Linked by fran on Tue 8th Feb 2011 18:08 UTC
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Member since:
2010-03-08
I assume this expression does not exist in English. Sorry... Is "the ipadification of OSX continues" syntactically better ?
Quickly had a look at a physical Apple store, but when I look for Apple hardware I tend to prefer "premium resellers" and store.apple.com as they are easier to access where I live.
From what I see, Apple controls a large part of the Mac software market. If they enforce that all software under their control is only available through the Mac store system (and what's mentioned in this article are some steps in that direction), this means that the majority of Mac software will only be available by this mean, forcing users to get used to it whether they like it or not.
Afterwards, as most commonly needed software and some other are only available on the Mac Store, software distributed on CD or websites becomes the exception rather than the norm. Under customer pressure of lazy users who want all in one place and won't look elsewhere, remaining software ends up having a choice between putting a copy of their software on the Mac store too or disappearing.
After a while, Apple declares that software distribution outside of the Mac Store is unsafe/legacy/helping piracy/whatever excuse they may come up with, and removes the ability to do this.
Net result : Apple gets 30% on every sale and absolute control on which apps mac users have access to. In short, ipadification.
Edited 2011-02-08 20:38 UTC