Why the iPhone Keynote Was A Mistake
jcatcw writes "Mike Elgan at Computerworld lists six reasons why it was a mistake to make the iPhone keynote at Macworld. He argues that extremely high expectations can only lead to disappointment for consumers and investors. The focus on the phone during the keynote also took away from the Apple TV announcement, put iPod sales at risk, gave competitors a head start, and (perhaps worst of all) ruined the company's talks with Cisco over the iPhone name. From the article: 'The iPhone, despite its many media-oriented virtues and its sweet design, will do far less than most existing smart phones. The problem Apple now faces because of Jobs' premature detail-oriented announcement is that of dashed expectations. When customers expect more and don't get it, they become dissatisfied.'"
The worst thing is the amount of time there is for your significant other to hear about the new iPhone and hide the credit cards before release day.
Beep beep.
> As for Microsoft Outlook... who uses it these days anyway? I sure as hell don't.
... but no one goes there any more, it's too crowded.
It's like this club that was cool once
Go somewhere random
Judging from all the rumours about the Zune the future iPods that have been helped along by FCC documents, I think they made the right call.
If I was a big apple I'd submit a few dozen fake products for approval just to throw people off. When the documents about the Apple Bananaphone and the Apple ipod/condom become public, people will start taking these rumours with a bigger pinch of salt.
"Goodness me, how unlike the FBI to abuse the trust of the American public." -- The Onion
Dude where have you been? Didn't you watch the commercial? The iPhone is a prophylactic too.
I don't know what weird parallel universe you inhabit where grad students are worshiped... but as a grad student, I desperately want to go there.