How Sun Bought Apple Computer (Almost)
Hugh Pickens writes "There was a time in the 1990s when Sun, at its wealthiest, was poised to buy Apple when it was at the lowest point in its storied history and now eWeek reports on how the deal for Sun to buy Apple fell through. 'Back in late 1995 early '96, when we were at our peak, we were literally hours away from buying Apple for about $5 to $6 a share,' says former Sun CEO Ed Zander. 'I don't know what we were going to do with it, but we were going to buy it.' Sun co-founder Scott McNealy adds that there was an investment banker on the Apple side who basically blocked it. 'He put so many terms into the deal that we couldn't afford to go do it.' Would there be iPhones, iPads and iPods on the market today if Sun Microsystems had been able to close a deal to buy out Apple in the mid-1990s? No, says McNealy. 'If we had bought Apple, there wouldn't have been iPods or iPads ... I'd have screwed that up.'"
The world does NOT revolve around the Sun!
Well at least he's being honest about it.
Chas - The one, the only.
THANK GOD!!!
It could have resulted in Apple retaining unique hardware, rather than moving to Intel CPUs. Of course, whether that would be for the better or the worse is an open question.
Damn_registrars has no butt-hole. Damn_registrars has no use for a butt-hole.
we'd have Javapods & Javapads instead
In other news, a few years ago, Microsoft was poised to buy Yahoo!'s search engine but didn't. Would there be Yahoo! Search, Yahoo! Bing, and Yahoo! Mail if Microsoft had been able to close a deal to buy out Yahoo! in the mid-2000s? No, says Balmer. "If we had bought Yahoo!, there wouldn't have been Yahoo! Search or Yahoo! Bing ... I'd have screwed that up."
We'll have more on that story and other past attempted company takeover news at '11.
Because of course without Jobs and Apple the world would be utterly bereft of "innovation".
Warning: this article may contain humor, sarcasm, parody, and perhaps even irony. Read at your own risk.
Apples do need Sun to grow.
I think Apple needed Sun in order to properly grow as a company.
Now I know how Stauffenberg must have felt.
And nothing of value would have been lost. Perhaps, even, actual useful computing devices would have been developed, instead of shiny geegaws. Perhaps the Apple of Woz would have won out over the Apple of Jobs.
Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
You cannot wash away blood with blood
I'm not sure I follow your logic, but
ooh look, something shiny
I'd have screwed that up.
2 Points awarded for being honest and being right....
CU, Martin
Happened at least three times
The Admin and the Engineer
While interesting and fun Apple products are frequently overhyped and under perform. I perfer my gen II Ipod to the much fancier ipod touch I received as a gift. Why? becuase the iPod Gen II actually does it's primary job very well (playing music) the Ipod touch is just a toy. The same can be said of the iphone - it is a crappy phone and an ok PDA. Nearly any blackberry device is a more fuctional phone and PDA (esp using a corp groupwise server). Most Apple true believers are simply people who hate MS and Intel and are making a politcal point as opposed to a logical shopping decision. The prime exsample of how poorrly most apple products function is iTunes - the single most bloated, resource hogging application on the planet. iTunes crashes any computer it is put on and is roundly cursed - but it "looks good" so apple is happy with it. Style over substance with an outragous price tag = Apple.
I recall a rumor that Sun Microsystems was once interested in purchasing Commodore. Sun was supposedly interested in the home and entry workstation marketplace, and wanted the Amiga line for themselves. I wonder if there was any truth to it.
Just imagine a SPARC based Amiga. That would have been interesting.
Apple expertise combined with Sun's might have resulted in a new, easier-to-use class of workstations. Ease of use promotes productivity among users at all skill levels. Good hardware engineers, for example, are generally interested in design of good hardware, not screwing around with command-line UNIX. Bad designers, of course, love to do everything except design.
Steve Jobs would have still been around to develop new consumer markets for another company.
Or perhaps the acquisition would have been disaster all around. We'll never know, of course, unless Apple unveils a programmable wayback machine next month.
It was in the 90's that Sun lost all it's intellectual capital and replaced it with marketing fucks, who cheapened the hardware and sent the company to it's doom, flatlining it's stock prices. It was in the last 10 years that Apple's stock went from around $7 to around $350. I think you are not exactly seeing clearly. If you are annoyed, that is your emotion, and you are responsible for it.
Sun obviously regarded Apple as a value play, and as the business client for client/server computing, in competition with Microsoft and IBM. They would've moved Mac to SPARC, ported Solaris and tried to meld Mac Finder with OpenLook, trying to bridge the consumer and business markets but satisfying neither. Since they've always a B-to-B company, not B-to-C, there would've been endless dithering, bureaucratic fuckups, and diva-like incidents involving Apple staff. They would've spun off or sold the carcass for pennies on the dollar shortly after the dotcom boom ended and Sun's core server business hit the skids.
Then maybe Larry Ellison would've ruled Apple....
I love the trolls' complete and total lack of objectivity. Hundreds of millions of iDevices sold, arguably the first economically successful tablet, a company that could turn on a dime and recreate their hardware jumping from PPC to Intel, and OS 9 to OS X in a seamless fashion, and gain enough financial success to ecplipse Microsoft...and yet 'nothing of value is lost'.
Here's a hint for the younguns: There's room for more than one successful company in the world, and one being successful doesn't mean no others will be. If you don't like 'em, don't buy 'em...but to ignore their success is foolhardy. It's what makes people like Nokia lose their position in the economy.
"Draco dormiens nunquam titillandus."
Sun execs came through our building for a walk through, and they were wearing ties! We were terrified the deal might go through.
Luckily there's GNUstep, however it could be where GNOME/KDE are now. If SUN would have released the Lighthouse Applications: http://www.noodlesoft.com/blog/2007/01/23/the-sun-also-sets/ http://talblog.info/archives/2007/01/sundown.html http://livecd.gnustep.org/ Scott McNealy unfortunately failed to find theses sources... saying he can't find it. I hope Java dies soon. And Sony SNAP gets born... but I doubt, it's SONY.
Windoze not found: (C)heer, (P)arty or (D)ance
Apple stuff isn't just "shiny". Apple wins customers by "shiny", but retains them by "just works". And, bluntly, as much as I hate it as much as the next geek, that's what the consumers want: Just working stuff.
Say what you want about Apple, but one thing they managed to do: Make stuff work. They streamlined everything, tucked everything remotely 'technical' away from the user, gives him only what he 'needs' and most people don't bother to ask for more.
I wouldn't want one, since I want to own my hardware and use it as I deem fit, not its maker. But apparently what the majority of users want is what Apple produces. Sad, but true.
We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
It could have resulted in Apple retaining unique hardware, rather than moving to Intel CPUs. Of course, whether that would be for the better or the worse is an open question.
Apple's move to PC hardware was key to its success. They basically doubled their market share after moving from PPC to x86. The consumer no longer had to choose Mac OS or Windows, they could have both(*). This made the decision to buy a Mac much easier for many.
(*) Yes there was emulation under PPC but it was far less practical, especially for games.
I doubt there would be iphones if this had happened. Sun seems to suffer from the lack of marketing skill and understanding of how average users operates and developing an environment that is suitable for them.
One of the reasons Sun has been doing so poorly as well, and why their business model is wrong and failing, is that the market for supercomputers and mainframes is shrinking. Businesses realise now that you can completely replace millions of dollars computer complexes of 30 years ago with a few $500 consumer PCs, that you dont need that high end expensive, premium hardware anymore. While computing power has increased, business activities have often stayed the same, the payroll, accounting, inventory control, mailing lists, accounts and transaction code takes the same amount of resources it did 30 years ago, but computers today are massively more powerful. With cloud computing, since the computers are far more poweful,fewer computers are needed, as well, in those data centers, to service the same load. All of this means a shrinking market for mainframes, fewer of them needed to do the same things and consumer computers having replaced a large part of that market.
Sun had made themselves dependant on a shrinking business computer market as businesses began to realise they no longer needed this very expernsive, premium top of the line hardware, so it had a shrinking market. They were totally ignorant of how to market or develop products for consumers. In many ways, Sun is similar to Linux, it is completely inept to understand why Microsoft is dominate and what needs to be done to make consumer friendly devices (hint: It is not really GUI design that is the primary reason, it is hardware support: it is engaging hardware vendors and making it so the OS has a stable binary interface for hardware drivers and excellent documentation and SDKs that makes it easy for hardware vendors to support the OS). That Linux does not understand this is one reason it is not widely adopted, in addition to many of its developers being downright arrogant, assuming that people should rearrange their lives around the OS, rather than the OS suit their needs, learn cryptic commands, or write their won device driver to use a piece of hardware. Obviously had Apple had made its main user front end anything like how linux hackers think it should be and requried users to write device drivers it would have been a miserable failure. With Sun it was likely the same problems that Linux has that would have precluded any sort of development of a consumer device.
Interestingly, one of the areas where the demand for computing power at the application level has been increasing is desktop consumer computers! This is due to 3D gaming and other entertainment activity that is still today stressing current CPUs and is gauranteed to consume all of the computing power of the top of the line cutting edge CPUs for some time to come. There is still a massive amount of room for growth in virtual reality gaming resource usage that it is gauranteed to be able to utilise all of the resources of the fastest CPUs yet to come. While daily business operation computing remains more static in resource use, gaming, 3D, virtual reality in consumer computers is where real growth in computer power consumption has been occuring for some time.
Have the same thoughts as Zander.
Back in 1998 (I think) the company I work for was recommended/poised to buy this little company that was making 6 meg virtual environments called Vmware.
Coolest shit I had ever seen up to that point, blew away Qview. Had we bought it, I have no doubt we would have screwed it up and set the whole world back by 5 years.
Not to say anything negative about the company I work for, just that I doubt they would have had the dedicated vision and creativity to develop them into the company they are today.
I Chuckle every time I see how much my company now pays them.
Funny little world we live in.
Yo Grark
Canadian Bred with American Buttering
True re Sun by the late '90s - concision led to imprecision, sorry.
As to Apple's stock price, I couldn't give two hoots. That's determined by the demand of shares on the secondary market, in turn determined by nothing much since they don't pay dividends. In particular, it's not determined by whether they're producing high quality products to help people produce. They are not.
MP3 players predated the iPod, and someone else, probably Sony, would have owned that market. The iPod wasn't the innovation. The iTunes store was the innovation. Jobs' contribution was making micropayments work.
Tablet computers had been tried many times before Apple. The hardware, and the wireless networking, weren't ready. Nor was the entertainment market. Early tablets were intended as general-purpose computers. Modern tablets are output-mostly devices, for which a touch screen is good enough.
Who was Apple's investment banker who effectively killed the deal? That's who I'd want to hire as my own banker if I ever had to sell my company or buy another one.
It just works at being shiny, i.e. at providing minimal features for a lazy consumer to entertain himself with. Neither the iPhone nor the iPad provide anything new which makes them realistic tools for productive work. Put another way, I've not found any work application where the iPhone or iPad is in some way the best choice.
At the time in the mid 90s, SGI was still something of a leader in high end visualization, graphics, animation, 3D. Apple was a leader in easy-to-use GUI and pretty much the only game in town for 2D graphics and publishing.
I always saw it as a good fit, with SGI providing the datacenter/high end technology Apple lacked while Apple could provide SGI with the end-user interface they lacked and the desktop-type end users.
The OS merger would have been OS X before OS X -- IRIX back end with the Mac OS GUI.
ANYONE could have produced the iPod but NOBODY did. MS failed, Sony failed, Philips failed, Samsung failed, Sharp failed. EVERYONE failed. Apple with the iPod took an extremely fragmented industry and took the vast majority of the market share because they simply saw a market and ordered a million units so they got discounts nobody else could get and had high capacity for a reasonable price.
Sony was far to busy worrying about its music sales to pick up the billions in sales for a quality MP3 player they certainly could have made based on their Walkman brand name alone.
Same with the iPhone and the iPad. Everyone else tried, Apple achieved. Don't discount their achievement if you ever want to understand how to be half as successful as them.
You claim that the iPad came at the right time doesn't explain why almost a year later NOBODY else has come out with a competitor. Why not? If the time is now finally right surely it must be right for everyone else as well?
But nobody else got the balls of Jobs, to simply order a huge amount of iPads so you can get the quality hardware needed at a low price and be confident it will simply sell. THAT is why the Samsung Galaxy Tab is so small, they didn't have the balls to order large screens in volume DESPITE making those screens themselves.
MMO Quests are like orgasms:
You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.
could have been called Snapple.
CDE open sourced! https://sourceforge.net/projects/cdesktopenv/
You must be new here. Welcome to Slashdot, the internet's center for pedantry.
Internet is a proper noun.
(See what I did there?)
Even for /. this title is a stretch considering it really should read:
How Sun Almost Bought Apple Computer
Same words, less characters, not misleading, factually correct, makes sense in the context of the summary, and doesn't insult the intelligence of all /. readers just to garner eyeballs.
The Newton was failing to do what the iPhone and iPad later accomplished. If Apple had been sold, would they have continued to invest in a concept that had already disappointed Apple? I think McNealy is right - Sun was focused on Java and building the best platforms to run Oracle databases. Slashdot always thinks it's only about the PCs & consumer devices - but that was not where Sun ever focused their energy. Apple's market would have been very strange territory for Sun.
""NeXT wasn't a "popular" computing company, it built high-end workstations and an object-oriented OS for the scientific and government markets, actually a lot like Sun. NeXT actually did pretty well at this"
Did pretty well? Not exactly. People loved the OS. The hardware, with that expensive-yet-trouble-prone combo optical drive... eh, not so much. Even if the hardware was beloved, there simply wasn't enough of a market in terms of total sales to support what NeXT was spending. They burned through cash at a mind-boggling rate. Jobs spent much of his fortune from Apple on NeXT, and didn't have much to show for it near the end. Eventually the company downsized radically, becoming essentially a small software tools shop, selling off their expensive-yet-stylish factory facilities. There have been entire chapters written about how Jobs was at his most obsessive over things like how the furniture looked at the factory during the period. NeXT, where Jobs was totally in charge of a company for the first time, was essentially a learning experience in how NOT to run a company for him. Considering what was invested and lost in it, NeXT was considered to mostly be a failure. This is why there was such a loud "WTF?" when the public found out just how much Apple paid for NeXT. Buying NeXT? Sure. Buying NeXT for $400 million? At the time it looked insane. People generally thought "Wow, Jobs sure conned them, didn't he?".You're right in that NeXT had an "exit strategy"; having Jobs talk (sucker?) a bigger company into buying them
I use OS X and love it, so you can argue that buying NeXT was great because it gave Apple a foundation for a post-Classic operating system, but let's be honest here. Apple wasn't buying NeXT or an operating system or software tools. In retrospect, Apple was buying Steve Jobs. And it was the best investment they ever made.
Life is hard, and the world is cruel
"If we had just grabbed the Intel Pentium chip and done a one-way and two-way pizza box with Solaris on it, Linux never would have happened. And we would have hit that whole next wave that was post-2000 and we would have had all the little startups.
McNealy forgets that Linux was a labor of love. If Solaris had shipped on commodity x86 hardware from Sun, that wouldn't have changed the game. The initial userbase behind Linux were the hackers who had been doing work on it in university and in their spare time. When it came for dot-coms to hit the web, everyone already knew Linux. Even if Sun hardware was cheap, no one knew Solaris.
Non impediti ratione cogitationus.
Actually, geeks with actual jobs as engineers and programmers love OS X. But carry on.
Who's to say that Sun wouldn't have come out with something functionally similar but less-Apple? That's not a bad thing: Sun technology has always been awesome and useful.
I feel assured by Sun's awesomeness at the time that, if they'd bought Apple, they'd have taken the Newton concept and turned it into something incredible and usable. Sun was/is great at hardware design, hardware utilization, and simplified user interfaces. The Palm hegemony of the time wasn't really so awesome that Sun couldn't have taken them on, I don't think.
~/ssh slashdot.org ssh: connect to host slashdot.org port 22: too many beers
Agreed. I always wonder about comments to the opposite effect on /.
A good example is the Supercomputing conference. I go every year, and while obviously the clusters on the floor have 0 Apple representation there are tons of Mac Pros and Minis driving visualization displays (or even iMacs acting as vis boxes) and, most importantly, the laptops people are using are roughly 30% Thinkpads, 30% Dell, 35% Apple, and 5% everything else (and I'm probably overstating Dell at the cost of Thinkpads and Apple machines).
"goodbye and hello, as always" ~Prince Corwin, from Zelazny's Amber series
Today we would have jPods and jPads and be surfing the web with HotJava. I guess an iMac25K would have been interesting to see. I wonder if they would have come in five colours?
Oh, and the number of iPhones is staggering
"goodbye and hello, as always" ~Prince Corwin, from Zelazny's Amber series
Apple is what was wrong about the last decade. They produced mass-marketed shiny for consumers.
Putting aside the decades-old "Apple makes products for morons" talking point, god forbid a company produce something consumers want.
Your type would probably be happy living on an isolated planet where everything is Linux-based and only runs on a command line, every function requires ten steps to perform, and all your MP3 players have tiny one-line LCDs and songs are navigated by repeatedly clicking on a d-pad.
Does it make you happy you're so strange?
Isn't it wonderful? that we, in today's age, have people actually proud of their own ignorance. Simply magnificent.
There's a vast difference between "being proud of one's own ignorance" and "understanding what one's needs are".
I have a MacBook Pro. I love it. I just want to get down to business, not masturbate with shell scripts and config files to boost my sense of self worth. That's not saying that I don't understand how a computer functions, far from it, but rather that I don't feel the need to incorporate needlessly complex things into my daily life.
But anyway, when the time comes to fuck around, I can open-up the terminal on here and access a certified UNIX environment...
Does it make you happy you're so strange?
Nope. Microsoft provides a reasonable balance for the average user. A good 90% of the computing world agree.
So what's you're saying is that a Mac makes a shiny Unix terminal, being a commoditised NeXT box. And that you're likely to find them on the laps of attendees at wankfests, but not doing the interesting work.
I agree.
You could credit NeXT for building a userfriendly Unix desktop with a poor man's Smalltalk, and say that this makes for a reasonable workstation.
But Apple isn't producing anything new and interesting for producers, is it? Really, I've tried to take an interest in Grand Central, in OpenCL, but it's just... nothing which hasn't been done better elsewhere. Apple just don't do research and they don't implement for researchers or other producers. Hell, it's a common complaint. When you contrast with MS or IBM's research output, it's fairly easy to see the difference in culture. Apple's had this perpetual thing of wanting to be cool, but it's never matured to saying, "I want to create something substantially new."
Have you ever used Microsoft Bob? The experience just reminds me of an Apple iDevice.
At one point, around 2004-2005, I thought it would have made lot of sense Apple to buy Sun.
That would have been extremely good thing from servers and Sun software sides, true winners would have been both companies owners, employees and customers. It's a shame Apple did not see the opportunity. Sun would have darn good servers they didnt (good for implementing those server farms for mobile stuff they now build) both using it themselves and providing it to customers like telcos etc. This Oracle deal is real sour, only winner is Larry and his investors.
True re Sun by the late '90s - concision led to imprecision, sorry.
As to Apple's stock price, I couldn't give two hoots. That's determined by the demand of shares on the secondary market, in turn determined by nothing much since they don't pay dividends. In particular, it's not determined by whether they're producing high quality products to help people produce. They are not.
Dividends are paid out to keep a stock from tanking. If you think MSFT is a good investment because it pays dividends then I have a bridge to sell you. Dividends cannot makeup for a stock like MSFT which has been either flat or in decline.
If you bought AAPL stock a year ago and sold it right now, you would earn $143.54 PER SHARE in profit (before trading fees) compare that with a $2.12 per share loss (before trading fees) for MSFT stock purchased a year ago and sold today. Offsetting that loss, you would have earned a measly 58 cents per share in dividends.
For a five year investment in AAPl, you would earn 276.70 PER SHARE in profit (before trading fees) compare that with an 8 cent loss per share of MSFT (before trading fees). Offsetting that loss, you would have earned $2.38 per share in dividend. That does not even keep up with inflation.
Jesus was a compassionate social conservative who called individuals to sin no more.
... thus giving Apple the *control*. Ironically, Oracle seems to be proving that what Apple has done on the consumer side (closed platform resulting in better end user experience), might also be possible in the enterprise by tight integration of enterprise software and hardware. So maybe Apple should have bought Sun at some point here recently and got a leg up in the enterprise as well.
...be sure to thank MS for keeping Apple around back then.
That's all very interesting, and I'm glad that you take 2 years of steep AAPL increase as indicative of the last 30 years, but it's not addressing my point: I stated that Apple produces consumer shiny, and does not innovate useful tools for producers. The counterargument was "Apple's share price has gone up". So what?
For a company which doesn't pay dividends, "share price has gone up" is not necessarily related to Apple's performance. And even if it were, it wouldn't necessarily be related to its ability to innovate useful tools for producers.
As with most mergers of companies with radically different culture, there would've been a massive exodus following the merger. If there was someone leading the exodus, they would've form a new company called Orang... no, that was taken at the time; (Orange Micro) maybe Pineapple, or something. Jobs would not have had his second coming, Woz would not have remained an Apple employee (to this date.) iPot.. iPod, iPorn... iPhone would not have been.
Jobs' has nothing on McNealy. Sun came up with TCP/IP? Sun open sourced it? Sun invented open source? Linux wouldn't have happened if they 1U'd Solaris on Pentiums?
WTF was McNealy smoking? He's got a completely warped understanding of his own company's history. If this is what he truly believes, then I'm starting to come around to those who have been saying that McNealy and co were just lucky - bystanders who happened to be at the right place at the right time and not really the pioneers they'd like to think they are.
So what's you're saying is that a Mac makes a shiny Unix terminal, being a commoditised NeXT box.
A shiny unix terminal on top of a nicer mobile OS than windows or linux often are, certainly easier to take it out of the box and get straight to getting work done. A shiny unix terminal on a nice laptop that lasts longer than any in its weight class on battery. A shiny unix terminal that gives people both unix underpinnings and better commercial support for day-to-day applications.
And that you're likely to find them on the laps of attendees at wankfests, but not doing the interesting work.
Supercomputing is an industry trade conference, not merely an expo. It's not much of a wankfest. We're not talking about CES here, a very large percentage of the people there are attending the technical program, not just window shopping on the floor (and even if you were just shopping, you're shopping for clusters, storage, and visualization equipment - not a show for the general public). There is a *very* high number of scientists and engineers present, and their laptops have a distinct bias towards Apple. The usage of Apple laptops is actually higher at booths than it is among attendees as well, I've found. For that matter apparently you also missed my comment about vis boxes.
I agree.
You could credit NeXT for building a userfriendly Unix desktop with a poor man's Smalltalk, and say that this makes for a reasonable workstation.
But Apple isn't producing anything new and interesting for producers, is it? Really, I've tried to take an interest in Grand Central, in OpenCL, but it's just... nothing which hasn't been done better elsewhere.
In scientific computing, which os what I was referencing above, these days chances are you're not using your local system for much of that anyway, it's why we have clusters. A reasonable workstation is what scientists and engineers need: for local testing though the machines are plenty powerful, and on Apple hardware with nvidia cards you have CUDA support. OpenCL will surpass CUDA I expect at some point though, since it's similar calls and more cross-platform.
Apple just don't do research and they don't implement for researchers or other producers. Hell, it's a common complaint. When you contrast with MS or IBM's research output, it's fairly easy to see the difference in culture. Apple's had this perpetual thing of wanting to be cool, but it's never matured to saying, "I want to create something substantially new."
Have you ever used Microsoft Bob? The experience just reminds me of an Apple iDevice.
That doesn't make their hardware and software crap, it means they're a consumer focused company. I wish they did more basic research because I wish I wish every company did, but they don't *have* to. They do contribute a great deal to open source, FWIW.
"goodbye and hello, as always" ~Prince Corwin, from Zelazny's Amber series
I wish I had mod points. Catchy metaphors aside, what you say is interestingly prophetic, and given the lack of moderation so far, it is difficult for many to view as a valid point.
All the managers here I work are no longer carrying around their laptops and power chords. They have ipads now.
But in general Apple doesn't make devices for work applications. Just look at it's business support options and how limited they are.
Unlike MicroSoft, Dell, HP, etc. it makes what consumers want, not what OEM and large business want.
And it's very good at figuring out what users want and then finding the technology to make it happen. It doesn't invent the technology, but it puts it to very innovative use.
And most people are indeed lazy, in the sense that they want to get things done and not worry about first having to read a manual. It's why RTFM is such a bad answer.
RogerWilco the Adventurous Janitor
I'm not sure what you mean by producers? programmers will just use existing tools from unix/linux for the most part.
What makes Apple nice is that it gives you most of the advantages of Linux, but a nicer GUI, very good hardware, and MS Office and some other stuff that doesn't exist on the free OS'ses.
Nowadays a lot of development needs to be mobile. Either conferences, having to go to customers, working while commuting, working from home, presentations at meetings, flexible workspaces, etc. Apple happens to make some of the nicest laptops in the world, and has a Unix OS, so you don't have to pay the MS tax, remove Windows and then hope you can get Linux working.
Where I work used to be largely a unix and linux shop, now it's all Apple, with Linux on the servers/clusters/supercomputers/embedded hardware. Except for accounting, HR and such, they use Windows. But with MS Office for Mac we can read their stuff and communicate.
But the R&D and operations departments are almost entirely Apple, with a few Dells and Lenovo's running Linux.
RogerWilco the Adventurous Janitor
Oh, just wait a minute there? Aren't we?
All the managers here I work are no longer carrying around their laptops and power chords. They have ipads now.
Can I ask what work managers do on their iPads? I have had periods of wandering around with a tablet, but that had a stylus and a detachable lightweight keyboard - even my 2003 Compaq TC1000 felt more usable than fat-fingering a tiny iPad.
And it's very good at figuring out what users want and then finding the technology to make it happen. It doesn't invent the technology, but it puts it to very innovative use.
Well, Apple's a fantastic integrator. No question there.
And, yes, most people are lazy. But most people learnt to read. If they can learn to read when they're young, they can learn to use a computer when they're young. People have been brought up on the Windows-style interface (the Mac-style interface not being that dissimilar), so they think it's natural - but it really isn't, and we've been through two decades of training up older people. Any worthwhile tool involves a small amount of learning. The solution is not to dumb things down so saving 5 minutes today means a lifetime of inefficiency, any more than the solution to the difficulty of learning to read and write is to pass information down by word of mouth.
If I want the best of a regular GUI with lots of commercial software and the flexibility and developer-friendliness of Unix - and I have for a good 12 years - I'll choose Windows and Linux with one in a VM. In the NT4 and brief W2K days, Linux was the more stable host. Since XP, XP has been the host - Windows takes good advantage of the hardware and I want the better graphical client experience.
I tried OS X for a couple years but it's just compromise after compromise: Mac Office doesn't quite render everything correctly and any neat Windows tool is likely to either not exist or have only a half-hearted Mac version; OS X isn't nearly as well supported for development as, say, Debian. And if I'm deploying to Linux I might as well develop on Linux.
Have you ever used Microsoft Bob? The experience just reminds me of an Apple iDevice.
Figures that you have used the former but probably not the latter.
Fandroids hate facts.
US must break big companies into smaller companies.
Govt must constitute a panel to rewrite US Constitution and Quran
That's the way, keep those blinkers on nice and tight. Does the word "delusional" mean anything to you?
Mate, get over the hate. Seriously, you're so blinded by your hate of Apple that you've closed your mind to what potentially millions of power users in need of a reliable, flexible Unix desktop operating system need. And it's making you look like a narrow minded idiot.
90% and rapidly declining.
That's all very interesting, and I'm glad that you take 2 years of steep AAPL increase as indicative of the last 30 years, but it's not addressing my point: I stated that Apple produces consumer shiny, and does not innovate useful tools for producers.
The problem is you're not really defining what "producer" means. What is your definition? The literal definition could mean movie producer, in which case Apple's done pretty well for them.
And, yes, most people are lazy. But most people learnt to read.
If you could not learn to read until you were were 30 or 40, I wonder what the literacy rate of the over-30 or over-40 crowd would be. My guess is not very high. Kids learn to read when they're developmentally suited for it.
...and why I love parenthetical asides that contradict the main title. PS I didn't really buy Sun)
No iPods - (slightly) lesser digital music penetration No iPhone - No app craziness, maybe no Android (I think Google bought Android just to compete with Apple). iTunes - Record labels largely sticking to physical media Of course, none of that multi-touch hype would have happened. MacOS - Windows would have been uglier, because MS tried to go the X way by beffing up Vista's eye candy.
Worse: Without the return of Jobs, I suspect there would have been no NeXT, I mean OS X, on Apple hardware.
Scenario 1: People like me who use OS X because it's UNIX would have gone to linux and linux would have finally really turned the corner. (Unlikely)
Scenario 2: With absolutely no competition Windows becomes even worse than it is today.
Scenario 3: With absolutely no competition, the federal antitrust laws finally get enforced, MS gets broken up, and there are several decent OSes to choose from on open hardware today.
A producer is someone who produces useful output. Contrast someone jacking about in a gaggle of hipsters or a seat-warming middle manager.
Movie producers are probably the only group of producers who have a serious reason for considering Apple, because Apple bought just-as-good-as-Avid(-well-almost) Final Cut. Oh, and bought and extinguished Skake, so it ended up having to play catch-up with itself on Motion. Embrace, extend, indeed.
or whatever the name would be based on who Jobs could convince to buy NeXT?
you know, assuming all sorts of variables
Like anyone can even know that
Do you really think that Jobs alone came up with this stuff? Jobs and Woz helped to create a company where creativity flourishes. Jobs served as a conduit. In all likelihood, Sun would have eventually brought Jobs back because I think that's what Jobs wanted all along. And the same products would have been produced regardless. The internal culture and ideas that it produces are not greatly affected by upper management. I think the Apple culture would be hard to destroy.
Nope. Microsoft provides a reasonable balance for the average user. A good 90% of the computing world agree.
So you're of the type that would be happy living on an isolated planet where everything is DOS-based and only runs on a crippled command line, every function requires fifteen steps to perform, and all your WMA players have tiny one-line LCDs and songs are navigated by repeatedly clicking on a d-pad.
Fandroids hate facts.
If Sun bought Apple, maybe Ed Zander wouldn't have taken over at Motorola and done damage that we still haven't recovered from...
but it really isn't, and we've been through two decades of training up older people.
No we haven't. There is very little training and very little focus on training. You see training at the low end, cashiers and hair dressers get training, but very little extensive training in offices.
Nowhere near 90% agree. Even the Microsoft commercials basically conceded that many of their users would take an Apple over their system if they weren't so price sensitive.
And the computing world is not just desktop / laptop systems it includes: servers, embedded, supercomputing, mainframes... where Windows is less of a player. And even on desktop its below 90% now.