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Journalists Cover Microsoft, Using Macs

It’s not an easy time for Microsoft — with Steve Ballmer having to field questions about being “buffoons” and an “evil empire”  at the shareholder’s meeting (.doc) — so when they get together “the world’s most influential technology pundits and online writers” (nb: we weren’t invited) for Mobius to discuss super-secret mobile tech you’d think [...]

Guide To Black Friday Apple Bargains: Cheap MacBooks, iPods and Accessories Galore

Here’s a guide for finding the best bargains on Apple-related gear during the infamous Black Friday sales on November 27. We’ve compiled a comprehensive list of gear from leaked photos of sales flyers and descriptions of sales.
The bargains include a 2.26 GHz MacBook + $150 gift card at Best Buy for $999.99 ; a 32GB [...]

Review: Voices Is Today’s Best Thing Ever, Grab It Now While It’s Cheap

New on the App Store is Voices from the clever folk at Tap Tap Tap. You can guess what it does.

Open it up, pick a silly voice. Helium is pretty silly. A microphone appears and the app even clears your throat for you (try it, you’ll see what I mean). Now speak your brains, and [...]

Review: Sony Walkman S540 Series Video MP3 Player

Press releases, you will hardly be surprised to hear, are rarely very interesting. But one arrived in my inbox a couple of weeks ago that made me double-take.
“Sony’s S Series Walkman,” it chattered, “is a serious challenger to the iPod Nano.” Gosh, really? Perhaps the Cult had better have a look at one, then, despite [...]

Mozilla COO Calls Jobs on Predatory Safari Plans

Safariconquersall

No matter what one thinks of Safari for Windows (which has already been patched three days after launch and still can’t render A LOT of sites), it’s nice to see Apple attacking Microsoft’s browser hegemony on its own turf.

Right?

Unfortunately, not really. As John Lilly, COO of Mozilla, points out, when Steve showed off a pie chart depicting his vision of Apple’s Windows browser marketshare, he didn’t depict MS losing any share at all. Instead, the image just eats up all the alternatives, including the still-rising Firefox. And while I have my problems with Firefox (it strikes me as a program only a software engineer could love), I only want to see Apple bite into Internet Explorer’s customers, not the folks who have already sought out an alternative.

The computer world is not the American political scene, and there is room for way more than two players. And so it should be. The more browsers we have, the fewer “browser-specific” features develop and the more readily standards get adopted across platforms. We all stand to benefit from a diverse, competitive markets. A shame that Apple reveals they have no interest in the same.
John’s Blog » Blog Archive » A Picture’s Worth 100M Users???

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About the author

Petemortensen

Pete Mortensen is the communications lead for growth strategy firm Jump Associates and the co-author of Wired to Care: How Companies Prosper When They Create Widespread Empathy, a book and blog that are significantly more interesting than you might initially think. Pete's particular Apple avocations are both around design--interface and industrial. Follow him on Twitter!

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4 comments

    “We all stand to benefit from a diverse, competitive markets. A shame that Apple reveals they have no interest in the same.”

    And how do you know that Jobs’ pie chart doesn’t reflect actual research about how the market is likely to develop? Is it Apple’s job to be a cheerleader for Firefox?

    Not explained in the announcement, but Apple has been targeting the IT Data Center market but unable to significantly break the MS strong hold. Too many businesses think they must use MS tools, MS servers and PC hardware because of the perception surrounding browser pie charts. Once browsers are standards compliant (as in everyone except IE) then apple can start selling hardware for the IT professionals. Giving away browsers is just a tool.

    I wouldn’t read too much into it.

    Speaking as a Mac user who lived through the mid- to late-1990s, when every complaint I had about a web site that wouldn’t render correctly on my Netscape browser was met with, “Buy a Windows machine and run Internet Explorer!”, I welcome Apple’s move. I’m still a Mac user, and while I use Safari most of the time, there are many things I like about Firefox, too; I definitely use both. If Apple wants to provide a browser for Windows users, I don’t think that it’s being done to cannibalize Mozilla’s share, despite Jobs’s slide.

    When I heard the announcement, my thought was that if Firefox has 15% of the market and is continuing to grow, and if Apple could get up to 15-20% as well, then that’s a significant portion of people browsing the web who will demand compatibility and interoperability, and developers won’t be able to get by with proprietary MS code that doesn’t work with other browsers or OSes.

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