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Old 10-08-2011, 12:40 AM
Michelle Steiner
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Default Four more years

<http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/arti...ing-Apple-boss
-left-plans-years-new-products.html>

He has also been overseeing the development of the delayed iCloud project,
which will allow Apple users to store their music, photos and other
documents remotely and masterminding updated versions of the iPod, iPad,
iPhone and MacBooks, ensuring at least four years’ worth of products are in
the pipeline, according to Apple sources.

--
Tea Party Patriots is to Patriotism as
People's Democratic Republic is to Democracy.
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Old 10-08-2011, 12:40 AM
Paul Morgan Wesley
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Default Four more years

On 10/07/2011 07:11 PM, Michelle Steiner wrote:
> <http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/arti...ing-Apple-boss
> -left-plans-years-new-products.html>
>
> He has also been overseeing the development of the delayed iCloud project,
> which will allow Apple users to store their music, photos and other
> documents remotely and masterminding updated versions of the iPod, iPad,
> iPhone and MacBooks, ensuring at least four years’ worth of products are in
> the pipeline, according to Apple sources.


What a strange obituary. E.g.:

"It was also revealed today that Jobs fought hard to get plans approved
for a spaceship-style company headquarters in California."

The discussions about the project at Cupertino city Hall have been on
the net for months. Some kind of Swam Lake song project.

OTOH, if the iPhone 4s was designed by a dying man, it's easier now to
understand why it is lame. (Cf. "Dismayonnaised" in comp.sys.mac.system)

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Old 10-10-2011, 04:30 AM
Mike Jacoubowsky
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Default Four more years

"Paul Morgan Wesley" <pmw@nonotknow.tw.com> wrote in message
news:j6o248$71b$1@dont-email.me...
> On 10/07/2011 07:11 PM, Michelle Steiner wrote:
>> <http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/arti...ing-Apple-boss
>> -left-plans-years-new-products.html>
>>
>> He has also been overseeing the development of the delayed iCloud
>> project,
>> which will allow Apple users to store their music, photos and other
>> documents remotely and masterminding updated versions of the iPod,
>> iPad,
>> iPhone and MacBooks, ensuring at least four years' worth of products
>> are in
>> the pipeline, according to Apple sources.

>
> What a strange obituary. E.g.:
>
> "It was also revealed today that Jobs fought hard to get plans
> approved for a spaceship-style company headquarters in California."
>
> The discussions about the project at Cupertino city Hall have been on
> the net for months. Some kind of Swam Lake song project.
>
> OTOH, if the iPhone 4s was designed by a dying man, it's easier now to
> understand why it is lame. (Cf. "Dismayonnaised" in
> comp.sys.mac.system)


The iPhone4s is hardly lame. There are a myriad of improvements, one of
which will be interesting to see how it works in real life (the
antenna-switching scheme that offers the possibility of more-reliable
use as a *phone*, what a concept!). The new camera functionality &
faster speed alone would be enough for most companies to claim "new
model" and not mildly-updated status. Plus better battery life, a big
thing for a lot of folk.

But three things worked against the iPhone4s being seen for the phone it
should-

#1: New improved guts in same old case. Dumb.
#2: Mismanaged expectations. This was the first Apple product in recent
memory where the most-fantastic rumors didn't hold to be true. When
rumors got so wildly out of hand, Apple should have stepped in and
factually discredited them. How far out of touch with reality did the
rumors get? How about the Wall Street Journal reporting that Sprint paid
$20 billion to be the exclusive carrier for the iPhone5?
#3: Calling it the iPhone4s instead of iPhone5.

I'm sure there are good reasons for all of those, but whatever they
were, they weren't good enough, and Apple has built expectations out of
a history of knocking everything out of the park.

--Mike-- Chain Reaction Bicycles
www.ChainReactionBicycles.com


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Old 10-10-2011, 04:30 AM
nospam
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Posts: n/a
Default Four more years

In article <-8SdnYzso_R0-w_TnZ2dnUVZ_tCdnZ2d@earthlink.com>, Mike
Jacoubowsky <MikeJ@ChainReaction.com> wrote:

> The iPhone4s is hardly lame. There are a myriad of improvements, one of
> which will be interesting to see how it works in real life (the
> antenna-switching scheme that offers the possibility of more-reliable
> use as a *phone*, what a concept!). The new camera functionality &
> faster speed alone would be enough for most companies to claim "new
> model" and not mildly-updated status. Plus better battery life, a big
> thing for a lot of folk.


right, it has a slew of improvements.

> But three things worked against the iPhone4s being seen for the phone it
> should-
>
> #1: New improved guts in same old case. Dumb.


if they changed the case then all the existing accessories would no
longer fit, like cases, docks and other stuff.

> #2: Mismanaged expectations. This was the first Apple product in recent
> memory where the most-fantastic rumors didn't hold to be true. When
> rumors got so wildly out of hand, Apple should have stepped in and
> factually discredited them. How far out of touch with reality did the
> rumors get? How about the Wall Street Journal reporting that Sprint paid
> $20 billion to be the exclusive carrier for the iPhone5?


boy genius came up with that claim, not the wall street journal.

> #3: Calling it the iPhone4s instead of iPhone5.


get a marker pen and write a big 5 on the back. does the name make that
much of a difference to you?

> I'm sure there are good reasons for all of those, but whatever they
> were, they weren't good enough, and Apple has built expectations out of
> a history of knocking everything out of the park.


like selling 200,000 in 12 hours on at&t alone, more than any other
iphone launch? and then there's verizon and sprint.
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Old 10-10-2011, 04:30 AM
JF Mezei
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Default Four more years

Mike Jacoubowsky wrote:

> The iPhone4s is hardly lame. There are a myriad of improvements, one of
> which will be interesting to see how it works in real life (the
> antenna-switching scheme that offers the possibility of more-reliable
> use as a *phone*, what a concept!). The new camera functionality &
> faster speed alone would be enough for most companies to claim "new
> model" and not mildly-updated status. Plus better battery life, a big
> thing for a lot of folk.


Image stabilisation for movies will also be interesing, if it works.


> #2: Mismanaged expectations. This was the first Apple product in recent
> memory where the most-fantastic rumors didn't hold to be true.


And this is where "under new management" questions arise. Was it Steve
Jobs himself who made the leaks to control/manage the rumours to
*properly* hype products ?

I wouldn't be susprised if the $20b Sprint deal story was concucted by a
competitor and leaked to WSJ. (or to whomever got the story first).

The WSJ lost a lot of credibility by publishing it though.

The problem is that it is likely that Steve Jobs had given a "wink wink
nudge nudge" to some employee to make the controlled leaks. But at the
same time, Jobs and others were very publicly punishing anyone caught
leaking anything. So those employees who worked covertly for Jobs would
no longer do it and might not walk up to Tim Cook and announce
themselves as the one who were leaking info on behalf of Jobs in the past.

Tim Cook was naive to think that announcing that the event was held in
their own *small* auditorium would set expectations of a small product
refresh instead of a brand new revolutionary phone. Wild rumours had
already been circulating for quite some time before Apple even made the
invites to media.

When Jobs unveiled the 4, he mentioned something akin to "many of you
have seen photos on the internet and may be worndering what those black
lines are on the casing... (and explains the separate antennas).

Apple was fully aware of what rumours and pictures were circulating.

When the prototype that was likely meant to a journalist was taken at
the bar by someone else Apple should have made arrrangements for the
journalist to get another one.


One possibility however is that Apple deliberatly let this wild
speculation go to discredit such speculation so that next time around,
the media will speculate much less about a new model and perhaps this
way, Apple won't have to make controlled leaks (when leaks are strictly
prohibited) to manage media expectations.

On the other hand, total silence about future model will not create
hype/excitement about it and Apple loses a lot of marketing value.

Only time will tell how Apple will manage the net iphone launch.

> --Mike-- Chain Reaction Bicycles
> www.ChainReactionBicycles.com



Hey ! I thought of you. Just got a Contour camera for my bike.
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Old 10-10-2011, 07:20 AM
Your Name
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Default Four more years

In article <-8SdnYzso_R0-w_TnZ2dnUVZ_tCdnZ2d@earthlink.com>, "Mike
Jacoubowsky" <MikeJ@ChainReaction.com> wrote:
>
> The iPhone4s is hardly lame. There are a myriad of improvements, one of
> which will be interesting to see how it works in real life (the
> antenna-switching scheme that offers the possibility of more-reliable
> use as a *phone*, what a concept!). The new camera functionality &
> faster speed alone would be enough for most companies to claim "new
> model" and not mildly-updated status. Plus better battery life, a big
> thing for a lot of folk.
>
> But three things worked against the iPhone4s being seen for the phone it
> should-
>
> #1: New improved guts in same old case. Dumb.


Nothing new there. Apple has done it with the iPhone and iPods Touch, as
well as their computers, but they aren't alone - many manufacturers do the
same thing.



> #2: Mismanaged expectations. This was the first Apple product in recent
> memory where the most-fantastic rumors didn't hold to be true.


Really?!?! I'm not sure which planet you live on, but here on Earth no
product ever released by ANY company has ever met all the "most-fantastic"
rumours.



> When rumors got so wildly out of hand, Apple should have stepped in and
> factually discredited them.


Apple never makes any comment on unreleased products, whether that's to
confirm or deny rumours.



> #3: Calling it the iPhone4s instead of iPhone5.


The iPhone 4S is a "speed bump" release, just like the iPhone 3GS was.

Technically Apple should simply drop the numbers entirely and have just
the names "iPhone" and "iPad", just like they do with all the other
products they make.



> I'm sure there are good reasons for all of those, but whatever they
> were, they weren't good enough, and Apple has built expectations out of
> a history of knocking everything out of the park.


Apple never builds expectations. It's the media that builds expectations,
and as usual the media got it almost completely wrong - if you want to
blame the real culprits, aim their way.
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Old 10-10-2011, 07:20 AM
Tim McNamara
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Posts: n/a
Default Four more years

In article <-8SdnYzso_R0-w_TnZ2dnUVZ_tCdnZ2d@earthlink.com>,
"Mike Jacoubowsky" <MikeJ@ChainReaction.com> wrote:

> "Paul Morgan Wesley" <pmw@nonotknow.tw.com> wrote in message
> news:j6o248$71b$1@dont-email.me...
> > On 10/07/2011 07:11 PM, Michelle Steiner wrote:
> >> <http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/arti...e-Jobs-Dying-A
> >> pple-bos s -left-plans-years-new-products.html>
> >>
> >> He has also been overseeing the development of the delayed iCloud
> >> project, which will allow Apple users to store their music, photos
> >> and other documents remotely and masterminding updated versions of
> >> the iPod, iPad, iPhone and MacBooks, ensuring at least four years'
> >> worth of products are in the pipeline, according to Apple sources.

> >
> > What a strange obituary. E.g.:
> >
> > "It was also revealed today that Jobs fought hard to get plans
> > approved for a spaceship-style company headquarters in California."
> >
> > The discussions about the project at Cupertino city Hall have been
> > on the net for months. Some kind of Swam Lake song project.
> >
> > OTOH, if the iPhone 4s was designed by a dying man, it's easier now
> > to understand why it is lame. (Cf. "Dismayonnaised" in
> > comp.sys.mac.system)


BTW you're responding to a known troll with dozens of nyms. He's only
marginally more sane than kolldata... (although I've suspected Gene's
apparently derangement is an act).

> The iPhone4s is hardly lame. There are a myriad of improvements, one
> of which will be interesting to see how it works in real life (the
> antenna-switching scheme that offers the possibility of more-reliable
> use as a *phone*, what a concept!). The new camera functionality &
> faster speed alone would be enough for most companies to claim "new
> model" and not mildly-updated status. Plus better battery life, a big
> thing for a lot of folk.
>
> But three things worked against the iPhone4s being seen for the phone
> it should-
>
> #1: New improved guts in same old case. Dumb.


There I have to disagree with you; a new case creates all sorts of
design and development problems, whereas swapping in a new processor and
such isn't so complicated.

However, I think there was clear disappointment in large part because of
what you write below:

> #2: Mismanaged expectations. This was the first Apple product in
> recent memory where the most-fantastic rumors didn't hold to be true.
> When rumors got so wildly out of hand, Apple should have stepped in
> and factually discredited them. How far out of touch with reality did
> the rumors get? How about the Wall Street Journal reporting that
> Sprint paid $20 billion to be the exclusive carrier for the iPhone5?


The WSJ ceased to be a factual reporter of business news years ago.
Damned shame.

> #3: Calling it the iPhone4s instead of iPhone5.


The iPhone 5 would have required a new case, I think, which immediately
visually differentiated it from the iPhone 4. People would have been
really peeved if this product was called the iPhone 5.

> I'm sure there are good reasons for all of those, but whatever they
> were, they weren't good enough, and Apple has built expectations out
> of a history of knocking everything out of the park.


Not everything (Newton, anyone?) but enough grand slams to make most of
us forget about the less successful ones.

OT: how's Jobst?

--
Your time is limited. Don't waste it living someone else's life.

Steve Jobs 1955-2011
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Old 10-10-2011, 07:20 AM
Michelle Steiner
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Posts: n/a
Default Four more years

In article <4e9270e8$0$26194$c3e8da3$c14f6927@news.astraweb.c om>,
JF Mezei <jfmezei.spamnot@vaxination.ca> wrote:

> And this is where "under new management" questions arise. Was it Steve
> Jobs himself who made the leaks to control/manage the rumours to
> *properly* hype products ?


The leaks came from contractors and subcontractors, not from within Apple.
At least not with Apple's corporate approval (tacit or not). I've known
people who were fired from Apple for making leaks.

> The problem is that it is likely that Steve Jobs had given a "wink wink
> nudge nudge" to some employee to make the controlled leaks.


It is highly unlikely that he or any other high-level executive gave any
such thing.

> Tim Cook was naive to think that announcing that the event was held in
> their own *small* auditorium would set expectations of a small product
> refresh instead of a brand new revolutionary phone.


The reason they held it there was that it was Cook's first product intro as
CEO; a smaller venue let him dip his foot into the pool, as it were,
instead of jumping into the deep end.

--
Tea Party Patriots is to Patriotism as
People's Democratic Republic is to Democracy.
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Old 10-10-2011, 07:20 AM
nospam
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Posts: n/a
Default Four more years

In article <michelle-702344.22463909102011@news.eternal-september.org>,
Michelle Steiner <michelle@michelle.org> wrote:

> > Tim Cook was naive to think that announcing that the event was held in
> > their own *small* auditorium would set expectations of a small product
> > refresh instead of a brand new revolutionary phone.

>
> The reason they held it there was that it was Cook's first product intro as
> CEO; a smaller venue let him dip his foot into the pool, as it were,
> instead of jumping into the deep end.


and because moscone was booked long ago.
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Old 10-10-2011, 07:20 AM
Paul M Westley
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Default Four more years

On 10/09/2011 11:30 PM, Mike Jacoubowsky wrote:

zip!

As I said: Cf. "Dismayonnaised" in comp.sys.mac.system
I do understand that posting this out of context is advantageous for a
Maccie Freakie.

Compared to the upcoming (in 2 weeks, 1 month) Nexus Prime and Samsung
Galaxy S3:

Still no Adobe Flash
Probably weaker CPU (1GH vs 1.2 or 1.5 GHz)
Smaller screen, no 720p
No 4G
Etc.

A lamie. Won't fly.
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