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Apple's Panther: Something Wicked This Way Comes

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Behind the medicine-show glitz of Steve Jobs' new-product announcements, something very bad is happening in Apple's orchard. Slowly but quite surely, Apple has begun to demonstrate its own form of Microsoft's "stick-'em-now-fix-it-later" philosophy.


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Since the unveiling of its Unix-based OS X operating system, Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) Consolidate Mac Servers. Run Windows Server on your Mac. Watch a Demo or Download a Trial. More about Apple has been releasing "point upgrades" about once per year, charging $129 for each one -- a pretty stiff fee for staying current. This in itself might not be so bad, except that in the process of speeding development through the pipeline to grab extra revenue, Apple seems to have lost the handle on quality control with its latest upgrade, 10.3, or Panther.

A quick read through Apple's own online forums shows that, for a large number of Panther users, Apple's Mail program is pretty much unusable; the new File Vault encryption system corrupts many users' files; and the new font management utility, Font Book, causes problems with other programs, including Apple's own Safari Web browser.

It should be kept in mind that for every user who complains, many more suffer in silence. In addition, the posts on Apple's forums represent only the "constructive" ones; those that don't meet Apple's high standard of circuitous caviling, rather than outright complaining, are unceremoniously deleted by the company's online "helpers." On other forums, such as the Macworld and MacNN message boards, where complaints about Panther are not censored, the barbs are more pointed.

Shades of Internet Explorer

It appears that Apple developers -- and I'm speaking specifically of Safari coders -- are now deciding what is "best" for end users by coding for Web designers, rather than giving users a choice. Thus, in Panther it is (for now, at least) no longer possible to specify a browser-wide minimum font size in Safari's preferences. The stated rationale is that there is a risk a given site may not look as its designer had intended. Never mind that many sites use fonts so small as to make them basically unreadable in some screen resolutions.

In another small but telling example of increasing arrogance on the part of Panther's developers, if one chooses not to use Apple's Mail as one's primary e-mail program, it is now necessary to open Mail and modify its preferences to deselect it. Previously, this option was located with other system-wide options.

This change means that you may choose not to use Mail, but you had better not delete it from your system or you will lose the option to not use it -- or to specify a different choice of software down the road. How very yesterday's Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT) More about Microsoft.

Mining the Faithful

In cynically manipulating its customer base, Apple has a huge advantage over Microsoft. Much of Microsoft's revenue derives from corporate customers, who are loath to leap at every upgrade Microsoft proffers, particularly in the case of Windows, and who harbor a certain degree of skepticism regarding Microsoft products in general.

Apple's customer base, in contrast, consists primarily of individuals (though Apple may wish that were not the case). Many of those individuals are longtime Mac users who, over the years, have suffered the slings and arrows of the computing world and would defend all things Apple to the death.

These are the people who faithfully line up outside the doors of the Apple store the night new software is released. They attend every Macworld show, if not in person then via QuickTime recordings, to gaze upon Steve Jobs as he unveils yet another "fantastically great" bit of software or hardware. They are, in other words, the people Apple counts on to fork over $129 per year to keep their operating systems up to date. Microsoft should be so lucky.

Back to Basics

Of course, every major software release has its problems, which take time and effort on the part of both early adopters and the manufacturer to sort out. However, when problems arise in a major operating system, they most often involve the installation process, largely because of the difficulty of anticipating every user's system configuration in advance. On the other hand, issues involving the most-used elements of an application, in this case Mail, usually are sorted out long before a program is released.

Lest anyone think that Apple's most recent operating system problems are anything new, many Mac users will recall, some with a good deal of bitterness, Apple's last update to its previous OS X release, Jaguar. That update corrupted so many users' systems that it was pulled in less than a day and not reposted for more than a week. In a massive public relations fiasco at that time -- just as now -- Apple did not publicly acknowledge that a problem even existed.

Apple is on a roll, certainly. Its G5 has cracked the performance ranks of the top PCs, iTunes for Windows is by all accounts a smash, and Apple's future looks brighter than it has in a very long while. But while the company speeds forward, it must not lose its focus on quality control or user loyalty. If it does, OS X could turn out to be nothing more than just another pretty face.


Note: The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily reflect the views of the E-Commerce Times, its management or parent company ECT News Network, Inc.

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Re: Apple's Panther: Something Wicked This Way Comes
kenbo
Posted 2003-12-15
While you have valid points to gripe about Mail, File Vault, or the M$ing of Apple, your facts ...
Re: Apple's Panther: Something Wicked This Way Comes
Schadow
Posted 2003-12-10
The comment in this article stating that Apple Discussions Helpers delete posts is totally ...
Re: Apple's Panther: Something Wicked This Way Comes
PhilipAlan
Posted 2003-12-10
Assuming you're correct, and I do not doubt that you are, then the situation is more dire than I ...
Re: Apple's Panther: Something Wicked This Way Comes
Schadow
Posted 2003-12-10
No, Apple employees do not have time to read all the posts. That's why they implemented the ...
FUD in Action
DrDude
Posted 2003-12-10
Phillip, the first thing that comes to mind when I read your article is FUD, FUD, FUD (okay, ...
Re: FUD in Action
PhilipAlan
Posted 2003-12-10
I'm not sure where FUD comes into this. There is no Fear, other than that of people whose files ...
Re: Apple's Panther: Something Wicked This Way Comes
wilmill
Posted 2003-12-10
The Panther OS improved performance by 20 per cent on my iBook 500. Tell me a cheaper way for ...
Feel like i'm missing something
biggstuu
Posted 2003-12-10
I just read your article and as i reader i trust i got the intended message, apple is missing ...
Re: Apple's Panther: Something Wicked This Way Comes
macartisan
Posted 2003-12-10
"This change means that you may choose not to use Mail, but you had better not delete it ...
Re: Apple's Panther: Something Wicked This Way Comes
PhilipAlan
Posted 2003-12-10
Your (sarcastic) comment is correct. What the author should have said is that if you delete ...
Re: Apple's Panther: Something Wicked This Way Comes
cloudbase9
Posted 2003-12-10
Among my many friends and co-workers with Macs, I've actually seen none of the probems with ...
Re: Apple's Panther: Something Wicked This Way Comes
mcsjgs
Posted 2003-12-10
I read your article, and there are some inaccuracies to point out. You make it sound as if the ...
Re: Apple's Panther: Something Wicked This Way Comes
PhilipAlan
Posted 2003-12-10
It is interesting how you know that a bug fix is due out "very soon," since Apple is ...
You are an ignorant fool!
macFanDave
Posted 2003-12-10
- Are you one of these Paul Thurrott, Rob Enderle Microsoft-paid FUDsters who spread lies for ...
Re: You are an ignorant fool!
PhilipAlan
Posted 2003-12-10
Lies about Mail?I suggest you go to Apple's discussion site and read what's ...
Re: You are an ignorant fool!
WaltFrench
Posted 2003-12-10
... Apple's own online forums [show] that, for a large number of Panther users, Apple's Mail ...
Re: Apple's Panther: Something Wicked This Way Comes
dimamarkman
Posted 2003-12-10
maybe I'm very lucky but I didn't see even a single ...
Re: Apple's Panther: Something Wicked This Way Comes
MacDuff
Posted 2003-12-10
Tempest in a ...
Re: Apple's Panther: Something Wicked This Way Comes
TroutMask
Posted 2003-12-10
No kidding! This is all you can find to complain about in an operating system that is only a few ...
Re: Apple's Panther: Something Wicked This Way Comes
PhilipAlan
Posted 2003-12-10
I have to agree with MacDuff about preferring Apple's failings to Microsoft's. However, the ...

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