Apple Quashes pBop 69
mojotunes writes "The pBop (nee pPod) MP3 player mentioned on Slashdot a while back has been officially pulled by its creator StarBrite Solutions, apparently because of legal pressure from Apple. Well, duh. Who didn't see that coming?"
not a very helpful link... (Score:5, Interesting)
Seriously, does anyone have any useful links on this, as to exactly how they were infringing on Apple, and not just the obvious speculation?
Re:not a very helpful link... (Score:5, Informative)
Not just making a nice MP3 player out of a pocket PC mind you, but making one completely identical to an iPod's interface - along with graphics to represent iPod controls.
Re:not a very helpful link... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:not a very helpful link... (Score:3, Informative)
History Repeating (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:History Repeating (Score:1)
Re:History Repeating (Score:5, Informative)
Re:History Repeating (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:History Repeating (Score:2)
"The LCD display is too small, it remains to be seen what the power consumption or usability of the backlight is, the four buttons (five, actually, I suspect) are likely insufficient, and probably rather modal. I dare not imagine how badly they've ginnied up the volume control. Apple's support for ID3 is woefully insufficient on iTunes and on iPod. (so is everyone else's, more's the pity)"
Re:History Repeating (Score:5, Interesting)
Can you blame them?
Except that.... (Score:3, Informative)
There's lot's of early Mac history at the Folklore site [slashdot.org]. Lots of pictures that show what passed for fashion [folklore.org] among geeks in the 1980s.
My favorite, our man Steve Jobs in his bowtie period, best left for your own searching so I don't get modded-down for posting a link akin to Mr. Goatse.
Re:Except that.... (Score:2)
Uh... sure. Here you go. [folklore.org]
Re:History Repeating (Score:1)
Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:History Repeating (Score:5, Informative)
Here [folklore.org] is the story as recounted by Andy Hertzfeld (one of the original "software wizards" to work on the Mac OS).
This story [folklore.org] by Bruce Horn (who worked at Xerox, and later was hired by Apple to join the Mac team) is a good recount of how the Mac interface came about.
cheers- raga
Re:History Repeating (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:History Repeating (Score:5, Interesting)
Everything you wanted to know about Mac development by the guys who did. [folklore.org]
cheers- raga
Re:History Repeating (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:History Repeating (Score:5, Informative)
Jobs told Xerox:
"I will let you invest a million dollars in Apple if you will sort of open the kimono at Xerox PARC" And Xerox agreed buying 100,000 shares of Apple stock at $10 a piece, which later split to 800,000 shares worth 17.6 million when Apple went public[1]
In regards to Apple "stealing" the interface, PARC's director said:
"Just like the Russians and the A bomb; they developed it very quickly once they knew it was doable."[2]
[1] Apple Confidential by Owen Linzmayer P. 53
[2] P. 54
Re:History Repeating (Score:4, Informative)
cheers- raga
The Peoples' Hate Affair with Apple (Score:5, Insightful)
Yeah... says something, doesn't it?
So the sequence is:
Step 1 is natural; they design stuff. Step 3 isn't guaranteed, but they seem to come up with quite a few hits, now don't they? Step 4 is also quite natural; if one of something is good, then a copy of it will work almost as well with a fraction of the effort! Step 5 is natural given step 4; if they don't protect their designs, then everybody will make money off of the popular ones. And step 6 is natural because, hey, lawyers are involved.
That leaves step 2: people saying that Apple's designs are bad. It farts liberally in the face of step 3, so it must have something to do with step 1: the fact that Apple made it.
And now I'm scratching my head and wondering why.
What does Apple do that makes them so evil that people will decry their products without even a second glance? Why do certain journalists feel the need to predict its imminent downfall for verging on 30 years? How do so many become so thoroughly programmed to be so hostile?
And no, I don't have the answer. That's why I'm asking.
Re:The Peoples' Hate Affair with Apple (Score:5, Insightful)
Perhaps another answer is that apple takes more risks with its products and produces genuinely 'different' things, and new 'different' things are (almost) always challenged before they are accepted.
Re:The Peoples' Hate Affair with Apple (Score:5, Interesting)
1) People fear that which they do not understand.
2) The Mac doesn't have any software for it, it can't be any good.
3) You can't walk into just any store and buy/get help with an Apple product or software.
4) The percieved high price of Apple products.
Now, I could be way off, these are just my perceptions.
Personaly I felt the same way. Up until OS X, I never liked the pre Aqua UI, still don't.
I started watching OS X when it first came out, when OS X got strong (about 10.2) I decided it had matured enough. I just happened to be in the market for a portable, I bought a PowerBook when they first started shipping 1GHz. Never looked back.
There are still 2 things I do on my Windows box; Play games and my Finances. I already had my games for the PC and I don't want my Financials on a portable machine.
BTW: I NEVER thought I would see the word "duvet" used on Slasshdot
Re:The Peoples' Hate Affair with Apple (Score:3)
I will also assume that you missed the part about my owning a PowerBook and that I only game on Windows because I already own the games...
If you walk into Best Buy, Circuit City and many small shops, you wont find any Apple software.
I did not say it was factual, but it is a common perception by the masses.
Re:The Peoples' Hate Affair with Apple (Score:2)
Re:The Peoples' Hate Affair with Apple (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:The Peoples' Hate Affair with Apple (Score:1)
Re:The Peoples' Hate Affair with Apple (Score:5, Insightful)
I always like to give the following answer to the people who argue there is less software on the Mac: there probably is, though if there is so much choice on the PC, why is everyone still using MS-Office?
The answer is that people appreciate quality.
Re:The Peoples' Hate Affair with Apple (Score:2)
Re:The Peoples' Hate Affair with Apple (Score:2)
Re:The Peoples' Hate Affair with Apple (Score:1)
Duvets on Slashdot (Score:4, Funny)
Then you're obviously not browsing at a low enough threshold [slashdot.org]. >:)
(Okay, I admit it, I used Search to find that one. But the fact that it was there... And, smileys look strange when you have to type them as >:) -- and lemme tell you, that one looked even stranger. Damned recursion!)
Re:Duvets on Slashdot (Score:1)
Re:The Peoples' Hate Affair with Apple (Score:2)
Re:The Peoples' Hate Affair with Apple (Score:5, Insightful)
For USians in particular, our history doesn't lend itself to adulation of the elites or of people that are perceived to have airs of being the elite. There is a grudging acknowledgment, once Apples has proven its products, that appeals to the practical appreciation of the technology, but there's a subcurrent of feelings of inadequacy which manifests itself when companies like Microsoft boldly state that they invented when it's obvious Apple was there first. The Microsoft appeal is probably at least partly "yeah it sucks, but Windows is one of the boys, at least - not prissy or artsy dilettante".
Beyond the outward cultural aspect, there is also the personal demons element. Apple (due to Steve's personality and reality-distortion-field) sort of acts like the smart, popular and good looking kid who knows exactly how smart, popular and good looking he is - yeah, that triggers all sorts of adolescent insecurities, even with people how haven't been adolescents for decades. Apple seems to seduce and some folks feel unconfortable with being seduced like that. (I happen to like but I'm a bit of hedonist! :-) )
Watching how Mr. Bill, and Microsoft in general, respond to things Apple leads me to think that these factors are at play. I'd put many Linux folks who hate Apple into the same bucket though, only in different proportions. Rationally Apple is Unix and a closer cousin now, most of the issues raised always seems to be more emotional than rational. (The proof will come from how people reply/moderate this I guess :-) )
Re:The Peoples' Hate Affair with Apple (Score:1, Funny)
Re:The Peoples' Hate Affair with Apple (Score:5, Insightful)
It is well known that any design that stands out enough is going to create a reaction. The more it stands out, the greater the reaction. The only thing is that this draws from both ends of the spectrum: those who say it is the worst thing ever and those who say it is the greatest. You can't please everyone, and it is foolish to think you can. Your average PC maker causes no reaction, simply because they produce the same stuff as the other company. Only the absurd and the different stand out.
Re:The Peoples' Hate Affair with Apple (Score:2)
Re:The Peoples' Hate Affair with Apple (Score:2)
Re:The Peoples' Hate Affair with Apple (Score:2)
Re:The Peoples' Hate Affair with Apple (Score:2)
Re:The Peoples' Hate Affair with Apple (Score:2)
Somebody please mod that funny.
Re:The Peoples' Hate Affair with Apple (Score:1)
Re:The Peoples' Hate Affair with Apple (Score:1)
You Didn't Like It Because You Didn't Think Of It.
Step 2 comes from industry journalists, I promise you, not the 'people' as a whole. (Anyone else who derides Apple has simply been reading too much John Dvorak.) The reason they're journalists is that their own originality and inventiveness is in their ass; otherwise, they might be sharing in the role that Apple plays every
Well, duh. Who didn't see that coming? (Score:2)
it's hardly a copy (Score:5, Informative)
didn't play AAC. doesn't work with iTMS. etc. etc.
i'm surprised it got as much coverage as it did.
Techie vs. Designer (Score:5, Insightful)
And if you asked a product designer, they probably wouldn't care whether it can play back AACs or all the other stuff: It has the same look & feel, it uses exactly the techniques and designs perfected by the people who came up with the iPod.
There's more to a device than just its functionality - the failure to understand that is exactly what has lead to a flood of software with unintuitive UIs.
Re:it's hardly a copy (Score:2)
Re:it's hardly a copy (Score:1)
Re:Uh oh (Score:3, Informative)
Which is a key difference... There are iTunes skins for windoze music players, and iPod skins as well.... they don't go after them because they don't charge. (Of course there's always a good chance you're just trying to get some free linkage, but I'll give you the benefit of the doubt....)
That said, I wonder how WinPLOSION [winplosion.com] (formerly called WinExpose) has survived this long.
Re:Uh oh (Score:2)
Disclaimer: It's entirely possible I'm talkiing out of my ass.
Re:Uh oh (Score:1)
Freeware vs. Commercialware? (Score:1)
Apple after all expends a great deal of money and effort researching design and interfaces for their products. Should other companies be permitted to proft from them? I don't think so.
Should other companies be able to use another companies' intellectual property in ways that:
A. Aren't profitting directly from the creator's ha