![]() ![]() ![]() Who’s going to buy a Mac Pro now? – April 4, 2017 Who has taken over at Apple? – April 5, 2017Īpple’s embarrassing Mac Pro mea culpa – April 4, 2017 More about Apple’s Mac Pro – April 6, 2017Īpple’s desperate Mac Pro damage control message hints at a confused, divided company – April 6, 2017 ![]() Why Apple’s promise of a new ‘modular’ Mac Pro matters so much – April 6, 2017Īpple’s cheese grater Mac Pro was flexible, expandable, and powerful – imagine that – April 6, 2017 That’s not a difficult concept to grasp even an inveterate beancounter might be able to get it. MacDailyNews, April 6, 2017Īs we wrote back in January, before last month’s news that Apple would be getting back into the Apple-branded display market after an utterly foolish dalliance with trying to sell Mac users on plastic, incorrectly-shielded, UltraUgly LG crap:įor the same reason – mindshare – Apple should make their own Apple displays, even to the point of taking a loss of each and every one, so that other companies’ logos on frankly ugly products that do not match Apple design sensibilities are not in users’ faces all day long. Satisfying the upper-end of Mac-using professionals is vastly more important that the revenue that can be generated from the market. Skelley writes, “A return to a tower design of some kind would not be the equivalent of Apple conceding it no longer can design innovatively to the contrary it would be an admission that it is better late than never to recognize past triumphs in design by creating modernized versions.” iMac and Mac Pro hardware designs feature stylish good looks over the ability to easily upgrade.” ![]() “Returning to the tower designs of yesteryear could potentially be a big win for Apple not to mention its customers. “But do we really prefer Apple produces more iMacs and unconventionally shaped Mac Pros? What if instead they decide to return to their most durable, albeit boring desktop hardware design?” Skelley writes. “And their lack of style made it easy for Apple to abandon them.” “There isn’t anything flashy about computer towers,” Bob Skelley writes for Computerworld. ![]()
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