Linked by Thom Holwerda on Mon 29th Mar 2010 09:48 UTC
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In fact, Apple is doing JUST FINE with that very "Mac business model" TODAY (and for the previous 11 years).
Talk about long toes.
I never said Apple isn't doing well. All I'm saying is that the "PC business model" (for the lack of a better term) has clearly won out, and is still by far the preferred model. Despite all the attention Apple gets, the Mac business model (only employed by Apple at this point in the desktop world) only has a share of round and about 4-5%.
So, yeah.
the '80s and '90s are happening all over again for Apple: the PC business model beating the Mac one.
Talk about learning nothing from history.
And with that, I mean Thom, not Apple.
It wasn't the "PC business model" that beat the Mac one, but a variety of factors (Jobs absence and a series of lackluster CEOs didn't help either).
In fact, Apple is doing JUST FINE with that very "Mac business model" TODAY (and for the previous 11 years).
How is Dell doing? Where is IBM's PC department? Compaq all well?
Talk about learning nothing from history.
And with that, I mean Thom, not Apple.
It wasn't the "PC business model" that beat the Mac one, but a variety of factors (Jobs absence and a series of lackluster CEOs didn't help either).
In fact, Apple is doing JUST FINE with that very "Mac business model" TODAY (and for the previous 11 years).
How is Dell doing? Where is IBM's PC department? Compaq all well?
Actually it is almost forgotten, that Jobs in the first place was the sole reason why Apple killed off the entire Apple II business segment.
They were in the position to counter IBM, and basically make the Apple III the PC of the world. Jobs however insisted that the machine must be fanless, it then overheated en masses, and the engineer who figured it out finally did not tell Stevie boy, because Stevie boy refused a raise before telling him he was just a lowly engineer.
Result, the Apple 3 died upfront and with it the entire Apple II based business line.
Jobs can learn from his mistakes, and by god he has, but his arrogance, still gets in his way too often.
I personally cannot see the iPhone making bigger inroads than it has, without opening severely, which is exactly what Jobs hates.





Member since:
2006-01-09
the '80s and '90s are happening all over again for Apple: the PC business model beating the Mac one.
Talk about learning nothing from history.
And with that, I mean Thom, not Apple.
It wasn't the "PC business model" that beat the Mac one, but a variety of factors (Jobs absence and a series of lackluster CEOs didn't help either).
In fact, Apple is doing JUST FINE with that very "Mac business model" TODAY (and for the previous 11 years).
How is Dell doing? Where is IBM's PC department? Compaq all well?