Editorial: "Apple doesn't care for their users"

Tip by Anonymous | Added 2010-07-26, 01:34 PM | 16 Replies

Anonymous writes:

So its been a while since I wrote my last editorial to Suregottold. Since then, a lot of things have happened with the iPhone and iPad. Both have resulted in typical disappointment.

Firstly, we'll start off with the iPhone. Before the antennagate discussion, let's dig down into some of the other issues.

Apple starts off by lobotomizing multitasking into a bastard child where you can access a few functions (unless you're Apple, in which case you can do whatever you want). This pokes a huge hole in the "charging $99 and screening apps prevents crap" argument. Even burying it in a submenu for power users to use with a hug bold disclaimer isn't good; if Apple thinks you're too dumb to use a feature right, you can't have it. Then iOS 4 is a power hungry update that bricks many 3Gs and greatly reduces battery life. Gorilla glass turns out to be easily breakable and scratchable. The retina display ships with many units having yellow spots, pointing to a sever lack of quality control.

Finally, we get to antennagate, a very serious issue which Steve Jobs downplays. Apple denies the problem for a long time before holding a press conference.

So Apple invites the media to a press conference that's allegedly to address the issues, and it starts off with a cheeky Youtube video telling the press that they're full of shit and making a mountain out of a non-existent molehill. At this point I knew that Steve wasn't going to recall the phone, although I had strongly suspected he would have avoided it anyways to try to p reserve the illusion that Apple can do no wrong (it just works, not to mention the bottom line).

So the press conference goes on and Apple goes on about how much they love and love their users, and how "smartphones have issues". This is when my bullshit meter hit full throttle. Then the trolling started with the "death grip" being shown on different phones.

Sure enough, Apple hires someone with gigantic hands to hold the phones in unintuitive fashions and show a signal reduction. In doing so Apple tried to make it out to be a minor problem that you can avoid if you don't hold the phone in a way that affects the antenna. In doing so, they tried to distract from a major point: Other phones are designed so that you don't block the antenna when you hold the phone in a fashion that can be remotely described as comfortable or natural.

Then Jobs continued to get more arrogant as the conference goes on. If Jobs thought he could avoid lawsuits no cases would have been given out, and he continued to be hostile and evasive throughout the rest of his conference. His comment about the Eminem band aid may have been the single dumbest thing I've ever heard. Of course, by saying how they'll reassess the issue in September and making snide remarks, Jobs distracted people from the real point that they're going to fix it in future productions of the current phone, which all of their factories will undoubtedly be doing by September (via nonconductive coating). By quietly rolling out the fix, Apple can avoid giving out cases on the new phones and dismiss the antenna problems as a nonissue (the coating prevents the attenuation), and they don't get crap from all the people who already bought iPhones.

Surprisingly, some of the media didn't fall for the RDF and called out Jobs for his arrogance. That made me happy. Then I saw Apple's quarterly profits and that they made record amounts of money. I can only hope that Apple's show of arrogance and lack of care for their users reflects in the next quarter (because the previous quarter was done before the press conference, when everyone thought Apple would actually fix the problem.

Now, onto the iPad.

iSuppli thinks Apple will ship about 13M iPads by years end. It's been called the "Tickle me Elmo of 2010". It's essentially printing money for Apple. Tech blogs and magazines can't stop raving about it.

Firstly, I'd like to state that Apple is in a great situation. The things are flying off of shelves. They get a cut of monthly data subscriptions. They've locked everyone into the App Store. They have a serious first movers advantage in the eyes of many, even though the tablet market is nothing new.

And denying that there is a market for internet appliances like the iPad is stupid. The market clearly exists. However, I wholeheartedly agree that, compared to a real computer, the iPad is a toy. And for $500, it's simply too much for me right now.

Yes, we all get envy of the iPad, watching this fly by and that app. I know a professional photographer who uses one to show photos to his clients and actually do some lightweight manipulation. I saw him take a normal photo of a city street under a train overpass and apply all sorts of effects via multitouch: blurring the background, dimming it and reducing the contrast to bring the only the road in focus. Such work would have taken quite a bit of time in Photoshop, and it was done in under a minute on the iPad.

And for all the wonderful things we can say about the iPad, there are many things that are alarming.

Apple is building up their rules regarding application coding and what tools you can use. They're trying to make smaller developers code for the iPhone platform only. iAds wastes bandwidth and time, and ultimately I anticipate Apple will choke out third party advertisers altogether, forcing them to work with Steve. By creating a platform investment for the dev, Apple is trying to get you to say "iOS has apps X, Y, and Z, I'll get that". Then you spend a ton of money on apps, books, and magazines, and you can't take them out of the walled garden. Better buy an iPad or the hundreds of dollars you spent might as well have been burned!

The device itself is prone to a variety of issues. As a magazine reader, it's probably best-in-class, but for regular reading, it's poor. I laughed yesterday as I read my nook on the beach and, after struggling with glare for ten minutes, the iPad owner found the lovely error message telling him he couldn't use the device until it cooled down. Not to mention how much easier e-ink is on the eyes.

It's not expandable. It has planned obsolescence (no removable battery). It has Wi-Fi issues. AT&T has now capped the data plans. It's fairly heavy. It's very fragile (the glass is thicker than the iPhone, but not enough relative to the increased size of the screen, so it is weaker).

Meanwhile, Conde Nast and others are looking to take content that is free for browsers and monetize it by charging iOS users for it (since you can't change the user agent or install external apps without jailbreaking, it is easily enforced).

The fact that jailbreaking is possible doesn't address the fundamental problem that the company who sells you the device is actively trying to prevent you from using it how you want. Many users are afraid to and Apple could take a more active stance against jailbreaking (suspending the iTunes accounts of jailbroken phones, denying warranty support after running checks in the background on a time delay like VAC so it's hard for hackers to determine if a jailbreak is complete and the process is either slowed or users get bitten, etc.)

No device is perfect, let's not deny that. However, the iPad is a feature limited device with a crippled OS. Let's wait for the devices to be more feature filled and affordable for their limited functionality (since trading off bells and whistles for ease of use becomes acceptable once it's priced like an appliance and not a much higher specced notebook), and let's pick an open OS where developers are not limited by the whims of Apple. In doing so, we won't shackle ourselves to Apple.

If you want an example of people doing so, look no further than the companies that coded apps for IE6 & ActiveX. Do you have any idea of the number of companies that mandate that IE6 is the only installed browser? Even Fortune 500 (and 100) companies? Many still use it on new images today. They can't move on because the pain of moving is so great. They pay every day because they locked themselves down onto a limited incompatible system.

At least the iPad does most of its functionality well, barring some serious Wi-Fi issues. The iPhone 4 is a sad, sad joke, and an example of Apple prioritizing aesthetics over functionality and reliability once again. Although nothing matches the level of sin that the hockey puck mouse was.


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> Anonymous 07/28/10(Wed)18:05 No.8562 
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This makes me sad because people will still eat Apple's shit up.
> Anonymous 07/28/10(Wed)18:31 No.8563 
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>> In doing so, they tried to distract from a major point: Other phones are designed so that you don't block the antenna when you hold the phone in a fashion that can be remotely described as comfortable or natural.

Yeah, youtube bit was a crummy start, but that kind of "other phones sux, SEE!!?!?!!12a12?" was a real load of bullshit they should not have tried to pull. Same for their continued site updating of "smartphones have issues" butthurt and not having the sense to "let the issue DROP."

>>Then Jobs continued to get more arrogant as the conference goes on. If Jobs thought he could avoid lawsuits no cases would have been given out, and he continued to be hostile and evasive throughout the rest of his conference.
Felt the same thing about this, much like a certain other tech company getting away with its very popular --and well selling-- defective by design product via "extended warranties."(aka "do nothing about it and hope the thing expires and 'legaliese' bullshit your way out of it").
> Anonymous 07/28/10(Wed)22:04 No.8567 
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Any idiot can pull shit out of his arse. But it takes a genius to sell it.

Steve is smart in that he managed to troll so many people into buying his products. You can see him laugh all the way to the bank.

> Anonymous 07/28/10(Wed)23:02 No.8569 
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>Although nothing matches the level of sin that the hockey puck mouse was.
What an excellent way to conclude this fantastic article. The puck mouse is truly Apple's worst product ever, although the Magic Mouse is a very close second.
> Anonymous 07/28/10(Wed)23:59 No.8572 
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>>8562
C'est la vie, right?

>>8563
>Yeah, youtube bit was a crummy start, but that kind of "other phones sux, SEE!!?!?!!12a12?" was a real load of bullshit they should not have tried to pull. Same for their continued site updating of "smartphones have issues" butthurt and not having the sense to "let the issue DROP."
It seemed largely affective among the loyal mac userbase (try Macrumors) but ultimately failed to convince people outside the cult that the reception issue was blown out of proportion or nonexistent.

>Felt the same thing about this, much like a certain other tech company getting away with its very popular --and well selling-- defective by design product via "extended warranties."(aka "do nothing about it and hope the thing expires and 'legaliese' bullshit your way out of it").
That's the thing, so many companies do this, but people are willing to defend Apple as pro-consumer when they're just as self serving and, in many cases, more self serving than other publicly held corporations.

>>8567
>Steve is smart in that he managed to troll so many people into buying his products. You can see him laugh all the way to the bank.
I can't argue with you there. Steve is making money hand over fist but you can sense how pissed off he was about antennagate.

>>8569
>What an excellent way to conclude this fantastic article.
Thanks!

>The puck mouse is truly Apple's worst product ever
I had to use one on a daily basis at one point ._.

>although the Magic Mouse is a very close second.
Ugh, what an non-ergonomic piece of trash. At least the "magic touchpad" isn't horrible ergonomically (although I'd much prefer a regular mouse and think that the gestures are a gimmick...)
> Anonymous 07/29/10(Thu)02:27 No.8573 
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What's sad is that Apple's devices don't function, but they look good.

I've known people that are buying macs and iphones becuase of the looks. And I'm gonna be honest, I'm being pulled in too. I'm trying to stop but they look neat, iPhones are designed to look physically appealing, iPads are, Macbooks, iMacs, you name it, Apple can make it look good.

But luckily some companies are starting to fight this. Look at the HP envy series, the new all in one touchscreen computers coming out, even the operating systems are starting to look better.

Really, I think every company should work together, develop a computer that looks cool, works, and has an operating system that looks cool and you can customize it, so if you want a mac so badly, you can customize your windows to look like OS X.

I mean really, they all need to get together and end apple's monopoly on certain devices. What's neat is that it's all starting though. Google's new droid phones are getting better, the laptops are getting a bit better looking, displays are getting LED backlights, and every time I go to best buy I see the Mac section get smaller. They removed the 21.5 inch iMacs and the Macbook pro 13 inch. You can still buy them, but they're making more room for the new devices.

Down with Apple.
> Anonymous 07/29/10(Thu)05:34 No.8574 
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>>8573
>Really, I think every company should work together, develop a computer that looks cool, works, and has an operating system that looks cool and you can customize it, so if you want a mac so badly, you can customize your windows to look like OS X.

What's this "Rain Meter" I keep hearing about and why does it have support for Windows 7?
> Anonymous 07/29/10(Thu)06:05 No.8575 
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Just dropping in to say that I fucking love Georgia in italic.
> Anonymous 07/29/10(Thu)08:42 No.8576 
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>>8573
>What's sad is that Apple's devices don't function, but they look good.
And one of the reasons they look good is because they make decisions that impair functionality for aesthetics.

>I've known people that are buying macs and iphones becuase of the looks. And I'm gonna be honest, I'm being pulled in too. I'm trying to stop but they look neat, iPhones are designed to look physically appealing, iPads are, Macbooks, iMacs, you name it, Apple can make it look good.
Anyone who says they aren't attracted by aesthetics is a liar. Now, what you find aesthetic MAY differ from the other guy.

I personally would find it hard to argue that Apple doesn't make sleek devices. The question is if sleekness outweighs functionality. And for me? Not by a long shot.

>But luckily some companies are starting to fight this. Look at the HP envy series, the new all in one touchscreen computers coming out, even the operating systems are starting to look better.
I've had some terrible experiences with HP as an OEM and in general I've found them to have really awful laptops (reliability, driver support, keyboards, etc.)

At least HP tries though. They stumbled under Carly Fiorina (who was the worst thing that ever happened to HP) and are trying to make a comeback. Some things never caught on, but HP computers have had cool features. They had removable hard drive bays (accessible externally) on a lot of PCs for years, which I though was very neat. And the touchscreen stuff is very interesting.
> Anonymous 07/29/10(Thu)08:43 No.8577 
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>>8576
(Continued)
>Really, I think every company should work together, develop a computer that looks cool, works, and has an operating system that looks cool and you can customize it, so if you want a mac so badly, you can customize your windows to look like OS X.
They don't care that much, the market largely wants Windows and is used to the look and feel. If you don't get this, you are younger. Even the new taskbar in Windows 7 pisses a lot of people off. They get a huge discount on Windows licenses too.

>I mean really, they all need to get together and end apple's monopoly on certain devices. What's neat is that it's all starting though. Google's new droid phones are getting better, the laptops are getting a bit better looking, displays are getting LED backlights, and every time I go to best buy I see the Mac section get smaller. They removed the 21.5 inch iMacs and the Macbook pro 13 inch. You can still buy them, but they're making more room for the new devices.
Apple is cutting down on the device variety because you'll increase the profit margin by offering fewer choice (and buying more of each part - bulk discounts).

Android still has some serious issues, mainly regarding OS fragmentation.

The solution (in my opinion) is to make two classes of devices:
-A device uses Android as an OS. Under the open use of the code, they implement it however they want.
-Android certified, or Google certified, or some certification. Point being, people who want to get this premium certification have to pledge to provide the latest operating system updates for the phone for a minimum of four years in a timely fashion (when a new release comes out, they have to have it out within a month).

>Down with Apple.
Definitely.
> Anonymous 07/29/10(Thu)08:54 No.8578 
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>>8572
I question the innovation behind the Magic Track Pad thing. I have a Bamboo tablet with multitouch support. I mainly use it for drawing (with a pen) and don't see why it would replace my mouse.

There's a reason why people choose not to use the trackpad on their laptops and instead use portable mice.
> Anonymous 07/29/10(Thu)11:33 No.8579 
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>>8572
>Thanks!
You're very welcome.

>I had to use one on a daily basis at one point ._.
You should be attain sainthood for putting up with that terrible mouse.

>Ugh, what an non-ergonomic piece of trash. At least the "magic touchpad" isn't horrible ergonomically (although I'd much prefer a regular mouse and think that the gestures are a gimmick...)
I tried a Magic Mouse at an Apple Store and it didn't register most of my clicks and gestures, so fuck that thing. As for the trackpad, it belongs on a laptop. I can't wait to see Macfags try to play Team Fortress 2 with that thing.
> Anonymous 07/29/10(Thu)19:56 No.8580 
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>hockey puck mouse
I used one in my high school days
> Anonymous 07/30/10(Fri)01:26 No.8582 
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>>8576
>I've had some terrible experiences with HP as an OEM and in general I've found them to have really awful laptops (reliability, driver support, keyboards, etc.)

I understand what you're saying, but look up the Envy series if you didn't. It is literally the Macbook Pro of PCs.
>>8577
>They don't care that much, the market largely wants Windows and is used to the look and feel. If you don't get this, you are younger. Even the new taskbar in Windows 7 pisses a lot of people off. They get a huge discount on Windows licenses too.

You don't get what I'm saying, I mean you can make it look like anything, so if you want the old taskbar, you can make it look like the old task bar. Want a dock? You got it, want exit, maximize, minimize on the left? Go into settings and set it like that.

Just make it more open so everyone is happy. I'd prefer to have my buttons in the middle and the old startbar, but a dock that runs below all my windows that's on the top of a screen that keeps shortcuts and shit.

Or, I want it to look and work EXACTLY like windows 3. I can do that through customization.

That's what I mean, an OS that you can customize to make it look and work how you want.
> Anonymous 07/30/10(Fri)16:37 No.8585 
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>>8578
>There's a reason why people choose not to use the trackpad on their laptops and instead use portable mice.

Games are my reason. You ever try to play an RTS or FPS on a trackpad? It's terrible.
> Anonymous 08/01/10(Sun)09:00 No.8589 
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Regarding the mentioning of IE6, check this out:

http://www.theregister.co.uk/2010/07/30/uk_government_sticks_with_ie_6/

This sort of shit just makes me shrivel up inside.