Found this video on YouTube and genuinely felt like the guy made valid points. Having been with Apple for this long, I tend to feel that Apple is doing more wrong than right at this point as well.
I agree with some of his points. Particularly the pricing: where is sub-$1000 laptop? I specifically have college students in mind, I think existing Macs are too expensive for them. I want to see an entry-level machine.
But I totally disagree with the following:
1) Touch on macOS. What does he even mean? Does he want to have an iOS/macOS hybrid like windows, because otherwise I have no idea why would I want to use my fat fingers to press tiny buttons and sliders in macOS. I have seen people using Windows tablets and all of them use mice for precisely the reason I described, when working in desktop version it's clumsy to try using your fingers to do things. Windows keyboard cover for tablets even has a tiny trackpad. Nuff said. And by the way you have a way to use touch on macOS. The amazing multitouch trackpad. I don't even own a mouse anymore.
2) Dropping the headphone jack is controversial. But. How is it making users buy wireless EarPods if wired EarPods with lightning jack are included?
3) Dropping I/O ports. Sure, it may be controversial for pros who use this technology daily, like SD cards, but I only use mini DVI to VGA almost daily for external monitor, keyboard and trackpad connect wirelessly. Probably this dude being a vlogger uses SD cards heavily and that's why this is the end of the world issue for him.
Otherwise, I think he missed the point that services are innovation, too. App Store is alive and well, so is the iTunes and iBooks stores. They've added Apple Music which is pretty good IMO and brought apps to Apple TV. Also, integration between Apple products is getting better.
And by the way I don't remember much different "innovation" during Jobs days going from the original iPhone to iPhone 4S and his death in 2011. Actually in my opinion the most innovative iPhone design was 5c but lack of demand killed it since it looked "too cheap".
Found this video on YouTube and genuinely felt like the guy made valid points. Having been with Apple for this long, I tend to feel that Apple is doing more wrong than right at this point as well.
Found this video on YouTube and genuinely felt like the guy made valid points. Having been with Apple for this long, I tend to feel that Apple is doing more wrong than right at this point as well.
Quite valid points made in the video. I have always thought marketing takes care of itself when the product you market is impressive. Substitute marketing for an impressive product and in time it catches up and blindsides the company.There is this guy on YouTube i watch every now and again. I do not really like all of his videos but some I do as he makes good points. This video in particular caught my eye and I thought I'd share it with you guys and gals to see what your opinions are on the matter.
Let me know what you guys think
Take Care
To be fair though, isn't her role limited to the Retail experience? I'm more annoyed at the seeming influx of hipster culture from the beats acquisition -_-;; The only thing I'd pin Ahrendts for is the god-awful post-launch experience of every single major Apple product since her hire.Quite valid points made in the video. I have always thought marketing takes care of itself when the product you market is impressive. Substitute marketing for an impressive product and in time it catches up and blindsides the company.
Always was concerned over Angela Ahrendts hiring and now stopping design work on airports. Very short sighted.
But of course this sequence won't last forever without cost.Typical sequence of events (repeated regularly since the first iPod):
1. Apple releases new product
2. Forums / internet in general erupt in rage
3. "Apple is doomed" clickbait headlines proliferate
4. Apple sells metric ****-ton of products, makes more money than God
5. Go back to step 1
But of course this sequence won't last forever without cost.
Computing Forever (Dave) is a hater, his views on everything have become very dark. He's mostly known now for his videos on politics, social justice, regressive liberals etc etc anymore.
It's like watching Ted Kaczynski do tech reviews. Seriously....it's that bad. If he doesn't have a use for a feature then it must be a useless gimmick right?
I unsubscribed from his channel a while back due to his ever increasing dark nature and closed mindedness. Later I see a video he made talking about how he's losing subscribers because YouTube is secretly doing this because of their far left (political) views!! I nearly fell out of my chair!
Anyway I suggest taking his OPINION with a grain of salt and forming your own OPINION. Surely no one here needs help forming their own opinions right? Lol
I agree with some of his points. Particularly the pricing: where is sub-$1000 laptop? I specifically have college students in mind, I think existing Macs are too expensive for them. I want to see an entry-level machine.
But I totally disagree with the following:
I have no idea why would I want to use my fat fingers to press tiny buttons and sliders in macOS. I have seen people using Windows tablets and all of them use mice for precisely the reason I described, when working in desktop version it's clumsy to try using your fingers to do things.
My Apple Stock indicates that Apple is doing just fine.
I am for the first time considering other laptops rather than just Apple laptops for my company. I am getting rather miffed by the lake of ports for the sake of thin. I would not care if the new MBPro 15 was TWICE as thick if they would put the ports back. I know it is not going to happen and that is why I bought one of the last MBPro 13" non-retina . . .it even has a CD drive inside! For doing my Office and Quickbooks the non-retina screen is perfect!
This, he is a delusional hater.
It's a biased and non-factual video.
Non Factual? That's just delusional. He made several valid points, albeit many opinions, but still very convincing.
Apple just didn't grow and surpass Microsoft to get the place they are now with just echo chambers.
No, but that sort of success is how "echo chambers" get started...
Remember, Microsoft had a series of foul-ups and "courageous decisions" that probably made a huge contribution to the rise of Mac OS, iOS, Android and Chromebook... Windows Vista, the Office ribbon, Windows 8, epic failure to break into the phone/tablet market, The UI Formerly Know as Metro, the Windows 10 forced upgrade fiasco, last man to jump on the "services" bandwagon, Linux eating their lunch in the server market... Any one of those could have bankrupted a company without Microsoft's legacy near-monopoly. Instead, they've lived and learned - and their competitors had better look and learn too, not point at MS's past mistakes and say "Ha ha!"
Also, a large part of the Mac's recent success is that Apple were already exclusively positioned in the "premium laptop" market which continued to grow after the "cheap commodity PC/laptop" market imploded a few years ago. That wasn't Cook's genius, nor Jobs' vision, it was just serendipity - high-end laptops have been Apple's bread and butter since the days of the reviled Sculley*, they were still turning out well-respected executive laptops at their nadir in the late 90s when their desktop line was a shambles. You'll notice now that Dell, Microsoft et. al. are now gunning for that market.
Seriously, I don't know what keeps them on.
For the average costumer, for example, the DELL XPS 13 might look good, but if you are a geek, you'll notice the 15W CPU, the non DCI-3P screen, the outdated ports, the thicker profile, the plastic feel, etc.