Apple Piles On the Features, and Users Say, 'Enough!' (nytimes.com) 191
In a few hours, Apple will kickstart its annual developer conference. At the event, the company is expected to announce new MacBook laptops, the next major updates for iOS and MacOS, new features of Siri, and a home-speaker. Ahead of the conference, The New York Times has run a story that talks some of the headline announcements that Apple announced last year: one of which was, the ability to order food, scribble doodles and send funny images known as stickers in chats on its Messages app. Speaking with users, engineers and industry insiders, the Times reports that many of its existing features -- including expansion of Messages -- are too complicated for many users to figure out (Editor's note: the link could be paywalled; alternative source). From the report: The idea was to make Messages, one of the most popular apps on the iPhone, into an all-purpose tool like China's WeChat. But the process of finding and installing other apps in Messages is so tricky that most users have no idea they can even do it, developers and analysts say.
What happened to "it just works"? (Score:5, Insightful)
Seems a case of "it just bloats" from now on.
Re:What happened to "it just works"? (Score:5, Insightful)
Apple has a history of going off-the-rails when Jobs wasn't involved. Say what you want about him as a person, he was pretty good at figuring out what people wanted and giving it to them just in time for them to figure it out themselves. He also worked with something of a minimalist approach, at times to a fault, but with a great degree of success. Without that restraint this could become a problem.
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"Apple has a history of going off-the-rails when Jobs wasn't involved"
Apple has gone off-the-rails when Jobs WAS involved, too. See, e.g., iTunes.
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I never said he was perfect in his approach. On the other hand for a lot of Apple's products he forced developers to take a minimalist approach whose end-result was extremely easy for the end-user to use most of the time, and whose aesthetics were generally good, and at least during the era when OSX was their main focus he threw a bone to users that wanted to have more powerful tools like the commandline available to them. That balancing act is very hard to maintain, and I do not hold high hopes that any
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"Apple has a history of going off-the-rails when Jobs wasn't involved"
Apple has gone off-the-rails when Jobs WAS involved, too. See, e.g., iTunes.
iTunes was just fine when it was a music app (see: Sound Jam), all the trouble came when it ended up becoming the 'windows explorer' of the Apple ecosystem. It's the rotting whale carcass of Apple bloated apps.
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What do you mean with simply saying iTunes?
iTunes the Application? I like it, I just don't like that they removed coverflow and that it is used for backing up iPads and iPhones.
iTunes the Store? What is wrong with the store?
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The application. It became a ridiculously bloated, absurdly non-intuitive piece of junk years ago, back when Jobs was running Apple.
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Apple has a history of going off-the-rails when Jobs wasn't involved. Say what you want about him as a person, he was pretty good at figuring out what people wanted and giving it to them just in time for them to figure it out themselves. He also worked with something of a minimalist approach, at times to a fault, but with a great degree of success. Without that restraint this could become a problem.
You mean in the great sample-size of ONE period-of-time that Jobs wasn't in charge?
Yeah, some "history".
Re: What happened to "it just works"? (Score:2)
Your math confuses me.
I offer no other opinion, just that.
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While they were some exceptions. Apple normally only added features once they get it right. Linux desktop systems are packed full of features however they are normally fully cooked, while fun to play with but often takes practice to figure out and be useful. Apple had usually made they new feature natural to use.
Re:What happened to "it just works"? (Score:5, Insightful)
Most of these "features" are just advertising in disguise. If you tell Siri to order you a pizza, it will go and order for a nearby top ranked pizza shop. So now we have gone from companies wanting to be on the first page of search results and paying for ad spots at the top, to only the very top result mattering at all.
It's the same with Alexa. If you ask it to order bog roll, it will order the most popular one stocked by Amazon. Not the cheapest, not the 5 ply silk stuff, just whatever Amazon decides to send you. If you want to sell toilet paper to Alexa users, you need to kiss Amazon's arse.
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Voice assistants are useless for browsing and comparing though. All they can do is read out some data on each item in turn. Can't even show you a photo of the item.
Re:What happened to "it just works"? (Score:5, Informative)
But very few Alexa owners actually use it for shopping. Only 10% use it to order things [geekwire.com].
I have never used mine to order anything. I buy toilet paper in bulk at Costco, not online, and the things I do buy from Amazon are rarely consumables.
So what do I use it for? First thing every morning while I am making tea: "Alexa, news report". While I am making dinner: "Alexa, set a timer for 5 minutes" and "Alexa, play a Willie Nelson song". I also use it to connect to my IoT hub: "Alexa, turn off the sink light" and "Alexa, lock the front door".
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It doesn't call you "Moles" by chance, does it? :)
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt00... [imdb.com]
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Try turning on dictation on a mac, and in Safari, try saying 'Show numbers' and then tell me you can't browse with a voice assistant.
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What should the default be if not the most popular?
The default should be the brand you ordered last time ... which is the default. Amazon's first step is to search your order history [amazon.com].
Also, instead of "Alexa, order toilet paper", you can say "Alexa, add toilet paper to my shopping cart", and later review the items on your laptop before committing.
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Random, possibly with the options weighted by market share.
Oh, great!
So when I say to Alexa, "Order me a laptop", I'm guaranteed to get the shittiest Windows laptop (and ONLY a Windows laptop) there is, right?
Afterall, Windows has be highest Marketshare, right?
Re:What happened to "it just works"? (Score:5, Funny)
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Apple knows what you want, you just don't know it yet. Now go enjoy your ultra slim laptop with short battery life, limited memory, and a drawer full of dongles.
As opposed to Dell's/HP's/Acer's/You-Name-It's latest ultra slim laptop, with even shorter battery life, the same limited memory, and a side-panel full of yesterday's ports, right?
Re: What happened to "it just works"? (Score:2)
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To be fair, while there may be a huge amount of criticism over Apple's successive generations of laptops, battery life is not one of them.
Non-upgradable memory, storage, an annoying keyboard, and forcing you to buy a shitton of dongles due to a complete lack of every single most important port still in use today, on the other hand...
Re: What happened to "it just works"? (Score:4, Insightful)
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Everything since the Apple IIe is just bloat. The question is which bloat is useful and which is not.
Hah! The //e is Bloat!
Everything since the Apple ][ (non-Plus, non-"e") is just bloat.
Afterall, 48 k should be enough for anybody, amirite?
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This is Jobs reality distortion field at work. It was never more obvious how to do everything on a Mac or iOS than competitor products, it was maybe a little easier to do the stupid user stuff after a "genius" had configured it for you, but it was f**king awful to be the local "IT Guru" that had to fix everyone's Apple shit.
Most people do what, make calls, texts, use the app store, and browse the web? Yeah, everything "just works" for that.
Apple's money (Score:5, Funny)
In a few hours, Apple will kickstart its annual developer conference.
I find this really surprising. I was sure Apple had plenty of capital.
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In a few hours, Apple will kickstart its annual developer conference.
I find this really surprising. I was sure Apple had plenty of capital.
Yeah, but it's in Ireland.
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Slashdot likes to rag on Apple (Score:5, Insightful)
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Slashdot likes to rag on Apple
Slashdot likes to rag on technology companies that do and make shitty things. I don't see a problem with that considering this is a site mostly about technology.
Slashdot has only gone after Apple since Jobs kicked it. Have you considered the possibility that Apple has lost the critical component that kept them from making shitty things?
Yes, "enough!" (Score:5, Insightful)
Apple needs a swift kick in the ass. They've completely lost sight of the Jobs method of empire building which starts with "build and maintain your moat." That moat is the Mac. Even if it becomes 10% of their revenue, it is one of the single most important products they have because of a few reasons:
1. It has developers get to every iOS product line.
2. It is the general purpose computer of influencers and decision makers.
3. It is a hub to the iOS product lines that Apple can totally control.
It takes no real resources for a company like Apple to regularly update the Mac lines. They can easily afford to sacrifice some potential profitability to make their pro lines robust, repairable, upgradeable, etc. I didn't mind a semi-disposable iPhone when the Macbook Pro was like it was until the post-Jobs era. Now I don't know any power users that think Apple for a $1500-$2500 laptop purchase because we all now think it's a sucker's game.
apple needs an server system or at least rights VM (Score:4, Insightful)
apple needs an server system or at least rights to run server in a VM on ANY base hardware. Small and big business can use an local update mirror and they would like to rack mount it / load on there in place VM hardware. Also apple used to have an mini server but they just had cut the power and make the mini even thinner.
And the mac pro??? 256G is small and 2 video cards is over kill for an server.
Re: apple needs an server system or at least right (Score:2)
well they need something to get into business (Score:2)
well they need something to get into business and they used to have servers rack mount and all kinds of sever stuff with them.
Features that nobody uses or CAN use. (Score:2)
My main complaint with Apple's new features of the past years has been that most have limited reach.
Things like Apple Pay are still not available in The Netherlands (where I live), years after release. Siri took years to arrive and is still far more limited than in the US. Other features are constrained to the Apple ecosystem, ignoring the fact that most users own and interact with various platforms. I've never felt a need to explore stickets in Messages, because barely anyone I know still uses Messages.
MacBook developer wishlist (Score:2)
- Large screens (DPI matters less than actual real estate): 15-inches or more, and vertical space is valuable
- At least two large/powered USB ports (today I have two large - Type A - and one powered)
- Two HDMI ports (today I have one; I use an adapter for my second monitor)
- Docking station (I do most of my work at one workstation where my monitors/keyboard/headphones live - today I plug/unplug
Re:MacBook developer wishlist (Score:4, Insightful)
They already have a docking station - it's called a Thunderbolt port, you just chose not to buy a dock.
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After plugging/unplugging a thousand times (getting close I think) I worry about my little Thunderbolt port, which feels like it's getting looser. I guess I'm hoping for something more "commercial grade" (designed for 10K+ plugs/unplugs, with a physical "ker-chunk" when it's docked).
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>> docking station - it's called a Thunderbolt port
After plugging/unplugging a thousand times (getting close I think) I worry about my little Thunderbolt port, which feels like it's getting looser. I guess I'm hoping for something more "commercial grade" (designed for 10K+ plugs/unplugs, with a physical "ker-chunk" when it's docked).
Thunderbolt Connectors ARE rated at 10K+ Insertions/Removals, IIRC.
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I'm still using a mid-2011 17" MBP for all my work in Lightroom. Brilliant laptop, great screen, and the best form factor for a 17" laptop at the time.
When you say "docking station", are you thinking of those god awful things that PC users put up with? I just plug in a thunderbolt connector and power lead in to my work 2015 15" MBP. The screen has a hub in it. I look forward to the upgrade to USB-C. I hope I never again have to use one of those horrible docks I had in the past with Dell laptops.
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Yes. That exactly. I currently use my MBP as one of the three monitors on my desk, and it always sits in the same place there.
> The screen has a (Thunderbolt) hub in it.
Just one external screen? My minimum developer environment is two large matched monitors, with the laptop open as a (small) convenience third.
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I'm still using a mid-2011 17" MBP for all my work in Lightroom. Brilliant laptop, great screen, and the best form factor for a 17" laptop at the time.
When you say "docking station", are you thinking of those god awful things that PC users put up with? I just plug in a thunderbolt connector and power lead in to my work 2015 15" MBP. The screen has a hub in it. I look forward to the upgrade to USB-C. I hope I never again have to use one of those horrible docks I had in the past with Dell laptops.
No, I think he meant a TB Dock.
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Developer here. I do some development on my MacBooks (newest is MacBook Pro from mid 2015). My ongoing wishlist:
- Large screens (DPI matters less than actual real estate): 15-inches or more, and vertical space is valuable
- At least two large/powered USB ports (today I have two large - Type A - and one powered)
- Two HDMI ports (today I have one; I use an adapter for my second monitor)
- Docking station (I do most of my work at one workstation where my monitors/keyboard/headphones live - today I plug/unplug 6 cables when I get in for the morning or back from a meeting)
No, I don't need a headphone jack. Bluetooth/wireless is a thing these days.
Sounds like you need a 2016 MacBook Pro with a nice TB3 Dock, like this:
One cable. Done. Three MORE Ports left!
https://blog.macsales.com/3856... [macsales.com]
Fix the hardware (Score:3, Interesting)
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"Bring the hardware up to modern specifications"
That's a typical answer for those that tend to not program in the most efficient manner possible.
How about you bring your coding standards up to something better than the modern bloat we have now?
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Actually, lots of them are. They make the suggestion - the companies listen.
Longtime Apple Support Specialist (Score:5, Interesting)
I've been a longtime Apple Support Specialist and I've never, ever, seen it hit such a low level of usability and simplicity. It's as if the current Apple has a UI team staffed by the people who designed Windows 3.1. Even basic applications like Messages (on the Mac) are now so difficult to use (AND buggy) that many users have simply given up.
Apple needs to fire or re-assign every single person that worked on the UI designs post Snow Leopard and post IOS 6 and do a complete "Microsoft Windows 8 doh! moment reversal." They need to go back to where they were then, when everything worked exactly as it should and made freaking sense.
There is nothing worse than trying to teach people how to use current Apple software: "Why is this this way?" (Because Steve Jobs died and the people now in charge at Apple are morons.) "This doesn't make any sense." (No, it doesn't, it's complete nonsense and you just have to memorize it.) It's a fracking nightmare.
Re:Longtime Apple Support Specialist (Score:5, Insightful)
Strong agreement here.
I have been annoyed for a while with what they have done to music on iOS since they integrated streaming. It is hard to do something as simple as switch to shuffle on a currently playing playlist for Pete's sake. Then I took my old ipod touch that is stuck at iOS 6 on a road trip. Holy cow did things "Just work". I'd forgotten just how bad iOS had gotten that I could easily do more of what I wanted on a widget I've barely used in 2 years than on the iPad I use almost daily.
I'd rather have fewer gimmicks that worked really well than heaps of buggy features I never use.
Re:Longtime Apple Support Specialist (Score:4, Insightful)
Not only that, who the fuck ever thought "Shake to undo" was a good, intuitive idea?
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They want to be a services company and they are using their apps to steer users towards their services.
Ever since iTunes match became a thing, the music app has been sliding and the current pushyness to Apple Music has made it almost unusable.
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Imac pro without E-net build in! do you want to ad (Score:2)
Imac pro without E-net build in! do you want to add an
$19.99 TB3 to E-net dongle?
$39.99 TB3 to 10G-E-net dongle?
$29.99 TB3 to SFP+ dongle?
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Books (Score:2)
Problem is that Messages isn't cross-platform (Score:2)
iMessage can become as advanced as it wants; the fundamental issue is that it's not a cross-platform app. Its extra features are only available on iOS devices and Macs.
I use mostly Telegram with my friends because it runs on everything. Even though I love my iPhone I recognize that without cross-platform support, some of its features will always be limited. Apple should open up iMessage to other platforms, then we might see some greater adoption of its fancier features.
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iMessanger never really worked for me reliable.
Messages sent on one device, or received, would often not show up on other devices.
So I switched it off (yes, of course I have the same iTunes/iCloud account on all devices registered), worst of all: some messages send on my iPad never reached the recipient.
My messages/imessage/SMS are broken. (Score:2)
My messages/imessage/SMS are broken. Have spent hours trying to get it to work. From some people, I only receive them on my computer, from others they arrive on my iPhone. Receiving and sending SMS from my computer haven't worked in months.
Sigh.
If I have to spend hours getting things to work, I might as well build my own Windows computer again.
One app for everything? (Score:2)
One App to rule them all, One App to find them,
One App to bring them all and in the darkness bind them.
My PRECIOUS!!!! (Score:2)
One App to shut them down!
The one announcement I want... (Score:3)
Only if you're a teenage girl.... (Score:2)
....is " ability to order food, scribble doodles and send funny images known as stickers in chats on its Messages app" a handy feature. Those of us who aren't frequently find ourselves inanely "commenting" on a text by accident. And, of course, that can't be turned off.
To be fair... (Score:4)
... I could name a dozen other companies off the top of my head who are adding more features than I want. Microsoft, Google, Facebook, Mozilla, Adobe, my cable company, my phone company... and that's just from looking at a list of what I have running right now. I could probably hit a hundred if I actually started making a list. Does anyone want to hear details of how the A/C controls in a 2016 Corolla are objectively worse than they were in a 1986 Corolla?
Apple is probably mid-pack in terms of "shit I didn't ask for and don't want".
Nothing... (Score:3)
Re:Sadly This is a rerun (Score:5, Insightful)
Jobs uniquely understood how important choosing things not to do was. Engineers and designers do brilliant work every day, but the vast majority of that achievement gets lost in the clutter and quickly forgotten.
Better to leave consumers wanting more than to leave them confused. Best of all, you can sell them that something more next year. That way you don't have to hit it out of the park every single time. It's more like loading the bases and then getting to first, time and time again.
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The hardware is sound...
The hardware is out of date. And I say this as a lifelong Mac user, working on a MBP right now. I want a Mac Pro with an i9 and a GTX 1080.
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The hardware is sound...
The hardware is out of date. And I say this as a lifelong Mac user, working on a MBP right now. I want a Mac Pro with an i9 and a GTX 1080.
So you want a CAD Workstation CPU with (last-year's) GAMING Graphics Card?
Hahahahahahaha!!!!!
Name more than a small handful (if any) of Games that would benefit from an i9's EIGHTEEN Cores (36 threads).
Name one CAD/Video Editing Application that would benefit from the GTX 1080s limited Display-handling abilities (a paltry FOUR 4k monitors). From a Workstation. In 2017. Right.
Your proposed system is not only mismatched for most MacPro Applications, but it also doesn't sound like much of an "upgrade" to me.
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One of the things that frustrates me about technology companies is the general focus on adding new features, while at the same time failing to make sure their existing features work. There are so many things in computing that are simply much more difficult and unreliable than they need to be. My fallback example is printer drivers. Why are printer drivers even necessary? I can understand 3D printers still needing custom drivers, or those big industrial copiers needing specialized drivers to deal with so
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There are so many things in computing that are simply much more difficult and unreliable than they need to be.
There are so many things in computing that are simply much more difficult and unreliable than they used to be.
My fallback example is printer drivers.
Funny, so is mine!
I can understand 3D printers still needing custom drivers
Interestingly, most of them don't. You just drop the STL file on an SD card or upload it to a web interface hosted on the printer itself, no drivers needed.
I'm 100% absolutely with you, here. When I look at where computing is today, I hang my head in sadness. Yes, machines have gotten faster, but it now takes longer to get anything done. This is not progress.
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You just drop the STL file on an SD card or upload it to a web interface hosted on the printer itself, no drivers needed.
You'd agree that's not really a good solution, though, right? Like, you have a networked printer on your company's network, but you can't simply print to it without weird crappy drivers that don't work. Instead you copy it to an SD card, walk it over to the printer, plug it in, and then try to print it? Or you log into a web interface and upload things? That's not easier.
Either way, again, that's just an example. I work in IT support and I'm constantly working around and fixing problems that don't rea
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my 3d printers all are wifi networked and they use the same gcode file. No 3d printer made uses a STL file directly. Hell I can even watch the print from it's built in webcam from any computer made that has a web browser.
Sadly 3d printers are far more compatible than any inkjet because the people making them are extremely talented engineers and printer engineers are mostly idiots that think secret proprietary control codes are important.
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The irony is that to some degree, the opposite is true. If you ignore the custom PPDs (which are just text files) to enable full feature support, you can send a plain-old-ordinary PostScript file to the most expensive Fiery setup
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How else will they make m/billions of dollars off your back?
Including drm in headphones, 30% tax on everything else...
Why do you just LIE through your teeth?
What FUCKING DRM in headphones?
WHAT FUCKING "30% Tax" on "Everything Else"?
Die, Hater.
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Messages? That's where I want to send and receive communications from... iOS already has an App Store why would I want to replicate that function in my communications app?
Isn't this what killed Google Wave?
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I wish I could believe they might turn things around, but I gave up any hope of that when they trash can was brought to market.
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Apple is going to fail so fast, it's going to be epic. It has become a fashion company. Once it goes out of style, it's going to be over so quickly, heads will spin.
Apple: Proudly going out of business for over FORTY YEARS...
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it seems to want you to "archive" the message and never delete it! We had to manually move it to the trash folder. Very unintuitive.
This is really just how Gmail wants it done. I'm not sure it works the same with IMAP.
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Re: When what most want. (Score:3)
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In practical terms, since it is a low-volume product, allowing it to be upgraded more easily by the end user might be economically viable.
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They don't sell oodles of trash cans. The trash can does not address the needs of the market it is intended to serve.
In practical terms, since it is a low-volume product, allowing it to be upgraded more easily by the end user might be economically viable.
It's a "low-volume-product" in Apple-terms. But they still probably sell more of them than all of the laptops on this list [themeshnews.com], combined.
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they wouldn't sell oodles of them like they do.
They don't sell oodles of them. They sell very few. That is why they haven't done an update in more than three years: It just doesn't sell well enough to bother. Rumors are that the new Mac Pro will be expandable and upgradable, and will be a box not a cylinder, so Apple may have learned a lesson. But it is unlikely they will announce a new Mac Pro today.
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Is a fucking Mac Pro that is not a fucking trash can.
That you can buy a new updated fucking motherboard for and not a waste a whole god damn machine.
Name even ONE Mac which has (or had) an upgradeable Motherboard.
They DID experiment (briefly!) with Upgradeable Processor Modules; but never a whole mobo.
So, if you want that whole "I enjoy working ON my computer, instead of WITH my computer" bit, but still pine for all that GUI-goodness that is macOS, then by all means, build a Hackintosh. Plenty of fun for all...
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Well, good news. Now, there's a Mac Pro that's an iMac.
*sigh*
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Unless you're jailbroken there is little reason to not install the latest version of iOS. And if you're jailbroken you can disable the automatic updates.
Why in particular are you staying on an older version?
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Unless you're jailbroken there is little reason to not drink the kool-aid
FIFY
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"Every few days a new iOS update is downloaded without my consent, with no way to disable it"
Block the shit in your router.
Turn off your data plan.
Don't let it connect to other APs.
In other words, use your phone AS A FUCKING PHONE. That seems to be what you want it to do, anyways. Here, I have a Tracfone for ya.
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There isn't a new iOS update every couple of days. There's only a handful during the year so they are making it up. If you don't install a minor update a badge with a number (for the number of messages, warnings, etc) shows up over the Settings app. For the major updates iOS nags you multiple times a day to upgrade.
There could be application updates every day but you can turn them off in the Settings.
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Every few days a new iOS update is downloaded without my consent, with no way to disable it. Wasting my money on data caps. Apple should use it's $100 billion to pay for internet connections of its users if it wants to force download updates.
Bullshit.
iOS Update Downloads are only done over WiFi, so no impact on your cellular data usage.
Also, It ONLY downloads updates if on WiFi AND connected to AC. So, turn on Airplane Mode (or just turn off WiFi) while you charge.
And you HAVE to Consent to INSTALL it.
So, what was your question again?
Re: Include an instruction manual (Score:2)
What about this one?
http://help.apple.com/iphone/1... [apple.com]
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The instruction manuals are on the phone. in the iBooks App if I recall correctly.
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I have an old iPhone 4S. :)
Yes, it came with a small printed manual, I'm just not sure anymore what was in the manual and what was in iBooks, might as well be that I downloaded the stuff into iBooks and it was mot preinstalled.
On the other hand only very few things on iOS require a manual. On the other hand again: I don't know what I have missed and don't know
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You can turn off that stupid doodle shit, I hated it too. http://www.iphonehacks.com/201... [iphonehacks.com]
Yeah, but how do you turn off the stupid "commenting" on a text by holding down on it too long?