people.
"X11 is the equivalent of Quartz." Not hardly!
You are missing the point. I simply pointed out that X11 and Quartz are graphics libraries. The presence or absence of X11 on a platform has nothing to do with how user friendly it is because X11 is not a user interface, it's little more than a graphics library.
So, yes, it looks like we can use X for Quartz. All we need do is [...]
I think you are completely wrong in your assessment (most of the features you mention are already in X servers), but that's water under the bridge. For better or for worse, Apple invested lots of effort in building stuff on top of Quartz.
My point is that what you should do now is integrate X11 as another graphics API into the system, alongside Quartz. People will develop applications for OSX using X11 toolkits whether you want it or not. But by taking control and making this work well, you can improve the user experience.
Come back next year, and tell me if you still think so. In the meantime, have a look at the Mac OS X projects at sourceforge, and check out how many of them use Cocoa.
We don't have to guess about what Cocoa is like, we already know it. I don't think it has much of a future against systems based on Java or C# and their APIs and toolsets.
In any case, there are about 10 projects using Cocoa as far as I can tell, all of the minor ones (Google [google.com]). Most OSX related open source projects seem to be about adapting cross-platform libraries to work on OSX.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Here's why that won't happen. (Score:2)
As for your other opinions, the resume on your web site lists no experience with X11. And you are just giving us the typical uninformed hot air of NeXT zealots about the supposed evils of X11, mistakenly implying even that X11 is a user interface.
Like any large, mature software system, X11 has its flaws, but X11 has a lot of strengths, too. X11 is a perfectly good substrate on which to build high quality user interfaces and it is the standard on which UNIX toolkits and applications are built. If Apple wants long-term buy-in from UNIX users and the open source community, they should make X11 a standard, transparently available component of OSX, alongside Carbon and Cocoa.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Here's why that won't happen. (Score:2)
Re:Here's why that won't happen. (Score:2)
I fully agree (Score:2)
If Apple doesn't do this, they people won't magically become devoted Apple Cocoa developers. Rather, Apple will only create unnecessary porting headaches for their newest developers--UNIX developers. Those developers won't switch to Cocoa, they will simply continue using the same toolkits they have always been using (Gtk+, wxWindows, etc.), but with substandard and poorly maintained OSX-backends. That only hurts Apple.
I know it's tough medicine to swallow for Apple. But I really don't see any alternative. Hoping that the world will switch to Cocoa is a pipe dream--whether it is technically good or not, Cocoa is a niche product. Only a small, dedicated core of Mac developers will spend time on it.
Re: (Score:2)
TV ads aim for the edges (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:TV ads aim for the edges (Score:1)
My biggest gripe right now, for those people trying to convert from PCs, deals with getting files from Windows computers. Connecting to Windows fileservers is completely unintuitive. Apple really needs to fix this, and quick. Connecting to Windows shares should be as easy as connecting to Appleshare shares. I hope 10.2 is out in July or August, and not September, and that it addresses this.
Re:TV ads aim for the edges (Score:1)
That's one thing I like about Apple. My iBook's ethernet port is auto-sensing. I can plug it into a hub, then use the same cable to plug it into another computer. It switches modes automatically, eliminating the need for a crossover cable.
Does the Mac "Just Work Better?" (Score:3, Interesting)
Just today, a co-worker called me to her office. She couldn't change her default printer in Windows. Rather, she repeatedly changed the default, but the program she wanted to print from didn't recognize the change.
I'm a Mac guy -- I figured something was wrong, so I walked her through the procedure one more time. It still didn't work. Maybe we have to restart the program? Nope, still defaulted to the wrong printer.
We eventually had to change the printer in "Print Setup" before the program would "default" to the printer she wanted.
On a Mac, you'd change your default printer and all of the program would automatically print using that printer. No restarting programs, no restarting the computer, no trying to figure out some obtuse reasoning to accomplish a very, very simple task.
Does the Mac work better? I think so.
Re:Does the Mac "Just Work Better?" (Score:2)
Still, on the whole, OSX does work a lot better than Windows in my experience. Let's hope Apple will fix this pox [cnet.com], too. I believe Apple has licensed CUPS and is working on replacing the current printing system.
I'll soon be upgrading my brain to 10.1.5 (Score:4, Funny)
"the way it works is like the way your brain is supposed to work"
So that's why I keep seeing gray stripes everywhere.
Ohmygod (Score:1)
Re:Ohmygod (Score:1)
Steve Jobs Quoth:
"Our relationship with Microsoft is really pretty good," Mr. Jobs said. "What's a few market-share points between friends? It wouldn't matter to them, and we would be eternally grateful."
It thought it was hillarious.
Bill isn't pissed.... (Score:2, Interesting)
Now, if Apple somehow managed to get up to 20% marketshare, then there might be a problem.
Myself, I switched back in March of 2000, and I haven't looked back since.
These ads are great. If it gets a few extra percent of the market, then they did their job.
My favorite part of the ads? The fact that they're trying to win over PC users without using direct insults.
Re:Bill isn't pissed.... (Score:2)
Um... "It was a horrid little machine" is pretty direct.
Re:Bill isn't pissed.... (Score:1)
Off the top of my head I can remember an older (early 90s) campaign that pitted Apple employees against the evil IBM (I believe this was a training video). Or, a 1995 spot that showed a Windows guy on a stage giving a presentation. When his Windows PC crashed, people were giving suggestions (Edit system.ini, edit autoexec.bat), and then finally a guy in the back just yelled, "Get a Mac!" Sure, that was funny, but it just made the Mac guy look like a zealot.
Zealots don't serve the Apple cause very well. It puts off Window users. I've successfully recommended Macs to coworkers twice, after they saw how easy it was for me to use one, and after the demos I gave them. When you show a user what the computer can do, rather than berating them for choosing something you think is inferior, you stand a far better chance of getting him or her to see things your way.
I like these Apple ads. It's a good step towards showing people that the switch to the Mac is going to be as easy as computer itself.
My Migration Stories and Thoughts on OS X (Score:2)
Re:I have to say... (Score:2, Insightful)
That "may be" is the big thing Apple are addressing. While there's no doubt there ARE things about macs that grab people (and being a fanatical user with 36 of the things myself I've been firmly grabbed!), there are also turnoffs. For people to be able to make decisions on what suits them best, whether it be linux/bsd/solaris/windows/macos/amiga/a tin can with a string/etc, they need to have the information. Just getting over the hurdle of "But it's a mac!" is the big thing. I find the best thing I can tell potential converts is "It's just a bloody computer!"... it has a cpu, ram, gui, I/O stuff... And let people see for themselves what they want. Taking a unbiased-seeming view kinda rubs off on people and opens their mind
After getting over silly little hatreds of what's just an inanimate electronic machine - some choose macs, some don't - and we're all happy
a grrl & her server [danamania.com]
An analogy... (Score:1)
Although the small increase in processing power may be far outweighed by the ease of use and stability of the Apple platform.
Disclaimer: borrowed from the AppleAddict forums.
If you're in Nevada, and you want to get to San Fransisco, do you:
Re:I have to say... (Score:2)
Re:I have to say... (Score:1)
Hopefully 10.2 will make enough serious speed imporvements to make worth our while.
Re:I have to say... (Score:2, Interesting)
Most other respectable bechmarks have shown that the margin of Mhz on a P4 vs performance on a G4 is MUCH smaller than the highly quote 2 to 1 ratio rabid Apple fans spout.
If all you do is Photoshop then yes the G4 is great but real world applications aren't all up to those performance numbers. Photoshop benchmarks are only showing specific operations and ignoring the rest. Anyone who has done any kind of benchmarking knows that there are strengths and weaknesses in every test. Marketing takes off with the highest figures and puts the spin on them.
OS X uses the CPU heavily because it isn't into the hardware yet on all the rendering. 10.2 is supposed to get the hardware more optimized and we will have to see how much improvement we will really see. I personally can't wait to see it.
Of course there are huge differences in speed and productivity. OS X is definitely got the advantage there over most. Maybe it is slower but it is still very nice to work with. If 10.2 comes through then it won't be slower and we really will have something to talk about.
It's hard to ignore facts but it nice to see that some people have fallen for the facts.
Re:I have to say... (Score:1, Interesting)
Altivec is perfect for some applications, but it's out of the question if you need double precision, of if you want all your code to be portable.
I think our project highlights the problem with Altivec. In theory we could invest a couple of thousand hours to implement altivec stuff, but in practice it isn't worth it for a platform with 5-10% market penetration.
It just doesn't matter how good Altivec is - from a commercial point of view it is much smarter to spend that money on adding SSE instructions for the other 90% of the market...
Re:I have to say... (Score:1)
I think if OS X gets optimized like it could be then it will have great usability and smokingly fast too. I don't think we are there yet and potential is great but you must capitalize on it. And I do use OS X regualarly at home and work. It is not what I would call fast even on a Quicksilver with plenty of RAM. It still is a very nice system to work with.
The last Intel processor I bought was a new 233MMX and everything else has been Athlon or RISC (Powermac, MIPS R10k). I did buy into DDR, faster hard drives, etc. but Intel and Mhz has not excited me.
Re:I have to say... (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:I have to say... (Score:4, Insightful)
but for things that actually matter to me like kernel compiles, mp3 encoding, or gaming
Under OS X kernel compiles are a non-issue unless you're hacking around inside the Darwin kernel. MP3 encoding is pretty quick. I believe the MP3 encoding routine used by iTunes is Altivec optimized so it encodes as fast as it suck the music off the cd. Gaming is the only thing on your list that would be difficult for anyone to argue..
Re:I have to say... (Score:1)
I won't argue the point, but I would like to clarify it a bit. The term "gaming" is very broad, and covers a variety of different applications. If by "gaming" you're referring to the number of frames per second in the latest 3d shooter, you're probably right. The latest 3d hardware often isn't available in Mac versions, and Apple is currently lagging in its support for the cards that are available. I wouldn't suggest a Mac to someone who's looking forward to Doom 3, for instance.
On the other hand, if you're into other types of games, such as Warcraft, Civilization or The Sims, you won't have a problem with running them on a Mac. There's nothing wrong with the Mac for gaming in general - it's just that some of the more popular games in a particular genre stress a particular area in which the Mac has shortcomings.
Re:I have to say... (Score:1)
Re:I have to say... (Score:2)
The phrase "often isn't available" does not have the same meaning as the phrase "is never available"
Re:I have to say... (Score:2)
No problems here. Nethack kicks ass on my iBook.
Re:I have to say... (Score:1)
Re:What a bunch of losers! (Score:1, Interesting)
The ads do a great job of elaborating on this. And I see they "real folks" as far more credible spokespersons than a bunch of celebrities.
Re:What a bunch of losers! (Score:3, Interesting)
Francis Ford Coppola was once quoted as saying, "Somewhere out there there's a six year old girl with a camcorder who's changing the future of film."
When they intro'd the new iMac, Apple showed a video at the keynote address. (QuickTime version available here [apple.com].) It's an amazing little piece with tons of production value.
In it, they featured interviews with Seal, Annie Lebovitz, and, yes, Francis Ford Coppola. Coppola talks about how the iMac and the digital media tools give regular people the kind of creative power that was once reserved only for big, famous filmmakers like himself. At the end of the video, he says, "I look at something like this [the new iMac] and I think, oh, I want three million of them. So I can put them with, you know, three million young people."
The fact that Apple never turned that into a commercial spot in wide release is just a crime. It's a really moving piece.
Re:What a bunch of losers! (Score:1)
Re:What a bunch of losers! (Score:1)
Re:Line by Line Responce (Score:2)
are they first party software or third, and do they come with the computer or are they aftermarket, cause there are plenty of third party options for the mac in these areas as well.
Re:Line by Line Responce (Score:1)
Re:Line by Line Responce (Score:2, Interesting)
While I wouldn't use the term beautiful, as far as I can see, style is the number one reason for getting a Mac. The problem is, in a few years, these things are going to be like bell bottom jeans.
Style the number one reason?? OS X is so staggeringly more robust than any of Microsoft's OS offerings that isn't even funny. Rock solid UNIX foundation, incredible performance (BSD-core outperforms Linux, Solaris), best application development platform bar-none provided free, world-class desktop applications (Photoshop, MS Office, Dreamweaver, Maya, etc.), world class server applications (Oracle being ported currently), and one company trying the OS and hardware together.
Yea - and it looks nice too.
blakespot
Re:Line by Line Responce (Score:1)
Re:Line by Line Responce (Score:2)
So, let me ask you: which applications on the PC let you download images from your digital camera, sort them into albums, publish to a web page and order hardcover books as effectively as iPhoto?
Which PC apps do DV capture, edit, and dump as seamlessly as iMovie (i.e. all within one working environment)?
Which PC DVD authoring apps make it simple for consumers to create beautiful, tasteful DVDs, with software integration as effective as that of iDVD and iMovie?
Which PC music player / playlist management / CD-ripping and burning app automatically synchronizes its own playlists with your personal hard disk-based MP3 player at FireWire speeds?
The iApps are elegant, powerful and bundled for free with the Mac. They have their own unique features which are not found on any other computer, at any price. Please tell me which PC apps are "just as good".
Re:Why show Mac users as lamers? (Score:3, Insightful)
Anyway, saying to people that you were smart enough to buy a Mac is probably not the best approach. Putting "real people" like this on TV, talking about their experience, is something I wish Apple did a long time ago! I think campaigns like this will get a lot of people's attention, and at least make them consider a Mac next time they buy a computer.
Re:Why show Mac users as lamers? (Score:1)
Parading a bunch of John Q Public anecdotes across the screen isn't going to get the general public's attention.
Re:Why show Mac users as lamers? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Why show Mac users as lamers? (Score:4, Interesting)
You must be too young to remember the "Pepsi Challenge" commercials of the 80's.
You see, if you just drink small sips of each pop in a double-blind taste test, the sweeter taste of Pepsi (Coke has a more bitter bite to it) leads the vast majority of people to say they like Pepsi's taste better. (2 out of 3, according the the marketroids who ran the test.)
With this knowledge in hand, Pepsi held taste tests of this sort in Supermarkets all over the country, and ran TV ads showing "real people" (including many lifetime Coke drinkers) express their astonishment at having chosen Pepsi.
The campaign was so wildly successful that it lead to a panic-inspired decision by the Coca-Cola company... when the patent on the formula for the original Coke ended they abandoned their well-known flavor and introduced "New Coke", a formula that tasted almost exactly like Pepsi. We all know what a disaster that turned out to be. Pepsi drinkers did not really feel any particular desire to switch to the new Coke, and Coke drinkers just wanted "the old Coke" back (and eventually got it, as "Coca-Cola Classic"). See, the thing is, people who drink a lot of Cola on a regular basis don't like the heavy, sticky sweetness of Pepsi. They like the crisp bitterness of Coke. So even when Pepsi more customers, Coke customers consume more product, which is why Coke has mostly remained the #1 seller (by a narrow margin) all these years.
Still, nobody can argue that the Pepsi Challenge ads were anything short of a triumph. In an industry where most people just drink whatever is loaded in their local bar's tap, and everybody else sticks with their favorite brand like a religion, the vast majoirty of Cola ads are for brand image alone. The ads don't sell cola, they keep stock values up. The Pepsi Challenge campaign, by putting "regular people" on TV stands alone as the only cola TV ads that actually got a few people to switch brands.
Happier now. (Score:2, Insightful)
I don't see that these ads show people who were too stupid to make their Windows computers work. I think these are people who want to get something done with their computers, hated the experience they got with Wintel, and are happier now that they've switched.
"I was smart enough to buy a Mac because it works better than what I had before. It looks and feels better, too."
The message seems to be:
Marketing 101, second week.
The most important feature of the DJ spot isn't that she thinks her Mac is pretty. It's that someone told her to buy Wintel, she did, and didn't like it. She then bought her own Mac, and she likes it a lot more. She went against the flow, jumped off the bandwagon, and bought a "niche" computer. As a result, she's happier. The marketing message is: Maybe you'd be happier like our friend Liza here if you did the same thing she did.
I much prefer advertising trying to influence me with real people saying they're getting more done with less headaches as opposed to advertising trying to influence me with a fictional glue addict whose catchphrase is "Dude!" Talk about "loser"...
Re:Happier now. (Score:2, Interesting)
If they're going for anecdotal evidence, there had to be some better choices.
Out of 8 commercials only IT and creative arts are represented. Shouldn't their target audience be a bit bigger? Give me some truck driver telling me how he dropped his iBook out of his truck and it still worked (happened to me with a 520. 7' drop to asphalt.) Give me some middle-manager that's having a much easier time hooking his TiBook to projectors and giving Powerpoint demos than he ever had with the old tank of a 'laptop' he used to carry. Those are real people.
Sorry, I'm a 'tough crowd', I suppose.
Re:Happier now. (Score:2, Interesting)
I'm sure these people will be surprised to hear they aren't "real people."
Maybe Apple's interested in going after the set of Windows users who are deeply unhappy with their computers and can't understand why things can't be simpler and just work better.
I agree that harder analytical stories would be nice to see in addition to this stuff. As a matter of fact, I can read a few right now at http://www.apple.com/switch/stories/ [apple.com] if I like.
Seems to me that these ads cater to what Apple considers its strengths: ease of use, style, design, empowerment through simplicity, etc. They're a bit whimsical and quirky, which != "tough"; maybe that's why they aren't doing anything for you.
Primarily, the ads get across something that people might perceive to be true anecdotally, but haven't heard directly from Apple in a while: There is a simpler way to do the basic stuff you might want a computer to do. Buy a Macintosh and check it out. These people did, and they're happier.
I am sure that there are lots of people out there who are sick of Windows crashing and hate dealing with confusing (and sometimes non-functional!) preinstalled software which makes it difficult to print a few pictures of the baby or write a paper or read something interesting on the Internet.
Apple is trying to target these "I'm as mad as hell and I'm not going to take it anymore!" people who are generally pretty bright but don't feel like they should have to learn how the computer approaches problems in varied instances just so they can do a few things that the computer was advertised as being able to do.
How is that a flawed marketing strategy?
Re:Happier now. (Score:1)
Hopefully I'm completely wrong about the effectiveness of this campaign. The rest of the campaign is great, but the TV ads suck, IMHO.
Having middle-managers walking off the wintel cliff like lemmings was whimsical and quirky, but no one liked that either. Oh well.
Re:Why show Mac users as lamers? (Score:4, Interesting)
> Hint to Apple marketing: If you create an image of
> the typical Mac user as lonely geeky loser, no one
> will want a Mac!
They didn't strike me as lonely, geeky, or losers. They looked like real people. Which is a refreshing change from "dudes", cows, and supermodels.
> That Dell Dude is cooler than any of the Mac
> users in these ads.
Well, he certainly explains why Apple unseated Dell as market leader in the education field.
> Even that Gateway CEO and his cow are cooler.
Closing stores and worrying about chapter 11, but still cooler. Whereas Apple is opening stores, has 4 billion in the bank, and Steve Jobs' muse is a famous moth goddess instead of a cow.
> In one ad, the "chick"
Suddenly I see why you favor the "Dell Dude".
> notes that she didn't like her PC because it
> "wasn't attractive."
You know, I think she's right. Especially that blue screen of death thing. That's real ugly.
> Haven't Mac users been trying to get past the
> "You only bought it because it's pretty" stigma
> ever since the first iMac? I know I have.
Stigma? If someone says "You only bought it because it's pretty" to me, I say "Yeah, isn't it gorgeous. And look, it can do this, this, and this..." That's not a stigma, it's an opening for some serious advocacy. When your friends pick their jaws off the ground, you then help them pick out a Mac of their very own.
> Marketing 101, guys.
That's the marketing technique all the PC makers use. That's why, in the middle of a decimated desktop industry, Apple sold the hottest selling computer in Amazon's history (the new G4 iMac). That's why Apple had to give in to users clamoring for a machine that Apple intended only for the educational market. That's why Apple has four billion in the bank and is opening stores all over while Compaq no longer exists and Gateway is troubled.
Apple's marketing works, and works well. If it worked too much better, if Apple grew too fast, Apple would be in trouble. Growing a company too fast can endanger or kill the company. They have to keep their manufacturing up with what they sell and keep their growth healthy.
The TV advertising is only part of what Apple does. They have a print advertising campaign that is highly focused depending on a magazine's target audience that lets them do more selling of products to a specific audience. The TV ads tend to be more branding style ads.
> No more "I was too dumb to run a PC, so I bought
> a Mac" ads, please!
You would be surprised by the amount of ordinary people in business that find the simplest task in a GUI to be daunting. They are not dumb people, they are simply busy people with a job to do that do not have time to take classes in mousing or file management. Any computer that makes those tasks simpler for them, saves them time, and thus is very valuable to them. That makes ease of use a very big selling point for the Mac for a lot of people.
On December 14, 1996, Mothra resurrected a charred Apple sapling ("Mosura" 1996).
On December 14, 2001, Mothra returned to see its fruit ("Gojira, Mosura, Kingu Ghidora: Daikaiju Soukougeki").
OS X: the Apple of Mothra's Aqua eye.
Re:Why show Mac users as lamers? (Score:1)
I really like Macs, and I've put up with quite a bit as a hardcore Mac advocate, but these ads don't sell. Sorry.
It could also be that they aren't getting the order numbers they needed just from the edu market, so they had to open them up. Neither of us know for sure. Let's see: No product is shown. Logo is seen once at the end. Brand name is only mention once or twice. Ads feel like documentary sidebars. There is nothing there that makes me want to sit through the ad more than once. No hook. No catch. Nothing.Interesting branding style.
Re:Why show Mac users as lamers? (Score:2, Funny)
Semper ubi sub ubi, "dude".
blakespot
Re:Well that's kind of sick... (Score:1)
How is her body any more camera friendly than the others?
Yeah, I noticed that too. Although I'm not too surprised, I think it was a bit too obvious of a move. But what can you say, thats today's advertising for you.
Re:"Switch" Campaign Deceptive (Score:4, Informative)
As for OS X, my Titanium PowerBook G4 has functioned without needing a reboot for over five weeks at a time as a shuttle it to and from work, from my wireless network at home to my LAN at work. I put it to sleep with impunity -- something the people at my office using Dell laptops won't trust, because suspend always causes them troubles.
No, it's not infallible. I don't think any consumer operating system really is, because there's software out there that won't follow the rules. (For instance, the only thing that crashes my computer is having Diablo II as the foreground app when I put it to sleep. I've forgotton twice in the past couple of months.)
By the way, Google returns 80,200 hits on "Windows XP Crash".
Re:"Switch" Campaign Deceptive (Score:4, Insightful)
I hate when people fall back on Google hit statistics. They are absolutely useless! Google is an unthinking search engine that will return any document with the terms you ask for, regardless of their context. You're bound to get all kinds of documents included in your results that have no place in your argument whatsoever. For example, you might get the weblog of a guy who says "My friend was in a car crash." and later says "I tried out OSX."
Please don't use Google this way. It does nothing to prove your point.
Re:"Switch" Campaign Deceptive (Score:1)
"Linux is a very reliable operating system. Put quite simply, it doesn't crash."
Google hit +1 :P
Re:"Switch" Campaign Deceptive (Score:2)
Re:"Switch" Campaign Deceptive (Score:1)
Since when does advertising not lie?
Or do bikini-clad women really leap out of your closet the moment you pop open a can of Miller beer?
Re:"Switch" Campaign Deceptive (Score:2)
Why else would you drink that shit?
Re: (Score:1)
Windows crash (Score:2)
Re:marketing lies - let me illuminate you (Score:5, Interesting)
When I learned that 1) NEXTSTEP was the basis for Apple's new OS and 2) new Pro towers were forthcoming, I decided to go Mac (from PC), and did in Jan '99 w/ a G3 400. I've since upgraded to a dual G4 800 PowerMac for just shy of a year now, running OS X exclusively. I have had two kernel panics. (One stemming from plugging in an unsupported USB device.) When I had the other kernel panic, I was horrified. I powered the machine off and started recalling the memory upgrade I performed a few months earlier--wondering if it could be the culprit. I checked the LED clock at my side to see if there had been a brownout. I felt the FireWire connection to my external 160GB drive to make sure it had not come-aloos and somehow caused the problem...
Oh...I just picked up an iBook 700. I have no practical need for this, as I am behind a machine all day at work (developer) and my G4 is there when I get home. I simply wanted to be able to bring OS X with me. On a whim, I can make use of it. It's that good. It is truly a shame what so many people are missing.
blakespot
Re:marketing lies - let me illuminate you (Score:1)
Let me add that I kind of like that the mac platform is small, to a certain extent. Don't get me wrong, I like converts and Apple's latest strategy moves, but it's nice to be using something that you have clearly chosen and that you are satisfied with.
A 10-20% marketshare would be nice (and I really think it's possible if Apple doesn't screw it up!), but not much more than that. We'd just get another Microsoft and who'd like that?
Re:marketing lies - let me illuminate you (Score:1)
Indeed. Let us remember--Apple need not come anywhere near market dominance to be wildly successful and secure. It's like Jobs' own comparison, B&M, Mercedes, etc.
Anyway, if Apple was the market leader, they'd end up "the bad guy."
blakespot
Re:marketing lies - let me illuminate you (Score:1)
Mac OS X performance benchmarks (Score:3, Informative)
lmbench 2.0 summary [clustermonkey.org]
Re:Mac OS X performance benchmarks (Score:1)
In some areas the latest linux 2.4 kernel is better. In other cases the Darwin kernel is better.
NetBSD is mostly behind though (not always)
Re:Mac OS X performance benchmarks (Score:4, Interesting)
I agree with all but one... (Score:2)
I've used Windows 2000 for a year now. I've never had a kernel panic (no matter what I plug in) and I can't recall having any kind of lockup that couldn't be fixed with the Task Manager.
Re:I agree with all but one... (Score:2)
In Win2K you might not be able to bring the terminal up on crash but I find you can get the Task Manager up even when the rest of the OS is pretty hosed.
Re:In Perspective (Score:1)
The price, on the other hand, is why next month I'm putting a new AMD/Linux workstation into the mix and not a new G4 workstation.