Apple's relationship with the press, customers, and dealers
tliet
– March 20, 2008 05:34AM
Although we don't live in the Apple is beleaguered times anymore, there's still enough to be said about them...
Transplanted once again...
The Gay Blade - 05:54pm Mar 31, 2000 EST
The Blade will attempt to transplant yet another rhetorical sapling here
on the Spork boards by copping a page from the delightful Brian Miller,
writing eloquently on the superannuated boards of yesteryear:
Brian Miller - 03:07pm Sep 30, 1999 PT
The man with a plan
My recent PowerBook G3 fiasco notwithstanding, I am beginning to wonder if
Apple is planning on abandoning "small fry customers." Consider the
evidence:
1) Apple's war with the Macintosh press;
2) Apple's slashing and burning of small local dealers, who often provided
the best service "in a pinch";
3) Apple's continued horrendous customer service breaches (individual Apple
Store orders cancelled in favour of large educaction/business orders).
Pulling all this evidence together and analysing it makes me feel far more
"worried" about Apple's future than any time under Amelio. Consider, for
instance, what all of those resources spent on lawyers threatening tiny Mac
sites could do in customer service and relations.
Before we consider Apple's "invasion" into the Fortune 1000 enterprise to
be ready, we have to focus on Apple's status in its own current markets. In
my view, there's a lot of "retrenching" to do before they're ready. They
can start by ceasing their intimidation of Mac publishers, letting the damn
Mac rags publish OS 8.6 on their cover disks, and spending a bit more time,
effort, and energy on a "satisfy the customer at all costs throughout the
organisation" policy. These are all core competencies they'll need before
they can even THINK of invading the big-enterprise space.
[/quote]
John Willoughby
– September 03, 2011 09:07AM
Homo Sapiens Sedentarius
Doesn't the old Final Cut Pro require Snow Leopard or earlier? Maybe that's why we've seen rumors that there will be a Snow Leopard release that supports iCloud. Life support for Final Cut Pro, until the new one can be beefed up.
tomierna
(Admin)
– September 03, 2011 04:39PM
Hideously Unnatural
Nah, I'm running FCS-3 on Lion.
John Willoughby
– September 03, 2011 05:32PM
Homo Sapiens Sedentarius
Oh. Never mind! < /Emily Litella>
Tony Leggett
(Moderator)
– September 07, 2011 04:02PM
Intel says, fire up your photocopiers...
Quote
Intel's actions, however, appears to suggest that it is not completely confident in the ability of the PC industry to match Apple on innovation. The chipmaker has created a $300 million "Ultrabook Fund" to help drive innovation in the category
James DeBenedetti
– September 07, 2011 05:21PM
Confident little buggers, aren't they?
Quote
Apple's redesigned MacBook Air has proven popular with consumers, with the company reportedly pushing out up to 500,000 units per month to satisfy demand. The product's success has drawn the interest of Intel and Windows PC manufacturers, who are beginning to roll out their own "Ultrabook" models to compete with the MacBook Air. But a new report from Digitimes claims that those manufacturers are merely testing the waters, limiting initial shipments to a combined 50,000 units.
Jeff Cooper
– September 23, 2011 12:23PM
I'm at Penn for a conference and wandered through the university computer store for old time's sake (I bought my Mac SE there in 1988 or 1989 for, I believe, $2848). They had Logic Studio for $149 and Logic Express for $69. Holy crap, the edu discount lives! In some places, at least (normal edu prices are $449 and $179 respectively, the 10% discount that's been Apple's norm for the last few years). Too bad I don't have a Penn ID anymore.
Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 09/23/2011 12:24PM by Jeff Cooper.
Jeff Cooper
– October 23, 2011 01:08PM
I was just in the 5th Avenue Apple Store. At 5 p.m. on a Sunday afternoon, the store was so mobbed that movement was nearly impossible. I went in planning to by a case for my new phone but fled within a few minutes. Absolute madhouse, and really not the kind of shopping experience that Apple should cultivate.
El Jeffe
– October 23, 2011 01:16PM
What a journey.
It's very strange, really.
Apple seems to be about the ONLY company selling products, or doing very well.
They stick out so much that one might worry that some form of protest or other will strike them.
Especially if the new management is perceived to be much (less cool and) more capitalistic. (even though SJ was very firmly in uber-capitalist space)
tomierna
(Admin)
– October 23, 2011 06:35PM
Hideously Unnatural
When I was in Sydney, a day after Jobs passed, there were flowers at the entrance of that Apple Store.
I have pictures, but they were on the card my son shot, so I haven't uploaded them yet.
Tony Leggett
(Moderator)
– January 02, 2012 02:50PM
El Jeffe
– January 02, 2012 04:10PM
What a journey.
It's more than a bit like SWF, or other similar obsessed behavior, imo.
Samsung
Weird
Freakish?
Samsung,
we're
freaked?
Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 01/02/2012 04:12PM by El Jeffe.
El Jeffe
– January 31, 2012 12:09PM
What a journey.
any opinions on Apple's new retail chief?
http://bit.ly/yrd6KT
Tony Leggett
(Moderator)
– January 31, 2012 05:43PM
I'll quote two of the story comments:
Quote
The guy who oversaw the trainwreck that is PC World - a byword for shoddy customer service and the butt-joke of IT retail in the UK - now running global Apple Retail. Fuck me. Why the hell they chose this man over Steve Cano I'll never know. Browett is the anti-Apple Store. It's like hiring Ballmer to replace Jobs.
And:
Quote
and the post Steve Jobs era begins....
Cloudscout
– February 01, 2012 10:56AM
˙pɹɐoqʎǝʞ ʎɯ ɥʇıʍ ƃuoɹʍ ƃuıɥʇǝɯos sı ǝɹǝɥʇ ʞuıɥʇ ı ?ɹǝʇndɯoɔ ʎɯ ɥʇıʍ ǝɯ dlǝɥ ǝuoǝɯos uɐɔ
Dr Phred
(Moderator)
– February 01, 2012 02:56PM
-Swine Flu free since...cough, cough...
A lot of ignorance in the article and especially in the comments. I'm surprised at these "mac consultants" don't know their shit when it comes to iOS. Ok, I lied. I'm not surprised at all. I have to deal with "consultants" way to much. Over charging ignorant know it alls in their tiny minds. Apple's IOS is end user focused, but there are many enterprise friendly feature built in and plenty of options for managing them and locking them down as much or as little as you'd like. And you don't have to "gift" apps to your end users. imbeciles.
El Jeffe
– February 01, 2012 03:33PM
What a journey.
we have our own app store. not sure of the particulars, but it works.
tomierna
(Admin)
– February 08, 2012 05:27PM
Hideously Unnatural
Tony, it's mostly snark. I'm now actively using FCPX, and the type of editing my company and I do doesn't need the workflows which Apple left out of the initial release. Nearly all of the problems which affected high-end editing are now solved.
The only real problem I had with the way Apple handled this was the part where they stopped stocking the old version of FCPS the day the FCPX shipped. There was a short period where you couldn't buy new licenses of FCPS, as all that was available was FCPX.