Steve Jobs and Control

When Steve Jobs was demonstrating the iPad last week and the screen suddenly showed one of those broken icons on the New York Times web page, indicating that a Flash animation was unavailable, I realized that the guy wasn't making a rare gaff--i.e. mistakenly showing a poorly-rendered web page--but rather indicating that the NYT had better step it up. Jobs isn't interested in Flash, and not because it's buggy or performance challenge. Instead, Jobs is interested in control. And Flash isn't going to make it on his devices.

Jobs has exerted his control in a related way with publishers, by enforcing a pricing scheme that damages consumers by raising the average price of eBooks from the $9.99 Amazon had been charging to the $12.99 to $14.99 range. This makes publishers happy, of course, as Amazon had been taking a loss on each $9.99 in a bid to get that to become the normal price for eBooks (which it should be) as its Kindle reader became more and more popular.

But wait, there's more. While Apple heavily advertises the 5 gajillion apps that are available on its iTunes Store, the fact remains that the vast majority of users only have a small handful of apps (5 to 10) on their phone and regularly use even less. So this app ecosystem does benefit a small number of developers greatly, but most of them, of course, make nothing. At the top is Apple, which makes the devices that run these apps. Apple still barely breaks even on its entire iTunes/App Store ecosytem, so the point of this endeavor, of course, is to just sell hardware. And if they are just selling new devices to the same customers repeatedly, so be it. A sale is a sale. If sales are down, just invent a "new product category." The lemmings will wait in line.

What emerges here is an interesting picture. Beloved Apple, as it turns out, isn't really so benevolent. I'm curious that we've got another Google/Microsoft in the making here and that no one seems to have an issue with this. Price fixing in collusion with the publishing industry? Creating a closed, central clearing house for selling other company's products? Orchestrating products to shut out competition? Doesn't all this sound kind of familiar?

By the way, each of these topics were covered in the New York Times this morning and yesterday, though the paper of course would never consider reporting on the central issue that binds them all together. (And read 'em while they're free; thanks to the new Apple commercial model, the NYT will soon go paid only.) Coincidental, I'm sure. But indicative of the fact that Apple, no longer the scrappy minority player, really isn't the type of company we want controlling things. Just as expected.

iPad Can’t Play Flash Video, but It May Not Matter

Flash is one of the world’s most ubiquitous applications, appearing on 98 percent of all computers. YouTube videos run on it. It is what animates millions of graphics and advertisements on Web sites around the world. Adobe says the technology supports nearly 75 percent of video on the Web and 70 percent of online gaming sites.

While Flash is present on nearly every Apple desktop and laptop computer, the company decided that Flash would not be used on the iPhone. Apple has argued that the Flash technology is too slow and unduly taxes laptops and netbooks. The company also has concerns over Flash’s vulnerability to viruses and other malware, as well as the way Flash-based content can voraciously consume battery life.

Adobe, unsurprisingly, disagrees — and has its own theory about why Apple remains hostile to Flash. Adrian Ludwig, group manager for the Flash platform product at Adobe, said he believed Apple’s opposition was a way for the company to control its iTunes system. “I think it’s pretty clear that Apple wants to regain control of the content consumers see online and the content Apple offers for their devices,” Mr. Ludwig said.

But concerns over the lack of Flash in the iPad and iPhone may be short-lived. Many online video sites have been experimenting with a new video format, called HTML5 ... the patents surrounding HTML5 are owned by a group of companies; Apple is a part of that group.

At Amazon, Giving in to Demands

Under Macmillan’s new terms, which take effect at the beginning of March, the publisher will set the consumer price of each book and the online retailer will serve as an agent and take a 30 percent commission. E-book editions of most newly released adult general fiction and nonfiction will cost $12.99 to $14.99.

Those terms mirror conditions that five of the six largest publishers — Hachette Book Group, HarperCollins Publishers, Macmillan, Penguin Group and Simon & Schuster — agreed to with Apple last week for e-books sold via the iBookstore for the iPad.

For more than a year, publishers have been fretting about the price of digital books, which Amazon, as the dominant player in the fast-growing market, had effectively been able to set.

Because Amazon has discounted the price of most new and popular e-books on its Kindle e-reader to $9.99, it loses money on most of those sales.

Amazon’s goal has been strategic: it aims to establish a low price for e-books that will have the ancillary benefit of helping it sell more Kindle devices.

When Phones Are Just Too Smart

Since she bought an iPhone nearly a year ago, Ms. Cua has downloaded precisely five programs ... Ms. Cua is not an exception. She is the rule. The average iPhone or iPod Touch owner uses 5 to 10 apps regularly, according to Flurry, a research firm that studies mobile trends. This despite the surfeit of available apps: some 140,000 and counting.

People prefer fewer choices, and that they gravitate consistently toward the same small number of things that they like. Owners of iPhones are no different from cable TV subscribers with hundreds of channels to choose from who end up watching the same half-dozen.

Most users will never see more than 1 percent of the total apps available ... A study last year by Pinch Media found that most people stop using their applications pretty quickly, particularly if those apps are free. And three out of every four applications people download are free

Not a big deal or necessarily related to the topic at hand, but I find it interesting that the New York Times also blogs about the stories that are in its print edition. So the Flash issue is also discussed separately in this blog post and the Amazon eBook pricing battle is re-discussed here.

Discuss this Article 91

Ocean
on Feb 1, 2010
"not so long ago you had a hard time using any browser other than IE6 because of another proprietary plugin — Microsoft’s ActiveX. " This is a good point.
Ocean
on Feb 1, 2010
" They want to make money." The ARE making money. Boatloads. And people love their wares.
Mark KB
on Feb 1, 2010
Ocean: "Because people are using click to flash to do it for themselves." But that doesn't *remove* Flash at all. In fact, the reason one would use Click To Flash is because they still want to view Flash content, but without viewing Flash ads (i.e. to pick and choose.)
mikegalos@msn.com
on Feb 1, 2010
SacredCow "Even as an Apple fan, people can say what they want but I like the stuff coming out of MSFT R&D, very exciting stuff even if most of it will never be used." Thanks. (By MSFT R&D I assume you specifically mean Microsoft Research and not all of Microsoft's R&D labs) As for it never being used, you should know that the research done here at MSR ends up in a LOT of products both from Microsoft and from other companies. Quite a bit is released under open licences such as the OSI Certified Ms-PL license and a lot is available in source code form on Microsoft's CodePlex open source community site. http://www.codeplex.com
yoshipod
on Feb 1, 2010
How typical... So its fine for Amazon to lose money on each ebook sale to make profits on their hardware, but Apple is chastised for the same thing. In Amazon's case you claim they were doing it " in a bid to get that to become the normal price for eBooks". Remember who fought with the record labels for years to try and keep music at $.99 per track? "Jobs has exerted his control in a related way with publishers, by enforcing a pricing scheme that damages consumers by raising the average price of eBooks from the $9.99 Amazon had been charging to the $12.99 to $14.99 range. " You honestly believe Jobs wants higher prices for content? If Apple could sell ebooks at $4.99 each, they would be more than happy to. Get it through your head, its the publishers setting the prices. You even say so yourself a few paragraphs later about how all the publishers are changing their pricing structure. It has nothing to do with Apple's control. As to Flash... "Jobs isn't interested in Flash, and not because it's buggy or performance challenge." Flash is a notorious beast, consuming memory and CPU cycles well beyond what an animation should, even on a 3GHz core 2 duo processor, let alone a phone. Performance would be terrible and consumers would blame the iphone, ipod, or ipad. I am very happy Flash does not work in my iphone. I don't want to wait while some large flash file downloads to have someone dancing across my screen advertising mortgage rates or whatever. There is really no need for flash with HTML5 gaining traction. Get over it. 1999 called, it wants it plug in technology back.
aemarques
on Feb 1, 2010
Nice post, Paul. It is this kind of insight and cross-references that keep me coming here for more. Regarding the ebook prices, this is definetely a case in which more competition (assuming iPad competes with Kindle) is a bad thing for the consumer.
daveinla
on Feb 1, 2010
Apple is indeed one of the big 3 controlling the information technology nowadays. All MS, Apple and Google have they own ground they control in the Web/Electronics/IT world and each of them is ready to use whatever dirty tricks to keep their control on their respective dominant segment... That's a sad reality. But the constant pressure that these 3 forces are exercising on each other (iPhone/Android; Bing/google; OSX/ Win) keep innovation rolling and the customer is the winner at the end !!!
NoNameAtAll
on Feb 1, 2010
Eh, so Steve Jobs does that and this and all that other junk. I still have no interest in purchasing an iPad though. My iPod touch is enough for me along with my Win7 laptop. To reiterate: I'm not on any side. MS and Apple are both companies and ultimately, they both aim to get cash. Same with any company really.
yoshipod
on Feb 1, 2010
"Surely this anti-flash move is to force people to obtain media from iTunes." Of course. Anyone who thinks otherwise is just being naive. While there is nothing wrong with that, we all should realize that is the case, that Apple is not going on some worldwide benevolence tour. They want to make money. No, it has nothing to do with that. Flash became popular for video since it eliminated the need for multiple plugins and codecs. Its used now as a wrapper for DRM and control of the video stream, for example, preventing users from skipping through commercials. Youtube is converting their videos to H264. Other sites can certainly follow as well. Many will not because they are choosing to control their content. But Paul seems to think that control is perfectly fine, while Apple's is not.
Mum
on Feb 1, 2010
"But wait, there's more. While Apple heavily advertises the 5 gajillion apps that are available on its iTunes Store, the fact remains that the vast majority of users only have a small handful of apps (5 to 10) on their phone and regularly use even less." Yeah, that's miserable, considering 99,99% of mobile users who don't have an iPhone have less than 1 app on their phone and use as many. Personally I find the 11-page limit on iPhone apps seriously limiting. Which is a valid criticism.
Ocean
on Feb 1, 2010
Pauls latest article slamming the iPad in reference to the Kindle: "Higher prices for the device. The iPad comes in six models that cost from $499 to $829 per unit, compared with $259 for the Kindle. Amazon also sells a higher-end Kindle DX for $489, still less than the least expensive iPad. Of course, the iPad is far more than an eBook reader, but then it should be at those prices. Higher prices for wireless access to the device's online bookstore. When consumers purchase a Kindle, Amazon provides them with free 3G wireless access to the Amazon online store so that they can purchase content on the go. This access also works internationally, so travelers can purchase books effortlessly overseas, albeit at a small per-purchase price. Meanwhile, iPad users must utilize Wi-Fi, purchase books on PCs, and transfer them via USB, or pay AT&T for 3G wireless, at a cost of $15 to $30 a month. And this 3G connection won't work internationally (though other carriers will offer similar plans to customers who purchase iPads in other countries). Higher prices for books. Although Amazon pioneered a consumer-friendly $9.99 pricing structure for new books, Apple is allowing publishers to set their own price, and most have indicated that they're more interested in a $14.99 starting point for new books. -- what consumers will get out of this Apple entry, of course, is higher prices. Yet another innovation for which we can thank Steve Jobs, and that's true whether we use a Kindle or an iPad." http://windowsitpro.com/windowspaulthurrott/article/articleid/103519/app...
lotsamystuff
on Feb 1, 2010
"Gaff" actually is a word, but it's not the one you're thinking of." http://www.ehow.com/how_2085927_wear-gaff.html Are you sure? Maybe Paul forgot to remove something after his latest adventure in crossdressing. It's not like a "journalist" to make a mistake like that.
shark47
on Feb 1, 2010
"Yeah, that's miserable, considering 99,99% of mobile users who don't have an iPhone have less than 1 app on their phone and use as many." It's amazing when I see the number of people busy lybrowsing the web or checking emails on their iPhones or BBs on the DC Metro. Take their gadgets away and the get nervous and fidgety. Those "99.99% of mobile users" with less than one app probably don't realize how lucky they are.
gorath
on Feb 1, 2010
Wow, is it just me or is Paul foaming at the mouth on the whole iPad issue? I worry for his sanity!
subzerohitman721
on Feb 1, 2010
Paul I have a few issues with this rant of yours. 1. Flash - WE AS USERS HATE IT. This is was great when the Internet was in it's infancy. But now, Flash is a buggy, sluggish, slow, CPU choking beast that needs to be terminated. I honestly applaud Apple for saying "NO" to Flash. Flash is becoming the number one attack vector into any machines that have it. If Flash cannot make it on its own, it should be abandoned for something better. While it is a defacto standard at the moment, it's clear that the voices out there of people on the Windows, Mac, and Linux sides are all saying that Flash needs to go. I'm joining that chorus. 2. You are quoting the obvious when it comes to Steve Jobs. We know he's a control freak. No more than Bill Gates and Microsoft is/was a control freak on it's own platform. No more than Linux is at rejecting proprietary standards. As much as I see people cheer the open source, a lot of the most seamless experiences come from closed source models. Apple is a perfect example of a closed system with elements of open source to create a near flawless experience. 3. Where I do agree with you is the part about device control. If it's my device and I've physically purchased said device, I should be the one in control as to what goes on there. If I want Flash, HTML5, Java, or anything else on that device, that should be my exclusive right as the owner, NOT APPLE'S, NOT MICROSOFT'S, AND NOT GOOGLE'S. I seriously can't believe so many people are surrendering their both God given and legal right to choice. Just because Steve Jobs says so? That's where some you hardcore Mac guys lose me. If you easily accept the decision of one person, you lose the ability to make creative unorthodox solutions/decisions later. The best way to compliment open source is with open decision making and the right to choose. 4. What I don't understand is where people think scaling back devices to the pre-multitask, pre-multicore era is a good idea. Really? It would be about the same as giving you Mac OS 6 and Windows 3.0 and asking you to make iPhone apps and create YouTube videos. Good luck there. Once the genie is out of the bottle, there is no going back. The future is clearly multi-task & multi-core. If both of those were not as important, then we'd all be using Blackberry, Symbian, and Windows Mobile. If the status quo was just fine, then those Intel Pentium 4 Extreme running over 3 GHz would still be in use today. 5. I think Paul your underestimating two of the 800 pound gorillas in the room. The first gorilla? Google. I'm far more interested in what Google does with Android than the iPad. We still have Google Chrome OS brewing in the background. With the money Google's pulling in, Apple really needs to watch these guys. Because Google easily could be the next improved version of Microsoft. If Apple falls into a repeat of the 1997 situation, I don't think anyone bails them out this time. The other gorilla? Microsoft. Laugh if you must. But Windows 7 silenced even the harshest of Microsoft's critics. The question is this. Who knows what Microsoft has up their sleeves? Because so many have blown off and dismissed Microsoft, I think they're all making a foolish mistake. 3 years after Vista and 60 plus million copies of Windows 7 sold and counting, the lesson has not been learned. NEVER underestimate Microsoft. The guys at Redmond are truly like the Borg and they adapt faster than people give themselves credit. To go from Vista to Windows 7 is a feat that would make the Borg Queen jealous. So the iPad doesn't interest me at all. I've already decided, I'm not buying one. I'd rather buy a real tablet. More bang for the buck. Your right that Apple is a portable device company. Good for them. But all this talk about a GIANT (Expletive) iPod is hilarious. No thanks. I think this will be a nice hit for the Mac folks, but the rest of us will pass. In the meantime, if you'll excuse me, I'm doing some Android shopping. If that says anything, I've had a change of heart when it comes to Google.
gorath
on Feb 1, 2010
oddly enough, Flash has cause numerous issues over the years on Windows and Linux for me, but on my Nokia phone, it behaves perfectly. strange.
Ocean
on Feb 1, 2010
I think it will be my first Mac PC. Up till now I've only had iPods.
yoshipod
on Feb 1, 2010
subzerohitman721 - A few thoughts into mindset of a potential ipad user as for your comments. It may provide some insight as to why Many users don't really understand or even care about flash, java, multitasking etc. Its like 10 years ago when people did not understand about RAM or clockspeed, (some still don't). They want to use a computer or device for specific reasons (email, photos, surf web, play games etc.) and they want it to work well and be easy to use. For many people, the Mac,or maybe the ipad, provides that environment. Are there things they are not able to do? Of course, but for many users, it does not really matter, because it does just about everything they want to, and does it well. There is no such thing as a perfect device or computer. There will always be some hardware feature or software that is not part of that package. What makes Apple successful, is they can pick the core of what is important and make that work well. That is really what a good majority of people want. They are ok with the trade off, do a subset of activities very well instead of doing a larger set not as well. As for multitasking, remember, the ipad is not designed for you. Its not designed for power users. Its designed for average people, who will NOT be doing 3-4 things at once. They will check their email, then surf the web, then maybe watch a movie. For them, there is no need to multitask and not having that ability makes it easy to use. We have all seen people struggle with a computer that has multiple windows and applications open. They click the wrong window, get frustrated when something is hidden, etc. Someday the ipad/iphone will have multitasking, but not today, and that is fine. Remember the target audience of this device, and it makes alot more sense.
WebGuy3000
on Feb 1, 2010
People don't necessarily WANT a shovel. What they want is to dig a hole. If someone comes up with an easy, affordable, way of digging holes without requiring a shovel (albeit with certain limitations that make it unattractive to hard-core shovel enthusiasts), it's to be expected that those in the shovel business might get a bit antsy.
rr0de74@live.com
on Feb 1, 2010
"I seriously can't believe so many people are surrendering their both God given and legal right to choice." Ummm they "chose" to. Your opinion is maximum choice. Others choose a closed product that all comes from one vendor for stability and simplicity. I could shop at 5 locations for food, chasing down deals all over town to save money, on food, while wasting more gas and taking up lots of my time. Or I could shop at one place. I prefer the later, because I choose that option. Different streaks for different freaks. "Because so many have blown off and dismissed Microsoft" Its called mind share. MS does not have it, Apple and Google do. Until MS changes that its all down hill. They will slowly....slowly lose market share in key areas. In fact if WinMo 7/Zune/whatever does not wow next month it may just rapidly lose market share. Even if it does wow, consumers wont be able to buy it until the end of the year and Google and Apple probably will drop "A+" upgrades to counter any wow WinMo can bring. To bad MS cant pull a rabbit out of its hat and announce the immediate availability of WinMo 7 at the event, a Zune HD phone with Zune OS. That would show everyone that they are still a player.
rr0de74@live.com
on Feb 1, 2010
"What makes Apple successful, is they can pick the core of what is important and make that work well. That is really what a good majority of people want. They are ok with the trade off, do a subset of activities very well instead of doing a larger set not as well. " So many people at this site and in IT dont get this. Next time you are about to spout off about something like the ability to change your battery in a cell phone or notebook computer, realize that while you might care, most dont or Macbooks and iPhones would not sell so well. My last WinMo cell phone, Treo 800W was a horrible hunk of junk. It had the ability to change the battery, and I even had a spare, but once a day the phone just got plugged into the charger at home. I popped the battery once a day while out and about to reboot the POS, and that was more than enough battery removing for me.
Ocean
on Feb 1, 2010
Ocean
on Feb 1, 2010
Ed Bott: "It’s clear that Apple has also been looking carefully at the technologies that Microsoft has been refining for the past decade, and I can confidently predict that Apple will do a much better job of implementing those features than any of Microsoft’s partners have done so far. Why? Because Apple understands something that Microsoft has yet to figure out: *Apps matter.*"
roteague
on Feb 1, 2010
"What I don't understand is where people think scaling back devices to the pre-multitask, pre-multicore era is a good idea. Really? It would be about the same as giving you Mac OS 6 and Windows 3.0 and asking you to make iPhone apps and create YouTube videos. " From what I've read, it's an inaccurate statement to say the the iPhone is not a multi-tasking OS; it is. It is only 3rd party apps that are not. It seems as if Apple has placed a wall around this part of the OS.
Backup77
on Feb 1, 2010
@Ocean Ed makes some interesting points in his post and its relevant to what Microsoft can and should be doing to keep up with Apple. Regardless of whats being said about the iPad it will be a big seller for Apple and has been priced accordingly
roteague
on Feb 1, 2010
"Ed makes some interesting points in his post and its relevant to what Microsoft can and should be doing to keep up with Apple. Regardless of whats being said about the iPad it will be a big seller for Apple and has been priced accordingly" The techology already exists to address Ed's concerns; it's called Windows Presentation Foundation (WPF). Unfortuantely, WPF is a bear to understand well, and is really comes into it's own when used in an environment where the is a graphics artist on the development staff. Most of us developers, are horrible at graphics design. However, as I pointed out, it's already baked into the OS. It's just a matter of getting people to do the programming against it.
SPiotr
on Feb 1, 2010
Now I've seen everything! @subzero You think it's your "God given right" to have Flash on the iPad? Do any of you guys ever pause for just a second, and think, before you spout this rubbish?
DRWAM
on Feb 1, 2010
I agree more with what subzero said. I would not want to bug up my iPhone, or any phone.
DRWAM
on Feb 1, 2010
Although i'd rather use an inexpensive laptop that does more, two of the 4 docs in our reading room said that they would want an iPad, although I convinced then that it was just a big iPod touch and how limited it would be. They still wanted it. They are cross platform guys too, but both use more Win than Mac.
Ocean
on Feb 1, 2010
"I convinced then that it was just a big iPod touch" Have you used one yet? How do you know?
DRWAM
on Feb 1, 2010
Ocean, just read the Apple web site. Maybe it will do more, but they sure are not showing anything but what we read, with the addition of 3G. I need a VPN, JAVA, and ActiveX with IE, but it does not have it. No flash for the kids on line games. I would prefer this for my wife over her iPhone though. Bigger screen, cheaper data plan [buying the limited] It would be perfect for her, and she could use t as an ereader. BUt let's face it, if it has the iPhone OS, iPhone apps, and the features at the Apple web site, then it's a big iPod Touch with the option of 3G. Please tell me what features that it has other than the iPod Touch.
whiplash55
on Feb 1, 2010
I'm vacillating on this thing, 1st I hate then it sounds cool, now I'm thinking its to limited. But everything could change if it ships with a new OS update that could give it multi-tasking..
wlow3
on Feb 1, 2010
Paul cannot write a coherent essay to save his life. His title and his first paragraph presumably set up his thesis: Jobs is interested in control. Um, okay. His next paragraph then sets out to claim that Jobs is setting a price that makes publishers happy, while Amazon, by inference, is not. Hmm, where does he think publisher will go if they have a choice? See, the problem is that Paul claims that $9.99 is what an ebook "should" be, but anyone who has taken Econ 101 knows that supply and demand creates what price a product "should" be. If it is too high, customers will not buy; too low and producers won't produce. If publishers begin to see that they could create more demand (and profit) selling at $10.99 than $12.99 then that is where the price will eventually go, not because of some magical round number. Not sure how this make Jobs a control maniac. Then by Paul's next paragraph he truly starts flailing. If the point here is that not all developers make money, well, how does Jobs "control" that. I'm sure he'd love for them all to make money; Apple gets a 30% cut. If his point is that Apple is selling hardware without regard of content providers (here: developers), how is that different than Amazon keeping prices lower than their content providers would like (here: publishers) in order to sell more Kindles -- something Paul seem to approve of in the previous paragraph. Third paragraph: "Price fixing in collusion with the publishing industry?" Um, you mean like Amazon to get that low $9.99? "Creating a closed, central clearing house for selling other company's products? Orchestrating products to shut out competition?" Are their deals exclusive? Can the publishers not also sell on the Kindle or on any other e-reader device? Even the format they are using is the open ePub standard, so it's not like they are even trying to shove down a proprietary standard. I think Paul is afraid that (gasp) the iPad may be popular enough to garner a majority market share and that that will foster the exclusivity. They did this with the MP3 player; Microsoft was just late to the party with the Zune HD. On Flash: “I think it’s pretty clear that Apple wants to regain control of the content consumers see online and the content Apple offers for their devices.” If you let Flash on what is really an appliance and the user has a bad experience with Flash, they will blame the appliance. This issue of content control completely goes away if, say, Hulu drops Flash and recodes their content in HTML5 video. YouTube is on the iPhone. It's not content (competing video providers) but Flash that Apple does not want. Of course the group manager of Flash is going to frame it as a content control issue, but that is bogus. On Macmillan: I've already pointed out the cogitative dissonance Paul must keeps at bay to believing if Amazon does something (try to put monopoly pressure on prices) it's good, but when he thinks Apple is doing it, it's bad. "People prefer fewer choices, and that they gravitate consistently toward the same small number of things that they like." This is the most insane sentence Paul has ever written. A guy who has always ragged on Apple for the one button mouse or for selling hardware systems that can't be expanded easily is now criticizing Apple (!) for offering too much choice. Bwa ha ha ha ha ha!!!! In that one sentence he has admitted that Apple had it right all along. Apple owns 90% of the market share of computers over $1000 (cause, ahem, till now they didn't make'em much cheaper ... till now). Apple doubled retail sales doubled from 5% to 10% for computers selling between $500 - $1000. Now Apple brings out a $500 computer appliance. Guess what? Paul is right. Most people want simplicity. They want a computer to check email and to browse the web, to play games, to see their pictures and video and to listen to music. They don't want to worry about viruses, malware or even file structuring or multitasking. Computer appliances will sell to your grandmother, to your teen daughter, to a lot of students, to your neighbor. The 140,000 apps mean one thing: it's a viable platform that will (eventually) meet the needs of a majority of user. Yes, people doing heavy duty stuff will still need the latest and greatest and, yes, there will always be PC buffs assembling boxes like guys who like to work on cars, but Apple is already skating to where the puck is going. Where is Microsoft?
rr0de74@live.com
on Feb 1, 2010
@DRWAM "I need a VPN, JAVA, and ActiveX with IE, but it does not have it." It is never going to have ActiveX or IE so if you need that then stick to a PC, Notebook whatever. It will probably have VPN since the iPhone has it but maybe not. The iPad is clearly a media consumption device. It will excel at a basic multi-media (web, movies, photos, books, magazines..etc) consumption device, because of its screen, the best touch interface around, size and price. If you are looking to replace a work machine, look someplace else. It may be able to do some of it, but that is not its target.
robertsjoe
on Feb 1, 2010
More troll posts about Apple? This is the Supersite for Windows, right? Does Microsoft pay per anti-Apple post? It truly shows that Microsoft is not innovative. That they are not doing anything interesting. Not even remotely worth talking about. Aside from the casual Zune (which is dead) post, which has not meaning to anyone but three people on the planet; to those about some Windows 7 Wallpaper Pack Home Student Professional Edition Service Pack 2 -- there is nothing of interest on this blog, or from Microsoft. What happened with the iPad announcement is simply something you, or your fellow Microsoft fanboys, cannot understand. Why? Because it is game changing. You, Microsoft, and most people can't see the future, like Apple can. In the very core, it's about jealousy. About the lack of media attention that the also-ran that is Microsoft gets. About the fact that Microsoft does not innovate, simply copy Apple and others. It's about jealousy over just how much better Apple is compared to Microsoft. You, Microsoft and its fanboys are jealous.
robertsjoe
on Feb 1, 2010
As for Flash, it will be a memory soon enough. Silverlight too. HTML5 will kill the browser plugins. Apple knows they are crap, and hence dislike it and will not support it. But you and most people can't see that. Apple can.
chuckb84
on Feb 2, 2010
Yep, Apple sells 90% of the computers over $1,000. Joe Wilcox has it yesterday: http://www.betanews.com/joewilcox/article/Nine-out-of-10-premiumpriced-P... And, the WSJ also has a notable article: "Microsoft Corp.'s new Windows 7 operating system has fattened the company's earnings and boosted personal-computer sales at retailers like Best Buy Co. But it hasn't increased the profits of PC giants Hewlett-Packard Co., Dell Inc. and others." Combined, these show the difference between profitable (Apple) and marketshare (all the others). Paul's obsession with marketshare is driven by his blind denial of Apple's enviable success and his apparent inability to grasp the importance of other metrics. The WIlcox piece is interesting because he poses what is the interesting question about the iPad, and any other future Apple devices in that price range: Can Apple take that premium brand perception down the price scale, win new customers and keep the premium image at a $500 price point? If you recall Ballmer's now-hilarious mockery of the iphone ($500 for a PHONE?), there is at least precedent. The Microsoft CEO completely misunderstood what the iPhone was about---it is only incidentally a phone---and legions of tech bloggers have similarly misunderstood the iPad. But, back to Paul. This piece is rambling, illogical, blames Apple for the unannounced, not imminent, but rumored(!) possible change of the NY Times to a pay model, and is his 5th (6th, 7th?) piece prophesying doom and disaster from a device that isn't even released. Curiously, we get the doom and disaster prophecy while at the same time predicting the gadget will FAIL. Kind of hard to have both simultaneously, isn't it?
DRWAM
on Feb 2, 2010
Yep rrode, the Butthreads at GE may never update the software. Currently, we get a warning that it was only tested with IE5.5 !!!!!! The latest version will be out soon, but as you can see, GE is not very innovative. I think that they just buy IP from others rather than create themselves. The iPad would be more ideal for my wife than the her iPhone IMO, allowing her to carry a smaller phone and use the iPad for the few times when needed, saving $15/month while at it too. Still, two other docs claimed that it was what the would like to use while at home or away, to web surf and watch media. I guess that it will have it's place in the tech world. I'll take a laptop any day. Ideally, MBP for any need, with WIn 7 or XP for work stuff. Thanks GE for all your hard work!! [sarcasm]
shark47
on Feb 2, 2010
Paul is right. The lack of flash is all about control. No flash means no flash apps. Jobs is a bully, just like Bill Belichick of the Patriots. As long as the company is doing well, it will work for him and the media will love it.
Dude1313
on Feb 2, 2010
Same here DR, my wife will be getting one. At most on the computer (an HP BTW) she browses the web, uses Facebook or syncs to iTunes. She does read a bit and is looking forward to using this to get her iBooks. And note she doesn't know or care about Flash, what features that are "lacking" from the the iPad; you know the features that 99% of this site (Paul included) are getting worked up over.
anonymous
on Feb 4, 2010
The iKindle

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