| Sign In/My Account | View Cart |
| Weblog: | When is Apple going to open up? | |
| Subject: | Preposterous Nonsense | |
| Date: | 2005-10-05 06:58:04 | |
| From: | decoder | |
| The good thing about this article is that it prompted a response that showed the community around here is capable of intelligently rejecting/correcting the editorial equivalent of an encomium for the Easter Bunny. The fact that someone like Giles could so easily be appeased by a few empty gestures is sad, but also, it makes me wonder what's next from this outlet. Perhaps O'Reilly should hire some of their readers as editors to prevent further embarassment. | ||
Showing messages 1 through 2 of 2.
Preposterous Nonsense| Showing messages 1 through 2 of 2. |
I'm not 'appeased'; it's not like I'm rushing out to buy a Dell machine based solely on the posts I've read on a few weblogs.
My point was intended to be about communication, and the willingness (or otherwise) of large corporations to communicate openly with customers and users.
I simply don't accept the argument (made elsewhere in the comments here) that MS's apparent openness is a result of it being so behind the competition, *and that by logical consequence*, Apple has no need to open up at all. It just doesn't follow. Why can't a market leader allow just a little insight into its internal activities? Being market-leading web services hasn't stopped Google and Yahoo opening up with official and not-so-official communications channels.
From my point of view, the good thing about this article was the fantastic response it triggered from readers, almost all of whom had a valid criticism or useful additional insight to add.