I certainly haven't used a Mac long enough to remember things like the Lisa, or Newton or that fabulous "Puck Mouse" (though I've see one... Uugly!)-
But I'll chime in on a couple things I think are "Apple Mistakes".
* No user-changeable iPod batterys. That goes for the iPhone too.
Granted, I can understand in the interest of keeping the form factor as slim as possible Why they sealed the batterys - but at the expense of being able to just toss in a fresh battery when you need it? I know some people don't care, but I find it annoying when my iPod runs out of juice, and I have to either A: stick it back into an outlet (good luck finding one of those on a mountain slope) or B: slap on one of those ugly 3rd party "Power Pack" boosters.
Don't even get me started on the whole "send us your iPod/iPhone back to Apple for battery replacement when it finally dies for a nominal fee. It'll take two weeks. Here's a cookie". Grrr.
* Apple TV. Sounded great when the first few tid-bits about it came out - now, to me it just sounds like a waste of money - and kind of smacks of the DIVX creation Best Buy came up with a few years ago, where content and what you can view on it is highly regulated. It certainly has its restrictions- and isn't enough of a machine to have me wanting one anytime soon.
* Nothing under a Grand. Aside from the "add-your own monitor/keyboard/etc" Mac Mini, right now Apple doesn't sell any model under a Thousand dollars. Not the Notebooks, not the iMac - nothing. Which to me is a shame, because I think Apple is missing a huge chunk of the marketplace that would buy a Mac - but that thousand dollar wall is too much for them to climb. It could be a great introduction for kids, or college students or anyone who likes the Mac - but only has a budget of say $600 to $800 bucks. So you throw out a few features - doesn't mean you can't build a quality machine for less than a Grand, that maybe doesn't do everything and isn't the fastest cat in the jungle - but it's more then decent and is solid & works well. Just sayin'.
But I'll chime in on a couple things I think are "Apple Mistakes".
* No user-changeable iPod batterys. That goes for the iPhone too.
Granted, I can understand in the interest of keeping the form factor as slim as possible Why they sealed the batterys - but at the expense of being able to just toss in a fresh battery when you need it? I know some people don't care, but I find it annoying when my iPod runs out of juice, and I have to either A: stick it back into an outlet (good luck finding one of those on a mountain slope) or B: slap on one of those ugly 3rd party "Power Pack" boosters.
Don't even get me started on the whole "send us your iPod/iPhone back to Apple for battery replacement when it finally dies for a nominal fee. It'll take two weeks. Here's a cookie". Grrr.
* Apple TV. Sounded great when the first few tid-bits about it came out - now, to me it just sounds like a waste of money - and kind of smacks of the DIVX creation Best Buy came up with a few years ago, where content and what you can view on it is highly regulated. It certainly has its restrictions- and isn't enough of a machine to have me wanting one anytime soon.
* Nothing under a Grand. Aside from the "add-your own monitor/keyboard/etc" Mac Mini, right now Apple doesn't sell any model under a Thousand dollars. Not the Notebooks, not the iMac - nothing. Which to me is a shame, because I think Apple is missing a huge chunk of the marketplace that would buy a Mac - but that thousand dollar wall is too much for them to climb. It could be a great introduction for kids, or college students or anyone who likes the Mac - but only has a budget of say $600 to $800 bucks. So you throw out a few features - doesn't mean you can't build a quality machine for less than a Grand, that maybe doesn't do everything and isn't the fastest cat in the jungle - but it's more then decent and is solid & works well. Just sayin'.