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The Worst Apple Products of All Time

An anonymous reader writes "While Apple is frequently referred to as a leader in consumer electronic product design, the history of the company is filled with examples of poor design and questionable product strategies. This list of Apple's worst ever products includes some interesting trivia, including Apple's overpriced eWorld Internet service, their painfully bad attempt at a 'value' computer (the Performa), the much-loathed 'hockey puck' mouse, and the Apple Pippin gaming platform. The article also includes the infamous Apple III, which overheated so badly that it prompted one of the strangest repair techniques ever: 'Users were advised to pick the computer up a few inches off the ground and then drop it, hopefully jostling the chips back into position.'"

9 of 469 comments (clear)

  1. not sure the eWorld diagnosis is quite right by Trepidity · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I don't think eWorld failed because of its now-ludicrous-sounding pricing model. At the time (early/mid-90s), it was the norm for online services to have monthly fees that gave only a few free hours per month, and then cost significant amounts per hour after that. In the early 90s, AOL gave 2 free hours for $7.95/month and $6/hour thereafter, and was wildly successful, so eWorld's $8.95/mo for 2 free hours and $5/hr day, $8/hr nights thereafter doesn't seem like it was so far out of line as to kill it.

  2. Re:The List by EdZ · · Score: 5, Insightful

    No Quicktime Player? It's a turd of a program on either OS, but the windows version definitely stand out as a major PITA.

  3. Re:how about all of them? by remmelt · · Score: 4, Insightful

    And still posting their biggest profit while the economy is crumbling around us.

    Seems like their marketing department is the best product they have... it's working fine indeed.

  4. Round of applause needed ... by OzPeter · · Score: 4, Insightful

    For the article itself not being a clickfest of 1 paragraph pages! I nominate it for best top 10 list article of 2010!!

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  5. Hasn't been out long enough yet by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 5, Insightful

    A product can only be bad if it doesn't sell. No matter how worthless the functionality is, if a product generates a lot of sales and thus a lot of profits, it is a success from a business point of view. The pet rock is a great example. No utility, whatsoever. It is just a rock with goggle eyes glued on it. However people loved the thing, tons were sold, lots of money was made. It was a success.

    So, the iPad's status will be determined later. If it sells tons, then it'll be a success, even if the people who buy it just end up using it as an expensive cup holder. If it has few sales, it'll most likely be a failure since it doesn't seem to have anything that will generate any advances over all.

    You have to remember that can also be a factor in success. Just because something doesn't make money doesn't mean it is a failure. An example would be the original Xbox. Overall, MS lost money on the venture. However it was a success. Why? Because it established them as a legit player in the console market, which is extremely difficult to break in to (many, many companies have tried and failed). Thus it was still a successful product in the long run.

    So we can't say about the iPad till much later. Personally, I suspect it'll be a failure. I suspect it won't make much, if any, money (remember there's a lot of R&D to pay off) and it'll provide nothing to Apple overall in the long run. However, we won't be able to say for a couple years at least.

  6. Re:The List by vlm · · Score: 5, Insightful

    No mention of the latest generation ipod shuffle? The one where they figured control buttons would "clutter up" the design, so instead you have to buy special, expensive apple earbuds/headphones that are all cluttered up with inline controls and only cost ten times the cost of normal headphones? So the shuffle plus a pair of "special" headphones costs more than a nano?

    I'd buy a shuffle in an instant, if it had volume up / volume down / play-pause buttons on the device.

    I know adapter cables are sold, and I guess I could duct tape / hot glue gun the adapter onto the shuffle, to make an almost usable "exercise ipod". But having to pay the "apple tax" and then whip out the duct tape and hot glue gun to make it usable is just going too far.

    Note I'm not an apple hater, I enjoy by nano for exercise listening and my ipod touch for PDA and video use, but the shuffle is just a design disaster.

    --
    "Science flies us to the moon. Religion flies us into buildings." - Victor Stenger
  7. Re:What, no iPad? by jo_ham · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "No wireless, less space than a Nomad. Lame"

    Yes, I really trust the slashdot elite to predict the success or failure of a product that *hasn't even been released yet*.

    Putting it on a "worst apple products of all time" list is just ludicrously premature and speculative.

  8. Re:What, no iPad? by jedidiah · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Nah. There are larger media players out there. They are even as much as $500 or more.

    They just aren't marketed as the second coming.

    It's not the device (so much). It's the mindless fanboy hype and lack of independent thought surrounding it.

    --
    A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
  9. Re:how about all of them? by david_thornley · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Okay, you don't like Apple products. That's cool.

    You don't understand why people like them. That shows a certain lack of empathy, but still no problem.

    You then attribute it to marketing, which apparently is some mysterious force you can neither understand nor control, and stupid consumers. At that point, you've essentially said that you don't have a clue how to be commercially successful, but resent those who are. That makes you a loser, dude. Either lose the bitter attitude or get a clue.

    Apple products are generally easy to use, often do certain things extremely well, and are physically attractive. Moreover, the components don't have to be ordered separately and put together by the user, which lots of people don't want to do.

    Apple's marketing department has pulled some real boners, but Steve Jobs' sense of style and feel for the market are vital to Apple.

    --
    "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes