so this is something that I find interesting.
every tech company was plagued with issues at one point or another, apple had their fair share and so did any other company. the thing is - when a flaw is found on apple products people blow it to huge dimensions. apple customers (me included) expect perfection, we expect a flawless product right out of the box, but when we don’t get it we judge apple quite harshly.this is some thing iv’e never noticed with any other tech company. why?
I think this comes down to marketing and reputation.
as an example, let’s compare Apples reputation with Google and Samsung - the companies making the leading android flagships in the iPhone pro line price range:
Google is known as software company, people see their pixel line as the only way to get the vanilla android experience without bloatware - as such, they don’t expect the pixel line to be in the forefront of hardware innovation - and indeed their tensor chips are extremely underwhelming. people buy pixel phones for vanilla android and have no other expectations.
Samsung always had a reputation for half-assing new technologies and rushing them in order to be the first with a product utilizing the new technologies in the market. this is evident back in the days of the galaxy s4 which had face unlock years before apple launched Face ID, and in some parts of the world used their own exynos chip which was the first octa core chip utilizing ARM’s big.little in a smartphone - problem was that the face unlock didn’t work more than 50% of the time, and the exynos chip had a design issue that allowed either the 4 performance cores to be active or the 4 efficiency cores, which resulted in the galaxy s4 running slower and hotter than the iPhone 4 with a dual core chip. this tradition continues over the years with the galaxy watch, curved displays, and foldable phones. as a result, while on paper the galaxy phones are technological marvels, this doesn’t translate well to real world use as they are full of gimmicks and bloatware and become sluggish after very little time.
now we get to Apple. apple always had the reputation of a high quality brand. they would be behind the competition in terms of features, then roll out a feature that would not work seamlessly and perfectly for the end user.
but not only that - unlike other tech bands, Apple also brands their products as a fashion statement and a status symbol. comparing an iPhone to to any other flagship phone is like comparing a Swatch to a Rolex, sure, both are watches and both tell the time, but a Rolex is made from premium materials, with utmost precision and regard to little details.
the way Apple markets their own brand causes their customer base to expect perfection from them.
obviously this affects how mistakes made by apple are blown out of proportion and remembered for years at a time while Samsung’s exploding battery fiasco has fizzled out and is largely forgotten by now.
but this also comes into play in what we expect when we buy an apple product:
- when people complain about cosmetic imperfections in their apple products the comments are encouraging them to replace it. since this is unacceptable for an expensive apple device to be imperfect, while for other manufacturers, the comments ae mostly “it’s a tool, use it and stop worrying”
- people are willing ro engage in endless replacement loops hoping to find their perfect unicorn device that has not even the smallest scratch, nick, dent, scuff, display unevenness or any other imperfection.
- even I, when I buy an apple product I inspect it the same way I would an expensive watch or piece of jewelry, and I always find some kind of blemish. I only recently learned to lower my standards as I come to realize that the perfect unicorn device does not exist and trying to endlessly replace devices will only waste my time and not bring me closer to getting said perfect unicorn device.
I think this could be solved in 2 ways:
- lowering expectations - change the marketing strategy so that the brand is no longer synonymous with premium quality, and lower prices. but this would of course hurt Apple’s brand image which differentiate them from other tech companies
- raise standards - implement stricter QC protocols, send Apple’s own QC engineers to oversee the process in factories, make warranty more flexible, maybe release devices that allow for certain cosmetic issues to be fixed on the spot, similar to how a watchmaker can polish watches. this would obviously cost a lot of money, and i’m not sure it is even possible at the large rates most apple products are manufactured at.
what do you think? is that even a problem? if so, how should it be addressed?
You pay more.
TLDR but Apple is more expensive and marketed as premium. There you go.
Plus Apple has the wealth and resources of entire countries.
Yes, if I get an Apple product that has a minor blemish, or when Apple screws up, I expect better from them. Because they are the most powerful tech company on Earth.
this is a huge part of it. I allow myself to be more critical of apple, and to expect products to not have even the smallest of blemishes because I know they have the means to do better even at their current manufacturing rate and still make a hefty profit
happy cake day!
This guy
I think people under estimate how big an influence the media have one our lives and opinions. If they can beat up more controversy about particular entities they can keep milking views.
I would say it’s because they set themselves there to stand out, and now consumers hold them to it
“Apple tax”
Or as we called in in Apple retail: ‘sucker surcharge’
Holding to higher standards? Apple gets so many passes even with how slow they roll out new technologies. It’s ridiculous. I think other companies had to compete so much harder to latest and greatest hardware where Apple can essentially release almost same phone year after year and people would still buy. I don’t see any high standards in that.
You want to charge high prices, make sure your product quality lives up to its price tag
People expect more when they pay a price premium. It’s really not that complicated.
Not sure what problem you are trying to solve. Apple knows it is impossible to 100% eliminate products with manufacturing defects, so they sell their products at a high enough margin to compensate for the cost of any replacement/refund request from dissatisfied customers. As a customer who understands this, I naturally keep my expectations high, and demand Apple ship me flawless products. What’s the issue here?
If what you are actually trying to ask is how to stop being OCD about Apple products, that’s an entirely different topic.
It’s because they are more expensive. But people now a days are willing to spend more on something that is reliable, integrates easily with their current devices, and will have a long life span.
Windows computer manufacturers did it themselves when they tried to maximize profits by pushing fastest performance cpu into shitty plastic bodies with little regard for thermal regulation, longevity of device, or ecosystem structuring.
Intel just shamelessly pushing desktop CPUs into laptops with 200 watt power consumption nowadays lol
That’s why we have AMD Ryzen.
Intel just shamelessly pushing desktop CPUs into laptops with 200 watt power consumption nowadays lol
Being really blunt here, Intel is not the one putting 200 watt power CPU’s inside of laptops. There’s lot to criticism Intel for, but OEM design choices are not one of them.
I mean, Intel made those CPU versions available in the first place.
And?
Is someone holding a gun to an OEM’s head forcing them to integrate it? Are there truly no products for which their highest TDP processors are not feasible or the correct choice to use? Are OEM’s clueless for recognizing the portion of the market who are willing to purchase machines with those chips?
The answer to all those questions is no, and I would really rather the market offer options if someone has use for them than discard them because most don’t. Heck, there’s a non-zero portion of the market that would love it if Apple had a M2 Ultra Macbook as an optiopn
Apple is the biggest (highest market cap) company in the world. Heavy is the head that wears the crown.
They did this to themselves
The reason I love Apple, since giving up on my Windows XP box, and switching to Mac Mini way back when- 1- no crapware, like “try AOL for free” plugging up my system 2-it just worked out of the box, no difficult settings to install games that usually didn’t work anyway. Re:DOS 3-I trust Apple to battle the government on keeping my system private. Fuck back doors. 4-elegant. Simple. No learning curve from my iMac to iPhone, iPad.
But the Mac does have Back Doors telling Apple what you’re up to:
https://sneak.berlin/20201112/your-computer-isnt-yours/
https://www.gnu.org/proprietary/proprietary-surveillance.html#SpywareInMacOS
I do agree on the “no crapware”, elegant, simple, integration, and literally everything else. But Apple does have Backdoors, just not to the government.
Interesting, thanks. The website articles are all 2-3 years old. I wonder if there is up to date info. Software holes, or intentional spying?
- Apple is more expensive, and a premium product. It comes with premium expectations
- Apple promotes their products as perfect
- Apple doesn’t have other products if one is bad. They sell 2 laptops, so if there’s a problem with the keyboard it effects 1/2 their product line
Apple promotes their products as perfect
Sorry, where? I literally have never seen this ever.
A while ago now, but their slogan literally used to be “It just works”
While they’re never going to outright call their products perfect, the implication is clear.
It just works implies reliability. Perfection goes beyond that: no physical blemishes, no design flaw, etc.
Yeah Apple prices everything - literally everything 3-5x more than everyone else. For example their developer license costs $99 compared to $25 for Google’s developer license. They also take a fat cut from developer in app sales.
They should be held to a higher standard IMO. 100% agree.
actually - regarding developer license pricing and the the cut they take from app sales revenue - I find that fair, because unlike Google, Apple:
- has actual humans go over and verify every app submission to the App Store- their job costs money
- has way more polished developer tools, Xcode is unmatched and swift is such a dream to use that schools use swift playgrounds to teach programming to children. and let’s not even talk about the fact that they made swift open source.
- has no fragmentation, which allows it’s API’s to take full advantage of both hardware and software.
also, their app store and billing and subscription management tools are all managed by Apple so app developers have much much less work compared to android developers on that aspect as well. the way I see it small developers actually gain from that - if they had to take care of all the billing and subscription aspects they would have paid much more than the cut apple takes now. larger developers (Epic, Spotify, Netflix) have the means to handle billing and subscriptions in house without the need to outsource it, so they try to bypass Apple’s billing service by pretending to be the underdog, and hoping that no one will notice they are also large tech companies with a nice profit margin.
Point 4. They do everything in their power to prevent people from being able to fix their apple products instead of buying a new one, when they are out of warranty.
repairability is a huge point in luxury products. the fact that it very easy to get a luxury watch or a luxury car serviced is a part of it.
watches for example are marked as heirlooms to be passed down across the generations, and as one it is meant to stay in good condition for a long time. Rolls Royce takes pride in the fact that 65% of all cars they ever made are still on the road. for a product to withstand such a lengthy amount of time it must be easily serviceable.
the problem with tech products is that they get outdated after a (relatively) short amount of time, so servicing them for a long time becomes unprofitable.
the situation with other manufacturers is much worse, I had a comparatively amazing experience with apple
the problem with tech products is that they get outdated after a (relatively) short amount of time, so servicing them for a long time becomes unprofitable.
Apple not servicing the products isn’t the problem, it’s that Apple doesn’t want you to be able to service your product via a 3rd party either. Because they want you to buy a new device from them instead of getting it repaired.
I mean look, for people that aren’t power users who need to stay on the cutting edge, which is frankly most people. There is zero reason in this day and age a laptop can’t last you 5-10 years. Every youtube video you watch that shows how much better a new apple laptop is vs an old one or shit even in the PC space, they are running synthetic benchmarks. Running demanding video editting tools, 3D rendering tools.
Why don’t focus on is just surfing the internet or running basic productivity applications? Because the experience will be largely indiscernible. Maybe your browser will open, applications will load slightly faster, but hardly a thousands of dollars of value faster. Thats a lot more underwhelming than exporting a long 4k video in 3 minutes instead of the 15 minutes it took on the previous model.
My last desktop I built in 2013. I ran that PC until 2020 when I built a new one, which I finally did because the processor was no longer up to snuff for gaming. I still use that PC as a media center for my home theater and it functions perfectly fine in that role. The processing power and memory is still more than adequate after 10 years now. There is no point, I get the latest OS and software updates, the experience of doing what I do with that machine is largely indiscernible from my current main PC. There is zero value in me getting a new PC for that job.
I have had some issues with that PC and I fixed them…myself. If that was an apple product, depending on what went wrong I may have just been boned and needed to get a new machine, because Apple does things like push software updates that brick your machine if it has 3rd party parts in it (like they did to people that got broken screens fixed on their iphone by a 3rd party and had a 3rd party home button installed). How dare you inexpensively fix your iphone instead of buying a new one.
I will address your concerns in regard to both mobile and computer repairability:
repairability of mobiles - this is a universal problem - mobile phones have to be so portable that when you don’t use them you don’t even notice they’re here - that means that you have to pack as many components as possible in the least amount of space possible - that means that a lot of times components will be not only glued soldered together, but will actually be part of the same integrate circuit, to save space. this is universal - most phones receive a score of 4, only a few receive a higher than that, and they are mostly niche devices where this is the part of their premise. the reason iPhones do not receive a repairability score of 7 is because of the software lockdown, where apple limits the functionality of non-verified parts. I actually believe apple handles the software lockdown in a way that maintains a good balance between privacy and right to repair, where if a non-verified component is recognized, the user gets a notification and features related to that component that could have an impact on the users privacy are disabled.
repairability of computers - it’s true indeed that in the days of the intel “all-flash architecture” MacBooks repairability was abysmal because apple chose form over function - and you can see that best in the trash can Mac Pro where components that should have been upgradable we’re soldered to maintain the sleek and compact form factor. since then apple listened to it’s customers and today the situation is very different.
a lot of the reparability issues of the Mac lineup stems from the use of apple silicon - the apple silicon has what they call a unified memory architecture which basically demands that the RAM will be a part of the SOC’s integrated circuit, that’s true for even the Mac Pro which is extremely modular. the storage indeed soldered on the motherboard for laptops and Mac mini in order to save space, but for the Mac Studio and Mac Pro the storage is removable. other than that - overall all the Mac lineup is quite modular and easy to repair hardware wise but the software lockdown issue exists here as well.
overall, even if the move towards repairability was forced on apple by legislator, I still think it’s a move I the right direction and will allow for cheaper and quicker repairs as apple moves towards in-store repairs instead of replacements and allows 3rd parties and personal users to order genuine parts and repair manuals.
Apple promotes their products as perfect
Apple fans as well. (Well, not necessarily “perfect” but definitely “better” than the competition. We’ve seen many cases where feature X was derided on competitors’ products, but subsequently praised when Apple added it to their product line.)
Apple doesn’t have other products if one is bad. They sell 2 laptops, so if there’s a problem with the keyboard it effects 1/2 their product line
This point is underrated.
If Apple sold appropriately updated versions of the 2012 Mac Pro and 2015 MacBook Pro alongside the 2013–2019 cylinder Mac Pro and 2016–2021 MacBook Pro with Touch Bar, then the latter two products would have gotten much less criticism.
I’m old enough to remember Samsung having exploding phones , imagine if that had been Apple
Pretty much the same thing did happen to Apple but with MacBooks, there’s actually a few 2015-ish models that are banned on planes.
https://www.techradar.com/news/macbook-pro-flight-ban-everything-you-need-to-know
op be like… let me elaborate a point word in 1000 words paragraph
Because they hold themselves to a higher standard
- From my experience, there’s a pretty active hate brigade against apple and in media in general. Some from people who think there’s two sides of a platform war to be won. I’ve never understood why there is so much tribalism in absolutely everything. 2. Some of it comes from what gets clicks and upvotes. Nobody is going to click on an article saying “Everything is fine with the latest iPhone or MacBook”. But they will click on “Check out this thing I hate about the iPhone 15” for some reason.