@Cavey: To be fair, I didn't say it
here, so no need to apologise. (Really, no need to apologise, even if I had.) I agree that it's a fairly unprecedented cock-up as far as Apple goes—probably even worse than MobileMe, given the more widespread nature of maps usage.
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they're in danger of "losing the plot", i.e. sufficiently alienating sufficient numbers of their (largely hipster/fanboi) user base such that they start to drift elsewhere…?
Not really. Apple no longer has a 'largely hipster/fanboi' user base. Apple is now mainstream. I think it's used up a big chunk of brand currency, but this damage can easily enough be repaired. Now, should Apple screw up again like this a couple more times this coming year…
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Apple seemed to have the smart phone market sown up good and proper 2-3 years ago didn't they(?), yet now they're very much in the minority compared to (open architecture) Android stuff. Their tablets are riding high at present, but is it so far fetched to think that the same thing could happen here as well, 2-3 years down the line? I don't think so, personally.
Apple never had the smartphone market sewn up and Android was always likely to grab a big chunk of the market. It's important to note, though, that Android is a whole bunch of companies and a fragmented OS. Additionally, many people aren't really using their Android devices beyond SMS and phone calls, which makes them not terribly appealing for devs, and that cycles round to lots of people really not using them.
I suspect many pundits are still waiting for a repeat of the Windows/Mac thing to happen. I don't doubt Android will remain in the lead, but I suspect Apple will continue with iOS to have a larger share than middle single digits. As for tablets, that's a different market, and the iPad's holding its own there against everything else. Perhaps there will be a shift over the coming year, but it's a tougher market for companies to attack when they're not backed by a carrier willing to subsidise the hardware.
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Seriously, where is the true innovation in the iPhone 5 then? What can it do - at great expense - that a much cheaper Samsung Galaxy or similar can't? Where is the true innovation in their other stuff come to that?
Innovation doesn't have to be magic beans. The innovation in iOS at the start was effectively in doing something wildly different from the default position, by taking ideas that already existed and doing them properly. Since then, Apple's been on a path of iteration. The iPhone 5 doesn't need to glue on all kinds of crap, just to say LOOK WHAT WE DID FIRST! Instead, it's honing something that was already very good. As for costs, I'm not sure how much you save in terms of total cost of ownership with a Galaxy, so I can't comment on that. On tablets, there's nothing equivalent that's anywhere near as good and significantly cheaper.
In general, I guess you could probably get something broadly the same for less money, but that's the same everywhere. A guitar from Argos will enable you to strum through an amp, but wouldn't you rather have the quality and craftsmanship of a Strat?
GazChap wrote:
The Last Salmon Man wrote:
I never noticed this before, but when you pin some websites to the home screen, they have their own iOS logo in the icon rather than a miniature screenshot. Google Maps is one of these. It is now on my home screen.
Yeah, you can set an icon to do that in the HTML of the web page, so any website can do it. I think I did it for my site too!
Yeah, it's done by dropping apple-touch-icon.png in the root. When you save a bookmark to a home screen, the PNG will override the screen grab of the site.