You state YOUR opinion as fact. You are not the arbiter of all that is true, supported by fact or otherwise. Get used to THAT.
I think you better be careful of statements like this, when the record is so easy to pull up in the thread. I have not stated my opinion as fact. I have even acknowledged here and in other threads that other opinions on the matter are valid points of view (although not my own): I understand that some people prefer matte. I understand that it is frustrating that Apple does not offer it as an option. Personally, I have an opinion as to why Apple does this, and I have posted it.
I have stated as fact the irony and flaws in your logic based on the information you posted. I think the facts surrounding your flawed logic are pretty obvious and clear. You claimed this was hurting Apple's sales, and then went on to describe how your own planned actions would in fact indicate the opposite. Fact is, that is a pretty odd and weak argument. So when your flawed logic is pointed out, you label me as "taking offense at any criticism of Apple", and when the flaw and flame-bating in that logic is pointed out, you resort to "you post your own opinion as fact". Neither are true, and you keep digging yourself deeper and deeper. Can you make your point without resorting to these flame-bating tactics every time the flaws of your logic are pointed out? If you have a good point to make, why the need to resort to bating? It only detracts from the validity of any point you can make.
Another fact is that your own anecdote supported my earlier theory (read opinion): Apple does this as a design and marketing philosophy - they assign features to each product that best suit that particular function (consumer, pro,mobile, etc), and they keep a high focus on the features of that intended use. This means glossy for consumer products and matte for pro. Glossy screen make consumers go "ohhh and ahhhh" and get out their wallets with a greater return to Apple than the lost sales resulting from people who don't like Glossy. My opinion is that because of the many other benefits of Macs, people will not abandoned the platform over the issue, and instead will just migrate to another model that suits them. Your anecdote provided a nice little example of what I am talking about. So my opinion is the lack of this option really doesn't hurt them all that much, and that Apple is betting that they get a bigger benefit from it by enticing consumers, having a simpler model line-up for consumers to select from, not having to stock and ship multiple configurations, etc. I believe this is a decision based on risk/reward analysis, not based on SJ mind control or other BS.
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For reference, here are my statement from earlier in the thread that support what I am saying above:
Exactly. That's the part that pisses people off. Glossy may be a better option for making consumer photos and home video pop off the screen, but not everyone wants it. People also don't want to spend $4000 on a Pro set up just to avoid it, and thats the rub.
At first glance, I never understood why not offer both as options, but that is just not the Apple way. They look at the function, and then put the best combination of choices together for that function with no options. What they lose in sales from the lack of that choice, they more than make up for in the simplicity of their line-up, ease of ordering, etc. It's just a balancing act that Apple has chosen to balance differently than most other PC makers. It's not some conspiracy. It's a marketing and design philosophy - and one that happens to be working quite well!
If you are mad at anything, be mad at the free market and that this approach works, and so they keep doing it. Or just go buy from another maker, or if it has to be a Mac (and it does for me), live with it, or pony up for the pro machine. And then welcome yourself to the wonderful world of capitalism where companies will always behave in what is in their own best interest.
Right. Apple does this thing that pisses off a lot of people: they assume the iMac is a consumer machine, and the Mac Pro with an ACD is for pros, and they assign features to each product that best suit that particular function. It is frustrating to those who want the features of the pro machine, but without the expense, and that is understandable. But it is also what allows Apple's products to be great - they are highly focused on the features of their intended use. It is a design and marketing philosophy, not an attempt to force the CEO's opinion on everyone, as others have naively suggested.