Meengla
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I have been saying it since at least early 2007 that Apple's dominance in computing is a dangerous event. I have a boycott of Apple and its products.
If Apple had won the race against Microsoft then innovation would have been much slower and more expensive. Even now, my $249 Toshiba netbook running Windows 7 Starter edition is more productive, has better storage, has physical keyboard is light-weight than Apple's stupid and expensive iPAD of (minimum) $499.
Looks like more and more people are waking up to it. Boycott Apple and encourage others to do the same if you agree.
Big Brother Apple and the Death of the Program
If Apple had won the race against Microsoft then innovation would have been much slower and more expensive. Even now, my $249 Toshiba netbook running Windows 7 Starter edition is more productive, has better storage, has physical keyboard is light-weight than Apple's stupid and expensive iPAD of (minimum) $499.
Looks like more and more people are waking up to it. Boycott Apple and encourage others to do the same if you agree.
Big Brother Apple and the Death of the Program
The Future
Is this the kind of computer we want? A closed, completely controlled platform that hews to one company's vision of what we should be watching, downloading or doing? It is frighteningly easy to picture a Mac where all your apps have to be approved by Apple; all your music, movies and TV shows are streamed from iTunes; all your books come from iBooks. This will be totally fine for some people. But as the rest of us become increasingly comfortable molding our computing experience to our own needs, this strict environment starts to seem claustrophobiceven technologically totalitarian. It's still startling to think, even after the last few years of the App Store on the iPhone, that this is coming from the same company that made the 1984 ad over 25 years ago.