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comment by steve
steve  ·  3851 days ago  ·  link  ·    ·  parent  ·  post: The Laptop Revival Is Here. The Laptop Is Dying.

you've been saying this for years, and I've always hoped your predictions would be accurate.





mk  ·  3851 days ago  ·  link  ·  

It just seems the most reasonable approach to me. As much as Apple works to make the PC an experience, there's just not enough value in box differentiation. The box is becoming a limit. Functionality is huge. Mobile is currently winning for two reasons: 1) most people do very little but consume with their PCs, and 2) a phone is smaller than a laptop. But, ideally, you want a screen to be big, and you want the hardware to be small. Currently the two are stuck together in a compromise. They need to be free.

IMHO Microsoft could make a comeback if they started making a Windows watch interface. They missed this train, but could catch the next. Google is well-poised for this next battle. I think Apple will likely die making devices rather than a technological environment. They don't have the infrastructure not to play well with others, and I bet they will debate that point until it's too late.

steve  ·  3850 days ago  ·  link  ·  

    I think Apple will likely die making devices rather than a technological environment.

At the risk of sounding like an Jobsian disciple, I'm not sure I agree. Sure, Apple may die, but it won't be because they are making devices. There's no question that the environment is king - and that's why I would argue that Apple has made such a comeback, and is so strong in the market now - it's not just about the box. They focus on how the OS and the hardware work together to create an environment.

This may just be the kool-aid, but I don't think you can have the environment without the hardware and the software working together.

AND I'm not trying to start an "apple is the best" or apple vs. windows, or apple vs. Linux, or apple vs. Android thing here... to each their own.

mk  ·  3850 days ago  ·  link  ·  

I just see standardization moving to the forefront. To interact with ubiquitous technology, the winner is going to have the most open-feeling platform. That's why I see MS and Google having the edge. I don't want the coffee shop tables to be incompatible with the hardware on my wrist. Google and MS will care far less about that coffee shop table experience.

Even on their own platform, from my experience, Apple's cloud is awful. My music collection feels like it has been randomly scrambled. Some songs are duplicated, and some songs are inaccessible from some devices.