Clone Wars Revisited (11/28/97)
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It's been a few months since Apple killed Mac OS licensing as we knew it, which, in computer techonology time, squarely plants the whole struggle in the realm of history instead of that of current events. Which is why the Times of London just published an article on why Apple had to pull the plug.
It's nothing you haven't read before, really, but it's a good summary of Apple's justifications: Apple wasn't charging enough for its licenses to cover the costs of development; license costs were significantly lower than those of Windows NT; if Apple had continued in the same vein it'd have gone out business in a year, and would have taken cloning with it, anyway. One interesting tidbit is that
Apple has learned one valuable lesson from all this, according to Jeff Martin, a senior director at Apple: "Its high-end customers are its most valuable customers." Hmm, that's all well and good, but does that mean Apple will bow out of the home and consumer markets? We hope not, because there's still a lot of homes without computers in them...
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SceneLink (222)
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And Now For A Word From Our Sponsors |
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| | The above scene was taken from the 11/28/97 episode: November 28, 1997: (Sorry—this was before we started writing intro text for each episode!)
Other scenes from that episode: 220: They ALL Think Different (11/28/97) The time-honored tradition of people ripping off Apple's innovations is reportedly no longer limited to its technological advances, according to Macintouch; the practice has apparently trickled down into the advertising sector, as well... 221: Spam Separatists (11/28/97) Thanksgiving has come and gone, but one thing we're not thankful for is the tenacity of spammers. According to Inter@ctive Week, two of the 'net's biggest spammers are tired of being booted off of service provider after service provider, and have decided to--get this--build their own internet backbone. Wow...
Or view the entire episode as originally broadcast... | | |
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