Kayembi said:
Apple get away with a lot because they have a vocal fanboy following who are more than happy to make personal attacks on strangers who dare to question their brand-of-choice; they also have a maturer, more thoughtful customer-base, though, and therefore cannot remain unchallenged forever. And this was the point of the article (which _was_ well-researched), as anyone who read past the first few paragraphs will realise: Apple have not dealt entirely well with its increased market share. The article was about calling Apple to account. Apple is a big, corporate business - it is not, as another writer recently pointed out, a worker's co-op.
Thanks for the post. I don't know if you're here to discuss, but I have to register my disagreement with some of these statements. Apple in fact, historically, gets away with far less than the typical company, because they are expected to perform perfectly with every new product they release, or they will automatically be counted out. Apple is very unlike, say, Microsoft, which can dither for years over a new operating system, push back delivery dates a dozen times, abandon feature after promised feature, and even have publicly-demonstrated product failures, and the collective shrug from everyone in the industry and the public is almost audible. Microsoft can spend billions developing products that have virtually no hope of ever showing a profit, and the analysts still throw rose petals at their feet.
If, on the other hand, Apple delays shippment of an announced product by even a few weeks, or fails to beat analyst's profit expectations by at least 10% every time, then a general calamity is officially declared. In short, each time Apple succeeds (e.g., fails to go out of business), everyone who notices proclaims themselves amazed. I have seen this happen far too many times over the years to have it denied.
Additionally, I think the "fan boy" affect is highly overrated. As someone who's been quite attentive to Apple's history for nearly 25 years now, I recognize that this is a company that not so long ago had close to a 15% share of the PC market, and is just now bouncing off of a 3% share of the same market. I guess those boys weren't such fans after all. Any company that watches close to 80% of its customers walk away is not going to count much on their "fan boys."
Finally, I believe it is always important to remain mindful of the fact that corporations are corporations. All of them. Not only are they not "workers co-ops," they are virtually by definition, not lovable. They are out to make money, and nothing but. They do this by manufacturing products that perhaps we will like well enough to exchange for some of our hard-earned cash. They are not moral creatures. I will argue with anyone, Apple critic or fan-boy, who tries to hold them to that artificial standard.