The thing is that it's not specific -just the feel (get it? -it's a feeling) you get when you sit there and use a machine!
Oh... Okay. So it is the same type of feeling I get when I have to sit there and use a Windows based machine.The thing is that it's not specific -just the feel (get it? -it's a feeling) you get when you sit there and use a machine!
Then lets return to your Apple specific comment from earlier...Don't get me started on Windoze -That's just more of the same cool-aid![]()
Never said they did (and they probably don't) but if their ads (and the salespeople I've met) are anything to go by, Apple takes great pride in designing things in such a way that the user doesn't need to know anything about how they work.Then lets return to your Apple specific comment from earlier...Don't get me started on Windoze -That's just more of the same cool-aid
"This also explains why Apple likes the word application; they don't want users to access any software they're not supposed to..."Be specific. Not feelings, specifics.
How does Apple restrict access?![]()
This way (imho, of course) we'll end up with an elite being the only ones actually able to make computers run and the wast majority being dependant on them for anything more complicated than plugging in some new hardware or clicking on icons.
Then lets return to your Apple specific comment from earlier...Don't get me started on Windoze -That's just more of the same cool-aid
"This also explains why Apple likes the word application; they don't want users to access any software they're not supposed to..."Be specific. Not feelings, specifics.
How does Apple restrict access?
Ease of use isn't a barrier to those who are interested in the technical aspects... I've never met with any barriers from Apple. If anything, everyone I know at Apple has always been very encouraging and forthcoming about such things.
And that is supposed to be a bad thing?Never said they did (and they probably don't) but if their ads (and the salespeople I've met) are anything to go by, Apple takes great pride in designing things in such a way that the user doesn't need to know anything about how they work.
Only as long as people show no more interest in this than you have thus far.What a brave new world.
I don't own one, but I would have to wonder how developer's test their software on these devices.Arrqh said:It is impossible to install an app on an iPhone, iPod or iPad that has not been approved by Apple without voiding your device's warranty.
^Make sure you save your document regularly where Word can't get to it! I have seen MS Word eating up anything from novels to small size sedans
What we really should be talking about is the 30% apple tax! Isn't that usury?
What? Usury is about charging interest. The "Apple tax" is a commission on a sale. Not even remotely related. I hope you were kidding but in the absence of aI can't tell.
I don't own one, but I would have to wonder how developer's test their software on these devices.Arrqh said:It is impossible to install an app on an iPhone, iPod or iPad that has not been approved by Apple without voiding your device's warranty.
But I don't see these as any different from devices such as an xbox (which is a Windows based system) as far as ability to play with them.
But in the case of the iPhone/iPod touch/iPad, if you are technically savvy enough to do such things, why worry about a warranty?
Kind of like the elite group of professional technicians and mechanics who know how to keep cars running, with the vast majority of car owners being dependent on them for anything more complicated than changing the oil or rotating the tires.. . . if their ads (and the salespeople I've met) are anything to go by, Apple takes great pride in designing things in such a way that the user doesn't need to know anything about how they work.
This way (imho, of course) we'll end up with an elite being the only ones actually able to make computers run and the vast majority being dependent on them for anything more complicated than plugging in some new hardware or clicking on icons.
What a brave new world.
We believe that we're on the face of the Earth to make great products, and that's not changing. We're constantly focusing on innovating. We believe in the simple, not the complex.
The thing to think about is the direction of the Apple philosophy.
That can be summed in one word: Simplify.
Apple's belief is that for most customers, ease of use is the top priority, and they're happy to hand over some control to the company if that's going to make the products easier to use.
But the iPhone soon proved to suffer from the same issues as the Mac computer I owned in university: it only lets you do what it thinks you should be doing. If you try to sway from that, you're stuck and you either accept it or get creative under the hood. Don't believe me? Fire up your Mac and try to configure iMail to be a little more useful than just its barebone setup. Or if the metallic surface of the GUI is getting tiring on the eye, try replacing it. You can't. And that's just the simple stuff.
/.../
I know Apple is all about thinking differently, but I guess our definitions of thinking differently really are: Apple creates beautiful closed tools that allow you to create beautiful things. Meanwhile, I want a beautiful product I can customize completely so that it does what I want it to do.
Apple tries to make things that many people love, not things that all people like.
Ridiculed?Yesterday...
Wow... I had to pay more than $300 a year for an Apple developer license back in the late 1990s... and I wasn't even a software developer.I believe that developers have to pay a yearly fee of $99 to be able to deploy code to an Apple device. They are not licensed to distribute it.
I didn't ask (or care for that matter) about Apple devices beyond computers. I don't use them (not completely true, I still use a Newton).The Xbox isn't a "windows based system" in the sense that Windows does not run on it. The fact that you similarly cannot run unsigned code on a 360 does not negate the fact that you cannot on an Apple device either, which was the question you asked.
Android isn't tied to it's hardware, it is provided to a number of different device makers. Can you go and buy Android? Is it an actual product that one can buy... or is it something that you get with some other product?Other mobile systems, such as Android...
Wow... I had to pay more than $300 a year for an Apple developer license back in the late 1990s... and I wasn't even a software developer.I believe that developers have to pay a yearly fee of $99 to be able to deploy code to an Apple device. They are not licensed to distribute it.
Kids today have it so much easier!
Oh, you were saying...
There are now a whole segment of device/appliances which are computer like but are intended to not be computer like. That is to say, they are intended to do a smaller number of things and do them with the least amount of issues. Computers haven't been like that (ever).
Apple isn't the first to go down this road. Microsoft has and so did Be (before it went out of business).
And the xbox is just as Windows based as the iPhone, iPod touch and iPad are Mac OS X based (you shouldn't need to go searching the net for this info, you should already know this if you are going to discuss this stuff... and I don't click links).
But I don't own an iPhone, iPod touch or iPad, so I don't really care one way or the other. When the iPhone was first released, it seemed too limited in what you could do on it to be a computer replacement for me.
... plus I don't like phones.![]()
Android isn't tied to it's hardware, it is provided to a number of different device makers. Can you go and buy Android? Is it an actual product that one can buy... or is it something that you get with some other product?
Maybe if Android was a phone or a device made and sold by one company responsible for all aspects of the user's experiences, they might do what Apple does. As it is, they aren't really comparable. Plus, Android has to work within the GPL... Apple doesn't.
But I'm sure you are aware of these things... right?![]()
My pleasure... When you're better informed, maybe we'll talk some more.The purpose of the link was to try and help educate you, but thanks for throwing it back in my face.
My pleasure... When you're better informed, maybe we'll talk some more.The purpose of the link was to try and help educate you, but thanks for throwing it back in my face.![]()
^Make sure you save your document regularly where Word can't get to it! I have seen MS Word eating up anything from novels to small size sedans
What we really should be talking about is the 30% apple tax! Isn't that usury?
What? Usury is about charging interest. The "Apple tax" is a commission on a sale. Not even remotely related. I hope you were kidding but in the absence of aI can't tell.
Just hope away, my little green friend!(smiley included for added clarity as we must not confuse him).
My pleasure... When you're better informed, maybe we'll talk some more.The purpose of the link was to try and help educate you, but thanks for throwing it back in my face.![]()
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