Apple sucks.
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Ya forgot the IIc. I think that goes in the bad.
The G4 Cube was a very good product.
It had a unique target market, so it shouldn't be compared to regular desktops.
My bank bought an Apple/// when the product was launched. Big mistake. We had to run it in the Apple ][ emulation mode in order to run Visicalc, as they did not have the foresight to develop a version compatible with the allegedly more powerful machine. The first evolution of the Mac did not have a numeric keypad. The hallmark of a successful enterprise is its ability to recover from its mistakes. The firm has successfully developed that ability.
I love my iPod. I was listening to mine the other day on the plane. I was boppin pretty good when I realized I was in public. I looked around to see if anyone noticed and counte 8 people doing the same exact thing...
The G4 Cube didn't sell well due to price, but the form factor was amazing for its time, and there were no performance issues, unless you were a bigtime power user, in which case a boutique, clear plastic cube with limited expansion wouldn't exactly be the ticket.
And, I take issue with saying the Quadra sucked. I had a Quadra 950, and produced huge, four color catalogs; I was an early adapter of digital photography via a Scitex Leaf digital back on a Mamiya, and had no problems. It was quite the workhorse at the time. It would feel like a slug now, no doubt, in comparison to a dual G5, but hey, we're talking 13 or 14 years ago.
OSX server is pretty good. it does run on a Linux kernal, however.
Al Gore is on the board of directors... that's enough for me not to buy one.
Apple's biggest failures are that they abandoned open architecture when they introduced the Lisa and Mac which forced the Apple aftermarket to turn to the IBM PC and clones for sales. Apple's market share plummeted and the PCs grandchildren are the worldwide standard.
With the Mac Apple failed to realize that they are not a hardware company. Some people might buy Macs because they are cute (at twice the price pf a comparably powerful PC), but most buy them for the operating system and software. If Apple would allow that software to run on other machines they'd make a killing.
Selling their own computers and OS has kept them at a solid 2% market share with no hope of improvement.
Apple has had a few innovations, but not many. They get far too much credit for things they didnt invent or popularize (digital music, GUIs, etc.) but they do have a fanatical following and they should have more customers.
I say this, by the way, as an owner of just about every Apple product through the early Macs (except an Apple I and an original Lisa anyone got one for me? :D)
Otherwise known as "The Mac Molar", for obvious reasons.
Current lemon? The new Intel Mac Mini. It has a blatantly defective wireless networking and Bluetooth implementation. I was burned by two units, and the fact that Apple isn't admitting there's a problem has made me look for more solid pastures.
I loved my 660AV Quadra. It was ahead of its time. Still have a Mac SE/30 in a box in my garage.
If they want items for bad how about OS 7.
I loathe my I Book.
I first touched an Apple PC back in 1980. Then never had the money, no real desire.
However, the ipod and powerbook drew me in for a closer look. I have four PC's and they have been either MS or Linux.
Given the thought of what Vista will be when it finally arrives I needed to fill the void of MS machines.
I took the dive with the new mini duo/intel when my multimedia machine with MS died. I was amazed with the just works that played out for me.
This let me to the decision of the new Macbook Pro. Again very, very impressive.
I am selling off my AMD/MS machines and will now have Linux and Apple machines. I really believe MS has screwed up with their age and growth, some of it self inflicted and some of it from the success. All I know is operating system must be stable, and I the user has the right to bypass the DRM controls. Itunes is DRM'd but there are ways around it the operating system isn't trying to control it as vista will in the future.
Then the strangest thing happened. He gets up, opens the overhead bin, and pulls out a computer. Much to my astonishment, it is not a Mac, but a Dell. Very strange.