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Editorials
@ Applelust
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Why
a frustrated Apple tells users to... Procreate?!
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The Most Expo-struck Mac Maniac Award...
... should probably go to Steve Jobs.
Sure, a lot of us have been disappointed after our
Expo expectations were hardly met, but poor Steve
had known it all along: the stuff he really
wanted to show us just wasn't ready. No wonder he
showed clear signs of tension at the event. According
to MacObserver's
report, at one point, when he couldn't get a digital
camera to work, he got "pissed", and hurled it off
the stage at an Apple employee something they
won't teach you at a PR class.
Steve was looking at a tough day ahead.
It had to give him shudders just to think about how
many unpleasant questions he'd need to face, how much
bad commentary he'd have to endure in the next few
weeks, possibly months. But first, he had to meet
the faithful and demanding, loving and damning Mac
crowd.
The crowd had gathered there to hear
about flat-panel iMacs, the "Son of Pismo", a rack-mounted
PowerMac, or just, according to last-minute "reports",
something "huge" such as a new hardware product
that "is not an iMac or PowerBook". But those
things weren't there, and Steve still had a show to
deliver.
So when can I start licking?
All the OS X announcements about the
support of third parties were fine. In addition to
the usual suspects like Microsoft and Alias | Wavefront,
there were a few pleasant surprises. Just as we all
hoped, an Adobe rep did show up and made
nice promises. To everyone's great astonishment (not),
Adobe isn't actually ready to give up the source of
one half of its revenues, which is developing for
the Mac. Even Quark showed up and announced XPress
for X, to everyone's delight.
The only thing missing from the coming
out party of OS X was... OS X.
Okay, we'll have to wait till September.
Version 10.1 of OS X, a.k.a. Puma, showed
really great promise, and is expected to deliver what
we can realistically hope it to, but still, we all
would have preferred to have it available for download.
So would Steve, I'm sure.
Shut up and burn that CD
Steve reportedly
took about a minute to go through the three "new"
iMac
models, which, having no combo drives, coming at an
increased price, and not even shipping immediately,
delivered a clear message: "Don't buy me."
MacMinute also reports that
Apple
is significantly downplaying today's revised iMacs.
MacMinute's roving reporters on the show floor report
that just six of Apple's best-selling Mac are available
for demonstration, as opposed to the rows of dozens
at previous shows.
Looks like these iMacs are genuinely
transitional, something to sell in small numbers at
large profits till the real thing arrives. When will
that be? It's anyone's guess; the August availability
of the high-end model makes it unlikely that it would
be discontinued too shortly after that, so we could
rule out the Seybold
event in late September, which is a professional event
anyway.
The Seybold Seminar could, however,
mean the introduction of new professional systems.
While the updated PowerMac tower might pass for a
semi-decent product upgrade (with the psychological
effect of the former high-end model now becoming the
low-end, the availability of the SuperDrive in a less
expensive configuration, and return of DVD playback
to two out of the three models by default, and a combo
drive as a BTO option in all), people want more.
It's not just due to the rampant rumor-mongering,
though: people are actually right if they
want to see gigahertz, DDR RAM and true server-scale
hardware with rack-mountability (Think Secret is a
prolific source of rumors on the latter concept),
things you can easily get on the Wintel side of the
force. I'm sure you'll read a lot of rumors about
Apple's server hardware in the next few months: Seybold
is around the corner, and Apple's Server G4 still
sports yesterday's enclosure, possibly hinting at
a not too distant revision.
Still, the PowerMac G4 was "the thing"
at this event. Let's hope that its significant, though
not exactly earth-shattering changes will be sufficient
for Apple to meet its sales goals before we see some
more dramatic announcements.
Let's also hope that Apple has a lot
of stuff up its sleeve, because this Expo didn't deliver
as much as it should have. And again, it's not just
the rumors' fault. There are some logical steps for
Apple's hardware to take, and we don't really
see that happening yet. We've seen little indication
as to whether the Macintosh is going in the right
direction, or whether it's going in any direction
at all.
Where is Apple's hardware going? Well,
the direction was set by some concepts and products
whose potential is nowhere close to being fulfilled.
Right now, I don't want to talk about new software
directions, and neither do I want to get caught speculating
about things like Bluetooth or having your Mac operate
your personal handheld satellite-toaster combo with
laser beams. No, I want to stick with basic, down-to-earth
stuff that requires little speculation and only takes
an idiot to figure out.
DVD playback. This is clearly
a consumer feature. It's nice to have DVD video
in all PowerMacs, but the iMac needs that feature,
or rather needs it back now. I wonder
how long it's going to take Apple to kill off
the current transitional iMacs and present a lineup
with Combo-drives as a standard, but I hope it's
within a few months. The only speculation I'm
willing to get into now is this: if the new iMac
lineup were here to stay, wouldn't Apple have
taken the effort to include combo-drives in at
least the high-end models?
DVD authoring. Guess what: this
is also a consumer feature. True, Apple
sometimes mentions the business use of iDVD, but
isn't even the latest iDVD commercial sugesting
a decidedly consumer use? (Hint: yes, it is.)
Sure, unlike Desktop Video, which debuted on the
iMac in 1999, DVD authoring had to come
on the PowerMac first, but in about a year, it
should really be available on the iMac
too. The first step toward this goal should be
a high-end iMac with a G4 processor: a chip that
you want to have around when you start encoding
a 90-minute DVD movie. If Apple's serious about
iDVD for consumers, it should ship an iMac G4
pretty soon.
Gaining market share. Apple's
retail stores are there, according to Apple, to
help the Mac gain market share. Apple's retail
web page says that the stores' purpose is to convert
existing computer users (as opposed to convince
first-time buyers). If that's the case, the Macintosh
needs to be competitive with, eh, "other
platforms". Apple must stop relying on the
fact that Mac users will forever buy Macs, despite
the ever-growing Mac premium they pay, the lack
of configuration options, and the inferior hardware
performance that a few contrived Photoshop bake-offs
cannot just simply make go away. If Apple wants
"real" IT managers to consider Macs as an option,
they should introduce 200 MHz system buses, gigaherz
processor speeds (which do matter), RAID
hard drives, and a variety of configurations ranging
from a low-cost client desktop to a big, hary
server beast.
Apple must forget about deciding for
us whether we need Gigabit Ethernet, or whether we
definitely need a SuperDrive with the highest-end
G4 tower. In other words: goodbye, foolproof product
matrix. Fools shouldn't buy professional Macs anyway.
Well, there is some hope for Apple's
hardware to go in the "right direction." For
example, Apple no longer stuffs the SuperDrive down
your throat (figuratively speaking, of course) if
you buy the high-end G4 from the online Apple
Store. If processing power is all that matters,
you can save almost $1000 if you configure a stripped-down
version of the dual-800 machine for yourself. Let's
hope that sensible configuration options like these
will be available in offline stores as well.
Some signs I've already alluded to suggest
that Steve would have loved to show us more. Touting
iDVD 2, a follow-up product that isn't even due to
ship for two months, as the famous "one more thing"
implies that Steve was just desperate to announce
anything. Past "one more things" include
AirPort, the Cube, and the TiBook; how could you put
them in the same league as iDVD 2?! My theory is that
Steve had a much more dramatic "one more thing" in
mind, something that almost made it to the
expo floor. And if so, it can't be that far away.
There is also a bright side to Apple's
hardware, and it's the laptops. The iBook is almost
perfect, coming in four different drive options.
The TiBook is due to be updated in September, unless
Apple really screws up something, expect it to come
with a ComboDrive as the standard.
And of course, OS X is looking very
good, better than ever. We're getting Quark! Aqua
is also evolving. OS X is slowly but steadily becoming
a reality. It looks like we'll need to say goodbye
to docklings, though...
Meanwhile, if you look at Apple's home
page, please make sure you get their message: "Don't
worry, we'll ship a lot of insanely great products
very soon. In the meantime ... try to have some fun!"
Andr‡s
Puiz
András Puiz is a Hungarian native. He first
met the Mac at a DTP job in 1997, and as a result,
he has vowed to minimize his contacts with all forms
of Windows. He is the proud owner of an iMac DV. He
has worked for IT-related publishers and consultants
as a freelance writer and translator, as well as holding
full-time jobs with project management, database development
and print production duties. He is also a programmer
wannabe, using FileMaker as his main development platform,
to everyone's ridicule and horror. As a college dropout-but-hopefully-going-back-there-to-finish-soon,
he's studied mathematics and teaching English as a
second language. Andras is working on a site called
"Mac Thought Crime" (technical problems
won't allow a link now).