Linked by Thom Holwerda on Sun 26th Aug 2012 10:28 UTC
Thread beginning with comment 532512
To view parent comment, click here.
To read all comments associated with this story, please click here.
To view parent comment, click here.
To read all comments associated with this story, please click here.




Member since:
2009-05-19
No, he's right.
Easily for 99% of businesses Apple has, until very recently, been completely non-existant.
Even now, it's only the "must have gadget" for the hipster crowd that may very well fall out of favour in the future - who knows.
So many people are buying the iPads and iPhones and they're not even sure what they're supposed to be doing with them. You download a few apps, play some angry birds and then you just go back to using the phone as per usual.
I only even saw Macs in educational departments and in use by the occasional graphic designer. They were a pretty cool (albeit expensive) niche product, and while they had a pretty quirky fan base, I never had much against (or for) them.
Maybe If I had more money than I knew what to do with, I would have bought one, but as it stood they never repesented great value for money.
But now we enter the Apple "reality distortion field" - where people such as yourself want to elevate Apple to a position it never held. This attitude is rapidly eroding any good will people have for this company.
To be clear: They have always made fine products, they have contributed tremendously to the field of computer usability, but for goodness sake, recognise the fact that they are NOT alone, they they are NOT the only player in town and ALL of these companies borrow ideas from one another.
DARE to open your eyes to the article Thom has posted. See those devices? What do they look like? Will you allow yourself to make the admission that perhaps Apple borrowed an idea or two from them? Consider then the injustice of attributing all major innovations to a single company. Try to be a bit more fair and open minded.
I asked you in another thread, but I will ask you again: Do you have a dog in this fight? I suspect you have more than a passing interest in Apple's well-being here.