My Great Grandmother (bless her soul) said the same thing about The Beatles.
This would likely result in higher prices and lower quality. The more entities you add to the development and manufacturing process, the higher the number of companies needing to maximize profits. If the prices are too high for you, Apple has a ton of other competition at lower price points.Apple needs to be broken up, probably into hardware, software and services companies.
Notably, I predict more competition around macOS would drive down hardware prices, and charging for macOS, iOS, etc., upgrades and maintenance would slow down hardware churn which would be better for the environment.
Apple needs to be broken up, probably into hardware, software and services companies.
Notably, I predict more competition around macOS would drive down hardware prices, and charging for macOS, iOS, etc., upgrades and maintenance would slow down hardware churn which would be better for the environment
Apple needs to be broken up, probably into hardware, software and services companies.
Notably, I predict more competition around macOS would drive down hardware prices, and charging for macOS, iOS, etc., upgrades and maintenance would slow down hardware churn which would be better for the environment.
I have a potentially unpopular opinion on this, but has more competition ever actually resulted in better outcomes for consumers for this type of business?Because more competition around Apple's operating systems would benefit consumers.
I'm not sure where to go to answer this. In general, it's good to have competing technologies, but quite frequently the best product does not actually "win". Beta vs VHS, 2 flavors of 56k modems, etc, etc, etc.I have a potentially unpopular opinion on this, but has more competition ever actually resulted in better outcomes for consumers for this type of business?
I'm of the mind that competition is actually the opposite of what we need, and that what we need is more openness and collaboration.
I'd rather see Apple make more stuff public and transparent than to see more competition. My favorite parts about Apple products are that they work so flippin' well with the tools I use to collaborate with colleagues and fellow developers.
Competition always seems to favor the entities with more money over the ones with better ideas, and I'd rather us have better products and ideas than more competition. More choice is not always better, I find that frequently it's just more of the same crap, but competing on price.
No, they don't.Apple needs to be broken up, probably into hardware, software and services companies.
Notably, I predict more competition around macOS would drive down hardware prices, and charging for macOS, iOS, etc., upgrades and maintenance would slow down hardware churn which would be better for the environment.
Define "competition" and "better outcomes"...I have a potentially unpopular opinion on this, but has more competition ever actually resulted in better outcomes for consumers for this type of business?
More to the point - open standards and collaboration are essential for healthy competition - because healthy competition depends on genuine choice.I'm of the mind that competition is actually the opposite of what we need, and that what we need is more openness and collaboration.
Sideloading is NOT a consumer benefit. It is a power user benefit. For standard consumers it is a booby trap!We don’t need to break up Apple, just support EU regulations that break down the closed tech ecosystems. Sideloading is a consumer benefit.
Gee just regurgitate Apple's marketing. The point is to let consumers have the choice. It worked for the Mac all these years.Sideloading is NOT a consumer benefit. It is a power user benefit. For standard consumers it is a booby trap!
Yes and I have already removed malware from macs from clueless users.Gee just regurgitate Apple's marketing. The point is to let consumers have the choice. It worked for the Mac all these years.
Consumers have a choice. It’s called android.Gee just regurgitate Apple's marketing. The point is to let consumers have the choice. It worked for the Mac all these years.
Not what the context of the comment was about, thanks for playing.Consumers have a choice. It’s called android.
This is by design and has always been by design. The hardware is tailor-made for the software and vice-versa and allows for Apple to take advantages of the additional efficiencies that this creates.Apple has a de facto monopoly on hardware allowed to run macOS. This is not in the best interest of consumers because it removed competition from this space.
You missed the point. Rather than ask apple to update their ecosystem or asking f the government to regulate apple in a way that kills the greatness of our tech platforms there is a platform that does what you want….vote with your $$$.Not what the context of the comment was about, thanks for playing.
Apple needs to be broken up, probably into hardware, software and services companies.
Notably, I predict more competition around macOS would drive down hardware prices, and charging for macOS, iOS, etc., upgrades and maintenance would slow down hardware churn which would be better for the environment.
Apple has a de facto monopoly on hardware allowed to run macOS. This is not in the best interest of consumers because it removed competition from this space.
Or require them to break up into McPatties, McSpecialSauce and McBuns restaraunts.I think we need to stop McDonald’s monopoly on Big Macs. Big fast food has controlled the market for way too long. McDonald’s definitely needs to be broken up into separate burger and french fries divisions…
Exactly. It’s a bit anti-consumer for McDonald’s to hold a monopoly on their special sauce. What if I want a KFC chicken sandwich with McDonald’s special sauce. It’s unfortunate that big fast food has been allowed to do this for so long. 😂Or require them to break up into McPatties, McSpecialSauce and McBuns restaraunts.