Hi Listers,

For anyone that is interested I thought you might like a read.

Personally I fully agree with what the article is saying .

Simon F

PS. Merry xmas to all and have a great new year.

http://www.stuff.co.nz/technology/gadgets/87802024/how-apple-alienated-mac-loyalists
How Apple alienated Mac loyalists

Making a laptop stand out is also harder these days. But when Apple has tried 
to leapfrog the competition, it has fallen short.

To die-hard fans, Apple's Macintosh sometimes seems like an afterthought these 
days.

Mac upgrades, once a frequent ritual, are few and far between. The Mac Pro, 
Apple's marquee computer, hasn't been refreshed since 2013.

The affordable and flexible Mac mini was last upgraded in 2014. And when a new 
machine does roll out, the results are sometimes underwhelming, if not 
infuriating, to devotees.

In October, after more than 500 days without an update, Apple unveiled the new 
MacBook Pro, with a slimmer design and louder speakers. The laptop garnered 
mostly favourable reviews from the technology press but grumbles from creative 
types, a key constituency, who said the device under-performed rival products.

Interviews with people familiar with Apple's inner workings reveal that the Mac 
is getting far less attention than it once did. They say the Mac team has lost 
clout with the famed industrial design group led by Jony Ive and the company's 
software team.

READ MORE:
* Review: MacBook 
Pro<http://www.stuff.co.nz/technology/gadgets/85902444/Review-MacBook-Pro>
* Has Apple abandoned 
computers?<http://www.stuff.co.nz/technology/gadgets/72550511/has-apple-abandoned-computers>
* Laptops just got frighteningly 
expensive<http://www.stuff.co.nz/technology/gadgets/85917243/Laptops-just-got-frighteningly-expensive>

They also describe a lack of clear direction from senior management, departures 
of key people working on Mac hardware and technical challenges that have 
delayed the roll-out of new computers.

While the Mac generates about 10 per cent of Apple sales, the company can't 
afford to alienate professional designers and other business customers. After 
all, they helped fuel Apple's revival in the late 1990s.

In a stinging critique, Peter Kirn, founder of a website for music and video 
creators, wrote: "This is a company with no real vision for what its most 
creative users actually do with their most advanced machines."

If more Mac users switch, the Apple ecosystem will become less sticky - opening 
the door to people abandoning higher-value products like the iPhone and iPad.

WINDOWS NOW AN OPTION

The Mac Pro, right, Apple's marquee computer, hasn't been refreshed since 2013.

People now have more options. Microsoft, once derided by Mac loyalists for its 
clunky, buggy software, offers Windows 10, which provides the tablet type 
functionality Apple pioneered with the iPad.

Microsoft's Surface computers offer Apple-esque quality and a well-reviewed 
creative paint program aimed at the Mac's audience. Sensing an opportunity, 
Microsoft called the MacBook Pro a "disappointment" and said more users than 
ever were switching to its Surface laptops.

An Apple spokesman declined to comment. However, the company has said the 
Macintosh remains one of its most important products and denies it takes a back 
seat to other gadgets.

Four years ago at Apple's annual developer conference, marketing chief Phil 
Schiller pledged to keep the computer front and centre in the company's product 
arsenal. "Nobody turns over their entire line as quickly and completely as we 
do at Apple," Schiller said. "We're really proud of the engineering team and 
the work they do to do this quick so you can get the exact product you need."

To be fair, Apple depends on Intel, which still makes key chips for Macs. Like 
the rest of the PC industry, Apple's innovation and product cycles are 
sometimes constrained by when Intel produces new chips - a process that's 
getting more difficult.

Making a laptop stand out is also harder these days. But when Apple has tried 
to leapfrog the competition, it has fallen short.

Take the company's attempt to create a longer-lasting battery for the MacBook 
Pro. Apple engineers wanted to use higher capacity battery packs shaped to the 
insides of the laptop versus the standard square cells found in most machines. 
The design would have boosted battery life.

In the run-up to the MacBook Pro's planned debut this year, the new battery 
failed a key test, according to a person familiar with the situation. Rather 
than delay the launch and risk missing the crucial holiday shopping season, 
Apple decided to revert to an older design.

Apple's Tim Cook views the new MacBook Pro at an Apple media event in October.

In the Mac's heyday, people working on new models could expect a lot of 
attention from Ive's team.

Once a week his people would meet with Mac engineers to discuss ongoing 
projects. Mac engineers brought prototypes to Ive's studio for review, while 
his lieutenants would visit the Mac labs to look at early concepts.

Those visits have become less frequent since the company began focusing more on 
more-valuable products like the iPhone and iPad, and the change became even 
more obvious after the design team's leadership was shuffled last year, 
according to a person familiar with the situation.

IPHONE IS THE PRIORITY

In another sign that the company has prioritised the iPhone, Apple re-organised 
its software engineering department so there's no longer a dedicated Mac 
operating system team. There is now just one team, and most of the engineers 
are iOS first, giving the people working on the iPhone and iPad more power.

That's part of a broader shift toward making Macs more like iPhones. Apple 
prioritises features, like thinness and minimal ports, that sell its iPhones 
and iPads, which generated about 75 per cent of revenue this year.

Those are contrary to professional needs, like maximum computing power. Early 
prototypes of the 12-inch MacBook used the iPhone's Lightning connector, 
although this was ditched for a more standard USB-C port. There was even a gold 
MacBook Pro planned, but this was shelved because the colour didn't look good 
on such a large product.

In recent years, Apple managers have also become more likely to float two or 
more competing ideas, meaning designers and engineers must work on more than 
one concept at a time. In the past, managers pushed a more singular vision.

Engineers are now "asked to develop multiple options in hopes that one of them 
will be shippable," a person familiar with the matter said.

When the company was developing the first 12-inch MacBook, Apple tested two 
primary prototypes. One, known internally as Stealth Fighter, was lighter. The 
second, a slightly less ambitious design known as Stealth Bomber, was heavier.

The lighter model prevailed, but with engineers developing and testing two 
competing concepts, they had less time to figure out how to cram all the 
electronics into a thin slab of aluminum that would hold together. In the end, 
Apple shipped the laptop in 2015, months after its 2014 goal.

For a 2016 MacBook update, some Apple engineers wanted to add a Touch ID 
fingerprint scanner and a second USB-C port (which would have made some power 
users happy). The update instead included a new rose gold colour option 
alongside a standard speed increase.

TURMOIL TAKES A TOLL

The internal turmoil has taken a toll. More than a dozen engineers and managers 
working on Mac hardware have left for different Apple teams or other companies 
in the past year and a half, said people familiar with the situation. Some were 
looking for a less all-consuming work environment, while others felt the future 
of Mac hardware was unclear in a world of iPhones and iPads.

In 2013, Apple launched a redesigned Mac Pro, a black cylinder with bright 
white LED lights. It was a powerful desktop machine created partly to cast a 
halo over the entire Macintosh lineup. The Mac Pro was also the first Apple 
computer in years to be assembled in the US. The decision caused production 
headaches though.

The Mac Pro's glossy exterior and chrome bevelled edges meant Apple had to make 
its own manufacturing tools and then train people to run those machines in an 
assembly plant. This slowed production and constrained Apple's ability to make 
enough computers to meet demand.

Three years on, the Mac Pro is ripe for an upgrade with its chips and connector 
ports lagging rival products.

Because of the earlier challenges, some Apple engineers have raised the 
possibility of moving production back to Asia, where it's cheaper and 
manufacturers have the required skills for ambitious products, according to a 
person familiar with those internal discussions.

Still, Apple hasn't given up on Macs.

In a recent company Q&A session, employees asked whether Mac desktop computers 
remain strategically important. "We have great desktops in our roadmap. Nobody 
should worry about that," chief executive Tim Cook said.

Mac fans shouldn't hold their breath for radical new designs in 2017 though.

Instead, the company is preparing modest updates: USB-C ports and a new 
Advanced Micro Devices graphics processor for the iMac, and minor bumps in 
processing power for the 12-inch MacBook and MacBook Pro.

Cue the outrage.

 - The Washington Post



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