The iPad success story — giving us what we want, again

By | March 10, 2012, 8:09am PST

Summary: The new iPad is off to a great start, because it gives mainstream consumers exactly what they want. Competitors have a tough time ahead, as they just don’t get it.

The new iPad is not even shipping yet but seems to already be a successful launch. While Apple haters shout from the rafters that it is just a minor update to the last iPad, folks are ordering them I suspect by the millions. Apple’s competitors have gotten nowhere with competing tablets, and they probably won’t when it’s all said and done. Apple has given the masses what they want, as they’ve done before.

Related: Apple’s next-gen iPad: New battlefields emerge | Microsoft’s business pitch for Windows 8 depends on tablets | Apple’s New iPad In The Enterprise: Laptop Replacement Gets Closer | The new iPad’s great but what’s wrong with a good, inexpensive Android tablet? | CNET: New iPad hands on | CNET: All CNET iPad coverage (roundup) | iPad HD will surpass laptops on key features

All we have to do to understand why the iPad has dominated the market is look back at Apple’s recent history. The iPod was introduced to an unsuspecting world years ago, offering a radical departure in how users listened to music. This was a common pastime for millions, and the iPod simply made it better and more enjoyable.

As brilliantly accounted by Farhad Manjoo of Slate, Apple improved the iPod every year, not radically but in simple ways, and made it cheaper. Competitors scrambled to best the iPod without success, because they took the path of adding whiz-bang features that didn’t matter to most consumers. Remember Zune squirting? Neither do the millions of folks who bought an iPod, or two or three.

Apple duplicated the model proven so successful for the iPod when it introduced the iPhone. It tapped into the existing iPod music ecosystem, and added the ability to do things folks already did, but easier and more enjoyably. Buyers flocked to the iPhone, not because it could do lots of things they never thought of, but because it made the things they already did much better.

Then the iPad hit the scene, and Apple took the successes of the iPod and iPhone and rolled it into the new tablet. It let buyers do the things it could do on both the previous i-products, but better with the larger screen. It was still easy to use and carry, but could make the things prospective buyers already wanted to do, better and more enjoyable.

Now Apple is clearly following the successful business model with the iPad, refreshing it every year. Not making it radically different or better, but better in simple ways. The company has figured out what drives buyers in the mainstream, and that is the desire for controlled change.

Human nature delights at change, finding something new or new ways to do common tasks. This is true for the youngest toddler up through the oldest grandma. We simply love finding a new thing to make what we enjoy even better. This controlled change is the basis for the Apple model proven so successful with the iPod, iPhone, and now the iPad.

This is where competitors to the iPad are failing miserably, and will continue to do so. The iPad popularity is already proven in the market, so competing products are built with more sophisticated hardware under the hood. The philosophy is to be better it must have lots more to offer, but that doesn’t work.

In almost every case, making a competing product with more sophistication intimidates the average consumer. I’m not referring to the small percentage of tech-savvy consumers who delight in learning radically new things. The regular consumer has a knee-jerk reaction to having to learn totally new things, and this is the major failing of competing tablets.

It gets back to the controlled change that Apple gives us with the iPad. Just new enough to be a delight to discover, but not radically different to require learning a lot of new things. You pick up the iPad, quickly discover how easy it is to do what you already like doing, and you never think more about it. Pick up a competing tablet and you have to figure out not only what you can do with it but how to make it happen.

The controlled change that is successful for Apple is going the be the biggest hurdle for Windows 8 tablets coming down the pike. Even if these are intuitive enough to use out of the box, the Windows moniker implies that a lot of learning will be required to use them. There will be a knee-jerk reaction to this for the average consumer, and they won’t look at them seriously.

The Apple model has been proven once again to be wildly successful with the iPad. This will continue as the product evolves year after year while competitors scramble aimlessly to make a difference. Apple haters will get louder while railing against the methodology the company is using, but millions will continue to buy iPads. Apple is giving the mainstream consumer what it wants, yet again.

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Topics

James Kendrick has been using mobile devices since they weighed 30 pounds, and has been sharing his insights on mobile technology for almost that long.

Disclosure

James Kendrick

James Kendrick has no affiliations or relationships that need to be disclosed.

Biography

James Kendrick

James Kendrick has been using mobile devices since they weighed 30 pounds, and has been sharing his insights on mobile technology for almost that long. Prior to joining ZDNet, James was the Founding Editor of jkOnTheRun, a CNET Top 100 Tech Blog that was acquired by GigaOM in 2008 and is now part of that prestigious tech network. James' writing has appeared in many print publications: Smartphone and Pocket PC Magazine, Information Week and Laptop Magazine to name a few. James' coverage of the mobile technology sector has regularly appeared in the New York Times, Salon.com and CNN/ Fortune online. Not just a writer, James has filmed numerous video reviews and how-tos that have garnered well over a million viewers. He has appeared on local news segments and been interviewed by the Associated Press on mobile technology topics. Additionally, James has been podcasting about mobile technology for years.

60
Comments

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Top Rated

Easy killer
Pete "athynz" Athens 10th Mar
James did not define who "us" is... and it obviously does not include Android fanboys, advocates, or proponents.

Just In

Do not agree in the slightest...
sameer_singh17 3 days ago
The market's being divided into media tablets & hybrid tablets, while Apple is a media tablet priced like a hybrid tablet.

http://www.tech-thoughts.net/2012/03/new-ipad-tablet-market.html
-2 Votes
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Umm
Peter Perry 10th Mar
No it does not! It gives some people some but not everyone.
7 Votes
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Top Rated
Easy killer
Pete "athynz" Athens 10th Mar Top Rated
James did not define who "us" is... and it obviously does not include Android fanboys, advocates, or proponents.
0 Votes
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Has nothing to do with that.
Peter Perry 10th Mar
I was perfectly content to buy one for myself if it had even half the features of the concept videos.
1 Vote
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You would buy one for yourself?
msalzberg 6 days ago
@Peter Perry

But, but, but it has a 4:3 aspect ratio!
0 Votes
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Contributr
Yes I did
JamesKendrick 6 days ago
" Apple is giving the mainstream consumer what it wants, yet again."
1 Vote
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No it doesn't
rhonin 5 days ago
It is defining a set of improved/new functions and telling us this is what you need. This "minimization" is what moved me from the iPhone 4 to Android and is looking to drive me from the iPad to Android.

Win8 - tbd....
Nor do they care about the higher resolution. They just browse and fb and the current resolution is perfectly fine for that. As for myself I'm still waiting for a W8 tablet because the new iPad didn't give me W8.
2 Votes
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WHen is that wait going too end?
James Quinn 6 days ago
Pagan jim
-1 Votes
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Long Live Big Ballmer
Robert Hahn 6 days ago
That's right, Johnny. The Ministry of Truth has determined that no hardware makers except Apple and Samsung will be able to deliver those really high-resolution displays in any serious quantity. Therefore the Ministry of Truth has announced that no one wants high-resolution displays.
The Ipad could have the cure for Cancer and you guy's would rather see people die than purchase an Apple product. Your seething hatred of all things Apple is just petty, and utter foolishness. If you don't want an Ipad, don't buy one.

It's called choice, but let people that want to purchase one do so in peace....
0 Votes
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ummm
spikedstrider Updated - 5 days ago
He is reffering to the majority as the iPad is the biggest in sales for Tablets. No company pleases everyone. lol When a company has huge sales it means they are doing something right to appease the masses.
0 Votes
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Still having battery issues
intruderman 10th Mar
with 3rd gen Touch and iOS 5.1. Still doesn't work as it was working before.
Apple ain't dumb. I'm sure they have a long-term plan for what features to add to a product and when they will add them. Some people complain that the i(fill-in-the-blank) doesn't have every feature they want. Well, if the first version of a product has it all, why would anyone want/buy the second version? And the third version, etc. Also, it doesn't make sense to include a particular feature if it isn't technically mature. The features they've added to the new iPad (retina display, faster processor, LTE) are power hogs, so the battery capacity (and unit thickness) had to be increased to keep battery life the same. Apple is sometimes criticized for not cramming all kinds of features in and letting the user make the trade-off between functionality and battery life. But their philosophy is to make a product that the vast majority of users will find easy and enjoyable to use. I'd say they're doing pretty well at that!
-1 Votes
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Time and time again you have said something along the lines of "since it is selling well, it indicates that Apple is giving the masses what it is they want" without explaining what reasons the masses are purchasing the iPad for.

Until you have shown exactly why they are being purchased, your words are hollow, based on assumptions only.

One could argue then that Rolex manufactures by far the most accurate and duable time pieces in existence, as they are coveted by so many.
plain
1 Vote
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With millions sold
Pete "athynz" Athens Updated - 10th Mar
James' logic is valid. Obviously it is giving some people exactly what they want - several million people in fact. Your emotional hatred of Apple has simply blinded you to the pure logic of James' article.

What the masses are looking for is something that is easy and intuitive to use, something that requires little maintenance, and something that allows them to do daily tasks easier. in the iPad several million people have found just that.
-8 Votes
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Yeah, the Oldest OS on Any Device on the Market
techenduser 10th Mar Below threshold | Show Anyways
It was time to retire fisherprice a long time ago. In 2012 your app drawer as your homescreen and no 3D. Either you would have to be so old and sight impaired that this look works or so young (toddler) the kiddie colors and buttons to push are fun. If you are in between and find this appealing you are a total fanboy. Look how old the author of this article is. Falls solidly in the first category.
2 Votes
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I can agree with Spock on that
John Zern 10th Mar
bloggers tells us why people buy the iPad, but has anyone actually asked the purchasers why the bought the iPad?

Their answers may not reflect the reasons given by the bloggers.
3 Votes
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I see people don't want the truth
William Farrel Updated - 5 days ago
bloggers tells us why people buy the iPad, but has anyone actually asked the purchasers why the bought the iPad?

Gee, now why would somebody want to hide your question, unless they don't want it asked?

It's a reasonable request - take a poll on why people bought their product, instead of some random blogger telling us why these people bought their product.

Maybe people are afraid of the answer?
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Reason
dheady@... 10th Mar
James did a fine job of explaining why the iPad sells so well. As I suspect you are in that group of IT professionals he also mentions you may be finding it difficult to grasp the elegant simplicity of those reasons. We, and I include myself, with years of technical experience and expertise focus on the specs, features, etc. Apple sells that ephemeral concept of 'the experience'. However much we may dismiss this concept, quod erat demo stratum...Apple sells a buttload of iPads!
-6 Votes
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Times Are A Changing
techenduser 6 days ago Below threshold | Show Anyways
They didn't sell as many iPad as they sold Macs for the whole of last year and the Kindle Fire obliterated them in the 4th quarter. You are looking at 850,000 activations of Android per day. That old OS is killing them.
3 Votes
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@techenduser First, in 2011 Apple sold 16.735 million Macintosh desktops and portables, but in the same period sold 32.394 million iPads (source: http://files.shareholder.com/downloads/AAPL/1729537625x0x512287/5a5d7b14-9542-4640-841d-e047ec28bb96/AAPL_10K_FY11_10.26.11.pdf). It should also be noted that those were all-time high numbers. Second, no one, outside of Amazon, knows exactly how many Kindle Fires sold in the last calendar quarter of 2011, but Amazon's own obfuscated numbers indicate that they sold about 12 million Kindles, with approximately a third of those being Fires for about 4 million units. It hardly "obliterated" iPad sales. In fact, iPad sales in Q1 2012 (Apple's calendar fourth quarter running up to 25 Dec.) were 15.434 million, almost four times the Fire (source: http://files.shareholder.com/downloads/AAPL/1729537625x0x536523/381559d7-04a1-40d5-8e2a-236e3f867158/AAPL%20Q1FY12%2010Q%2001.25.12.pdf).

Additionally, if you look at Amazon financials, their operating income was down while net sales were up, meaning that they're taking a loss on those Kindles. It will be interesting to see if content consumption will make up the losses over the course of a Fire's life, but if it doesn't expect Amazon to get ravaged in the market.

Finally, the vast majority of those 850K activations are Android handsets, not tablets, and no one has really liked the veracity of that number, except Google executives. More importantly, even if that number is completely accurate, it really doesn't mean a thing. Most Android handset makers are losing money, and those who aren't are scraping by on margins so low it may not be feasible to continue.

Yes, times are indeed a changing, and business realities are starting to set in.
0 Votes
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If it makes you happy
ego.sum.stig@... 10th Mar
Try something similar to the "success" of Windows etc. Or for that matter the inimitable "Big Mac." Or if that doesn't get your blood pumping, you could also try to explain (using similar logic) why people read zdnet.
3 Votes
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Regarding why people read ZDNet
kenosha77a 10th Mar
I have to confess I chuckled out loud reading that comment. Well done.
2 Votes
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Because it sells well
Richard Flude Updated - 5 days ago
it must be giving consumers what they want, otherwise they wouldn't volunteer their money to purchase it.

It's popularity defines it as what people want.

This is different than saying its the best or can't be improved, it's saying many consumers see enough value in the offering to buy it and chose it over the competitive offerings.

I don't get your Rolex point, seems an illogical extension.
-1 Votes
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People saw value in the Chia pet...
techenduser 6 days ago
So what does that really say?
And many saw value in the Chia Pet.

The alternative is authoritarian regimes where those that think they're others intellectual superiors demand to make decisions for them. Interestingly such societies have never matched the wealth creating capacity or quality of life of the free market, which says plenty about the value of their claimed superiority.

But sorry, you were saying they should have bought what?
0 Votes
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Short Sighted
rhonin 5 days ago
And I bet if you asked, just about every single one of the consumer users could suggest one or more improvements or functions they feel they need.
0 Votes
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Rolex?
Romas27 5 days ago
You don't get it? Rolex, iPad, McDonalds, BMW - all in the category of very popular and desired. Why? Because people have a tendancy to follow the pack rather than be independent.
0 Votes
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You're right of course Spock..
T-Wrench 4 days ago
Apple is screwing up royal. That's why they're about to go bankrupt any minute now and....

NOT!!!
3 Votes
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Reason reflection
dheady@... 10th Mar
James, I agree with our pointy-eared friend on one count. I think Apple's success is less from giving consumers 'what they want' than from giving them something they had no idea they 'needed' until they hold it.
Anecdotely, I played with the iPad v 1 and found it heavy, slow, and awkward. My wife needed the iPad 2 for her work (she's a developer) so we got it on day one. I demurred. However, after half an hour if playing with it I not only found that Apple had addressed my issues, but that I went from 'that's a nice shiny' to 'dang now I have to wait two weeks to get mine!' Apple filled no 'need' but rather openned up for me a whole new way of using a computer.
0 Votes
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It's not very risky
Robert Hahn 6 days ago
    I think Apple's success is less from giving consumers 'what they want' than from giving them something they had no idea they 'needed' until they hold it.
You're confusing the form with the function. James correctly describes a secret of Apple's success as finding functions that people already use, functions that people are known to be willing to spend money for (like listening to music, like making phone calls) and using technology to create new and better ways of doing those things. The iPod was not some alien from space, it was just a new form of the Walkman/Discman idea that had been around for twenty years and sold in the tens of millions. You didn't have to be Gartner Group to guess that people would buy portable music players.

Same thing with cell phones. People had already demonstrated willingness to spend money on little portable phones. Make a better one, and there you go.

It was only with the iPad that Apple extended that idea to something they had a hand in creating the mass market for: the super-portable web browser that came along as a side-effect of the iPhone. The insight that, "this would be a lot more useful with a bigger screen" could have occurred to any of the vendors who made web-enabled cell phones. But only Apple acted on that insight. But again, people had already demonstrated that they would pay money to hold the web in their hands.
2 Votes
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Pre-Orders Sold Out
Tony Burzio Updated - 10th Mar
Yep! New iPads all spoken for! Just up on the news networks! Stunning!
-6 Votes
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Checked Market Watch...
techenduser 6 days ago Below threshold | Show Anyways
No proof of your claim and if ATT is your source you need to find a new one. The worst telecom in the business.
2 Votes
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The issue
Michael Alan Goff 10th Mar
Of course, there will be a lot of people who say "Nuh-uh, I don't want this", but they're not the audience that Apple plays for. While I love my Android Tablet, though slightly less than before with my phone in hand, I can see the reasoning behind everything that you're saying. It all really comes down to the essential question of why iPads sell.

It'd be easy to say that it's marketing and move on. It'd be wrong. If that was the case, Macs would sell more. That is another subject, though.

Apple gets that CPU sizes, shapes, speeds, and so forth, are mostly irrelevant. They have discovered, and hopefully will continue to improve on, the only piece of hardware that matters. If you'll notice, they're biggest bragging point of the iPad 2 was that their graphics got so much better. This time around, they boast a better display and better graphics. This is why the iPad does better, it is better graphically.

What does this mean?

It means that when you use the GPU for things like games or browsing or any number of other things that can be GPU-accelerated, the weaker CPU takes back-seat.

Not only that, but this display is how good?

Point is that Apple gives people what they want in their own way. The problem that a lot of other companies run into is that they haven't figured out that formula. They're too busy loading it with more RAM and more CPU cores.
-1 Votes
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No pixels is good pixels
Robert Hahn 6 days ago
You raise the interesting question of what they do for an encore. Once you have a display that is so tightly packed with pixels that no human can distinguish them, you can no longer gain product differentiation that way. For a year or so this new display will give Apple a huge advantage because the Android and Windows 8 OEMs will have a devil of a time procuring comparable displays. So they will be fielding visibly inferior products.

But eventually the display fabs of the world will perfect their own processes and begin turning out displays that look as good as Apple's. At that point The Other Guys come roaring back to play more rounds of BetterFasterCheaper. Where does Apple go to stay ahead of them?
0 Votes
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Where does Apple go?
Michael Alan Goff 6 days ago
While everyone else focuses on making that display, they get to focus on everything else. They get to focus on GPU some more, or maybe even battery life. Imagine if Apple came out with something that had more battery life in a smaller space. Or maybe they could make it to where their display takes less and less power.
1 Vote
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I generally think the points made in this article are reasonably accurate (although I still think many writers are way too quick to ignore or dismiss the success of the Kindle Fire), but I also think this is a point that has been made over and over again and I don't really see where this article brings anything new or particularly interesting to the table.

I am getting to the point where I am finding myself reading mobile technology coverage less and less as most of it right now seems to be nothing more than armchair market analysis, usually focused on trying to explain why whatever platform or device the writer currently likes best is going to dominate the world. Isn't there more to talk about? There are hundreds of thousands of applications in both the Apple and Android application stores. How about some in-depth reviews of some of them? How about some detailed descriptions of various use scenarios for these devices. Using James' own writing as an example, I'd love to see a lot more articles like his recent series describing his experiment to try and use only mobile operating systems for a few days.

I guess my thought is that I'd love to see more tech writers think to themselves "Have I or someone else written something similar to this already?" before sitting down to write a new article. Right now, mobile technology is one of the fastest growing and most active segments of the industry. With that being the case, why can't the reporters covering it find more to original topics to write about?
Let's all go back to 2008 when our app drawers were our home screens.

Hey were can I get that Windows tab with XP on it you know the one with the bright screen, latest processor and free photo app?

iPad 3 welcome to the past. Don't forget it is heftier, so now gaining weight is a feature too.
4 Votes
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A game of give and take if you will. I think in this case Apple choose the right balance. You may disagree that is your right of course but in the end neither yours nor my opinion mean much as sales will tell this tale.

Pagan jim
0 Votes
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Oh NZ you are too funny...
T-Wrench 4 days ago
And Ur purple with envy......HA, HA, HA, HA!
0 Votes
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I would have said it differently.
James Quinn 10th Mar
Something like this perhaps. "The iPad giving some people exactly what they want!" I often take offense when people make blanket statements that include well everyone and I often point out to those people the errors of that or their statement. So while I personally agree with your title for it fits me to a "T" I have to admit the iPad is clearly NOT for everyone:)

Pagan jim
0 Votes
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I'm glad you covered all the bases. GRIN. BTW, I agree with your opinions.
1 Vote
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Maximum want is...
Tony Burzio 10th Mar
...the maximum production possible. Apple can only make so many iPads. Once they reach this level, and it looks like they did it in two days, debate over what "everyone" means is moot.
-1 Votes
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Another article
Justice007 Updated - 6 days ago
Another article from someone who probably needs to unsure he gets an invite to the next Apple media function. Having tried the iPad 2, it is my opinion that it is not all it is propped up to be. My wife got it for me as a gift. I played with it for about two weeks then quickly lost interest. So I doubt the new iPad will do much more for me. I do not hate apple. We have iPhones, a mac book pro, an imac, a couple PCs, and a blackberry playbook. Note some of these are supplied through work. My wife now use the iPad 2 while I enjoy my blackberry playbook which I absolutely love. I am not trying to tell anyone the playbook is better for them. So I hope no one tries to tell me the iPad is best for me. For what I do on my playbook, I simply prefer it to the iPad. I however wish I was able to get itunes u, and iBooks on my playbook. Those aside, I have all I need on my playbook. To each their own. I wish grown men will stop cheering for products as if they are elementary school kids or as if they are cheering for their college football team or something.
-7 Votes
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Does success by definition include brainwashing?
lgpOnTheMove 6 days ago Below threshold | Show Anyways
Suggesting that a product meets people's needs purely on the assumption that it has sold millions is in my mind inaccurate and misleading. As far as Apple is concerned, the company doesn't differentiate or think about people's individual needs. Ingenious marketing perhaps, but they really do treat their target audience like sheep. In Apple's mind everybody is the same, so they build one model of iPad, one model of iPhone, and attempt to convince the world we have what you need, go buy it!

I have a need for wma and wmv file playback for example. I have a need for storage beyond 32GB and I also require standard Office functionality and flash. I want to be able to transfer files between my smartphone/PC without having to go hunt for a wire, listen to music with a 10-band equalizer, and watch HD video wherever I happen to be. I want to be able to use GPS and pull up a map without having to require an active data connection. And if I want data, it has to be affordable with no caps. I demand function over form. Does all of that make me the one black sheep in the herd?

True, they improve on the product marginally with the release of new models, but the older model gets discontinued. So you're still left with one model of iPad and one model of iPhone - it either does what you want, or doesn't.

Did the crowd cheer for the LTE iPad this week? Sure as hell. Did the crowd think about how that data cap will impact them, nope. Because around the excitement and hype Apple creates around a new product release, they tactfully downplay or dismiss any negatives that a thinking human would pick up on. Again the analogy to sheep.

You could say Steve Jobs had it good when he cornered AT&T; with the first iPad and iPhone release, except that unorthodox control over carriers has gone. I won't fault Apple for the issues carriers bring to the table today. But a solid connectivity experience is definitely a must for a useful mobile gadget, without data caps getting in the way, without throttling, and at a price that folks can comfortably afford. Let me have a device that allows me to use it the way "I" want to, not how the "shepherd" says I can or cannot.

For those offended by the sheep comparison, my apologies. Maybe you didn't follow the herd and buy a product just because somebody said "Baaaaa". Maybe you're an enthusiast oblivious to marketing hype who looks beyond product specifications. Because as far as Apple is concerned, the future of mobile tech and the post-PC era lies around serving the simplified, identical needs of a common audience, aka sheep.
1 Vote
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Windows strength in sheeples
Tony Burzio 6 days ago
"It just works."
Is this a statement about Windows or Apple?
"It doesn't require a virus scanner."
Is this a statement about Windows or Apple?
"I find that I know how to use it completely by the time I leave the store."
Is this a statement about Windows or Apple?
Baa-ram-ewe. Baa-ram-ewe. To your PC, your Windows, your Stevie Ballmer be true. Baa-ram-ewe.
-2 Votes
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Apple Hater Talking Point #3
CowLauncher 6 days ago
Apple users are sheep.
-1 Votes
+ -
Big Whopper Baseball
Robert Hahn 6 days ago
I'd like to thank you for the great idea, and I do hope I'll be able to count on you as a fan.

Thanks to you, I've decided to start a new major league baseball league. Right now, you have basically two models: one with designated hitters, and one without. But other than that, it's "one size fits all."

So with you in mind, my league will have slightly different distances between home plate and first, between first and second, and so on. Some teams will play using the Infield Fly Rule, and some will juice up the action with lots of double plays. At least one team will play its home games in a park where the fence is only 150 feet out from home. Imagine the scores!

I'm sure you'll agree that my new "Have It Your Way" baseball league will be much more popular than the league we have now, with its static uniforms and 19th century rules.
0 Votes
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Do not agree in the slightest...
sameer_singh17 3 days ago
The market's being divided into media tablets & hybrid tablets, while Apple is a media tablet priced like a hybrid tablet.

http://www.tech-thoughts.net/2012/03/new-ipad-tablet-market.html

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