Re-Imagining Apple 541
FirienFirien writes "Business 2.0 has put up a selection of ideas from Pentagram Design, featuring some interesting rumoured ipod innovations, as well as a look at what may be next for Apple. From the article: 'The project was led by Robert Brunner, who was Apple's chief designer from 1989 to 1996, and who oversaw the design of the PowerBook line, among many other hit products.'"
An interesting set of designs (Score:5, Insightful)
Those products all look like any old generic electronics product. They entirely lack the current Apple design features of absolute minimalism.
If steve could create a sphere with one single button on the outside, that glowed, and had any realistic expectation that it might sell, he would.
(and the button would be optional)
Re:An interesting set of designs (Score:5, Funny)
You mean they don't look like boring bars of Ivory soap?
Re:An interesting set of designs (Score:3, Funny)
hawk, dating himself
Apple Design Award (Score:3, Interesting)
You must be thinking of the Apple Design Award [panic.com]. It's a "beautiful metal cube ... that glows when you touch it." Unfortunately they're generally not for sale.
http://www.mekentosj.com/goodies/cubism/ [mekentosj.com]
PIctures, including x-rays:
http://www.mekentosj.com/goodies/cubism/gallery.ht ml [mekentosj.com]
Re:An interesting set of designs (Score:5, Funny)
Tagline: "Life is random."
Re:An interesting set of designs (Score:3, Interesting)
I
Re:An interesting set of designs (Score:4, Insightful)
There's also text messaging... which is a big deal for some people. I only use it for my one friend who works the night shift and can't answer the phone while at work.
Most people I know never use the voice activated dialing, mostly because it doesn't work, and they don't want to look like a moron saying "Bob! Bob! Bob!" at their phone in a public place. Of course, this assumes that they're not one of those folks who thinks it's OK to talk on a cell phone at any time and place (see: "Shaun of the Dead")
Re:An interesting set of designs (Score:3, Funny)
Re:An interesting set of designs (Score:4, Funny)
Re:An interesting set of designs (Score:3, Interesting)
What you want is a Nokia 7280. No keypad, just a clickwheel (very iPod).
Re:An interesting set of designs (Score:3, Insightful)
already been done (Score:4, Interesting)
http://www.nokia.com/nokia/0,8764,62371,00.html [nokia.com]
How's that again? (Score:5, Interesting)
Perhaps that should read "... chief designer from 1989 to 1996, a period where Apple saw its market share drop to near irrelevance".
Weren't these the same people Steve Jobs saved Apple from?
Re:How's that again? (Score:3, Informative)
http://www.lowendmac.com/musings/gil.shtml
Re:How's that again? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:How's that again? (Score:3, Informative)
If it's any consolation, you only missed out on some coupons. (The lawyers, of course, made out like bandits all three times.) And your Performa will happily run Linux if you stick some more RAM in there.
Re:How's that again? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:How's that again? (Score:4, Insightful)
Oh, and that thinkpad clit-mouse is worse than any trackball.
Re:How's that again? (Score:3, Insightful)
Uh huh, that must be why we're all using those eraser-tip mouse controls.
The first touchpad for mouse control debuted on .. wait for it ... a Powerbook. Ditto the first active matrix LCD. Ditto the first backlit keyboard on a notebook. Ditto the first 17" screen on a notebook.
IBM had the first ... uh ... hmmmm ... hang on, I'll think of something I'm sure ..
One of those isn't good (Score:4, Insightful)
One of those isn't something to be very proud of. The reason the IBM eraser tip is not a lot more common is that IBM charges a lot to license their patent. At times, Toshiba has chosen to bite the bullet and include it The eraser nipple thing is far easier to use than one of those mushy touchpads. Especially when so many touchpads have the horrendous "feature" where if you bump the surface, it acts as a mouse click. This makes absolutely no sense: how many real mice register a click when you touch the mouse without clicking it? I've seen some where you could not even turn it off, making "a Drag is often a Click and Drag even though you never clicked any button" a common situation.
Re:One of those isn't good (Score:3, Insightful)
Hey AtariAmarok, you're a funny guy .. I copied and saved one of your posts the other day about swedish pirates .. "I veell seenk yuoor sheep und ploonder yuoor buuty, hurty flurty schnipp schnipp!" .. cracked me up ...
I agree with you about the "clickable" touch-pad "feature". I keep this turned off on my Powerbook G4. I have never liked it and am always surprised that other people, using my computer, are so surprised when tapping the pad does not result in a click .. apparently they use it so much on th
Re:How's that again? (Score:3, Informative)
> References, please.
Sure thing.
The Regsiter [theregister.co.uk]
Apple has a history of mobile computing innovation quickly ripped off by other vendors. Its PowerBook 100 - manufactured by Sony - was the world's first notebook with a built-in trackball.
The first trackpad, the first integrated modem, the first integrated 802.11b WLAN, the first 15in widescreen LCD, and the first backlit keyboard (in the 17in PowerBook) are among Apple's other notebook firsts.
MobilePC Magazine: "Top 100 Gadgets of All Time" [mobilepcmag.com]
22
Re:How's that again? (Score:3, Insightful)
Weren't these the same people Steve Jobs saved Apple from?
This is certainly a valid point, but it is essentially a 'red herring'. It's not the design of the machines that was responsible for Apple's fall in market share. On the contrary, the exempalry design kept the market share from falling further.
Apple's low market share is primarily due to its high price and relative
Re:How's that again? (Score:5, Interesting)
For some reason known only to them, Apple chooses to have only a tiny market share of the PC industry. They are certainly smart enough to redefine the industry on their terms.
The way I would put it makes the reason a bit more obvious:
Apple chooses not to compete with Dell and the other commodity box makers in the commodity box market. They've chosen to compete with Dell on their own terms, by redefining the industry more than once.
Maybe you meant to say that. The ideas are certainly there in your post.
Redefinitions properly defined. (Score:3, Interesting)
Except there were still many things that were easier on the command line than the GUI. The command line serves the users, period. Apple crippled thier OS by not having it. No one else copied this mistake, and eventually Apple rectified it with OS-X (which is their first serious OS).
"Users want total contro
Re:Like many on /. , you're an insulated geek (Score:3, Insightful)
They don't have anything like a full keyboard, so it doesn't make sense there. But if they did, they would need it.
"The computer is now a piece of consumer electronics and the interface matters. That began with the Macintosh."
It began long before the Macintosh. Besides, in the mid 1980s Apple was one of a few companies with the GUI. The "piece of consumer electronics" started with the C= Pet, TRS-80, and Apple ][. The M
Re:How's that again? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:How's that again? (Score:5, Insightful)
> started seeing Macs everywhere.
He did no such thing, And those clones were crap. They relied on better performance figures on paper with woeful hardware support & reliability.
I had the misfortune of supporting Macs during the 1990s. Apples were marginally better than most suppliers, but most clones were cheaper & more prone to failure than the worst PC brands.
Re:The clones were better than Apple's machines (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:The clones were better than Apple's machines (Score:5, Interesting)
Apple's reliability was also crap during that era, too - and their prices were a lot higher.
When it became obvious that MacOS 8 was really just being targeted at shutting down the cloners (at the time, most of the clone companies only had license rights up through 7.x, because 8 was originally supposed to be Copland) and that Apple was going to refuse all the license renewals, I wrote Steve Jobs a snippy e-mail complaining about it and telling him I expected to see their lunch eaten by NT.
A day later, he sent me an e-mail back explaining his rationale in what he was doing, and we agreed to disagree. You know, I'd say he was probably right after all...
Apple is rolling (Score:5, Insightful)
Apple is the new Sony. Their iPod is this generation's walkman, and Apple is smart enough to leverage that success into other products. Apple has always been good at design. The unix-core of the Tiger OS extends that nice design into the innards.
More food for thought: Paul Graham's essay on Japan vs US design [paulgraham.com], which gives a nod to Apple as one of the few US companies that get it.
Re:Apple is rolling (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Not really (Score:5, Insightful)
If you don't like it, do what I did, and get a $10 logitech wheelmouse. OS X supports it just fine.
Better ERGONOMICS too. (Score:4, Insightful)
Sure, I can get 10% more productivity with a scroll wheel or multi-button mouse, but I wouldn't be working today PERIOD if I'd used one all along.
Re:Not really (Score:4, Insightful)
I've tried to teach my father the keyboard shortcut for quitting an app. CMD-Q. Bless his heart, he still uses the menu every freaking time. Do you think these clueless people, such as my father, should be subjected to your "clueful" idea of computing?
Re:Not really (Score:3, Informative)
You quoted the parent, but perhaps you didn't read it first? Let's see it again:
"Very few applications have (or should have) the level of feature complexity that would require contextual menus for basic functionality..."
Your list represents an almost insignificantly small subset of the applications used by PC owners. Most applications used by people are nowhere near as complex
Re:Not really (Score:3, Interesting)
I can understand why Microsoft did it- they have little creativity and their culture stifles it.
But why did Linux GUI developers just copy the really poor Windows UI (which is a poor copy of the Mac UI)?
Sidebar-- if you're going to mention xerox in your response, don't bother. Apple licensed some ideas from xe
Is it just me... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Is it just me... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Is it just me... (Score:3, Interesting)
Then again, there's Dashboard. Its aesthetics represent a sharp departure from what I think of as Mac design.
This is from someone still puzzling Apple's fascination with brushed metal within OS X. Here's hoping for some modernized version of Aqua, applied everywhere it makes sense.
a music revolution.. (Score:5, Funny)
but damn it would be the same size as a chiclet and only cost $75...
Mines on preorder as we speak...
Re:a music revolution.. (Score:5, Funny)
What will Apple do next? (Score:3, Insightful)
The page you requested is available only to magazine customers and AOL members. Subscribe now and you're in...
I guess that's kind of what Steve Jobs meant when he said they "just don't get it." Steve isn't the type of guy to go around giving stuff away for free willy nilly. In fact, he's built up Apple from relative obscurity to the powerhouse PC juggernaut it is today. But when he sees an opportunity, he goes for it. And sometimes that opportunity is to build a stronger brand through giving stuff away for free. He seems to be criticizing the RIAA's tactics of suing their customers, when they should be kissing their asses.
I'm not saying that Steve Jobs should be on his knees kissing anyone's ass, but it is quite obvious that he has a knack for reading the market and "knowing" what people instinctively want.
Re:What will Apple do next? (Score:4, Insightful)
I think there are a few key things that has made Steve Jobs' term at Apple a success:
Generally speaking, all of this boils down to one simple summary: Steve Jobs does whatever he wants, whenever he wants, and when he does, he makes you want it too, regardless of the reality of the situation.
Re:What will Apple do next? (Score:5, Insightful)
Do you imagine for a second that a public company would tolerate a CEO who "does whatever he wants, whenever he wants, and when he does, he makes you want it too, regardless of the reality of the situation" if he wasn't making them as much money as they've ever seen?
Now, leaving everything in the hands of such a person is inherently risky. They are capable of great success because they can brush aside all opposition, but they are also capable of spectacular failures for the same reason. But Steve Jobs is a success today mainly because he made Apple build and sell what people want to buy.
Re:What will Apple do next? (Score:5, Insightful)
Sure, so Apple's kicking some ass with the ipod/iTMS. They're also giving us constant updates to OSX, lots of fun to play with consumer software, a solid lineup of hardware, and with the mac mini, a cheapo machine that everyone's been clamoring for for years.
Part of being the mac faithful is a belief that the average person would be much better off with a mac than a windows machine. Apple's finally making some progress in reaching those average people, and providing them with a cheap computer. What more could we reasonably ask from them? They're not perfect, but I don't think their success in music is causing any big problems.
PodWatch (Score:2, Interesting)
Pentagram wanting to get bought...? (Score:3, Interesting)
What Wonderful Credentials (Score:5, Funny)
He must be a design genius- 89-96 were such wonderful years for Apple!
Re:What Wonderful Credentials (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:What Wonderful Credentials (Score:3, Interesting)
iSatan (Score:5, Funny)
It gets really spooky (Score:5, Funny)
Darwin's mascot has a pitchfork, horns, and a . . .
BILL!
Proof that MS is the Devil, if you were ever in any doubt.
Re-Imaging Apple? (Score:5, Funny)
Steve Jobs Photo? (Score:2, Interesting)
To boldly go... (Score:3, Funny)
Ipicture 4 of 5, it looks like the aged Steve Jobs is wearing a Science Division Starfleet uniform from Star Trek IV?
Ooh, this is gonna be GREAT!
There were some innovative ideas there. (Score:2, Insightful)
The mock-ups are just that, and some of the technology isn't there yet, but since Apple is a brand that people associate with 'expensive but insanely great' products in their niche, like B&O speakers, it might behove them to roll out a line of niche, low volume products like these (rather like, but in a smarter way, than they did the Mac Cube.)
1989-1996 (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:1989-1996 (Score:5, Funny)
Here's the newest Apple hit (Score:2, Funny)
http://www.gizmodo.com/gadgets/images/iProduct.
You've heard it here first and the best thing is, Apple can't even sue me into oblivion as I'm posting anonymous.
Too Bad you Have to pay (Score:3, Insightful)
Paid reg? (Score:2, Insightful)
Really out of the box thinking? (Score:3, Insightful)
We have the
iPod Wristwatch
iPod Wireless
iPod Camera
iPod Media Server
iPod Wireless home phone
How about something new guys? I don't mean to troll, but if this is the most creative you can be then this company is going downhill fast. Whatever happened to the Apple that had all those great new ideas?
Re:Really out of the box thinking? (Score:5, Insightful)
They're still coming up with great new ideas. In the meantime, we have this article under discussion involving ideas from people who do NOT work at Apple, so why are you complaining about Apple?
Re:Really out of the box thinking? (Score:3, Interesting)
um... the design firm is not affiliated with Apple. It was hired by Business 2.0 magazine to present the "ideas".
Well, the firm was working for Apple from 89-96, when Apple did go downhill fast. Now we know why.
Re:Really out of the box thinking? (Score:3, Insightful)
Steve Jobs, great instincts (Score:5, Interesting)
Anybody remember this? Dood has a great natural feel for products.
Re:Steve Jobs, great instincts (Score:3, Insightful)
"You'll only get one shot at this..."
Re:Steve Jobs, great instincts (Score:4, Insightful)
Who knows? Maybe if it had been designed more innovatively it would have caught more eyes than it did. Certainly if they'd taken his manufacturing suggestions it would have been cheaper, and that might have been sufficient (though I can't imagine knocking off the factor of 5 to 10 that would have been required).
Ultimately I've got to give him props for the crucial observation that it simply wasn't the right thing: "You don't have a great product yet!" Well, it would have been great for free, in the Jobs definition of "insanely great", even without more style. But he was clearly righter than everybody else in the room.
Thanks for the link.
Re:Steve Jobs, great instincts (Score:3, Interesting)
Read "Code Name Ginger" for the straight dope on why Segway failed. It was a brilliant product with a poo
A list of possibilities for the product name (Score:5, Funny)
The next big thing... (Score:5, Insightful)
Simplicity. I don't think Apple is in the game of mixing functionalities (I think Sony is a better contender for that). That is why there is no FM tuner in iPods.
Watch that plays music? No one wants to do anything except keep time using their watch. I mean no one sensible.
Simplicity doesn't mean lack of functionality (Score:3, Interesting)
I think if Apple could keep a straight, uncluttered interface they would support an FM (or XM, or Sirius) tuner.
I'd like my watch to do a ton of other things- but the "it has to be a watch" comes first. So a calculator would distract from that terribly (bunch o
Re:The next big thing... (Score:3, Funny)
That's okay, I only listen to AM radio anyhow.
<rant>So why isn't there an AM tuner in iPods?!?!?!! I'm not going to ever buy one until they include an AM tuner!!!!1!!1!!@@!!one!!!</rant>
Missing the point (Score:5, Insightful)
That silly-looking wirless iPod necklace thing -- what's with the bevelled see-through skeleton around it? How does that make it work better? The skeleton around the iPodWatch -- what does it add?
Apple succeeds because they hide the complexity, not because they call attention to it. Flashy complicated designs advertise internal complexity. While a geek sees power in complexity, most people see added cognitive burden. "Oh, shit, I bet that thing has a million features that I'll never figure out."
Re:Missing the point (Score:5, Insightful)
Apple succeeds because they hide the complexity, not because they call attention to it. Flashy complicated designs advertise internal complexity. While a geek sees power in complexity, most people see added cognitive burden. "Oh, shit, I bet that thing has a million features that I'll never figure out."
You've hit the point exactly. I'm a PC user for various reasons, but I drool everytime I see a nice, simple, and clean design from Apple. It's pleasing on the eyes and pleasing on the mind, and I wish a PC manufacturer would realize this and just make a laptop or PC without all these little edges, buttons, and colors.
Re:Missing the point (Score:3, Insightful)
Funny, my first reaction is, "Yeah, right..." (sarcastically)
I mean, there designs are fine, I guess-- at least ok. But the idea of putting an iPod into a watch like that? That's not innovative. Figuring out how to make one that's light and easy to wear, has a reasonable amount of memory, bluetooth, a nice color screen, a convenient interface to your computer, and a price tag under $500-- that wou
Digital Country Club? (Score:5, Insightful)
Someone should string FirienFirien and Zonk up by their editorial tonsils. We can't RTFA unless we shell out money. There is no option to register for free or view advertising in exchange for a subscription. Since when did Slashdot becaome a digital country club where one has no option but to pay to play? Oh, I forgot. 90% of Slashdot doesn't ever bother to RTFA.
That said, I think the most interesting element about this article (of which I could read two paragraphs in addition to its headline) is that a major business news publication is engaging in rumor-mongering just like the fan-based Apple sites. It looks like even the mainstream media has begun imbibing Jobs' Purple Kool-Aid.
Not that I'm complaining. (Just check out mistersquid's profile on http://discussions.info.apple.com/ [apple.com] if you don't believe me). I just find it interesting that mood of Apple's fan-base is starting to be reflected in major media channels.
In related news (Score:2, Funny)
Somebody post the freakin article so I can comment (Score:2)
Imagine... (Score:3, Interesting)
Get a clue (Score:5, Insightful)
Apple computer shipments are actually on the rise (Score:5, Informative)
Turning into a consumer electronics company? If you recall, way back when Steve introduced iTunes to the masses, his plan was to make people want the iPod, which would make people want Macs. His plan is working perfectly. While other PC companies are predicted to have slowdowns in units shipped, Apple is actually expected to sell MORE computers in the near future. Not only is Apple selling computers...they are selling MORE computers than before. Making a nice chunk of profit from the product that is helping the computer-base grow is simply gravy.
The only thing I liked (Score:5, Insightful)
For a movie iPod, take the current device, make the screen longer for 16x9. Now if you want to watch a movie, turn it on its side and use the wheel to move forward or back.
For the iPhone, let you side the top half sideways so you could hold the phone while revealing a keypad - great for finding/entering contact information, notes, text messaging, etc.
But I'm not sold that Apple will go this route. I think they see the iPod as a hub to the computer - insert music into computer, get music onto iPod. Insert movies onto computer, get DVD's or (in time) movies onto the iPod. Record messages to the iPod, and back to the computer.
So most - if not all - of what they do is still geared towards the computer. And I think most people in this generation can live with that.
Extend the idea further. Apple is using the iPod as a hub of its own - recording messages, storing contacts, etc. I can see a time when you buy a digital iCamera, and instead of accepting tapes it just uses an iPod for storage. Plug it into the digital camera or camcorder, take your pictures (with 4,000 picture storage space at incredibly high quality, or with 40 GB of storage space, that's what - around 40 hours of video at MPEG-4 for normal TV rates, different for HDTV? I'm just guessing, so I'm sure someone who knows more about video compression will know).
Cars, like GM, are making "iPod plugs" so you can charge up. Look at the third party iPod market - at least 3 manufacturers are creating car stereos to let you view and select playlists from your iPod.
Expect to see the iPod become more of a "hub" in this fashion - and, of course, still come back to the PC. Maybe it will get Bluetooth in the future so can "walk into the house, sync and go". But several of the ideas (such as the "Wireless iPod you hang around your neck") won't happen because doesn't use the computer as a hub - but as a streamer. Apple knows people want to sync and go.
One last thought - the one thing that I'd like to see in future versions of iTunes is a group/family system. I have music, my wife has music, my kids have music, all shared on a Mac Mini. I have a family user just for that reason, but I can see the first time my daughter does a User Switch to herself and doesn't unplug Daddy's iPod, then starts putting *her* music onto just her user - now duplicating storage.
I'd like to see a version of iTunes which takes this into account, and lets you say "I'm a member of an iTunes share - point me here". Granted, there is the DRM angle where you'll have to have a "family user" to play Audible/iTunes store purchased songs (fine by me, since I just either buy CD's or JHymn the music once I buy it online) instead of every person using their own - but an iTunes family system would be a great. Only 4 more years until my daughter turns 10, and I think the system should be in place by then when she *really* starts getting into her own music.
Do you have one of those 1970s Mavicas? (Score:3, Funny)
The only thing I can figure is that you have one of Sony's 1973 model "Mavica" 0.3 kilopixel digital cameras that stores the pictures on an 8-track tape you insert in the side of the camera.
Revealing Quote (Score:4, Funny)
Kinda makes ya wonder what's hidden in that closet in the corner of Steve's office, doesn't it?
Popularizing existing technologies (Score:3, Interesting)
Don't get me wrong, the new iMacs are cool, but I would have liked to see the rotating monitor become mainstream.
- AJ
In related news, attorneys... (Score:3, Funny)
IronChefMorimoto
Full article text (Score:3, Informative)
What's Next for Apple?
Steve Jobs won't ever tell you -- but we will. Here's what a trail of intriguing evidence reveals about
where the world's hottest company is going.
By Paul Sloan, Paul Kaihla, April 2005 Issue
Steve Jobs was rocking back and forth in his chair at the head of his conference room table -- and venting. It was January 2002, and the target of his
ire was the music business. The industry was reeling from Internet piracy and, as Jobs saw it, doing nothing about it. Even Jobs himself, a man
accustomed to commanding people's attention, had been largely ignored by music execs. Jobs railed to his audience, a few Apple (AAPL)
lieutenants and Paul Vidich, then a senior exec at Warner Music, about the industry's total lack of imagination. "Until now," Jobs said, "I've never had
a living, breathing music executive come to Apple."
Vidich sat quietly.
"Why is it," Jobs continued, "that the people who run the music industry just don't get it?"
Vidich could have taken this the way Jobs certainly meant it -- as an insult. But as Vidich listened, he couldn't help thinking that he agreed. Finally,
he spoke up.
"Steve," he said, "that's why we're here. We need some help."
It's amazing to consider what has happened since that encounter at Apple's headquarters in Cupertino, Calif. In three years Apple has utterly changed
the way people listen to music, and Jobs has become the hero of the very people he was lambasting. Top acts are eager to sell their music via the
iTunes music store. The iPod music player has become totemic; it's selling at a rate of about 40 per minute. White buds sprout from so many ears
that a sudden human evolutionary adaptation seems to have taken place.
Apple's lead in digital music is growing even as an army of corporate powerhouses -- Dell (DELL), Microsoft (MSFT), Samsung, and Sony (SNE)
among them -- spends hundreds of millions of dollars to grab a slice of the business. And the financial transformation driven by Apple's storming of
the music stage has been profound: On its knees when Jobs retook control in 1997, Apple is coming off a year in which revenue rose 33 percent and
profits quadrupled. Its stock, not surprisingly, has been on a tear, up more than sixfold in the past two years and now hovering around $42 a share.
So, Mr. Jobs, what do you do for an encore?
It has become a parlor game in some quarters to try to divine where Apple is going and how it intends to get there -- and not just at the dozens of
blogs that traffic in Apple rumors. Recently, Microsoft quietly hired a former Apple design executive whose mission is to help Bill Gates's baby
behave more like Steve Jobs's. Apple doesn't make the game easy; Jobs is famously secretive and detests leaks -- just ask the kid from Harvard
whom Apple recently sued after he posted details of the Mac Mini before the stripped-down computer was unveiled at Macworld (see "The Secrecy of
Success"). But there are ways to draw a bead on what's brewing in Jobs's fantasy factory. And we're here to tell you, it goes way beyond what he has
discussed at Macworld.
Jobs wouldn't talk to Business 2.0, but in various public forums, he has stressed how the $499 Mac Mini, the low-cost iPod Shuffle, and an advanced
operating system called Tiger, due out this spring, are meant to build on the digital-music momentum. In truth, they are but the tip of a very long spear.
Discussions with past and present company officials, Apple partners, and longtime acquaintances of Jobs, as well as clues in patent applications
and other evidence, point to a gargantuan effort to leverage the iPod's success by creating an entire line of breakout consumer electronics devices.
Dozens of gadgets -- from an iPod phone to wireless iPods that talk to one another to the ultimate all-in-one home-cum-car media hub -- appear to be
on the drawing board or, in some cases, already in prototy
This is what I want! (Score:3, Interesting)
Steve, let me know when I can place my pre-order!
Are they serious?! (Score:3, Insightful)
1. That iTunes was created as an attempt to mimic P2P software.
2. That the makers of Kazaa sued Apple, and settled out of court for a rather large amount of money.
3. That ESR did much of the programming on iTMS.
4. That ESR is the one who suggested putting DRM on the files, a prospect that hadn't occurred to Jobs or the music industry.
5. That the music industry had to convince Apple to loosen the DRM restrictions because they were afraid people wouldn't buy otherwise.
I almost want to say this sounds like an early April Fool's joke. Are they serious? Does anybody buy this?
Re:Apple is SO 2004 (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Apple is SO 2004 (Score:3, Interesting)
I think you missed the point of the post. All the things he mentioned *did* happen already. The reason iPods costs so much, BTW, isn't that the prices are artificially or unreasonably inflated due to a monopoly. Component costs certainly have a lot to do with it, since the retail prices of the storage media alone often cost more than the iPods they're included in.
I guess Apple has a "monopoly" on iPods, but they don't have a monopoly on MP3 players.
Re:Apple is SO 2004 (Score:3, Insightful)
But you mean to tell me a car adapter, a firewire cable and other iPod accessories need to be orverpriced too. Apple is clearly jacking prices up, cause they are in the monopoly seat.
Re:Apple is SO 2004 (Score:3, Insightful)
iPod Shuffle, Mac mini (Score:2)
Re:I sure would like a non reg version of the arti (Score:5, Funny)
Re:I sure would like a non reg version of the arti (Score:4, Informative)
Link [business2.com]
Re:Well, for one thing... (Score:5, Insightful)
I know someone who was sued by microsoft. It was essentially the same thing. Rattle the saber a bit, get some media attention, and settle for peanuts after the story has disappeared from the pages.
Re:Products (Score:2)
involve "enhancements" to Apple's iPod. These
"enhancements" might (or might not) have a
market, but they certainly don't have the
simple elegance of Apple's iPod. Apple would
do well to pass on these designs.