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There has always has been a certain amount of piss taking, with regard to their pricing, and from the other side of the fence millions of customers who love that one-upmanship of being able to afford Apple.
But under Mr Cook, innovation has stagnated and prices rocketed even higher. As if the ethos is 'make it so expensive the plebs will believe it must be great.' Okay, before anyone says it, nobody is being forced to buy anything, and if we don't like it we can look elsewhere.
Yet those of us who have already bought into Apple don't want to jump ship, we just want a fair deal. Unfortunately, Cook and co aren't listening and are doing a great job of pricing their own customers out of the market. So, until Apple looses much more than a few billions, and needs to both innovate and provide genuine value nobody wins.
I just wanted to pipe in and say me and Apple are both fine with each other.
Problem with buying a computer, or device, is that you're doing more than just buying a single thing - you're investing in a platform and so also a whole bunch of software and peripherals. For businesses that becomes a major investment, and so two price rises in quick succession, that push up the price of a single product by £400, or £500 - multiplied ten times across a small office, along with higher peripheral costs could break that companies chances of survival - in the, let's face it, difficult times ahead.
The iMac in particular has become a very popular machine, in offices that wouldn't normally use Macs - due to the recent reasonable pricing. That's all changed now, so I can see the small business and corporate market having to rethink their next computer purchases.
Other manufacturers are following suit, but with less drastic increases, and from a smaller pricing base it should have a smaller impact, plus there's competition rather than a single supplier.
Personally - I'm abandoning my planned iMac purchases later this year, and upgrading my existing Dell PC's instead.
i Have a Mac Mini, fully speced out, from the last generation before Apple decided to stop customers upgrading their own equipment. I also run a Windows 7 64-bit heavily customized system. Alongside my iPad Air 2, there is NOTHING beyond what they offer that I need. The one product I was looking at, was an iPad Pro. But as Apple have pushed the prices up to even more extortionate levels, and done virtually nothing to make the product more powerful/ practically usable, they can stuff it.
I hadn't thought of getting a Mini, shame they've closed off the upgrading - they really seem determined to eliminate those of us with less money to spend from buying their products.
Na. Ken Bone is.
I can recommend Hoxton Macs.
hoxtonmacs.co.uk/collections/mac-mini
Ah cheers, they look good. Reckon they're going to be busy now the new prices have gone up...
Mac Mini is awesome. I have a late 2012 model, 16 Gb memory, SSD + HDD inside. Not good enough for modern 3D games but very capable for everything else. It's fast, quiet and very reliable. Can't praise it enough. iMHO, a Mini and a good, non-glossy monitor of your choice is a better option than an iMac
I also have a 2007 model, still working fine. It's attached to my TV and is running Plex Home Theatre.
Bought my first ever Macbook Pro last year and have to say it runs like a dream...i went from a Laptop running Windows that took about 8 mins to finish start up to my Macbook that takes 8 seconds...awesome for Ableton...no complaints yet
I feel somewhat bad for Mister Cook, high profile, easy target for every little (and big) complaint, and I promise to figure out a way to improve his personal PR if he will show good faith (in me) by arranging for the posh and expensive Apple Pencil Mrs. Goodyear bought me to also work on this 6Splus phone which, while offering more real estate than my five, would benefit tremendously from HAVING THE DAMN PENCIL WORK ON IT YOU BASTARD.
[It's the little things.]
"If it seems like I’m being hard on Apple, I’ll say this to conclude: it’s a very, very strange thing when suddenly many artists and developers who have been loyal to macOS since the start are telling you they’re shopping for a PC. I’m not being hyperbolic."
http://cdm.link/2016/10/visualists-heres-the-info-on-the-gpu-in-the-new-macs-surface-books/
Considering how much cheap plastic shit is being made globally, with batteries that fail after a few cycles and plastics breaking after first use I'd say Apple are doing pretty well. This is at leat true as far as environment is concerned. Higher cost means people think twice before buying and then throwing it away. Good quality materials mean that even if that iPad 2 is no longer good for your Audiobus chain, it has still love in it left as a web browser or a kids pad.
I'm much more concerned with the likes of Poundland or one dollar shop importing stuff that basically is made to use once. Also cheap batteries etc, etc.
We're clever, not so clever species needing evolution to sort us out.
I just put Samsung Evo SSD into the optical slot of my late 2009 IMac, £100 and 1hr work later I have a decent machine for audio and video editing (and kids cartoons!). I've done this to my MacBook Pro a year ago and it's been quite awesome.
I think the creative industries should give up using actual computers, only ever do anything on an iPad Pro, and refuse to do anything that can't be done that way. A global intellectual production strike. The strike! (Which was the working title of Atlas Shrugged).
I really don't relish the prospect of having to sit down in front of an actual computer again, whenever that may have to happen. The things haven't got any useful sensors! They don't know where they are. They can't be used to pay for things by tapping. They can't even fit in a VR headset and pan all around. Mobile devices are definitely the evolved breed of what ordinary computers were a decade or so ago, and although those old style computers aren't going to die tomorrow (they'll just be relegated to the office, like a stapler or water machine) they really should stop selling them to ordinary people and let such archaic products die their well deserved death.
I've always imagined the future of computing would be a 'phone' that could be docked when at home.
I love the thought of just sitting down, connecting my phone to the largest screen in my house and coding away on my wireless keyboard.
I think we're still a few years away from that but despite Apple's questionable decisions of late, I still feel that they're the company most likely to realise my vision.
I expect next years iPad and iPhone releases to blow me away.
Definitely, but Apple let themselves down by the lack of upgrading options in their newer machines. I'd be happier spending more on a quality product if I knew I could keep it going longer by upgrading the CPU, graphics card etc. as I can with my Dell PC. In that respect they're no better than Poundland, or 2500poundland as they've become.
Really? I'd hate to have to use a tablet or even a laptop as my main work machine - destroying my eyesight by staring at a little screen, and posture - hunched over a tablet. Give me a desktop PC and nice big monitor any day.
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Err, windows 10 does exactly that... I'm not a fan of windows but that's one thing that's very cool about it.
Are we talking about Windows phones here? I thought they were dead..?
http://www.theverge.com/2015/4/29/8513519/microsoft-windows-10-continuum-for-phones
That's actually pretty cool.
I still feel that Microsoft's mobile strategy is still unclear, so I standby my opinion that Apple seems the most likely to pull this off... That said, I've been more impressed with both Microsoft and Google's keynotes this year than I have Apple's so who knows..
As I said, Microsoft already pulled it off in spring 2015. I don't see any signs Apple is going to follow their lead. And I agree Microsoft have impressed more with innovations recently. I still prefer Apple. Can't stand windows...
I'm in two minds about this...
On the one hand, Apple's focus seems to be clearly on iOS. The recent Mac updates were incremental at best, and they're already marketing the iPad as a laptop replacement. Also, with recent inclusion of playgrounds on iPad we could potentially see an iOS version of Xcode in the future.
On the other hand, Apple seem fairly happy raking in the mass-market dollars and perhaps they see their future in creating 'connected jewellery' and less in professional tools.
As a side note: is it possible to compile for Apple platforms using a Windows machine?
I don't know about that but if the PC can run Mac OS you can do it that way.