The tired, old VHS-Beta analogy needs to be re-tired. The V-B wars were over a dominant standard in a growing new market. The computer market is mature. The shelf-space on video rental stores, and the store-buys-user-rents model, forced the need for only one standard; the computers themselves, and the Internet they access, make shelf inches no longer relevant. Most important, Beta never achieved a critical mass in the general market, nor established a niche market, where it could survive as a second standard. Macs have both a general second standard status and the education, music, publishing, and video niches. I have never heard an argument predicting Apple�s fall to Wintel that did not also apply to Pepsi collapsing against Coke�s dominance.
Neither Pepsi nor Apple are going anywhere. The end of a Mac IE is not a death knell for Apple. It�s an acknowledgement from Redmond that they could afford to drive Netscape to bankruptcy by making their product better, then giving away a better product for free, but they cannot make inroads against the superior Safari with Apple behind it. Especially when Safari has the same location, location, location advantage on Macs that IE enjoys on Windows.
What I DO thank MS for is for being a model of stick-to-it-iveness that Apple should learn from. From Windows itself to IE, MS has made many sorry and low quality products, and reworked them and reworked them until they became tolerable, then usable, and sometimes even quite good. Apple repeatedly puts out great products, put no or ineffectual marketing behind them, then abandons them. eWorld used the same AOL engine; the Newton broke ground that�s still not matched, and HyperTalk is STILL the most English-language-like programming language ever. If any of these were MS products, you�d still be using them.
We?re always told, especially by licenses, that a font is a program like any other. So if Apple fixes the program install issue (see What Panther Should Fix, Part 2), let fonts use that fixed installer like any other program. If being installed by a user, they go one place, period. Installed by an administrator, a list of font folders should appear, with check boxes to indicate whether that user can access the install you?re doing.
As a user, I want to see what fonts I have access to myself, and turn them on and off, singly or in sets of my choosing. I don?t usually care where they physically are, so I don?t want to see that regularly: give me a separate mode for that. There can be a column to indicate if the font is PreScript, FalseType, BlotchMap, or whatever new ?I want to be the standard? type we get next. Let me hide this column, though, for when I don?t care and want the width: some font names are elaborate. But if a font requires two files, like PostScript screen fonts and printer fonts, and I?ve got access to one but not the other, it should certainly tell me that!
I can hardly credit the idea that Apple has ever successfully marketed anything. Doesn?t anyone remember eWorld? The Newton? Anyone out there surfing the web with CyberDog? Do you see the market share of HyperCard growing? Apple STILL doesn?t know what market HyperCard addresses!
The success of the Mac is based on the fact that it?s so good that it survives Apple marketing fiascos. Even in the immediately pre-?Jobs 2.0? era, when Apple was bleeding marketshare faster than Exxon tankers bleed oil, the Mac held on.
I think the ads target who they say they do. Whether they do so effectively or not is a different question. I can?t help but be struck by the fact that ?switch from Wintel? ads appeared *immediately* after the 5 year MS investment deal with Apple ended. MS could concentrate their efforts for 3 1/2 years on other areas, like putting voyeur peepholes for national security groups into their OS, in exchange for the Justice Department suit dying. Then they had 1 1/2 years left to get their first ever decent Mac department in place and running before the agreement ended. Now THAT?S marketing strategy that makes even an inferior product a best-seller.
Thanks for the reminder; it's important to remember that anyone, and any company, can be seduced by the power of information, and convince themselves that the ability to collect it gives them the right to do so.
More relevant to Apple's history, however, is the likelihood that they'll get bored with their own technology and abandon it. It's what they've done with everything they've made except the Macintosh itself. Anyone here use a Newton? HyperCard? eWorld? Did you know that AOL was a joint Apple/Steve Case venture, and Apple backed out pre-launch? (That's why eWorld software worked so identically to AOL; it was the same engine, Apple had the rights).
So more relevant than "will Apple charge a $200 upgrade 3 years from now" might be "will you be retyping all your data 3 years from now"? Apple has walked away from better technology that most companies ever invented. Microsoft, by contrast, went through Windows 1, 2, and 3 over several years before having a selling product with 3.1 ... something to be said for perseverence, no?
Bye Bye Internet Explorer, And Thank-You
What Panther Should Fix: Part Three, Font, Fonts, Fonts!!
The Switch Campaign Targets Mac users Not PC Users
Safari: It's not just a browser