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Line Forms At Apple's Always-Open Manhattan Cube

SpectreBlofeld writes "According to EngadgetMobile, a line has formed in front of Apple's flagship Cube store in Manhattan. From the article: 'So word on the street (literally) is that a large number of people are queuing in line outside of Apple's flagship store on 5th Avenue in New York City — keep in mind the Cube is open 24 hours a day. Our intrepid girl-on-the-scene reports that the group is more than 60-deep, though most people seem confused about what they're waiting for, but some believe they're actually camping out for a 3G iPhone.' Prank, or mass hysteria?" I wonder if the crowd already has its own Flickr group set up -- if not, what are they waiting for on that front?

103 of 445 comments (clear)

  1. Mass Hysteria by Erioll · · Score: 5, Funny

    It's apple people. What ELSE could it be but mass hysteria? ;)

    1. Re:Mass Hysteria by Z00L00K · · Score: 4, Informative
      Mass confusion maybe?

      It's usually better to wait for a while when a new product is released - that way someone else will have all problems.

      --
      If builders built buildings the way programmers wrote programs, then the first woodpecker would destroy civilization.
    2. Re:Mass Hysteria by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      It's apple people. What ELSE could it be but mass hysteria? ;)

      OS X and commodity x86 architectures living together?

    3. Re:Mass Hysteria by flyingsquid · · Score: 5, Funny
      It's apple people. What ELSE could it be but mass hysteria? ;)

      Yeah, but when we Apple fans do mass hysteria, it's in a hip, cool, stylish kinda way.

    4. Re:Mass Hysteria by dotancohen · · Score: 4, Funny

      It's apple people. What ELSE could it be but mass hysteria? ;) OS X and commodity x86 architectures living together? Nobody steps on a Mac in my town!
      --
      It is dangerous to be right when the government is wrong.
    5. Re:Mass Hysteria by NMerriam · · Score: 4, Funny

      It's apple people. What ELSE could it be but mass hysteria? ;)


      Yeah, but it's mass hysteria with hipsters and threesomes with hot vegetarian girls protesting the war.
      --
      Recursive: Adj. See Recursive.
    6. Re:Mass Hysteria by Pollardito · · Score: 5, Funny

      nothing to see here. just a bunch of people seeking iGuidance, looking for an iPurpose to live

    7. Re:Mass Hysteria by Tirhakah · · Score: 2

      Yeah, sorry. Gonna have to prove you wrong on that one...

    8. Re:Mass Hysteria by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      Yeah, but when we Apple fans do mass hysteria, it's in a hip, cool, stylish kinda way. And when the mass hysteria fades, you have to box all the people up and send them back to Cupertino, because you can't replace the hysteria yourself without special tools.
    9. Re:Mass Hysteria by Dana+W · · Score: 3, Insightful

      "I" have an iPhone "and a Macbook Pro for that matter" its a nice phone, but its a PHONE for fucks sake! I bought mine a month after the line standing dimwits got bored. What drives people to stand in line like like this? I may get a 3G iPhone at some point. I probably will, when the old phone is two years old. But to stand out on a street corner like a kid waiting for a new video game console? And don't just blame Mac users, just like iPods. There are plenty of iPhones hooked to PCs. "Can you blame them? I mean, have you LOOKED at Windows Mobile?"

    10. Re:Mass Hysteria by Carnildo · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Performance art, perhaps? Has anyone checked to see what Improv Everywhere is up to?

      --
      "They redundantly repeated themselves over and over again incessantly without end ad infinitum" -- ibid.
    11. Re:Mass Hysteria by jo42 · · Score: 2, Funny

      Apple people "iPoop, therefore iAm!"
    12. Re:Mass Hysteria by flamingnight · · Score: 4, Funny

      seeking iGuidance, looking for an iPurpose to live iBelieve it's called iLife
    13. Re:Mass Hysteria by petermgreen · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I guess it is a sign that i'm an electronics/computer geek that I don't consider a soldering iron and a decent selection of screwdrivers to be special tools. Putty knives are a bit of an odd tool to be using for electronics work but they aren't exactly an unusual tool in general.

      And because there are realtively few models of mac it is generally fairly easy to find information on what order things come apart in (which is generally the biggest challange when working on laptops and similar IMO)

      --
      note: i'm known as plugwash most places but i screwd up registering that here somehow in the past and now can't register
    14. Re:Mass Hysteria by NatasRevol · · Score: 4, Informative
      --
      There are two types of people in the world: Those who crave closure
    15. Re:Mass Hysteria by breem42 · · Score: 4, Funny

      "I" have an iPhone "and a Macbook Pro for that matter" [snip] I may get a 3G iPhone at some point. I probably will, when the old phone is two years old.[snip]

      "You" have too much money. Luckily, Apple is helping you with that.

      --
      If the answer is war, you are asking the wrong question
    16. Re:Mass Hysteria by Dana+W · · Score: 2, Insightful

      No actually, I'm on disability, I have very little money. So I bought a computer I'll get at least five years of real use out of instead of a two year throw away HP or Dell. As to replacing the phone, most people replace their phones every two years or so, the trendies replace them every six months. I'm certainly not discarding an 8 month old phone for GPS and faster networking. Sometimes buying the cheapest is not the best way to save money.

    17. Re:Mass Hysteria by Mr2001 · · Score: 5, Interesting

      So I bought a computer I'll get at least five years of real use out of instead of a two year throw away HP or Dell. "Two year throw away HP or Dell"... what is that supposed to mean? Yes, of course it'd be a waste of money to throw away your HP laptop every two years - but it'd be an even bigger waste to throw away your MacBook every two years, wouldn't it? That's why you don't do that.

      There's nothing stopping you from keeping a non-Apple product for longer than two years, you know. Hell, my Toshiba laptop must be at least 6 years old now.

      As to replacing the phone, most people replace their phones every two years or so, the trendies replace them every six months. I'm certainly not discarding an 8 month old phone for GPS and faster networking. Sometimes buying the cheapest is not the best way to save money. In this case, however, there's a lot of room between "the cheapest" and an iPhone. For example, you could've gotten a feature phone that does 95% of the same stuff as an iPhone for 15% of the price, and you'd be able to keep it just as long as you're going to keep your iPhone.

      See, buying something more expensive only saves you money in the long run if the cheaper one would need so much more maintenance or replacement that it wouldn't be cost-effective. But this isn't one of those situations. An HP, Dell, Toshiba, or any other competing laptop will last just as long as your MacBook (for hundreds of dollars less), and a Samsung, LG, Motorola, or any other competing phone will last just as long as your iPhone (for hundreds of dollars less).

      There's nothing wrong with spending more money to get something flashy or cute or whatever, but don't pretend you're saving money this way.
      --
      Visual IRC: Fast. Powerful. Free.
    18. Re:Mass Hysteria by omnichad · · Score: 2, Funny

      That's exactly what I first thought. Get a bunch of people together and form a line. See if anyone else starts camping out in front of Apple not knowing even what exciting launch they're waiting for.

    19. Re:Mass Hysteria by mikael_j · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Jokes! i hope you baught an apple(tm) extended(tm) waranty(tm) otherwise, if its anything liek an ipod, your gadget has a 90 day waranty. What happens after that? You are told to buy the new model! 5 years indeed..

      One year warranty, 90 days of free phone support. Also, in certain countries the law states that the warranty period is longer unless the manufacturer can prove the fault was caused by the user. And there are tons of Wintel/PC manufacturers who have similar warranty lengths.

      With adult, real computers, every part has its own waranty. Also, you dont have to buy your service packs and DONT have to have any bloody itunes, quicktime or safari near your ANYTHING. (apple updater FTW)

      Well, if you buy a pre-built PC then all parts are covered by the same warranty, same as an Apple, Sun, SGI or IBM machine. And if you build your own then that's one of the annoyances, having to figure out who to contact and where to send stuff ("What? They only have offices in Germany and Taiwan? And their service center is in Latvia?").

      Also, "service packs" as you and Microsoft call it are free with Mac OS X (there have been two major updates since the release of Leopard) but the major releases have to be bought (just like you have to pay to upgrade from IRIX 6.2 to 6.5 or from WinNT 5.0 to WinNT 5.1).

      As for the software, iTunes is actually pretty good and usable on OS X and so is Safari. Quicktime (as in, the application) isn't really that fancy and I prefer VLC but on a freshly installed system it does its job.

      Btw, have you tried using an expensive old g3 mac (your five year old example). Good luck finding software thats not purposely broken so that it wont run on your revision of the OS. Thats the most hilarious part. Even if the software would work fine, there are locks on most programs to tell you what os revision you can run them on. You know the odd program that complains when you run it on 2k, but doesnt on XP? thats par the course for mac - why didnt you buy the upgraded service pack you prole??!?

      The newest G3 macs you'll find are six years old, and that was at the end of the product cycle. The first G3 macs were introduced in 1997 and the G3 Powermacs were phased out in favor of the G4 CPU in 1999. So with a six year-old iMac that was pretty much the lowest of the low end when it was new there will indeed be problems.

      Also, I have not found this to be very common, some software that relies heavily on things that change between different versions of the OS will often have different executables available for different OS versions and in some cases the version for the older OS version may not be supported any more as it is not possible to add new features without maintaning separate codebases.

      /Mikael (IHBT IHL HAND)

      --
      Greylisting is to SMTP as NAT is to IPv4
    20. Re:Mass Hysteria by Corporate+Troll · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Oh, come on... 3 years out of a HP or Dell PC? In december 2005, I bought a second hand Fujitsu Siemens Lifebook E6550 from the employer I was leaving at the time. That machine was "decomissioned" because it already had served for 5 years in the company. I got it for 100€. Initial specs were P-III 600MHz RAM with 256Meg RAM. I still had a 256Meg laptop RAM stick lying around from a computer I had before. So, I had a P-III 600MHz RAM with 512Meg RAM and it ran Windows XP SP2 just fine. Multitasking was not a problem, neither was playing back multimedia. This machine got all the abuse you could think of: it was tossed in my backback, treated like shit. Begin 2007, the plastic case started to break apart. The hardware itself kept on chugging, but because of the case broken everywhere, I decided it was time for a replacement.

      That's 7 years of useful life for a laptop!

      My dads Dell laptop was bought in 2000, he still uses it to this day. Sure, we upgraded it a bit with scavenged parts (512Meg RAM instead of 256Meg RAM and be bigger and faster harddisk). He still uses it to this day and has no intention whatsoever to replace it. 8 years and going strong.

      Oh, any you surely want to know where that 256Meg RAM stick came from? I'll tell you: from an iBook 600MHz G3/384Meg RAM (later upgraded to 640Meg RAM which is where the 256Meg RAM stick comes from), I bought in December 2000 and which died in June 2005. Logic board failure. That's only 4.5 years for the Apple.

      Now, sure, I know this is anecdotal evidence and all, but I *used* to be a Mac user. The iBook experience didn't do much good. I would have bought a new one, but their timing sucked: the Intel Macs were around the corner and I could only buy G4 laptops. I wasn't in hell going to do that. When the Intel MacBooks came along, I had my second hand laptop and was happy, so why change?

      No, my new laptop isn't an Apple. I went the cheapo way: for 799€, I got a Dual Core machine with 1Gig RAM, 160Gig harddisk DVD-RW with Windows XP SP2. (For that the specs are meager, but I bought it in January 2007, just before the dreaded Vista release) Apple simply had nothing comparable for that price. It runs Ubuntu now, so I don't even have to cope with Windows anymore.

    21. Re:Mass Hysteria by Richthofen80 · · Score: 3, Funny

      I own an iPhone. Where can I redeem my threesome?

      --
      Reason, free market capitalism, and individualism
    22. Re:Mass Hysteria by NatasRevol · · Score: 2, Informative

      For varying levels of well.

      Sometimes I think my users actually do use hammers to operate their computers. Or maybe the footprints on the outside give a clue..."What size shoe does your son wear?" Hmmm, and tell me again why you wonder how it just stopped working?

      --
      There are two types of people in the world: Those who crave closure
    23. Re:Mass Hysteria by Pendersempai · · Score: 2, Interesting

      For example, you could've gotten a feature phone that does 95% of the same stuff as an iPhone for 15% of the price, Except much of what the iPhone "does" in that sense is be really easy to use. The features themselves were relatively cheap to implement, but Apple spent a ton on interface design. If you can really find a feature-equivalent phone that is 95% as pleasant to use as the iPhone for 15% of the price of the iPhone, more power to you, but I doubt such a phone exists. I'd guess you're one of the people who pulls up the feature list and assumes that feature parity means value parity, which is really about as useful as saying that a leather couch is as valuable as an row of upside-down plastic buckets, since you can sit on both of them.
  2. The Time Machine by Mordok-DestroyerOfWo · · Score: 5, Funny

    Does this remind anybody else of the Eloi gathering to be taken underground by the Morlocks?

    --
    "Never let your sense of morals prevent you from doing what is right" - Salvor Hardin
    1. Re:The Time Machine by Thaelon · · Score: 2, Funny

      We can only hope that's the case.

      --

      Question everything

    2. Re:The Time Machine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Actually, the first thing I thought of is the old Cold War story that a reporter in an Iron Curtain country decided to just wait at a door and see what happened, and shortly thereafter someone else joined him, and so on, until they'd accumulated a line around the block. It was always presented as some kind of myth about the Communist Mentality of mindless herd-like behavior or some similar propaganda deal. I guess this goes to show it's more like general human nature.

    3. Re:The Time Machine by sconeu · · Score: 4, Funny

      I'd heard that one, but I've also heard the same story about Brits. Apparently, they'll queue up just for the hell of it.

      --
      General Relativity: Space-time tells matter where to go; Matter tells space-time what shape to be.
    4. Re:The Time Machine by Rakshasa+Taisab · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I live in Japan... I've seen _much_ worse. It's like a perfect storm of high population density and a love for queuing in orderly fashion.

      --
      - These characters were randomly selected.
  3. Apple... by ChowRiit · · Score: 4, Funny

    You know Apple fandom is getting excessive when a product doesn't even need to exist to get hyped...

    1. Re:Apple... by Selfbain · · Score: 5, Funny

      Whatever is in there, it's the only thing I've ever wanted! - Fry

      --
      Well, it has never been successfully tested.
    2. Re:Apple... by mrslacker · · Score: 5, Funny

      Guess you haven't seen this ;-)

      http://www.misterbg.org/AppleProductCycle/

      hth.

  4. The reason is marketing by LotsOfPhil · · Score: 4, Insightful

    So the link is "iphone-line-forms-at-apples-flagship-for-absolutely-no-reason." It seems quite obvious that the reason is marketing. Same as when there were lines at Apple stores selling iphones but not at AT&T stores selling iphones.

    --
    This post climbed Mt. Washington.
    1. Re:The reason is marketing by LoudMusic · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I realize others are replying that there were lines at the AT&T stores near them, but the day after launch I walked into my local AT&T store where there were maybe a couple people looking at Blackberries and asked if they knew when their next shipment of iPhones would be in. The sales person said, "Uh, I've got like 16 in the back.", "Oh? I'll take two. Thanks!" Gave one to my wife as a present and sold the other to my boss.

      If there is technology you want that is in high demand you can probably find it in a smaller town.

      --
      No sig for you. YOU GET NO SIG!
    2. Re:The reason is marketing by Maestro485 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      This is somewhat OT, but I saw in the paper (the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, as I'm from Pittsburgh) a photo of protesters, with a small blurb next to the pic about what they were protesting. It was only after re-reading the blurb and checking with another source did I discover that they weren't protesting anything, but were there at the request of the museum to draw attention to the exhibit.

      I remember thinking how stupid it was at the time, but I can't remember what the exhibit was, only that it was obviously non-offensive, especially after the recent semi-controversy about the 'Bodies' display that spent some time here.

      Not to knock Pittsburgh museums; they are usually a source of pride for the entire region. This particular incident, however, isn't exactly the most intelligent thing they've ever done.

      Credit where credit is due though, the Post-Gazette had absolutely no accompanying article, just this somewhat inciting photo and an utterly useless blurb. That's sadly sort of on par for that paper, though.

  5. It's back! by fstolze · · Score: 5, Funny

    People lining up in front of stores in the hope that maybe there will be something for sale that they are after - sounds like the Soviet Union to me!

    1. Re:It's back! by maxume · · Score: 2, Funny

      Are there any pickles?

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    2. Re:It's back! by flyingsquid · · Score: 5, Interesting
      People lining up in front of stores in the hope that maybe there will be something for sale that they are after - sounds like the Soviet Union to me!

      I once visited the Apple campus at 1 Infinite Loop, Cupertino. There was a big open, quadrangular courtyard. Each side of the quadrangle had a huge banner, like 20 feet tall, displaying an Apple product: there was a iBook, a PowerBook, an iMac, and a Power Mac. The huge banners made me think of something the Soviets might have put up to glorify Stalin and Lenin at Red Square to celebrate the revolution. And certainly, Steve Jobs is a bit like Stalin or Kim Jong Il in creating a cult of personality, and you could argue that his product announcements are like the Communist Party rallies held in the USSR, China, or North Korea.

      Obviously there are limits to such an analogy. I don't imagine Apple-manufactured tanks, made of polycarbonate and brushed alumninum rolling into Eastern Europe. And I don't imagine Apple getting the bomb, or starving millions of people to death, or locking PC users into re-education camps where they are taught how to use a mouse with a single button. Still, the way Jobs and Apple appeal to people is oddly similar to the way totalitarian regimes do.

    3. Re:It's back! by stableos · · Score: 5, Funny

      Anyone wanna come stand in the Zune line with me?

    4. Re:It's back! by fstolze · · Score: 2, Interesting

      So Steve knows how to look at history and learn from the best. Clearly a business book waiting to be written!

    5. Re:It's back! by argent · · Score: 5, Funny

      I don't imagine Apple-manufactured tanks, made of polycarbonate and brushed alumninum rolling into Eastern Europe.

      They never do, not until it's too late.

    6. Re:It's back! by dotancohen · · Score: 2, Interesting

      So Steve knows how to look at history and learn from the best. Clearly a business book waiting to be written! Clearly a war book waiting to be rewritten!

      There, fixed that for you.
      --
      It is dangerous to be right when the government is wrong.
    7. Re:It's back! by dotancohen · · Score: 4, Funny

      Apple could market all of these pretty easily: iTank, iBomb, iStarvation & iCamp. Ah, but before you get that far you must go through BootCamp.
      --
      It is dangerous to be right when the government is wrong.
    8. Re:It's back! by geekoid · · Score: 4, Funny

      But they would be some sweet looking tanks.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    9. Re:It's back! by porky_pig_jr · · Score: 4, Informative

      Yes, I've thought of that as well. Except in Soviet Union people didn't line up in hope that may be there will be something for sale they are after. They lined up in hope that there may be something for sale *at all*, not necessarily they are after, but may be something decent, and if they don't need it they can sell it. Lived in Moscow in 70s, know that phenomena quite well.

    10. Re:It's back! by Whiney+Mac+Fanboy · · Score: 2, Funny

      Wow, so Apple haters have now reached the new low of comparing Jobs to Kim Jong Il.

      I know! Unbelievable isn't it? Especially when Mussolini is a much more appropriate comparison.

      --
      There are shills on slashdot. Apparently, I'm one of them.
    11. Re:It's back! by Spatial · · Score: 2, Funny

      Apple-manufactured tanks, made of polycarbonate and brushed alumninum rolling into Eastern Europe. That would make an awesome drawing. I suggest Apple-logo grenades, and maybe the enemy can be Microsoft, with their emblem some kind of swastika-shaped Windows logo. Then you've got the Linux faction with super-advanced stuff like mech-walkers, but who are few in number so they need to drive GPL propoganda trucks around the place to gain recruits. Ah yes, I can see it now!

      Urge to draw, rising...
  6. And verily, Our Lord Jobs Did Come Unto Them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    And the Lord Jobs did address the faithfully assembled masses, saying "Unto you my loyal supplicants I do bestow the bounty of the 3G iPhone, that ye may use it at all times, and in sickness, and in health, and in times of pestilence and low bandwidth, and it shall comfort thee."

    And then did the Lord Jobs hand out the Holy 3G iPhone unto the chosen who harkened unto him, and it was good.

  7. Improv Everywhere? by Bryansix · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Maybe it's the same people who pulled off this stunt? http://improveverywhere.com/2006/04/23/best-buy/

    1. Re:Improv Everywhere? by notNeilCasey · · Score: 4, Informative
      It's not IE. Charlie Todd, the founder of Improv Everywhere, says so on his Blog

      For the record, Improv Everywhere has nothing to do with this. Though I do love that we're now the go-to guess for anything out of the ordinary!
    2. Re:Improv Everywhere? by nfk · · Score: 3, Insightful

      That site is genius. Seriously, if you need evidence that there is still hope for mankind, look no further.

  8. Re:Ah, the wonderful, screaming world of retail. by snl2587 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Oh well, good for Apple - they can't make computers fast enough for demand. That's really what this is about and they deserve the marketshare.

    I think that's up for debate, and really, this is most likely a social prank, not a mass gathering to encourage Apple to speed up production of the i[newest-product-name-goes-here].

  9. Re:Ah, the wonderful, screaming world of retail. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Twitter, you need to learn the basic rules of social interaction.

    That Apple employee did NOT care about your stupid canned lecture about Free Software(tm).

    They didn't demonstrate setting up dual-booting with Windows, not because there's a vast corporate conspiracy against Free Software(tm), but because the display was already set up with all the steps laid out, and the employee wasn't going to spend 3 hours of a workday setting up Free Software(tm) for the sole purpose of demonstrating software that works the same with any 2nd OS.

    The employees didn't like you, not because they're part of a vast corporate conspiracy against Free Software(tm), but because you went to an Apple store for the sole purpose of harassing employees about information you could have obtained much more easily with Google, JUST so you could give an absolutely retarded canned lecture about Free Software(tm) to an employee who didn't give a shit at all.

    They kicked you out because you were acting like an obnoxious prick, not because you were asking too much about free software and/or you were embarrassing them with your superior knowledge of software and/or they were ignorant or forbidden to tell what they knew. In the future, just shut the fuck up, 'kay?

  10. Re:Ah, the wonderful, screaming world of retail. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Twitter, you need to learn the basic rules of social interaction. For example: Having a conversation with yourself is not good practice for having a conversation in the real world.
  11. Apple's newest product... by hyperz69 · · Score: 5, Funny

    The ILine :)

    1. Re:Apple's newest product... by UnknowingFool · · Score: 4, Funny

      Of course, Apple follows it up at the nearest school: The iLine mini.

      --
      Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
  12. damn, I'm still in the "Indy" line by peter303 · · Score: 2, Funny

    Cant wait until they perfect cloning.

  13. Vindicated finally!!! by syousef · · Score: 3, Funny

    I've been calling Apple fans lemmings for years. Finally I have clear and irrefutable evidence of herd behavour!

    (Hint: This is tongue in cheek humour, you want to mod it funny not troll. Either that or there's nothing to see here, move along. The secret history of star wars says so, so it must be true).

    --
    These posts express my own personal views, not those of my employer
  14. Twitter by twatt3r · · Score: 5, Funny

    "Hi, I'm Twitter! I refer to my^H^Hhimself in the third person! I bother a busy store about products they don't support! I have a journal!"

  15. Maybe they're British by Black+Art · · Score: 4, Funny

    Are they moaning as well?

    Nothing that the British like more than moaning and queuing.

    --
    "Trademarks are the heraldry of the new feudalism."
    1. Re:Maybe they're British by heffrey · · Score: 2, Informative

      Well, we at least understand how to queue!

    2. Re:Maybe they're British by ettlz · · Score: 4, Funny

      In fact, we're go fucking good at it, we can form a queue with just one person!

    3. Re:Maybe they're British by bitspotter · · Score: 2, Funny

      Shall we call the store "The Queuebe", then?

  16. The Onion by StCredZero · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "Line forms spontaneously at NYC Apple Store" It sounds like a headline on The Onion! I guess we've been at the point where The Onion sounds like real life for some time now.

    1. Re:The Onion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      I guess we've been at the point where The Onion sounds like real life for some time now. Happened a long time ago
  17. Posts, barriers, and security on hand by Animats · · Score: 3, Interesting

    This looks like a marketing stunt. Note that posts, barriers, and security people for line control were all on hand for this "unexpected" event.

    Apple probably isn't even paying them. All they'd have to do is send anonymous text messages for a few of their fanboys, er, customers.

    1. Re:Posts, barriers, and security on hand by dotancohen · · Score: 4, Funny

      It's a glass cube in the middle of Manhattan. They probably have the guards to keep people from throwing Zunes through the damn store. The tech crowd prefers to throw chairs, from what I've heard.
      --
      It is dangerous to be right when the government is wrong.
  18. Nothing to see here... by deAtog · · Score: 2, Insightful

    please move along.

  19. What's worse? by objekt · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The fact that they line up for nothing, making them little more than a flash mob...

    OR

    That this story gets media attention at all and has anti-macheads all in a sweat shouting "sheeple!" and trying to put various political/religious/fanboi spins on the story?

    --
    -- Boycott Shell
  20. In other news... by flattop100 · · Score: 2, Funny

    ...line forms at supermarket checkout. More at 11.

  21. Meanwhile, at the Sony Style Store... by techsoldaten · · Score: 5, Funny

    Meanwhile, at the Sony Style store, 5 blocks away, the glow of HDTVs illuminated the vapid faces of salespeople in tshirts as they stared across the racks over empty aisles. Aisles of laptops, PS3s, CDs and other items went unpurchased, and no one was there to see it.

    Brand name computer stores are the outlet for those too weak to resist the urge to make impulse purchases in excess of a month's income. The fact Apple has been able to capitalize on this trend so well speaks to the fetishistic appeal of those shiny laptops and the absence of any real value in their products. Convinced the worth of something that is not even there, people are literally waiting in line to buy nothing.

    Truly, they are the dead.

    M

    1. Re:Meanwhile, at the Sony Style Store... by geekoid · · Score: 2, Funny

      Then I suggest the rest of the world not go into the Manhattan Apple store.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    2. Re:Meanwhile, at the Sony Style Store... by Ohio+Calvinist · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Normally, I'd have to agree with you, however, if I'm dropping 1-2 grand on a new computer (in particular a laptop) I want to try it out first. I'd buy a desktop online no-questions asked, but for a laptop, I've been disappointed, not by the specification being off, but that it was extremely uncomfortable to type on, and the plastic shell felt like it was going to crack in half.

      I'm concerned about stability (its not going to break), weight (not too heavy), size (not too big), that the keyboard is comfortable, the speakers sound good and have good placement, and that the ports are in non-annoying places. For all those things (in general), nothing compares to picking it up, listening to it, seeing how loud it is, etc... it is really closer to taking a test drive for a car than buying an appliance.

      In Apple's case, I know what made me overcome my hesitation to switch was going to the store for 2-3 hours and attempting to do all the things I do on my PC to see if it was going to drive me crazy or not be possible.

      So I have to disagree that my trip to the store wasn't weakness, but an exercise in prudence (shopping around).

      --
      Forgive my spelling from time to time. I'm often posting during short breaks.
    3. Re:Meanwhile, at the Sony Style Store... by techsoldaten · · Score: 2, Informative

      Median US household income is $43,318.

      Pre tax, that's $3,609 monthly earnings.

      Subtract 30% for federal, state and local, that's around $2,526.

      The shinier the Mac, the higher above that number it goes. They make the cheapest models black for a reason.

      M

  22. Re:Ah, the wonderful, screaming world of retail. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    Twitter is a tool.

  23. Re:good computers by dotancohen · · Score: 4, Funny

    Yes, it must be tough to deal with such huge crowds.

    60 people? NYC's entire Mac-using population has shown up!
    --
    It is dangerous to be right when the government is wrong.
  24. Re:ImprovAnywhere by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

    This stunt sounds alot like what Improv Anywhere would do.

    But your mention of "a friend of mine got an invite for it" sounds strange. Normally when Improv Anywhere stages an event, the invitation makes no mention of what the event actually is. It just says something vague like "bring a green shirt and be prepared to walk alot" or whatever. Only once everyone is gathered do they explain the stunt. (This is intentionally done to prevent information leaks and to keep everyone genuinely surprised.) If you want proof, watch some of their videos: the first step is always a briefing session for the volunteers.

    I suppose your friend could have phoned/emailed you after receiving the instructions...

    Improv Anywhere is officially denying involvement (not sure if you can take them at their word, however!). All this to say that without more proof, I don't think it's warranted to conclude this is Improv Anywhere's doing. (Yet.)

  25. Obligatory Borg Comment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    I've never seen people waiting outside of a cube to be assimilated!

  26. Re:Ah, the wonderful, screaming world of retail. by mollymoo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I've never noticed twitter's trolling, assuming it exists. I have noticed the constant barrage of "you're a twitter sockpuppet", which is the only way I ever really notice the posts in question. So if twitter is trolling, they're not so trollish that they stand out above the background noise (I read at -1, so there's a fair bit of background noise). So, can you please shut the fuck up and stop polluting Slashdot with your whining? If I was a troll I'd have great admiration for twitter - they have succeeded where most fail in that every one of their posts gets numerous "stop trolling", "you're a twitter sockpuppet" replies. It's you and your ilk who need to stop feeding the trolls.

    --
    Chernobyl 'not a wildlife haven' - BBC News
  27. Giant orgy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    A giant fanboy orgy is going to take place inside the cube. Steve Jobs will allow them all the blow him 10 seconds each.

    Jokes aside, an Engadget story on slasdot, about Apple, on a queue. I know Apple is worshiped here, but can it go lower than this?

    1. Re:Giant orgy by eli+pabst · · Score: 4, Funny

      A giant fanboy orgy is going to take place inside the cube. Steve Jobs will allow them all the blow him 10 seconds each.
      Well that's obviously wrong. The line would be a hell of a lot longer than 60 deep for that.
    2. Re:Giant orgy by Concerned+Onlooker · · Score: 3, Informative

      "I know Apple is worshiped here..."

      I assume that this is the funny part that got you modded up. From reading regular comments right here on Slashdot I have discovered that because I am a Mac user:
      1. I am gay.
      2. I have toy computer.
      3. I only bought a Mac because I am under the influence of marketing forces.
      4. I'm too stupid to be able to use anything else.
      5. I am a shrill fanboy. Or fanbois. Whatever.

      --
      http://www.rootstrikers.org/
    3. Re:Giant orgy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

      I can't help but notice that you do not deny the truth of any of the items on the list.

    4. Re:Giant orgy by mdwh2 · · Score: 2, Informative

      I assume that this is the funny part that got you modded up.

      There's no excuse for the trolls, but they tend to get modded down, so that doesn't change the OP's point.

      Generally, anything critical of Apple has got modded down, when the same comments made with respect to other platforms wouldn't. Apple stories are the only one that I have to browse at -1 to follow the thread properly.

      I have noticed this become less an issue since the release of the Iphone - possibly people are getting fed up of seeing story after story about Iphone hype.

  28. Line was for old iPhones by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    It's been found out that the line was just a bunch of people wanting to purchase from the incoming shipment of current-generation iPhones...

    http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t&ct=us/0-0&fp=483570bb44e45a71&ei=Suo1SMbdJY3q_AG6kIGnCw&url=http%3A//dvice.com/archives/2008/05/mystery_lineup.php&cid=0&usg=AFrqEzdpLsANqWrm6zwUT10e-6PmeMbnHg

  29. Re:Ah, the wonderful, screaming world of retail. by dotancohen · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Please, don't feed the twitter-sockpuppets. This guy just want attention (that, and he's probably a Markov tool). Reputed troll around here. So far I've kept out of the twitter-bashing, but now it's getting out of hand. When he has conversations with himself and mods himself up, fine, blow the whistle. But when he's actively contributing to the discussion, let it be.
    --
    It is dangerous to be right when the government is wrong.
  30. Re:Don't worry. by dotancohen · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It's been at least 15 years since anyone stood in line for a Microsoft product. That's because now they are holding on the line while Raj finishes his 20 questions, now reboot, now click the third tab, now click the second checkbox...
    --
    It is dangerous to be right when the government is wrong.
  31. The Jungle by Wilson_6500 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I'm reminded of the bank run depicted in the Jungle, only with less panic.

    Of course, that scene depicted people with absolutely no disposable income desperate to get their money back in their own hands, whereas--minus the hysteria--this scene depicts people desperate to put their money into someone else's hands. How far we've come.

  32. Re:Satanic verses. by stephentyrone · · Score: 3, Funny

    I'd be interested to read your references for the "historical fact that Mohammad dictated the Koran while in what modern people would call a seizer."

    Not a lot of historical documents from that time period have survived, so I'm curious about your hidden stash of medical records. I'm also curious about your apparent collection of criminal (or are they professional?) records establishing the prophet as a baby-raper.

    The God you worship may not like baby-rapers, but does he know how to spell "seizure"? I don't really care about the answer; I just want to use this opportunity to be a condescending punk and point out that you're not only delusional, but also can't spell properly.

    You may also want to review the rules of English capitalization.

  33. Apple marketers must be laughing by hairykrishna · · Score: 4, Funny

    I mean; when people to queue up to buy something when they're not even sure what it IS that's a whole new level of success.

    --
    "Physics is to math as sex is to masturbation." -R. Feynman
  34. Re:Ah, the wonderful, screaming world of retail. by dedazo · · Score: 4, Interesting
    Actually twitter, this last December I got the chance to go to an Apple store for the first time while on a trip to San Francisco. My sister was looking for educational games for her three kids to run on her Mac, so I said what the heck and went with her.

    As far as the retail experience goes, coming from the gritty do-it-yourself-BestBuy-or-bust PC white/beige box world where I see computers as tools rather than post-modernist plastic sculptures to gawk at, I have to say I was rather pleasantly surprised. I half expected these guys (Geniuses?) to be no better than the ignorant, pushy pimply teenagers at BestBuy or the Gateway Country Stores (R.I.P.), but that was certainly not the case. I mean I didn't walk out of there with a hard on or anything like that, but Apple certainly has the "don't worry about anything, just give us your money and you'll be OK" approach completely figured out.

    The thing that got my attention was the number of kids playing with the Macs on display, and the number of older people browsing around. I'm not sure what gives, but it's like the store atmosphere sort of encourages people to sit down, try things out and ask lots of questions. Inevitably I suppose this takes care of the other thing, which is to sell the boxes.

    I can't say that I'm anything other than a die-hard Windows (with sprinklings of BSD and Linux) user, and I really wouldn't want or know what to do with a Mac. But at the expense of sounding a little fanboyish, the Apple store is very cool.

    I think anyone with just a few working brain cells can figure out the real reasons for your lame little account of the terrible things suffered at the hands of these evil people. If I happened to be in the shoes of that ogre of a manager that "screamed" at you, I would have taken your picture and put up a website with an account of what really happened (one can only imagine your demeanor and shudder), along with a recommendation of how not to "evangelize" free software.

    As always, you end up doing more harm than good - sockpuppets or not.

    --
    Web2.0: I love when people Flickr my cuil and digg my boingboing until my google is reddit and I start to yahoo
  35. They got a shipment of iPhones in (link) by 6350' · · Score: 5, Informative

    http://dvice.com/archives/2008/05/mystery_lineup.php

    "By the time we got there, the lineup was gone, but a couple of helpful Apple blueshirts told us what was what: It turns out that the lineup wasn't for the widely -- and wildly -- rumored 3G iPhone. The store got a shipment of current iPhones this morning, apparently a rare occurrence these days, and when word got out, some touchscreen-hungry folks got in line to snatch up the few that came in."

    1. Re:They got a shipment of iPhones in (link) by nobodyman · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Okay, so that confirms that they're idiots, right? I mean, by all accounts the 3G iPhone will be in stores in less than a month. For the same price as what is currently available.

  36. Apple and the French by argent · · Score: 4, Funny

    Let's see.

    The French invented the modern tank in WWI, based on an original idea by the British.
    Apple invented the modern WIMP UI in 1981/82, based on an original design by Xerox.

    The French didn't really improve their tank after WWI, and were totally taken by surprise by German tank warfare.
    Apple didn't really improve their OS after the '80s, and were totally taken by surprise by Microsoft Windows 95.

    Yeh, sounds right.

  37. Re:Ah, the wonderful, screaming world of retail. by dedazo · · Score: 2, Interesting

    discussed by another one of his sockpuppets

    Heh. I have to say in fairness that full credit for spotting most of twitter's sockpuppets goes to Macthorpe. I just took the opening twitter gave me :)

    I can't believe he would actually post a link to that, never mind doing it with one of his other accounts (in the third person, no less). I would have deleted it in embarrassment a long time ago. Well, I wouldn't have written it to begin with.

    I'll take my offtopic moderation now

    The usual YOU CANNOT TALK ABOUT TWITTER EVEN IF HE'S REPLYING TO HIMSELF WITH FIVE ACCOUNTS ON THIS THREAD moderation aside, I'd have to say you're on topic. After all, he's the one that posted the link to his lame journal entry, and that's what you commented on. And this whole thing is about Apple.

    There's a duck outside the window, BTW <-- I MENTIONED FOWL SO MOD ME OFFTOPIC NOW OR SLASHDOT WILL BE RUINED

    --
    Web2.0: I love when people Flickr my cuil and digg my boingboing until my google is reddit and I start to yahoo
  38. Here's why by cats2ndlife · · Score: 4, Informative

    http://www.appleinsider.com/articles/08/05/22/apple_seeks_expert_in_wimax_impromptu_5th_ave_lineup_more.html The answer to something seeming perplexing is usually something simple, if the observer has any common sense at all.

  39. Coming soon! The iNull! by OldManAndTheC++ · · Score: 4, Funny

    Whispers are circulating concerning a new Apple offering, to be known as the "iNull". Apple's latest tech blockbuster is said to involve no hardware or software, will not be offered as an online service, will not be encumbered by DRM, and in fact will have no actual existence at all, either physical or virtual.

    "Apple will change the way we look at nothingness as a society," said one industry insider. "This is game-changing. Everything you think you know about nothing is going to be swept away."

    Mac enthusiasts are eager to be among the first to have an iNull, despite the inherent philosophical difficulties in "having" one. "I can't wait!" blurted one blogger, "Apple has once again shown how they 'think different'. In a world of gadgets, doodads and useless techno-gimmickry, they've brought forth something of unrivaled simplicity and elegance. Way to go!"

    From a business perspective, the profit potential is limitless -- the iNull will have the lowest production cost of any Apple product to date, requiring no manufacturing, shipping, or inventory, although there will be a "significant" marketing campaign. Of the $499 price tag, Apple is expected to reap the lion's share as pure profit, with an unspecified percentage paid out as a licensing fee to the Sartre estate.

    --
    Soylent Green is peoplicious!
  40. Time value of money and exponential improvement by StrategicIrony · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Your argument may seem convenient and pat, but

    There's something cool called the "time value of money". There's also a unique property to the PC industry, which is a trend toward exponential improvement.

    If you save $1000 today, it's actually worth a lot more compounded over 5 years from now. Not to mention the value in more frequent hardware replacements in an industry where exponential improvement is the norm.

    Given accepted rates of return on things like index funds (10%), you could spend $1000 every 2 years, instead of $2000 every 5 years... You would have two brand new machines during that time on the same budget and have a bunch left over at the end. The only thing you miss out on is the first two years of having a 50% superior machine, if we arbitrarily call your $2000 Mac (we'll go wild) "50% better" than the $1000 PC when it was brand new.

    The neat thing is that if you spend $1000 every two years rather than $2100 every five years, those last three years, you would have a far superior machine.... so... for more than half of the 5 year life cycle, you would have vastly superior machine... of course it does involve delayed gratification.

    OK, lets do the numbers. I can hear your ears turning red.... or perhaps your eyes are glazing over. I don't care. Keep reading. :-)

    Even assuming Macbooks hold their value better (lets use some numbers and assume the PC depreciates at exactly 40% per year and the mac at exactly 30% per year), your 2nd $1000 PC purchase would cost you $640 after the trade in of your 2 year old PC (which was then worth $360). Your initial $1000 savings is now also worth $1331, which you can spend on that PC. So you have a brand new computer in the second year and $691 in the bank. Two years later, you replace it again, getting a trade in and paying $640 for a machine 8 times (exponential for 4 years) faster than your original box. Again, your initial savings on the purchase means that you don't have to put down any money. Your $691 could now be valued at $836, so even after you THIRD purchase (8 times faster than the original), you still have $196 in the bank. Upon reaching the 5th year, you evaluate your position.

    Your $2000 Macbook is worth about $340 since it's 5 years old (30% per year).

    Your $1000 PC is actually your third one you got with the same money. It's currently worth $600 (40% per year). You also have $215 in the bank from the leftovers after the trade-ins and compounded interest.

    Lets say your $2000 Mac was.. we'll go wild and say it's 50% "better" than the $1000 PC when it was brand new. Today, you have a 1 year old PC that's valued at about $600 and is generally about 6 times faster (presumably "better" in most ways) than your 5 year old Mac. You didn't spend any additional money during the entire process but you got a new PC every 2 years.

    Now, this argument is TOTALLY IRRELEVANT for someone who considers "money is no object", since they will simply buy the best AND replace it yearly. But for someone on an obviously restricted budget, it's simply silly to argue that you're saving money. In fact, it's a lie.

    If you want to argue that the PC is so infuriatingly poor that you simply can't use it during those first two years.... there is nothing I can say and you are entitled to that opinion.

    But you wanted to make some sort of kooky economic argument.....

    epic fail. :-)

    Of course, this all falls apart if you're the type who will spend your spare cash on lotto tickets rather than putting it in an interest bearing account as I've assumed above....

    Which is also entirely possible.

    Hey, anything is possible!

    o.0
    (_)

    1. Re:Time value of money and exponential improvement by Rinikusu · · Score: 2, Informative

      /* Your $2000 Macbook is worth about $340 since it's 5 years old (30% per year). */

      I'm trying not to nitpick, but just go peruse your craigslist mac listings and you'll find that your numbers are completely off the mark. Macs hold their value exceedingly well. Dual G4 1.x machines still regularly command a $500-$700 price in Los Angeles, not to mention other markets. It is a sad fact. If you're going to go mac, you can do exactly what you're advocating with your PCs: Buy new, then every 2 years, sell before Applecare runs out for 80-90% of what you paid, buy another new (better) one. You really can't do that with PCs because the resale value is complete shit for most vendor machines, but you can generally get better prices if you part out your homebuilds as most homebuilders tend to use higher quality/priced items to begin with.

      --
      If you were me, you'd be good lookin'. - six string samurai
  41. Ah, I wouldn't know ;) by Moraelin · · Score: 4, Funny

    Ah, I wouldn't know. There's a certain advantage to talking to yourself. For a start, you have more common topics than with anyone else, although that's somewhat offset by the fact that you're not going to hear anything you didn't know already. It also takes all the fun out of telling jokes, lemme tell you.

    You're also almost guaranteed to have the same moods at the same time. When you're in a mood to go see a movie, for example, so are you. I mean it's not like you're in a mood to watch the game, while you would rather talk about moving the furniture instead. No need to nod absentmindedly and go "uh-huh". Which is just as well, because you'd know it anyway. And when you're depressed, you can always cry on your own shoulder. (Come to think of it, more of the people on the Internet should be encouraged to use their own shoulder for that;)

    And if you want to call yourself to dinner, but you're still at the last boss in a MMO raid... well, chances are you'll find a way to accomodate and understand yourself.

    You can also save yourself not just the phone bill, but also the internet bill. You can just use Notepad as IRC, IM and pretty much any other text chat medium rolled in one. And you know you can accept any files or attachments. Heck, even if you sent yourself a virus, you had it already anyway.

    Buying gifts for yourself is fun too. It takes all the guesswork out, and it's not like you'll buy yourself a tie you'll secretly hate but pretend to like so you don't offend yourself. Downside, it ruins the whole surprise big time. Plus side again, it'll probably be something both you and you can use, and you won't get into ownership disputes about it.

    Romance tends to not work too well, though.

    --
    A polar bear is a cartesian bear after a coordinate transform.
  42. Look, the fanboy persecution complex! by 0xdeadbeef · · Score: 3, Interesting

    No, you are submissive, dogmatic, and base much of your identity on a brand for consumer products. You are the shame of Mac users.

    Has anyone else noticed the similarity between Apple fanboys and Republican freepers?

    Think about it:

    Criticism of the (product or company | party or policy) is seen as personal attack.
    Criticism of the fearless leader is seen as a personal attack.
    Both groups consider themselves tiny voices of truth being attacked by a horde who constantly censors them.
    Both groups employ talking points which are repeated ad nauseam with little variation.

    Of course, the result of this mentally is that people enjoy baiting them.

  43. Move along nothing to see here... by DarthVain · · Score: 2, Funny

    "...though most people seem confused about what they're waiting for..."

    So idiots line up at an Apple store, what else is new? How is this News?

  44. Re:good computers by atriusofbricia · · Score: 2, Informative

    The thing you have forgotten is that a lot, not all, of New Yorkers suffer from NYC Syndrome.... it is an incurable disease which makes the patient believe that NYC == Manhattan == The Universe. Nothing exists outside it with the possible exception of LA. And that is doubted in the worse cases. All TV, and most movie, execs suffer from this terrible disease. This is why all TV shows/movies are set in either NYC or LA. Even when the story doesn't actually require it.

    --
    I was raised on the command line, bitch

    "Nemo me impune lacesset"