jrodan94 t1_j5n7dhc wrote
Reply to comment by FlamingTrollz in Report: Apple’s 2023 mixed reality headset to feature full-body FaceTime avatars and iOS-like interface by DarthBuzzard
I agree, Apple is Apple so they’ll be obtuse in the worst ways but I think they are actually really good in the early stages of building a product category. Apple has the ability to legitimize a market segment, and they can afford to make no money for quite some time on any of it. They’ll always take their closed door pathway on it, but a rising tide lifts all boats. That will allow competitors to really show how their legitimate niche has value without being the figurehead for the entire industry to rail on. There’s enough space in VR/AR rn that Apple only helps everyone by entering the field
[deleted] t1_j5nzh14 wrote
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the_first_brovenger t1_j5o1pp5 wrote
Apple Home, though.
Apple doesn't really do cutting edge niche well, which VR is.
throwaway8726529 t1_j5odcas wrote
iPods? iPhones? Smart watches? And earlier, desktops and laptops? Apple’s entrance into all of these categories essentially created the category (for the pedants, yes I know the categories technically existed, but you know it’s not what I mean). By definition, the first mass-market product in a category is cutting-edge.
I’m old enough (sadly) to remember the pre-iPod days. The iPod wasn’t an iteration on the existing mp3 players. It was cutting-edge enough that it birthed a new type of product. Same is true for the iPhone, and the same may be true of this headset.
the_first_brovenger t1_j5og8vm wrote
>By definition, the first mass-market product in a category is cutting-edge
No, that's not what defines cutting edge.
By the time something is mass produced, it is no longer cutting edge.
The iPod was literally an iteration on existing players. It massively improved on storage, as other manufacturers were content just beating the ~14 tracks on CDs a few times over.
>iPhones
iPhone was not a niche product.
It was not cutting edge either, it was an iteration on existing phones removing the mechanical keyboard, which had already been done.
>Smart watches?
Not cutting edge.
Also not really a niche, a smart watch is an ultracompact smart phone with a wrist band. There's no new cutting edge tech in them, they're just incredibly small.
>And earlier, desktops and laptops?
Still not NICHE and still not cutting edge. All of it, iterations.
>I’m old enough (sadly) to remember the pre-iPod days.
Well I am.
>The iPod wasn’t an iteration on the existing mp3 players.
Yes it was.
>It was cutting-edge enough that it birthed a new type of product.
No it didn't.
>Same is true for the iPhone
No it isn't.
>and the same may be true of this headset.
It very clearly won't be.
They're making their own iteration of a niche technology with low chance of success.
Jesus christ you are such an obvious fanboy, and clueless to boot. Please stop hurting yourself.
Shopped_For_Pleasure t1_j5ox7t4 wrote
Well mp3s weren’t cutting edge because walkmans existed before it.
And walkmans weren’t such a big deal, because we already had things like vinyl players.
And don’t even get me started on vinyl players. helloooo, phonographic cylindersss.
flagcity t1_j5p57in wrote
this is such a silly take. know why the iPod cutting edge you mouth breathing cave man?
Because my grandmother can use it. And she’s dead.
Everything Apple does has existed before to some extent. The difference is they solve the problem, which is different than trying to sell you technology.
If you’re old enough to remember how PCs were advertised back in the day, everyone made their choice on chips and ram and cache. a classic race to the bottom where the consumer gets screwed.
Contrast that with Apple, where the only specs that matter are the finish. You know it will work for 90% of what you wanna do and you probably don’t need to reboot it within the first year. Nothing is even close in terms of customer experience from opening the box to getting service to incorporating your family members to other ecosystem components.
Your take might be the most ignorant and infuriating on Apple I’ve ever read, and I am an android guy!
newtybar t1_j5tvrnv wrote
I’d argue that’s more salesmanship than being cutting edge. I’m typing this on an iPhone.
the_first_brovenger t1_j5p6akq wrote
It's just incredible the level of toxicity Apple topics brings out in people.
Here you are unable to help yourself. Frothing at the mouth like an animal needing to try to insult me. And you do it while unironically calling me a caveman! It's fantastic! 😅
[deleted] t1_j5p94f6 wrote
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skolioban t1_j5rd1mp wrote
Cutting edge product and market are not the same as cutting edge technology. You guys are talking about different things.
shortfriday t1_j61t73b wrote
I've got ten thousand bucks of apple stuff in my house and a thousand shares of aapl and literally everything you say is spot on. They're just a very good business. Silly subreddit.
Veltan t1_j5ocwe1 wrote
Honestly, nobody is doing smart home stuff that well.
KarmaPharmacy t1_j5ocz5b wrote
Have you ever heard of an iPhone, iPod, iPad, or AirPods? All cutting edge niche products in the beginning.
the_first_brovenger t1_j5oglkg wrote
Great products, yes.
Cutting edge, hell to the no.
The only somewhat cutting edge tech in the original iPhone was the screen.
AirPods were literally just an iteration on a product type that had existed for years already.
Apple fanboys are seriously the worst.
Shxhxxhcx t1_j5oi0nf wrote
You’re here commenting on every post that shows appreciation for Apple? Cringe.
the_first_brovenger t1_j5okbrw wrote
Literally prefaced with Apple products being great, dude 😂
Shxhxxhcx t1_j5opb08 wrote
That’s just sad. Get a life
the_first_brovenger t1_j5orabi wrote
Once again it's proven apple threads will consistently bring out the man-children in force to hurl feeble insults at people. Take your own advice, bruh.
KarmaPharmacy t1_j5olkcy wrote
I’m not even a boy. Let alone a fan. I am a nut for historical achievements in technology, regardless of who made it.
I do give credit when it’s due.
Smart phones with a touch screen didn’t exist before Apple. And I hardly even classify a BlackBerry or sidekick 3 as a “smart phone”.
Considering your big brain post history is limited to “deaf people don’t laugh at farts” I’m gonna go ahead and assume you weren’t alive when the iPhone came out.
Please, allow the adults to have constructive discussions. You have nothing to add here, I’m not even sure you’re 13 and allowed to be on this site.
[deleted] t1_j5oqi3g wrote
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boltman1234 t1_j5oe6td wrote
Nope they were just fanboi starvation, sort of like Tesla golf carts etc
Apple stuff is complete crap, its all driven by fanbois and Apple trying to scare you with privacy /security bullshit
KarmaPharmacy t1_j5ofy1l wrote
Educate yourself. You sound like a child.
FrankTankly t1_j5oewti wrote
Lol what? I’m no Apple fanboy but denying that Apple was first in these (niche, cutting edge) spaces (especially the iPhone and iPod) is just going out of your way to hate on Apple.
SharpClaw007 t1_j5oeqjr wrote
This comment reeks of cope. Apple, despite their shitty business practices, makes top tier hardware.
boltman1234 t1_j5omz8h wrote
Um no their hardware looks lame and don't game
littlebitsofspider t1_j5odqj9 wrote
I tracked a bug in HomeKit (one of many) when I worked for Apple that was stupendously, egregiously bad. I agree with this comment.
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