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Stupid Is As Stupid Does
By: Scott Bradner
Well I guess it's that
time again. It has been a few months since I last talked about the ability of
Apple Computer to snatch stupidity out of what seemed to be a smart move, but
they have done it again.
Finally Apple is
producing a new version of their operating system that will include inherent
support for TCP/IP. In addition to the IP support, System 7.5 has a bunch of
other features and improvements ranging from the 'why bother' through 'gee --
that's neat' to 'gotta have that'. Most of these features are not things that
the user will exercise directly, even though the System 7.5 ads say
"breakthrough functionality and ease-of-use."
The things that users do
deal with directly seem to generally fall into the 'OK, I'll use that'
category. An example is a feature called "windowshade" that lets you
collapse a window (Can I still use that word now that Microsoft has a trademark
on the term? Well, maybe it's OK since the trademark is on "Windows"
not "window", I'll have to be careful though.) so just its title bar
shows. It is an improvement, but not nearly as useful as the ability to reduce
a window to an icon as you can in the MIT X-Window system. The new ability to
read and write MS DOS disks is also quite nice even if many of us had been
doing that for quite a while with third party software.
Most of the more
interesting additions are enablers - they enable an application to perform a
function that it was not previously able to do. MacTCP, the way that Apple
spells TCP/IP; Drag and Drop, an updated version of cut-and-paste; and
PowerTalk, as far as I know a not-to-any-real-standard electronics
communications manager are only useful if there are applications that utilize
the new features.
Why bring this up? Well,
here is where the Microsoft "mole" inside of Apple made his, or her,
move. Apple has priced this upgrade at about three times what IBM and Microsoft
priced their own system upgrades, upgrades that made more of a difference to
those operating systems than System 7.5 will for Apple. Apple is asking $134.99
list price with the cost running to many thousands for a large site. Don't they
understand that unless the enablers are widely installed, software developers
will have little incentive to rely on them? What use will they be if they are
not used?
Why should I care? As I
mentioned in a previous column, I saw my first Mac back in '83 and have used
one as my primary or secondary computer ever since. When the Mac was not my
primary computer a UNIX workstation was. When I first saw the Mac I concluded
that these people understood the operational paradigm that I wanted to work
with. I had seen the Altos at Xerox PARC so I was primed, but here it was and I
could get one of my own. I now have 3, a VX at home that I'm about to upgrade
to be a PowerPC, a Duo 230 that is my portable computing environment and a
PowerPC 8100 at work. As an aside, in order to merge my two favorite computing
environments I run Mach10, a full Berkeley-style UNIX, on all three.
I have recommended Macs
to many people in the same spirit that I've recommended minivans ever since I
bought my first one back in '84. It is some part of human nature that makes a
person want to have made the right choice and gets them to recommend their
choice to others. Apple keeps getting me into the position of having to
apologize for my recommendation, and that don't make me happy.
No, I don't know that
there is a Microsoft mole in Apple, it just may be a natural home-grown ability
to do the dumb thing that is driving Apple so resolutely along the path of
lesser differentiation of their product line.
Disclaimer: Although
many people at Harvard use Macs and a similar number use PCs, the University
takes no stand on these issues so it must be my own frustration speaking.