Linked by David Adams on Thu 30th Jul 2009 23:14 UTC
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Member since:
2005-06-29
For me, it's always been about OS X. I never was an Apple fan (nor hater for that matter) back in the OS 9 and earlier days. Every modern Mac I've ever owned, I've sold because it could only be upgraded so far. The resale value was such that I could build something three times as powerful and run some form of Linux or BSD and have the majority of the functionality with added versatility. Now that building a Hackintosh is as easy as buying off the shelf hardware with the same chipsets as Apple's gear, there's no reason for me to buy another Mac for a while. Apple won't miss me anyway; with the exception of the 1st gen mini I've bought all my Macs secondhand.
The iPhone, while hardware-wise is all Apple, is severely limited when you look at the non-jailbroken OS. It may be a subset or variation of OS X but it is locked down so tight that there is no longer any common ground. Some say that is a necessity in a phone for stability and security reasons, but then I point to my BlackBerry, with enterprise-class security and sandboxed apps, and wonder why the iPhone can't be so open. Granted, the BlackBerry's UI is decidedly unintuitive and could use an overhaul to bring it closer to WebOS, iPhone OS or even Android's ease of use.
I know I'm wishing for the impossible, but I'd like to see Apple allow an "expert" mode on the iPhone that allows one to legitimately install current jailbreak-only apps with no expectation of support or warranty from Apple itself. I know it will never happen as it would destroy interest in the App Store, but it would be nice.