Apple is not the new Microsoft

I noticed the PC World editorial proclaiming that Apple was the new Microsoft (via this blog), and I swear the mainstream press will print anything these days.

I've gone on record time and time again about how much I care about, and love using, Microsoft's development products. I can indirectly credit everything .NET with owning a hot tub, and ironically enough, at least $7k in Macs, iPods, software and an iPhone.

Aside from the Xbox division, which is unfortunately too focused in its reach, Microsoft has little to offer me. They become more irrelevant every day. It's unfortunate I think, because while they're doing great things for developers and hardcore gamers, they aren't doing much of anything useful for consumers at large. Having a guy at the top who dismisses everything that doesn't have a Microsoft logo on it doesn't help with the perception either.

The editorial is very nearly a steaming pile of link bait. It's barely worth linking to because it so fundamentally misses the reality of what the two companies do, or what they have in common. So, for giggles, here's why the piece is just plain wrong.

First off, there's no secret about the link between iTunes and iPods. It's not some unknown gotcha. Certainly Apple had to make some concessions to the record companies to sell music at all. But you know what? Their system works where every other one has mostly failed. If they were hell bent on keeping this "monopoly," as Elgan puts it, do you think they'd be pressuring the record companies to go DRM free? I'll refrain from citing the number of iPods sold to the number of iTunes songs sold, and how it results in a handful of songs average per iPod, but it's still a valid stat. And if consumers weren't OK with it, they wouldn't keep buying music.

And what kind of comment is this? "At least with Windows, you could reformat your PC and install Linux or any number of other PC-compatible operating systems." Who does that? And who would want to do that with an iPod? That's the most asinine "proof" of Apple being a monopolist I've ever seen. I'll say it again: Consumers just want stuff that works. Don't be a geeky moron.

There's a rant about FM tuners or something, but there's nothing to respond to there. FM was killed by Clear Channel years ago. Listen to the music you want, and download some podcasts.

He goes on to rant about pricing on all kinds of fronts, but yet he freely admits being an Apple addict. Is Apple scoring killer margins on its hardware? You bet. Of course, the analysts leave out the R&D costs for the products, but I'm sure they're still doing well. That's what I love about Apple as an investment, in that they're not trying to compete with commodity crap. Their "low end" is still a premium product for similar business lines (see MacBooks versus mid-level Dell laptops, for example).

More to the point, Apple charges what the market will bear. People pay it if they can, even when there are less expensive alternatives. Why do you suppose that is? Because Steve Jobs is charming? Perhaps, but I'm willing to bet it's more because people like the experience of using these products better than the cheaper alternative.

The "copycat" nonsense is laughable. Great, Microsoft has Surface. My ATM has a touch screen too. What does that have to do with the iPhone? A million phones sold, and Surface is, what, not even available, and not going to sell in any meaningful numbers? I especially love his mention of the Zune having Wi-Fi. Yeah, what is it good for again? That's what I thought.

Frankly, I'm thankful that Jobs is bullying people in Hollywood. That's the way it should be. Hollywood has been bullying tech with a fraction of tech's revenue for decades. That's entirely backward. Bullying the media companies to price their stuff at points consumers will stomach, that's a good thing for consumers. God knows they've been incapable of doing it themselves.

Now, the part where it all stinks like link bait: "You see, my point isn't that Apple's growing bad reputation is deserved, but that Microsoft's wasn't." So now he loves Apple. Whatever. Microsoft's reputation was well deserved for pushing years worth of crap on us. Even us developers, with years of COM+ and DLL hell and, the biggest atrocity, Visual Basic. We can overlook all of this now because in developer circles we have .NET, consumers have OS X, and geeks have Linux. Microsoft's sins are irrelevant.

Just don't for a moment tell me that Apple is getting a free pass when Microsoft was criticized. That's not comparing the same things.

 

6 Comments

  • Wow, you singlehandedly managed to display your utter lack of knowledge when it comes to business practices, and your complete inability to look past your Apple fan-boy mentality.

  • So are you going to back that up or just do an "I said so?"

  • That was just for giggles?!?

    You certainly are a fan boy. So, because iTunes is known doesn't make it bad? wrong. You say people are using it so it must be right. I know there are lots of people who still use it because they HAVE to. They bought music through it for their ipod and when they want to move on they find they can't. That is bad - in any ones books that has to be bad.

    BTW, not sure where you are, but in the UK FM would be a fantastic addition - we happen to have great FM coverage over here.

  • So you're contending that people bought music from iTunes not understanding that it had to be used in iTunes or iPods? Are you further implying that Apple intended to lock people in all along, even though they're now pushing everyone to drop DRM? You can't have it both ways.

    I'm a fanboy for anything that works, and consumers are right there. The geek press doesn't get that. There have been countless articles about why the iPhone doesn't do this or that, and yet average consumers that buy them think they're the second coming.

    Put down your pocket protector for a minute.

  • I'm only going to comment on the bit about the relationship between the iTunes and the iPod, and the comparison to reformatting a PC.

    I do not own an iPod. I do not own a Zune. I own a phone, and an Mobiblue (http://www.mobibluamerica.com) "Cube". What has kept me from purchasing an iPod is the tight coupling with the iTunes application. I do not run iTunes on my PC, nor do I want to. When I plug my MP3 player into my USB port, I do not think I should have to use a standalone separate application to move files around (particularly if they are already on my system). My phone and my Mobiblu, on the other hand, plug into my USB port, and Windows Explorer happily shows me a file structure that I can manipulate on my own. When I start up my Ubuntu (or Mandriva, or BSD, or Slackware...) virtual machines, I get the same response. A window opens, and I can drag and drop files to my heart's content. In that sense, it's just a portable flash drive that has a tiny bit of software on it that outputs digital music to the headphones. I like that. It's all I need.

    So, I guess you could say that I appreciate that minimalist approach. In response to the question "Is Apple the new Microsoft?", I don't think I'm qualified to comment on that. :)

  • You aren't the typical consumer though. Most consumers aren't concerned with files, they just want the music on their computer to be the same music that's on their iPod.

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