Apple to Rule the Digital Home by 2013? 223
Stony Stevenson writes to tell us that a new study from Forrester Research is taking a crack at what seems to have become a hobby for so many, predicting Apple's market strategy. Specifically, Forrester is predicting that Apple will become the 'hub of the digital home by 2013.' "Forrester predicts that Apple will offer eight key products and services to connect PCs and digital content to the TV-stereo infrastructure in consumers' homes. A 're-engineered' Apple Store will expand into in-home installation services to deliver what Forrester describes as a 'fully integrated digital experience.'"
Quick summary: (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Quick summary: (Score:5, Insightful)
Much more in depth than you made it out to be.
Re:Quick summary: (Score:5, Funny)
In the end it doesn't really matter what technical devices I have in the house 2013. My wife still rules the remote control with an iron grip.
Re:Quick summary: (Score:4, Insightful)
Yeah, it's total crap. Not every home even has a drier, or a microwave oven (surprise surprise) or even a TV. Heaps of people don't own anything more than a small radio and cheap TV.
Apple is not going to rule the home because it cannot produce products that everybody can afford.
Re: (Score:2, Interesting)
Remember those ads from the 1950s promising the easy life if you only buy their special new product, firmly targeting the (at the time) new middle class? That's Apple, today.
Re: (Score:2)
And the money we have is shrinking as I type this.
Did you know, by the way, that the government's figures for inflation do not include the cost of energy or food?
Here's a bet: Within 2 years there will be a "new Apple" who succeeds by using Apple's original vision.
Re: (Score:2)
All content (tv episodes, movies rentals, music of course) would be purchased from the iphone and played on the TV.
Re: (Score:2)
Apple is going to rule the Digital Home. Read the article and the title of this /. article again.
You seem pretty sure of yourself, so what exactly constitutes what is and isn't a "digital" home? The article doesn't really pin that down.
By the standards of 25- or even arguably 10 years ago- most present-day homes are fairly "digital" and high-tech. Inevitably, those with money to splash out would have got their fancy toys first, biasing the market in the short term, but in the medium to long term the average home *has* become a digital home. Even if we raise the bar (cliche alert) for this future "di
Re:Quick summary: (Score:4, Insightful)
If you ask me, so far Nintendo's been the most successful.
Re:Quick summary: (Score:4, Insightful)
Yeah (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Yeah (Score:5, Funny)
Hell, think of the marketing! "You have two options of getting your media; via iTMS, or for free via BitTorrent" I'd buy that shit in a heartbeat
Re:Yeah (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Yeah (Score:5, Funny)
I'm not sure why people seem to think it's taboo to talk about how Apple TV didn't make the cut. So not all their products are going to be perfect - big deal. The road to success is not always paved with the detritus of your earlier home runs. Sometimes you have to work harder.
I'm not sure if the premise of the article is valid, but I do believe that if someone can make the media center revolution happen, it's Apple.
Re: (Score:2)
I don't see where it is taboo to say AppleTV isn't up to par. I think it's a fine example to keep to show that Apple doesn't always make a hit the first time around. I'd like to see some better competition, the secrets to Apple's successes aren't secret, most of the information is out there, but maybe it's constantly misinterpreted or poorly adapted to an incompatible culture or management style.
I really don't want one company to have all the keys to
bit terrent (Score:3, Insightful)
And I really doubt that any company, even Apple, would really want to or be able to serve up paid media and install BT to link into illegal distribution of copyrighted materials onto their box like that
Bittorrent is quite capable of distributing legal media as well as illegal. I'm not a content provider however if I did make movies and or music I very well may use Bittorrent for distribution. I'd use it to distribute low quality version of whatever then allow a high quality version to be downloaded for
Re: (Score:2)
Now, do you think Apple represents the masses? Do the richest and most powerful among us really need a revolution on their behalf?
Re: (Score:2)
But the "Take 2" version, especially with the price cut and the hacks to enable a web browser, weather, news feeds, etc, make it a pretty compelling box.
I bought one at the new lower price, and I am getting a lot of use from it. Even my wife thinks it's cool, and as non-technical as she is, the TiVo was the last thing I bought that got such a positive reaction, so I think Apple TV has a b
What part of "home market" don't you understand? (Score:4, Insightful)
Bittorrent? What's that? Isn't that something that pirates and terrorists use to exploit poor starving artists?
iTunes and the iPod have been successful because of the public perception that they just work - now, you can debate how true that is if you like, but that's the line. Part of that ease of use is exactly because they force you to use iTunes (the software*) - which annoys slashdotters who want to mount their mp3 player under Debian and copy .ogg files to it, but is a matter of sheer indifference to the mass market, who like the seamlessness that comes from the monolithic approach.
As for the AppleTV: at the moment, whereas the iTunes store is there to sell iPods, the AppleTV is there to sell iTunes video, and to "tick a box" so that people buying video for their iPods know there's an Apple-branded solution to show them on the big screen. Once the online video market has "come of age" (which will also need a bit of a revolution in broadband availability & capacity) Apple might get serious about the AppleTV.
(*Of course, iTunes the software doesn't force you to buy your media from iTunes, the store - it will happily rip audio CDs, accept MP3s and unprotected AACs from any source - legal or otherwise - and a google for "rip DVD to iTunes" produces a heap of solutions: if you know Bittorrent you probably know Google)
Re:Yeah (Score:5, Informative)
You can laugh now, but a slow introduction of an Apple product does not guarantee eventual failure.
Estimates indicate 1-1.5 million Apple TVs were sold in their first year on the market [wikipedia.org].
In comparison, the iPod sold 376,000 units in their first year on the market [wikipedia.org]. We're not laughing at iPod now, are we?
Re:Yeah (Score:4, Funny)
No they won't (Score:5, Interesting)
Apple doesn't make anything that hooks to a TV that has any critical mass.
Agreed. (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:No they won't (Score:5, Insightful)
Nintendo doesn't seem interested in providing the full experience, either. They focus heavily on each individual product.
Microsoft definitely has the strongest ambition. But they do often shoot themselves in the foot.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
Re:No they won't (Score:5, Insightful)
Other than perhaps a less clunky interface, I can't imagine how Apple could trump that.
Re:No they won't (Score:5, Interesting)
maybe I've had my expectations set too high after using xbox media centre for so long, but after being able to watch pretty much any video format over nearly any protocol the 360's media "integration" just seems like a polished turd
Apple (Score:2)
The way the 360 integrates with an internal computer network to deliver high quality video and audio is pretty darn slick.
Other than perhaps a less clunky interface, I can't imagine how Apple could trump that.
With built in network ports, Ethernet and WiFi, Apple TV can also integrate with a computer network, and it works with Windows and OS X. It can serve up movies, music, and photos. And it works with standard as well as HDTVs.
FalconRe: (Score:2)
PS3 or Wii (Score:3, Insightful)
For the PS3, Sony has been helpful in getting Linux to run on it. The most important factor is the blu-ray capability. I know a lot of people who bought a PS3 just for the blu-ray. They own no games 'cept what came in the box.
The Wii is an exceptional game machine. Nintendo hit their target right on and that fact that the Wii is outselling the PS3 and Xbox combined speaks volumes. If the Wii offered up blu-ray, it would dominate even more.
Re: (Score:2)
Yes, I know it will be a different version of the Wii to support HDMI and 1080p. I think all of them will need at else t ONE more version change before it has the chance, including Apple.
Of course, there al
I for one welcome our new over 1 button overloards (Score:5, Funny)
Re:I for one welcome our new over 1 button overloa (Score:5, Funny)
4 Button overloads nowadays (Score:2)
Of corse if you just look at a mighty mouse at the shops you won't notice because the designers made the mouse lokke like it has no buttons at all.
Martin
Mighty Mouse a disappointment in the long run (Score:2)
In 6 to 12 month when cleaning the roller no longer restores usability you'll go back to Microsoft or Logitech like many other early adopters. In the long run it turns out to be quite a disappointment for the price. It's a cool device out of the box but it has longevity problems.
Re: (Score:2)
I can't say I've had this problem with my Mighty Mouse (that's actually hooked up to my Linux PC as I use a wacom tablet with my main mac), but then I take care not to make a disgusting mess of my computers.
This may be true for some other people though, like those of my friends who swear cellphones are made to only last a few months while chucking them around and dipping them in drinks (yes, a friend of mine did this and seemed almost surprised when it stopped working), or who complain that keyboards alway
Forrester cracks me up... (Score:5, Interesting)
The 4 new products they predict are:
* AppleSound universal music controller
what, for the times when you are out of earshot of itunes, ipod or apple tv? or so you can sync them? I don't see the market here.
* Network-enabled gadgets
like a chumby? or an ambient orb?
* In-home installation services
apple geek squad? Ok, this may be true, but really... yawn...
* Apple home server product
This is the only one that MAY be interesting, but that's probably just because they don't say much about it. isn't this what the mini is? or mini+drobo?
Re:Forrester cracks me up... (Score:5, Insightful)
So it isn't as though Apple can just waltz in to this arena and amaze people, the products already exist, and they are already easy to use. It also already works with Apple stuff. Put an iPod in your Yamaha receiver (many have iPod docks) and the receiver will control it remotely, and the Harmony will control the receiver.
Sounds to me like this guy is an Apple fan who hasn't really done his homework about what is actually out there, or done any real business analysis of if a market would be good for Apple to get in to. As you noted for home installation services, that's a big yawn. To the extent people buy that, they are going to buy it from the retailer they get the hard drives from, like bigscreen TVs. This isn't the sort of thing someone is going to think "Man, I'd better call Apple and have them pick up my TV from Best Buy and install it." It's hard to sell "cool" in the mark of in home installations and it takes only a minor look at Apple's business to realise that selling cool is what they do. The iPod wasn't the first MP3 player, it wasn't the cheapest, etc. What it was is the one that made MP3 players cool to have, that made them a fashion accessory.
I really wish Slashdot wouldn't post fanboy crap like this. Just because it doesn't come from a blog, doesn't mean it isn't just a fanboy drooling over what they think would be cool. There seems to be no business case for any of this, just wild speculation.
Re: (Score:2)
Sounds to me like this guy is an Apple fan who hasn't really done his homework about what is actually out there, or done any real business analysis of if a market would be good for Apple to get in to.
While these systems, like X10 [wikipedia.org], and services already exist Apple has a record of moving into something and putting pieces together with a polished UI and selling it, such as the iPod and iPhone. What Apple doesn't have is a record of going into homes however they can put a system together to control home aut [wikipedia.org]
Re: (Score:2)
What? They control my devices that connect via Bluetooth, with an infrared transmitter? They control my ethernet-connected devices with the same IR remote? That is pretty amazing, but somehow I don't think it's true.
Re: (Score:2)
Do you have one? I do. Heres the thing. Its d
* In-home installation services (Score:2)
Actually there's a pretty good market in home installations now, with media centers, automatic systems, and remote control like X10 [smarthome.com] being installed. I've seen 3 or 4 magazines that focus on these like "Smart Homeowner" [smart-homeowner.com] and "Electronic House" [electronichouse.com]. Falcon
Not with apple TV, but maybe... (Score:2)
Now the bad : apple has no history of creating amplifiers, TVs , or game systems. Still, looking at the success of the iPhone and their laptops, I would not be surprised if they just came out with a Sony/Nintendo/MS Xbox killer multi function device.
Hey APPLE, please do not make it dependent on damn ITU
Re: (Score:2)
Now the bad : apple has no history of creating amplifiers, TVs , or game systems. Still, looking at the success of the iPhone and their laptops, I would not be surprised if they just came out with a Sony/Nintendo/MS Xbox killer multi function device.
My mind isn't working 100% right now from lack of caffeine, so I'm just going to give you the link for interesting reading to Apple's one and only game system, the Pippin. [wikipedia.org]
Re: (Score:2)
the ampliefier is done. There really is no difficulty here. There well understood and everyone with 1 year of electronic interest knows how to make them. The only question is quality, and I'll give Apple that one. They have continued to improve and learn.
"TVs"
Apple doesn't need to create TVs, they just need HDMI. I would be surprised to see Apple try to compete with all the new 1080 stuff. It seem to me that the market for that has all the entries it needs.
ANd i
Re: (Score:2)
Apple doesn't need to create TVs, they just need HDMI.
Apple TV does HDMI and is compatible with many TV resolutions.
FalconRe:Not with apple TV, but maybe... (Score:4, Insightful)
That's where they make their money. And making money by locking in users matters to Apple just as much as to Microsoft.
Nokia (Score:2)
I just got an iphone to get rid of that piece of shit E65 after promising everyone, that it was my last ever nokia.
Yea, I can kick myself for buying the Nokia item I bought. A bit over 10 years ago I saw a 21" Nokia monitor and liked it, so as I was looking for a large monitor I bought one. I didn't have it a year before paying to send it into their repair facility because the display was wrong. After getting it back a week or two later it still had the same problem. It was nice while it worked but i
Apple is as Apple Does (Score:5, Funny)
It's fun and easy to do, and you soon learn that you can do just as good a job as Forrester or Gartner or Cringley, and do a lot better than Metcalf, Michael Dell or Dvorak (not the keyboard layout, as even a keyboard layout can provide better market analysis than that guy).
Bold predictions! You can make bold predictions -
"Steve Jobs will buy Adobe!"
"Steve Wozniak will mary a famous comedienne!"
"iPhone will be the first earth technology bough by alien visitors as it's superior to their own!"
"Apple will shut it down and give the money back to the shareholders!"
- Ok, I admit that it's unlikely Woz will marry a famous comedienne, but other than that, as long as it's outlandish and over-the-top, there's a one-in-a-million chance it might come true, and as Terry Pratchett readers, we know one-in-a-million chances crop up nine times out of ten.
Articles like this are just the encouragement newly fledged Apple pundits need to start rolling their own... and it's a small step from speculation to rumor-mongering! That's where the action's really at.
(And, you didn't hear it from me, but the next rev of iTunes will knock your socks clean off, employing bayesian fuzzy-logic heuristic inference engines to predict with 89% accuracy what you want to hear before you hear it, or so I heard from a little bird who's working on "Project BHA-II")
Re: (Score:2)
Apple May Well Rule, But Forrester Misses Why (Score:2, Insightful)
The eight essential pillars on which Apple will deliver this platform, based on four existing offerings and four new product concepts, are expected to be:
* Apple Macintosh home PC
* Apple TV digital media extender
* Apple Store
* iTunes and its successors
* Apple home server product
* AppleSound universal
Re: (Score:2)
After all, it already syncs with bluetooth devices, so why not a keyboard and a mouse? A cable that provide HDMI and we're there.
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Their other big play between now an 2013 could be videogames. There's no reason why Apple can't release its own Xbox - I'm sure Intel would be happy to lend them a lot of engineering help in order to establish a presence in that market. Make the device function with iPhones and serve as a media hub, sell it for $300 or less and watch as it erodes the market for more expensive gaming devices from its rivals. The iPhone is already poised to become a successful portable gaming device in its own right.
Apple cou
Re: (Score:2)
I'm not seeing it happen.
Re: (Score:2)
Likewis
The article has a lot of stuff I consider silly (Score:2)
The first is a fancy NAS, aka. "home server" (But not called that, of course. Whoever thought up that moniker was practically begging to have their gadget ignored by the mainstream). The Time Capsule's hardware is probably already sufficient for a lot of tasks (although they'll probably sell a new souped up model with the new features instead), and more software integration with OSX and iPods/iPhones/AppleTVs se
Comment removed (Score:3, Informative)
Following the iPod and iPhone trend... (Score:3, Funny)
The trouble with a digital home (Score:2)
No - but whereas in your analogue home you can sit back and look at the damp patch slowly spreading on the wall and think "I must get that fixed before it starts sprouting fungus" your Digital home will stay crisp and pristine up until the day when it suddenly, without warning, dissolves into a mess of pixels.
No one wants integration (Score:5, Insightful)
I like that I can have different components from different manufacturers. It means I can shop around for the best deals. As soon as one company ties it all in you can look forward to the death of standards like HDMI. Anyone remember ADC? The Apple Display Connector? Don't think for a second Apple wont start doing this to lock you in.
It boggles the mind why people get so excited about vendor lock-in like this. Suddenly it's a good thing? Did we learn nothing from the 90's and the Microsoft/Intel/Cisco empire?
Re:No one wants integration (Score:4, Interesting)
Enter Apple.
Integration can help ensure things "just work", if done correctly (Microsoft being the poster child for how not to do it correctly). The downside is, it's either Apple's way or the highway. But that's really already the case for any existing integrated solutions from every other consumer electronics vendor, from Bose to Nokia to, well, Microsoft.
Apple has successfully locked people into the iPod with the iPod's connector. They've leveraged their position as the #1 portable music player to build up a whole ecology of products that'll only work with their devices, a barrier to entry even Microsoft couldn't overcome. If they establish themselves as the lead integrator in the home, as I suspect is likely via the iPhone and future successors to the AppleTV, they're going to become virtually impossible to work around.
Their products aren't perfect, but I'm frankly glad it's gonna be them and not either Microsoft or Sony. Apple is at worst annoying - Sony and MS have already proven dangerous.
Re: (Score:2)
What are you talking about?
Yes, they ahve products that only work with their devices, so what? that's not lock in. If only provided them, then that would be lock in.
It's like saying Chevy has vendor lock in based on there Auto parts When ANYONE can make them as sell them.
Re: (Score:2)
No, it's like saying that Chevy has customer lockin based on the fact that the majority of garages are only configured to allow Chevy's to park in them, and the vast majority of tires only fit Chevy's propriteary wheels. Buy a Ford and you can't park it most places, and don't have the same range of accessories to chose from.
That's the situation with the iPod - from car stereos to clock radios, Apple's
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Can I ahve your old Apple hardware?
"Don't think for a second Apple wont start doing this to lock you in."
Of course they won't. It would be stupid, a quick glance at then Stereo market would tell you that is bad and nobody succeeded fpr very long doing that.
And if they did? so what, as soon as it was a problem, people would abandon it in droves. In a lot of ways it's following the Stereo history.
Most people WANT 1 unit to do it all, but nobody can make one that keeps enough people happ
Re: (Score:2)
I like that I can have different components from different manufacturers. It means I can shop around for the best deals. As soon as one company ties it all in you can look forward to the death of standards like HDMI.
Apple TV works with HDMI and supports a bunch of resolutions. It works with many TVs.
Anyone remember ADC? The Apple Display Connector? Don't think for a second Apple wont start doing this to lock you in.
After switching from Windows, to both Linux and Macs, I can hook the MacBook Pro I'm
A new study by me says (Score:2)
And I ain't gonna charge you $400 for it.
$5 will do.
Thank you.
In-home installation services? Terrible business (Score:4, Insightful)
Providing in-home installation services would not be forward progress. Eliminating the need for in-home installation services would be.
Cabling for home entertainment systems needs to be simplified drastically. Current large-screen TVs have far too many connectors. The home entertainment industry has been unable to make all the boxes talk to each other and self-configure. The display vendors, the cable box vendors, the media player vendors, and the "amplifier" vendors each want to be in charge. The game console people don't worry about integration much. So we don't have idiot-resistant plug and play, even though that's technically possible. (It is getting better, though; if you're all HDMI, things do interoperate better. Aspect ratio, for example, is handled automatically.)
Apple probably isn't in a position to make that happen, though. Apple may sell a "media center" box, but they won't be the only one.
5 year predictions... (Score:5, Insightful)
I suppose Apple as we knew it in 1996 is dead, but how many people really miss that Apple? By January 2001 Apple was on the rebound, 3 years after introducing the iMac and about to release Mac OS X 10.0.
I don't think that's what Forrester had in mind, though. I'll take any such company-specific predictions with a grain of salt.
USA, maybe (Score:2)
blah blah blah (Score:2, Insightful)
Rule the home? (Score:4, Insightful)
Maybe no? (Score:2, Interesting)
Quick, get a fanboi in
2013? (Score:4, Funny)
It's kind of hard to rule the digital home if there aren't any.
Who knew the Mayan's hated Apple fanboys?
Re: (Score:2)
And on the Mayan thing.. I think it's impressive that the Mayan calendar went for as long as it did, but eternity is a long time to cover, so I am not surprised that it had a stopping point.. but that doesn't mean anything more than Staples only stocking calenders for a couple years ahead.
Re: (Score:2)
house full of dumb! (Score:4, Funny)
Still waiting on digital home and the flying cars (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Still waiting on digital home and the flying ca (Score:2)
They've certainly been trying to push the concept since then. It's become a meme like the Paperless Office was in the 1970s and 1980s.
"Hasn't this Digital Home idea been in the making since the early 90's?"
It failed because there's no evidence whatsoever to show that people want the sort of "digital home" that's being offered (which isn't a digital home at all, but a centralised digital entertainment system that belongs to the commercia
Forrester is waking but, but not Roughly Drafted (Score:2, Interesting)
I give Forrester Research credit for finally waking up and smelling the coffee, but they're still in a groggy, early morning stupor.
AFAIK, this is the first article from a mainstream computer industry research report that acknowledges Apple may have a very serious and viable five year product plan, beyond their existing hit products.
But then, Forrester goes on to say Apple's "commitment to closed systems" poses a barrier to wide adoption. In the previous paragraph, Microsoft and HP are cited as tough
oh, really? (Score:3, Interesting)
More than likely, this is just more nonsense from the standard Apple product cycle [misterbg.org].
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Apple and the sub $200 PC (Score:2)
I have no idea why the media is so in love with Apple and it's products - the real world just seems to ignore them. From what I've seen, no real people use Apple PCs or laptops, a some have oneiPod and a tiny fraction have an iPhone (but would they buy another?). It's only the media
Re: (Score:2)
Yeah, just look how successful eMachines was. Why, they blew Dell and HP away!
When you get down under the $1000 price level, some piddling little savings isn't going to do much to differentiate you from the competition. Most customers still have plenty of anxiety when it comes to buying a PC. They aren't worried about the price (within reason) - they want something that's going to b
Re: (Score:2)
The only way Apple could get any kind of toe-hold in the average household is if their stuff is cheaper than anyone else's. That's all it takes, just low price.
Funny, because they've been very successfully growing their market share over the last 5 years - and dominated the portable music player market - by staying out of the high volume, low-end of the market and positioning themselves as a "designer label".
Outside the U.S. an Apple PC/lappy is about as common as a tandem bicycle - you know they exist, but see maybe one or two a year.
That's partly historical - I'd debate whether Macs are overpriced now (if you compare like-for-like in terms of form factor) but back in the 80s & 90s Apple really did price itself out of, e.g, the UK market with the 'ol £1=$1 trick - at a time
Placement (Score:2, Insightful)
One thing they always overlook... (Score:3, Insightful)
This factor can have a huge influence on a person's hard value based upon their ability to put their possessions up as collateral. For example, let's say two people spend an equal amount of money on the same titles of music/movies/games/etc, but one of them buys only the digitally distributed, while the other buys everything on CDs/DVDs/etc. Now, let's say both of these guys suddenly end up in debt and need to make a quick buck. Our first guy probably has to resort to turning tricks in some alley, while our second guy can simply go to ebay with his collection and wait for the money to roll in.
Unfortunately, the second guy is quickly becoming a dying breed, due to demand for instant gratification and personal convenience. Digital distribution screws up the concept of trade we've used for thousands of years. We're handing over our physically-backed valuables in exchange for something that has no actual value outside our own hands.
CHRIST NO! NOT AGAIN! (Score:2)
Can you say "global warming"? Sure. I knew you could.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
IBM did the port of Windows NT to the PowerPC architecture, and not Microsoft. While one of the original intents of NT was to maintain some form of platform neutrality by doing everything in C, in reality it wasn't true then and I seriously doubt if it's true now with Vista. MS is pretty much locked into Intel compatible processors.
Yaz.
Re: (Score:2)
A consumer that has a TV that's brand A and a stereo receiver that's brand B, and neither one of them work with Apple's latest "digital media center" (or don't work very well) aren't going to run out and buy an Apple TV or receiver, especially when there are other products that will work with his or her existing equip
Apple TV (Score:2)
A consumer that has a TV that's brand A and a stereo receiver that's brand B, and neither one of them work with Apple's latest "digital media center" (or don't work very well) aren't going to run out and buy an Apple TV or receiver, especially when there are other products that will work with his or her existing equipment.
Except Apple TV [apple.com] works with many, if not most or all, TVs. It also can play different audio formats. What I don't see though are any regular stereo inputs. All I've got now is an old
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Every home theater nut that I've ever met either was motivated enough to learn how to do it themselves, knew someone who could show them how to do it, or had enough money to pay someone else to set it up for them.
I honnest doubt it'll be any of the big three, Apple, MS, or SONY, because they spend too m
Re: (Score:2)
The GIMP . . . (snip) . . . they are the best programs available
Ahhh, such irony can only be found on Slashdot . . . now who's calling who a fanboy?
iTunes is great, the iPod sucks (Score:2)
I don't like Firefox. It's better than IE, but that's like pointing out a bad cold is better than ebola. My browser is Camino, on the Mac... there isn't a comparable product on Windows opr Linux that I can see.
iTunes is a great user interface to music, I haven't found one that does a better job for the way I listen to music.
The iPod clickwheel suck