Linked by Thom Holwerda on Wed 4th Feb 2009 07:05 UTC
Apple Apple has always been about moving forward, about pressing customers to buy the latest and greatest. Product pacing has been high in Cupertino (except for the Mac Mini, obviously), and this is obviously a good thing if you're an Apple bean counter. Most Apple fans more or less accept this planned obsolescence without question, but the company may have just gone a little too far.
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Amazing....
by nathbeadle on Wed 4th Feb 2009 17:00 UTC
nathbeadle
Member since:
2006-08-08

....how a little tid bit like "Training videos in Garage Band won't play on PPC systems" suddenly throw everyone into a rut about their computer being obsolete.

If your computer is working fine for you now, then it will continue to work and you can keep doing everything you do. Eventually these things happen, Apple for some reason has this image that whatever works now will forever work. At some point support just stops... Canonical stops updates after 18 months for it's distro (not the LTS), Microsoft end-of-life's their OS after a set period..

EVERYONE, not just mac users, run into the point of "do I stay with what I have or do I need to buy a new computer to get newer stuff"

Reply Score: 1

RE: Amazing....
by andrewg on Wed 4th Feb 2009 17:25 in reply to "Amazing...."
andrewg Member since:
2005-07-06

We are talking about obsoleting HARDWARE for no reason. Drawing comparisons with SOFTWARE is misleading.

Ubuntu doesn't sell hardware the sell services for software. Microsoft doesn't sell PC's they sell operating systems and application software.

Apple on the other hand sells you software and hardware. There is a conflict of interest here. If they can entice you with new software and tell you, you need new hardware to run it they increase their sales.

Microsoft could do the same thing by using their application software to drive sales of their new OS. But they generally don't -> DX10 could be cited as an example of the contrary. Apple does it whenever and wherever they can.

Reply Parent Score: 3