Today I get far less excited or argumentative about this subject. I know what I like and I'll talk to you about my choices and recommendations, but I have little interest in arguing. I just wanted to give a little bit of background on my computer background and history.
From what I've been told, the Ipod was what gave Apple the cash to really grow. It "supported" the computer side of the business. From what I can tell now, iphone and ipad probably provide most of the revenue with the computers being low on the sales charts. But I haven't looked in several years. Things might have changed.
The world is ever changing and I think more people are adopting portable devices than moving from windows to OSX (or vise versa). Thanks for reading these ramblings.
Brian.
Agree with most of this. I do find it frustrating when people (often people very comfortable with programming) try to puncture what they seem to see as Apple fanboy or zombie loyalty by pointing out that Jobs or Apple did not invent every single thing that made their products successful, when that misses the entire point, and distorts history.
GUI, desktop metaphor*, windowing systems, mouse, vector-based graphics and typography, a simple-to-use mp3 player that seamlessly integrates with cheap granular content, ultra-hi-res displays, etc. etc--lots of other vendors offer them now, and many are well-implemented, but all those things were first brought to the commercial market by Apple, who created the conditions for competitive offerings by other vendors and the economic viability of the development ecosystems built around them. Jobs and Apple had some big failures (NeXT, though that launched the WWW, Lisa, and Newton, for instance) but those were cases of reaching for a vision that either wasn't quite ready for prime time (in the available state of execution) or that was ahead of the market's readiness (in the case of PDAs). I think Jobs learned from that, and his notorious perfectionism about finish and usability no doubt reflected the pain of those attempts.
Yes, it was the iPod, as I said, that changed Apple's fortunes, but only because it was introduced in conjunction with iTunes and 99-cent downloads (and all the major-label licensing deals needed to make that happen). Otherwise it might still have been a successful device, by traditional measures, but it would not have completely changed the economic model of the music industry and catapulted Apple to the size it became. What Apple realized is that by creating a simple way for users to complete the real-world task (acquire and play music anywhere) rather than just creating a better device, they would be far more successful.
And you're right about iOS and portable/mobile devices. And it was the iPhone and the iPad that launched those categories (smartphone and tablet) at scale. I think a lot of Apple's recent growth in OSX-device market share is due to halo effect from the iOS-device success. Here at Penn, where I work, the proportion of our network traffic from mobile devices is far higher than laptops and desktops combined. Total user population of about 35,000, more than half of which is staff.
Who knows whether Apple will continue to lead in this way? It's been a long run. Things can change quickly.
And none of this bears directly on the question of what environment a given individual finds most effective for their particular needs today.
Cheers,
Randall
*Apart from the $17,000 Xerox 8010 STAR workstation in 1981, which was a real pioneer.