Isn't this just the way things go? Apple started off as the lovable David to the Microsoft Goliath, but is now starting to develop serious image problems of its own. After all, how many millions of iPods can you sell and still pretend to be trendy and alternative?
I think the same thing is happening with Google, albeit at a slower pace.
The new iPods are not compatible with Panther. Panther is 10.3. That's what my computer is running right now. They went back at least 8 years in compatibility with PC's, but barely three years for Mac. It looks like you found the specs but you didn't read them. That's okay. Seems like a lot of people are having that problem.
Actually, I am the ideal Mac customer. You know why? Because I am going to need two new computers soon. Probably by the end of 2008.
i noticed someone up there commented that the new ipods dont work on windows 98. which is the predecessor to xp. the newest ipods are still compatible with panther (panther, tiger, leopard), but not windows 98 (98, xp, vista) so obviously mac went back farther in backwards compatibility with their own OS than with PC like you tried to suggest. i think it would be in your best interest to concede this argument, because the only accurate thing you've said thus far is that you should have read the system requirements. Those requirements are easily accessible online (it took me 5 sec to find these http://www.apple.com/ipodclassic/specs.html). not handling the box is not an excuse. before you take an accusatory stance against something, you should check your facts better. this was too easy to tear apart.
i totally agree with everything brian said here. its absolutely ridiculous to assume that your BRAND NEW generation ipod will automatically connect with an OS as outdated as OS 9. thats like expecting to be able to connect your ipod successfully to windows 3.1. seriously.
oh. it is also ridiculous to think they should include a copy of tiger FREE just because you paid base $249 for something. thats chump change that doesnt entitle you to a free OS upgrade. windows vista is out, so by your theory, everyone should be able to get windows xp for free too right?
maybe the people with the false sense of entitlement are not apple, as you suggest, but yourself. apple doesnt owe you anything. especially if you are running a 7 year old computer with a 3 year old operating system. that doesnt exactly make you an ideal customer. in my house we have a mac mini, a g5, 2 14in ibooks, a macbook, a macbook pro, ipod nano, ipod mini. in fact the computer i am on is running your "outdated tiger ox x." interesting.
I've heard of this some time ago on another blog and I decided to use my image editing software to make wallpaper for my desktop instead. It saves trees by not needing cardboard or magazines so it's also environmentally friendly as well as being in a place that I will definitely see it every day. Good blog, thanks for posting about this.
okay..just to be the devil's advocate here. I'm not defending Apple or anything, but there is a reason why system requirements are documented on the box. It is tedious to make hardware/software backward compatible and it usually takes more programming/qa resources on the development side to make it compatible. Often the software product that is made compatible with older OSes have more bugs and are bigger and more cumbersome (I deal with this crap a lot since I'm a release engineer). Sometimes the project managers just cut out the backward compatibility to get things released. So they leave it to the customer to figure out that certain things are just not compatible. You can't just assume that because it is a Mac it will work. So I'm saying I don't think Apple meant to screw with you or punish you. Though, it is possible that internally they made it not backward compatible so that people keep on upgrading. If you can prove that then it is a conspiracy to have Mac fans shell out as much money as possible.
On a side note, a company that has been great with backward compatibility is Nintendo. For example, the Nintendo DS has a slot for GBA, and the Wii has a slot for Gamecube.
Um, $49k is the top 50% of American families. Meaning -- no one looks at that salary for a family of 4 as nearly poverty level except you wealthy friends. I assume they were wealthy because 84k household income puts you nearly in the top 20% of household incomes.
Also, $49k/year adjusted for inflation of 4% after 20 years is equivalent to making $88k/year in 2008. So, yeah...you were in the top 20% of household incomes back then. Congrats!
Unsolicited advice: start counting your blessings more and stop buying into the consumer society.
Have been pondering those fixed expenses myself lately. Always a good idea to be looking down the road a few years ahead and imagining "what if," never hurts to do that, guess I've been doing that since my first job as a teenager (well, even before, back in my babysitting days). Amen, always have a contingency plan.
"You do realize that it's perfectly possible to own a product without buying into whatever hype might be around it, don't you"
You're kind of making me wonder, there, buddy.
I think you are right that OS X came out after the cube was discontinued. Thanks for the correction. However, remember that the computers stay on the shelves for a while after the company stops making them, so it was not that long after the computer was purchased that the new OS came out, and it never worked well under OS 9.
If you installed Leopard on a G4 cube, then you probably know that the minimum system requirements for Leopard include a 750 Mhz processor, and that the cube came with a 450 Mhz processor.
I think the bottom line here is that Apple went out of their way to make the iPod compatible with even older PC systems, so the question of whether it was technically possible for it to be backward compatible with system 10.3 seems rather moot. Of course they could have done it if they wanted. Or, if it really was too much, they could have comped the few of us that are still running the older system a free copy of Tiger, which is not the new flagship product, which they are not selling through regular channels anyway, and which no one would willingly buy if they could run Leopard. (That is my point about it being obsolete.)
I severely doubt that apple 'put a cloaking device' on their product to actively prevent it from working with older OSes. What they probably did was an analysis on how many people still had an old OS, and decided it wasn't worth the trouble.
And as a software developer, I can tell you it *is* trouble. It's not impossible like the tech support said, but it does take time, effort, money, and ultimately makes the product worse at relating to new platforms, since it can't use the latest and greatest protocols and optimizations.
So they drew the line a little closer than you would have liked. Yeah, you can gripe about it, and you probably have a point that three years is a little slim, but be clear that that's what you're griping about. It's not a conspiracy, it's just a decision.
Oh, and I don't completely get your comment that cars are so much better in this department. Sure you can get new tires for a five year old car, but can you get one for a 50 year old one? We have a 15 year old volvo (that works pretty much just fine, thanks) and while we can still get tires, any other parts (speedometer, brake lights...) have to come from a junkyard. Yeah, it's a longer cycle, but cars are a much more established technology, and not evolving nearly as fast as computers, so you should expect that.
Take it easy. The statement was about Horizon Organic PRODUCTS not just the milk. Then, you went on an incredible rant against the labeling on this milk. Slow down and read more carefully.
"I would expect, though, that if it wouldn't actually sync, the computer could detect it in "disk mode" which it doesn't, which makes me wonder if this is deliberate."
On what technically-sound basis do you wonder this?
"We have Nintendo Game Cube, Game Boy, DS, and Wii, and we are hugely appreciative of the seamless backward compatibility in those systems. It's a great example of doing it right."
Yes, it is. The difference is that Apple's old software continues to run on newer operating systems. To make your analogy work, you'd have to be able to use a Wii controller with a Game Cube. Let me know when Nintendo enables that for you.
"In answer to some others, I know that there is an attitude of entitlement on Apple's part regarding its users paying big bucks to upgrade to newer operating systems, and for some reason certain customers really buy into this."
"Entitlement"? What "entitlement"? Apple can employ whatever "expectation" they like. If consumers don't like it, they're free to reject it (your Cube is a perfect example). But you elected to keep your iPod and use it in a cripple manner, which tells Apple that all this is okay with you.
"The cube, when it was purchased, came loaded with system 9 software, in spite of the fact that OS X Panther was out already. Why were they selling a computer with obsolete system software right off the shelf?"
Again, your utter lack of technical knowledge is showing. OS 9 was discontinued in very early '02 or very late '01. The Cube was discontinued in July of 2001. Panther came out in October of 2003. Your comment is written in such a way as to imply that your Cube came NEW with OS 9 when OS X 10.3 was on the market, but (a) you said above that the Cube was a gift from a friend -- was it new or used? -- and (b) what you're proposing is a technical impossibility.
You might have gotten a used Cube running 9.x, or a new Cube out of some reseller's vintage stock still running OS 9.x (since that's what they shipped with). But what you did not get was a new Cube, from Apple, running 9.x while Apple was shipping 10.3, because this didn't occur (except insofar as Apple continued to provide 9.x as a _non-default_ OS to support Classic mode, because the switch from 9.x to OS X involved a wholesale change in the code use to run applications). Either you're misinformed, or you're being disingenuous.
"Not to mention that OS 9 was a horrible OS and they should have given everyone who had it a free copy of OS X just to make up for inflicting OS 9 on them."
This has nothign whatsoever to do with your argument, and is, again, just an excuse to use Wisebread to pee in the chili of a company who has affronted you.
"I paid the money for Panther, but no I will not pay an Apple Tax every couple of years just so that I can have the latest system software."
This might be a valid argument if the upgrades provided no additional benefits. As it stands, they do. It's not a tax, and such references only damage your argument.
"Eventually I will need a new computer, either because my current one died, or because the new technology really is too much for the old processor. How I've been treated by Apple will definitely influence my decision."
That's fair.
"If I expect that a new Apple is not only going to be more expensive, but is going to give me more headaches and cost me more money in terms of upgrades...well, the competition is starting to look a lot better."
To which I say "Good luck, my friend." Have actually read anything about Vista recently?
"Once upon a time, I chose Apple because I saw it working easily and intuitively while my friends with PCs were struggling with unstable software, having to hack their own machines and spend hours on customer support to get them to work. Now, the situation seems to be reversed."
In a tirade full of misinformation and opinion disguised as fact, this is easily the most outlandish comment you've made. I invite you to switch. Much good may it do you.
A friend of mine hosted a party to do this...about 8 girls got together with piles and piles of magazines, then we went around and shared the images. It was great fun, and yes, I learned a lot about myself, too.
It's the other way round for me. I used linux both professionally and private for ten years. And I have had it. Although the basis is good (I am unix/linux consultant), the GUI is just like windows. All simple tasks are ridiculously complicated and if you want to get something done you either have to develop software for it or install programs, plugins and drivers until you're old. Now that I'm on mac, I am there for good. I never switch to any other platform anymore. I can totally rely on it, it does what I expect and how I expect it, it charges my ipod (classic 80gb too) with power as well as music and I don't have to install extras to do simple things.
First, my bona fides: I'm a longtime Mac user but keep a foot in both worlds. I have more iPods than I can shake a stick at, including an iPhone. My job revolves around Mac maintenance. I keep an XP box and home, and an XP VM each under Fusion and Parallels. So:
"I've got an old, dead Mac laptop that I can't bear to part with from 1996."
This immediately denotes the type of user I tread warily around. It indicates the kind of person who wonders why they can't run their Mac Plus version of Tetris under Leopard. The sort who still drives their 1975 Dodge Dart, but gets irritated because they can't convert it to a hybrid.
"I've watched other Mac lovers fall away from the True Faith, one-by-one, but I never thought it would happen to me."
You know, I can't count how many thousands of dollars I've spent on Apple hardware over the years, but the fact remains that _it is a gadget_. It's not a religion. It's a product. That some users elect to treat it as more than a product is to Apple's benefit, but not their responsibility.
"After you pay the hefty $249 price tag, plus an extra $30 for a wall charger (they used to bundle those in for free)"
And gas stations used to hire attendants to check your oil and wash your windows while they filled your tank. Times change. As much as anything else, the chargers are largely unnecessary. I have four iPods that I use regularly, and I don't charge a single one of them from the wall...they're all from the computer. Was there supposed to be a point with this, or is it just an excuse to rant about Apple?
"plus $55 for the composite AV cable for your TV, plus any other little extras you may need"
Differentiate, please, between need and want. You _want_ to connect it to your TV, but I'd wager your _need_ to do so isn't all that great.
"there is a hidden cost that blows up in your face when you get it home."
Only hidden if you don't read.
"In short, the new iPods are not compatible with any operating system before OS 10.4.8."
OS X 10.4 has been out for nearly three years. I am, at best, unsympathetic. You can drop $350 for an iPod that replaces the working ones you already own, but you can't drop a Benjamin to keep your OS up to date?
"There's a good discussion of the problem here."
That definition of "problem" is interesting. As is that definition of "good discussion." What you link to is a bunch of agglomerated griping and armchair quarterbacking from people whose definition of "extensive research" translates -- trust me, I know the type -- as "I did a Google search and looked at the top five links." Not a single commenter is actually _qualified_ to explain any technical issues.
"Basically, if you don't have a newer operating system, you have to buy it before you can use your iPod. If you can't run the newest OS, Leopard, you need to call Apple tech support and they'll graciously sell you the outdated and obsolete Tiger for $129. You can imagine what I said to this gracious offer, after plunking down $350 for the device."
This is a blatant double-standard. You continue to use a G4 Cube, which was discontinued in mid-2001. You're running Panther, which was discontinued in April '05. So your machine is (at best) seven years old, and your OS is three. Yet, they're perfectly okay. But Tiger is "obsolete and outdated." Look, either "obsolete and outdated" is perfectly okay with you, or you have a problem with it...you can't have it both ways.
And let's be clear, buying Tiger from Apple was NOT your only option. As I write this, there are several copies being auctioned starting at about $20. So Apple might be where you called, but their price left you only _cold_, not stuck.
"In a way, I should have seen it coming. I had recently spent several hours trying to get my brother-in-law's two new iPods (shuffle and nano) to sync with his PC. But I assumed that it was a Mac/PC thing, and that it could never happen to me. And yet it did. My computer stubbornly refused to recognize the device."
This has nothing to do with anything, other than your brother in law might possibly have bought a bum iPod. Stuff happens. If you truly walk around with the "it'll never happen to me" attitude about any technology, you're asking for reality to slap you in the face. Hard. But that has nothing to do with the system requirements printed on the iPod box.
"We should have read the system requirements on the box.. I admit it. I didn't."
Yes, you admit it halfway through your commentary and immediately after a paragraph plainly written out of a generalized sense of betrayal. Somehow you, a True Believer, haven't been treated properly by Apple. How could this be?
Again, I'm lacking in sympathy.
"There are two reasons for that. One is that after so many years of being able to count on my computer to handle a variety of devices without complaint, it simply never occurred to me. The iPod is a standalone device. All I need my computer to do is exchange data with it."
This is, at best, a naive outlook.
"And since my computer has no problem running the newest versions of iTunes and Quicktime, I never expected that there would be any compatibility issues. Moreover, it's become standard and expected for all of these handheld devices to connect to any computer via USB cable. I would never think to check for system requirements for my digital camera or my cell phone."
Again, your technaivete is charming, but not practical. You know what they say about assumptions, so don't fault Apple for your misconceptions. How many other $350 purchases to you fail so completely to research beforehand? I don't know about you, but I'm more careful with my coin than that. (By the way, it's far from "standard" for cellphones to simply work with your Mac.)
"The other reason is more practical. I never got my hands on the box until I paid for it. We had extensive conversations with the salespeople, in which compatibility never came up, then they unlocked a cabinet, took a box out, and carried it to a cash register. I don't blame them for this."
No, instead you blame Apple, which is only valid if you bought at an Apple store, and then only insofar as saying they should train their clerks better.
"I think they were under the influence of the Mac "it just works" mind-control field as much as I was."
"Mind-control field"? Excuse me while I clean the soda out of my keyboard! How, exactly, does this fit in with Wisebread's philosophy of personal responsibility for one's money? You're sloughing your responsibility off on Apple at every turn. Makes for a nice sob story, but not so much for a paean to personal responsibility.
"Ultimately, Apple has failed to provide a technical justification for this. The technical support representative made it sound like it was a law of nature or something. "You can't make a device be compatible with an older computer," she said."
Technical support reps are trained to solve specific problems, or provide answers to why the problems cannot be solved. This is NOT equivalent to "technical support reps are gifted software engineers who understand the code that makes things go." You're plainly expecting the latter, and you wouldn't get it from anywhere, least of all Apple. Even if they could give you the technical details, would you understand them or care? At this point in this tale, I have to doubt that.
"This is obviously just an old-fashioned wallet grab. I can see the marketing execs, in their board room, poring over numbers representing people who were still using older versions of Macs and operating systems. "What if we could force them to buy a new operating system with their iPod? Better yet, maybe they'll decide after all that trouble to buy a new computer. What a slam dunk!""
What this "obviously" is is Catherine Shaffer's personal jeremiad against Apple for failing to pay heed to her unreasonable expectations as a customer (to wit "Why can't you make my seven-year-old computer and three-year-old OS work with my six-month-old iPod."). Apple's marketing intent notwithstanding.
And you may well be right...81% of Apple's installed base still runs Tiger, so this could well be a tool designed to push people to Leopard. But that emphatically does not make Apple evil just becaust Catherine Shaffer is suddenly excluded from using new iPods unless she upgrades! (For the record, you _can_ run Leopard on a Cube with an upgraded video card. I've done it.)
"In fact, I suspect not merely a failure to support the older OS, but some kind of deliberate cloaking of the device, forcing it to be invisible to the older OS. Why else would the computer not even be able to see that there is something plugged into its USB port? And if that's the case, perchance this nasty little easter egg is also turning on accidentally with certain other computers and operating systems, which might explain why my brother-in-law's children were unable to use the iPods they received for Christmas on their PC."
This is a completely unfounded assertion, and I find it difficult to believe that Wisebread condones this sort of ludicrous supposition and FUD. I thought that was reserved to Linux nuts and Microsoft. Honestly, at this point you should be ashamed. You're basically just determined to pee in Apple's chili to the greatest extent possible, and no lack of fact is going to get in your way.
"What all of this comes down to, for me, is that I am tired of the platform wars."
Excuse me? This isn't a platform war. It's an issue of how long a manufactur should continue support for an old product. To use my previous example, are you now arguing that Chrysler should still be producing engine components for your Dart? Gimme a break.
"I shudder to think of my old cube trying to run a bloated newer operating system)"
What, exactly, is your experience with Leopard that justifies this accusation? Because my MacBook and MacBook Pro, and my wife's G4, actually felt substantially faster after moving to 10.5.
"which, by the way, I was planning to do extensively"
Nice try. "Apple, if you don't play by my rules, I'll take my ball and go home." Except it's not your ball, and your alternative is bogus services like Hulu. Have fun.
"I'm tired of trying to exchange text files with people who have some subtly different document format, and seeing all of my formatting turned into gibberish."
For the record (since we are apparently passing personal anecdotes off as fact here) I exchange dozens of files with hundreds of users on a regular basis, and experience no difficulty at all. I don't think I'd be beyond the pale this far in to suggest that this might well be user error.
"I'm tired of declaring loyalty to one manufacturer or another just because I bought their product."
That's the first thing you've said all day that makes sense. but how does that make it Apple's fault that you drank the proverbial Flavor-Aid?
"When I take my car in for repairs, the mechanic never tells me that my older model car is "no longer supported," or that my new tires are incompatible with my older chassis."
If he works for a dealership I'll be he does. Even if they'll work on an older car, you'll be told at some point that you can't get parts for it (try finding electrical switches for a vintage Midget, or original dashboard trim components for a Mark II Jetta). And the tires example translates poorly, since basically every manufacturer draws on the same set of specs for tires.
"I am not forced to stop using my refrigerator because my new food is suddenly incompatible with it."
Bad example again. If your computer's job was simply to hold food, that'd be valid. Generally, though, hard drives don't start refusing to hold data because it's incompatible (see, there's a valid analogy).
"And while I'm on the subject, I don't understand why I need a desktop or a laptop computer at all to use my iPod or my other smart devices. Has no one ever thought of making an ethernet or wireless adapter so that we can download our tunes directly from the internet? Of course not!"
REF: iPhone with iTunes Wireless Music Store. The Zune has WiFi, too, though it's not worth much.
"Because then people might decide they don't need a $2000 laptop just so they can listen to music in the car. Slam dunk!'
Not so much, really.
"We ended up connecting the new iPod to a truly ancient PC that we have in the basement, then transferred the video files through our home network so that my son could finally watch his favorite cartoon on it. But we are not pleased."
Then you should return the iPod. Ranting about the situation on Wisebread is unlikely to turn Apple's head. If you feel you've got beef, get your money back. According to you, money is all this is about (and exactly how that's a crime for a company whose entire purpose is to generate shareholder value is beyond me).
"This is a message to all of you entrepreneurial geeky types out there. I want a smart, hand held device that "just works--really." I want it to be platform agnostic, so that I can use any file type with it. I want it be robust, long-lasting, and durable. I want it to do a lot of jobs for me, but be ridiculously simple-minded to use. I want it to come with a decent warranty and be totally independent so that I never have to connect it to my computer unless I want to. You give me this, and you've got a customer for life. And I have a feeling there are a lot of other folks out there who feel the same way."
Buy an Archos product.
And by the by, there's a world of difference between "simple to use" and "simple-minded to use". I'll take "simple" if it's all the same.
I expect better of Wisebread than this kind of lame, ill-informed rant. Really.
You're right, Xin. There's no way to know if it is an actual Evil Conspiracy. It could be that they either didn't have the time or resources to make it backward compatible. I would expect, though, that if it wouldn't actually sync, the computer could detect it in "disk mode" which it doesn't, which makes me wonder if this is deliberate. We have Nintendo Game Cube, Game Boy, DS, and Wii, and we are hugely appreciative of the seamless backward compatibility in those systems. It's a great example of doing it right.
In answer to some others, I know that there is an attitude of entitlement on Apple's part regarding its users paying big bucks to upgrade to newer operating systems, and for some reason certain customers really buy into this. Personally, I don't agree. The cube, when it was purchased, came loaded with system 9 software, in spite of the fact that OS X Panther was out already. Why were they selling a computer with obsolete system software right off the shelf? Not to mention that OS 9 was a horrible OS and they should have given everyone who had it a free copy of OS X just to make up for inflicting OS 9 on them. I paid the money for Panther, but no I will not pay an Apple Tax every couple of years just so that I can have the latest system software. Eventually I will need a new computer, either because my current one died, or because the new technology really is too much for the old processor. How I've been treated by Apple will definitely influence my decision. If I expect that a new Apple is not only going to be more expensive, but is going to give me more headaches and cost me more money in terms of upgrades...well, the competition is starting to look a lot better. Once upon a time, I chose Apple because I saw it working easily and intuitively while my friends with PCs were struggling with unstable software, having to hack their own machines and spend hours on customer support to get them to work. Now, the situation seems to be reversed.
There's a lot of expense in maintaining old OS's, especially when the technology is changing so rapidly.
I, too, have been a loyal Mac fanatic. My 1997 Apple laptop still works --and I retrofitted it for wi-fi usage, but there's a limit to how much the 64 MB RAM (maxed out) and the old processor can handle.
With my PowerBook G4 (almost 4 years old), I've updated from Panther to Tiger to Leopard as the new OS's have become available. I added a gig of high-quality RAM. I would like to buy a new MacBook Pro when it has the multi-touchpad.
Now, I can do everything except run Windows natively (I have it running virtually if I should need it) and iMovies 08 (many prefer the older version, which is not as easy but has more technical features, I believe).
You should be able to return the iPod, but you might look at a new (refurbished) iMac from the Apple store web site, or buy one from a friend who is looking to upgrade. All of my original Macs still work (but I've donated several).
Thanks! These are GREAT tips...Someone sent this link to Ross from the Rossblog!:)
Thanks! These are GREAT tips...Someone sent this link to Ross from the Rossblog!:)
Isn't this just the way things go? Apple started off as the lovable David to the Microsoft Goliath, but is now starting to develop serious image problems of its own. After all, how many millions of iPods can you sell and still pretend to be trendy and alternative?
I think the same thing is happening with Google, albeit at a slower pace.
Jess,
The new iPods are not compatible with Panther. Panther is 10.3. That's what my computer is running right now. They went back at least 8 years in compatibility with PC's, but barely three years for Mac. It looks like you found the specs but you didn't read them. That's okay. Seems like a lot of people are having that problem.
Actually, I am the ideal Mac customer. You know why? Because I am going to need two new computers soon. Probably by the end of 2008.
Catherine Shaffer
Wise Bread Contributor
I BOUGHT ONE OF THESE GADGETS A WHILE BACK, AND IT WORKS WONDERS. WELL WORTH THE PRICE FOR THE PEACE IT GIVES:
http://www.person-to-person.net/
ONCE THEY CALL I JUST ADD THEM TO THE BLOCKED LIST BY PUSHING THE BUTTON. THAT'S IT, THEY NEVER RING MY PHONE AGAIN... EVER!!
i noticed someone up there commented that the new ipods dont work on windows 98. which is the predecessor to xp. the newest ipods are still compatible with panther (panther, tiger, leopard), but not windows 98 (98, xp, vista) so obviously mac went back farther in backwards compatibility with their own OS than with PC like you tried to suggest. i think it would be in your best interest to concede this argument, because the only accurate thing you've said thus far is that you should have read the system requirements. Those requirements are easily accessible online (it took me 5 sec to find these http://www.apple.com/ipodclassic/specs.html). not handling the box is not an excuse. before you take an accusatory stance against something, you should check your facts better. this was too easy to tear apart.
i totally agree with everything brian said here. its absolutely ridiculous to assume that your BRAND NEW generation ipod will automatically connect with an OS as outdated as OS 9. thats like expecting to be able to connect your ipod successfully to windows 3.1. seriously.
oh. it is also ridiculous to think they should include a copy of tiger FREE just because you paid base $249 for something. thats chump change that doesnt entitle you to a free OS upgrade. windows vista is out, so by your theory, everyone should be able to get windows xp for free too right?
maybe the people with the false sense of entitlement are not apple, as you suggest, but yourself. apple doesnt owe you anything. especially if you are running a 7 year old computer with a 3 year old operating system. that doesnt exactly make you an ideal customer. in my house we have a mac mini, a g5, 2 14in ibooks, a macbook, a macbook pro, ipod nano, ipod mini. in fact the computer i am on is running your "outdated tiger ox x." interesting.
I've heard of this some time ago on another blog and I decided to use my image editing software to make wallpaper for my desktop instead. It saves trees by not needing cardboard or magazines so it's also environmentally friendly as well as being in a place that I will definitely see it every day. Good blog, thanks for posting about this.
okay..just to be the devil's advocate here. I'm not defending Apple or anything, but there is a reason why system requirements are documented on the box. It is tedious to make hardware/software backward compatible and it usually takes more programming/qa resources on the development side to make it compatible. Often the software product that is made compatible with older OSes have more bugs and are bigger and more cumbersome (I deal with this crap a lot since I'm a release engineer). Sometimes the project managers just cut out the backward compatibility to get things released. So they leave it to the customer to figure out that certain things are just not compatible. You can't just assume that because it is a Mac it will work. So I'm saying I don't think Apple meant to screw with you or punish you. Though, it is possible that internally they made it not backward compatible so that people keep on upgrading. If you can prove that then it is a conspiracy to have Mac fans shell out as much money as possible.
On a side note, a company that has been great with backward compatibility is Nintendo. For example, the Nintendo DS has a slot for GBA, and the Wii has a slot for Gamecube.
Um, $49k is the top 50% of American families. Meaning -- no one looks at that salary for a family of 4 as nearly poverty level except you wealthy friends. I assume they were wealthy because 84k household income puts you nearly in the top 20% of household incomes.
http://felfoldi.wordpress.com/2008/02/01/top-us-household-incomes/
Also, $49k/year adjusted for inflation of 4% after 20 years is equivalent to making $88k/year in 2008. So, yeah...you were in the top 20% of household incomes back then. Congrats!
Unsolicited advice: start counting your blessings more and stop buying into the consumer society.
Have been pondering those fixed expenses myself lately. Always a good idea to be looking down the road a few years ahead and imagining "what if," never hurts to do that, guess I've been doing that since my first job as a teenager (well, even before, back in my babysitting days). Amen, always have a contingency plan.
Not only are you above average, but you are 85% above average.
http://felfoldi.wordpress.com/2008/02/01/top-us-household-incomes/
Here is how to live on $40k/year.
http://felfoldi.wordpress.com/2007/06/04/how-to-live-on-a-40000-salary/
"You do realize that it's perfectly possible to own a product without buying into whatever hype might be around it, don't you"
You're kind of making me wonder, there, buddy.
I think you are right that OS X came out after the cube was discontinued. Thanks for the correction. However, remember that the computers stay on the shelves for a while after the company stops making them, so it was not that long after the computer was purchased that the new OS came out, and it never worked well under OS 9.
If you installed Leopard on a G4 cube, then you probably know that the minimum system requirements for Leopard include a 750 Mhz processor, and that the cube came with a 450 Mhz processor.
I think the bottom line here is that Apple went out of their way to make the iPod compatible with even older PC systems, so the question of whether it was technically possible for it to be backward compatible with system 10.3 seems rather moot. Of course they could have done it if they wanted. Or, if it really was too much, they could have comped the few of us that are still running the older system a free copy of Tiger, which is not the new flagship product, which they are not selling through regular channels anyway, and which no one would willingly buy if they could run Leopard. (That is my point about it being obsolete.)
Catherine Shaffer
Wise Bread Contributor
I severely doubt that apple 'put a cloaking device' on their product to actively prevent it from working with older OSes. What they probably did was an analysis on how many people still had an old OS, and decided it wasn't worth the trouble.
And as a software developer, I can tell you it *is* trouble. It's not impossible like the tech support said, but it does take time, effort, money, and ultimately makes the product worse at relating to new platforms, since it can't use the latest and greatest protocols and optimizations.
So they drew the line a little closer than you would have liked. Yeah, you can gripe about it, and you probably have a point that three years is a little slim, but be clear that that's what you're griping about. It's not a conspiracy, it's just a decision.
Oh, and I don't completely get your comment that cars are so much better in this department. Sure you can get new tires for a five year old car, but can you get one for a 50 year old one? We have a 15 year old volvo (that works pretty much just fine, thanks) and while we can still get tires, any other parts (speedometer, brake lights...) have to come from a junkyard. Yeah, it's a longer cycle, but cars are a much more established technology, and not evolving nearly as fast as computers, so you should expect that.
Take it easy. The statement was about Horizon Organic PRODUCTS not just the milk. Then, you went on an incredible rant against the labeling on this milk. Slow down and read more carefully.
Great points, Jack. You still want to have a good time on vacation, so go for the memories!
I think I'm going to have to print out this comment thread and put it in my cookbook. These are some seriously fantastic options for stretching meals.
And, AlexG, your family friend story has stuck with me all day. I'm sure he was a great guest, but I'm just amazed at his actions!
You do realize that it's perfectly possible to own a product without buying into whatever hype might be around it, don't you?
"I would expect, though, that if it wouldn't actually sync, the computer could detect it in "disk mode" which it doesn't, which makes me wonder if this is deliberate."
On what technically-sound basis do you wonder this?
"We have Nintendo Game Cube, Game Boy, DS, and Wii, and we are hugely appreciative of the seamless backward compatibility in those systems. It's a great example of doing it right."
Yes, it is. The difference is that Apple's old software continues to run on newer operating systems. To make your analogy work, you'd have to be able to use a Wii controller with a Game Cube. Let me know when Nintendo enables that for you.
"In answer to some others, I know that there is an attitude of entitlement on Apple's part regarding its users paying big bucks to upgrade to newer operating systems, and for some reason certain customers really buy into this."
"Entitlement"? What "entitlement"? Apple can employ whatever "expectation" they like. If consumers don't like it, they're free to reject it (your Cube is a perfect example). But you elected to keep your iPod and use it in a cripple manner, which tells Apple that all this is okay with you.
"The cube, when it was purchased, came loaded with system 9 software, in spite of the fact that OS X Panther was out already. Why were they selling a computer with obsolete system software right off the shelf?"
Again, your utter lack of technical knowledge is showing. OS 9 was discontinued in very early '02 or very late '01. The Cube was discontinued in July of 2001. Panther came out in October of 2003. Your comment is written in such a way as to imply that your Cube came NEW with OS 9 when OS X 10.3 was on the market, but (a) you said above that the Cube was a gift from a friend -- was it new or used? -- and (b) what you're proposing is a technical impossibility.
You might have gotten a used Cube running 9.x, or a new Cube out of some reseller's vintage stock still running OS 9.x (since that's what they shipped with). But what you did not get was a new Cube, from Apple, running 9.x while Apple was shipping 10.3, because this didn't occur (except insofar as Apple continued to provide 9.x as a _non-default_ OS to support Classic mode, because the switch from 9.x to OS X involved a wholesale change in the code use to run applications). Either you're misinformed, or you're being disingenuous.
"Not to mention that OS 9 was a horrible OS and they should have given everyone who had it a free copy of OS X just to make up for inflicting OS 9 on them."
This has nothign whatsoever to do with your argument, and is, again, just an excuse to use Wisebread to pee in the chili of a company who has affronted you.
"I paid the money for Panther, but no I will not pay an Apple Tax every couple of years just so that I can have the latest system software."
This might be a valid argument if the upgrades provided no additional benefits. As it stands, they do. It's not a tax, and such references only damage your argument.
"Eventually I will need a new computer, either because my current one died, or because the new technology really is too much for the old processor. How I've been treated by Apple will definitely influence my decision."
That's fair.
"If I expect that a new Apple is not only going to be more expensive, but is going to give me more headaches and cost me more money in terms of upgrades...well, the competition is starting to look a lot better."
To which I say "Good luck, my friend." Have actually read anything about Vista recently?
"Once upon a time, I chose Apple because I saw it working easily and intuitively while my friends with PCs were struggling with unstable software, having to hack their own machines and spend hours on customer support to get them to work. Now, the situation seems to be reversed."
In a tirade full of misinformation and opinion disguised as fact, this is easily the most outlandish comment you've made. I invite you to switch. Much good may it do you.
A friend of mine hosted a party to do this...about 8 girls got together with piles and piles of magazines, then we went around and shared the images. It was great fun, and yes, I learned a lot about myself, too.
It's the other way round for me. I used linux both professionally and private for ten years. And I have had it. Although the basis is good (I am unix/linux consultant), the GUI is just like windows. All simple tasks are ridiculously complicated and if you want to get something done you either have to develop software for it or install programs, plugins and drivers until you're old. Now that I'm on mac, I am there for good. I never switch to any other platform anymore. I can totally rely on it, it does what I expect and how I expect it, it charges my ipod (classic 80gb too) with power as well as music and I don't have to install extras to do simple things.
Regards,
Servaas
First, my bona fides: I'm a longtime Mac user but keep a foot in both worlds. I have more iPods than I can shake a stick at, including an iPhone. My job revolves around Mac maintenance. I keep an XP box and home, and an XP VM each under Fusion and Parallels. So:
"I've got an old, dead Mac laptop that I can't bear to part with from 1996."
This immediately denotes the type of user I tread warily around. It indicates the kind of person who wonders why they can't run their Mac Plus version of Tetris under Leopard. The sort who still drives their 1975 Dodge Dart, but gets irritated because they can't convert it to a hybrid.
"I've watched other Mac lovers fall away from the True Faith, one-by-one, but I never thought it would happen to me."
You know, I can't count how many thousands of dollars I've spent on Apple hardware over the years, but the fact remains that _it is a gadget_. It's not a religion. It's a product. That some users elect to treat it as more than a product is to Apple's benefit, but not their responsibility.
"After you pay the hefty $249 price tag, plus an extra $30 for a wall charger (they used to bundle those in for free)"
And gas stations used to hire attendants to check your oil and wash your windows while they filled your tank. Times change. As much as anything else, the chargers are largely unnecessary. I have four iPods that I use regularly, and I don't charge a single one of them from the wall...they're all from the computer. Was there supposed to be a point with this, or is it just an excuse to rant about Apple?
"plus $55 for the composite AV cable for your TV, plus any other little extras you may need"
Differentiate, please, between need and want. You _want_ to connect it to your TV, but I'd wager your _need_ to do so isn't all that great.
"there is a hidden cost that blows up in your face when you get it home."
Only hidden if you don't read.
"In short, the new iPods are not compatible with any operating system before OS 10.4.8."
OS X 10.4 has been out for nearly three years. I am, at best, unsympathetic. You can drop $350 for an iPod that replaces the working ones you already own, but you can't drop a Benjamin to keep your OS up to date?
"There's a good discussion of the problem here."
That definition of "problem" is interesting. As is that definition of "good discussion." What you link to is a bunch of agglomerated griping and armchair quarterbacking from people whose definition of "extensive research" translates -- trust me, I know the type -- as "I did a Google search and looked at the top five links." Not a single commenter is actually _qualified_ to explain any technical issues.
"Basically, if you don't have a newer operating system, you have to buy it before you can use your iPod. If you can't run the newest OS, Leopard, you need to call Apple tech support and they'll graciously sell you the outdated and obsolete Tiger for $129. You can imagine what I said to this gracious offer, after plunking down $350 for the device."
This is a blatant double-standard. You continue to use a G4 Cube, which was discontinued in mid-2001. You're running Panther, which was discontinued in April '05. So your machine is (at best) seven years old, and your OS is three. Yet, they're perfectly okay. But Tiger is "obsolete and outdated." Look, either "obsolete and outdated" is perfectly okay with you, or you have a problem with it...you can't have it both ways.
And let's be clear, buying Tiger from Apple was NOT your only option. As I write this, there are several copies being auctioned starting at about $20. So Apple might be where you called, but their price left you only _cold_, not stuck.
"In a way, I should have seen it coming. I had recently spent several hours trying to get my brother-in-law's two new iPods (shuffle and nano) to sync with his PC. But I assumed that it was a Mac/PC thing, and that it could never happen to me. And yet it did. My computer stubbornly refused to recognize the device."
This has nothing to do with anything, other than your brother in law might possibly have bought a bum iPod. Stuff happens. If you truly walk around with the "it'll never happen to me" attitude about any technology, you're asking for reality to slap you in the face. Hard. But that has nothing to do with the system requirements printed on the iPod box.
"We should have read the system requirements on the box.. I admit it. I didn't."
Yes, you admit it halfway through your commentary and immediately after a paragraph plainly written out of a generalized sense of betrayal. Somehow you, a True Believer, haven't been treated properly by Apple. How could this be?
Again, I'm lacking in sympathy.
"There are two reasons for that. One is that after so many years of being able to count on my computer to handle a variety of devices without complaint, it simply never occurred to me. The iPod is a standalone device. All I need my computer to do is exchange data with it."
This is, at best, a naive outlook.
"And since my computer has no problem running the newest versions of iTunes and Quicktime, I never expected that there would be any compatibility issues. Moreover, it's become standard and expected for all of these handheld devices to connect to any computer via USB cable. I would never think to check for system requirements for my digital camera or my cell phone."
Again, your technaivete is charming, but not practical. You know what they say about assumptions, so don't fault Apple for your misconceptions. How many other $350 purchases to you fail so completely to research beforehand? I don't know about you, but I'm more careful with my coin than that. (By the way, it's far from "standard" for cellphones to simply work with your Mac.)
"The other reason is more practical. I never got my hands on the box until I paid for it. We had extensive conversations with the salespeople, in which compatibility never came up, then they unlocked a cabinet, took a box out, and carried it to a cash register. I don't blame them for this."
No, instead you blame Apple, which is only valid if you bought at an Apple store, and then only insofar as saying they should train their clerks better.
"I think they were under the influence of the Mac "it just works" mind-control field as much as I was."
"Mind-control field"? Excuse me while I clean the soda out of my keyboard! How, exactly, does this fit in with Wisebread's philosophy of personal responsibility for one's money? You're sloughing your responsibility off on Apple at every turn. Makes for a nice sob story, but not so much for a paean to personal responsibility.
"Ultimately, Apple has failed to provide a technical justification for this. The technical support representative made it sound like it was a law of nature or something. "You can't make a device be compatible with an older computer," she said."
Technical support reps are trained to solve specific problems, or provide answers to why the problems cannot be solved. This is NOT equivalent to "technical support reps are gifted software engineers who understand the code that makes things go." You're plainly expecting the latter, and you wouldn't get it from anywhere, least of all Apple. Even if they could give you the technical details, would you understand them or care? At this point in this tale, I have to doubt that.
"This is obviously just an old-fashioned wallet grab. I can see the marketing execs, in their board room, poring over numbers representing people who were still using older versions of Macs and operating systems. "What if we could force them to buy a new operating system with their iPod? Better yet, maybe they'll decide after all that trouble to buy a new computer. What a slam dunk!""
What this "obviously" is is Catherine Shaffer's personal jeremiad against Apple for failing to pay heed to her unreasonable expectations as a customer (to wit "Why can't you make my seven-year-old computer and three-year-old OS work with my six-month-old iPod."). Apple's marketing intent notwithstanding.
And you may well be right...81% of Apple's installed base still runs Tiger, so this could well be a tool designed to push people to Leopard. But that emphatically does not make Apple evil just becaust Catherine Shaffer is suddenly excluded from using new iPods unless she upgrades! (For the record, you _can_ run Leopard on a Cube with an upgraded video card. I've done it.)
"In fact, I suspect not merely a failure to support the older OS, but some kind of deliberate cloaking of the device, forcing it to be invisible to the older OS. Why else would the computer not even be able to see that there is something plugged into its USB port? And if that's the case, perchance this nasty little easter egg is also turning on accidentally with certain other computers and operating systems, which might explain why my brother-in-law's children were unable to use the iPods they received for Christmas on their PC."
This is a completely unfounded assertion, and I find it difficult to believe that Wisebread condones this sort of ludicrous supposition and FUD. I thought that was reserved to Linux nuts and Microsoft. Honestly, at this point you should be ashamed. You're basically just determined to pee in Apple's chili to the greatest extent possible, and no lack of fact is going to get in your way.
"What all of this comes down to, for me, is that I am tired of the platform wars."
Excuse me? This isn't a platform war. It's an issue of how long a manufactur should continue support for an old product. To use my previous example, are you now arguing that Chrysler should still be producing engine components for your Dart? Gimme a break.
"I shudder to think of my old cube trying to run a bloated newer operating system)"
What, exactly, is your experience with Leopard that justifies this accusation? Because my MacBook and MacBook Pro, and my wife's G4, actually felt substantially faster after moving to 10.5.
"which, by the way, I was planning to do extensively"
Nice try. "Apple, if you don't play by my rules, I'll take my ball and go home." Except it's not your ball, and your alternative is bogus services like Hulu. Have fun.
"I'm tired of trying to exchange text files with people who have some subtly different document format, and seeing all of my formatting turned into gibberish."
For the record (since we are apparently passing personal anecdotes off as fact here) I exchange dozens of files with hundreds of users on a regular basis, and experience no difficulty at all. I don't think I'd be beyond the pale this far in to suggest that this might well be user error.
"I'm tired of declaring loyalty to one manufacturer or another just because I bought their product."
That's the first thing you've said all day that makes sense. but how does that make it Apple's fault that you drank the proverbial Flavor-Aid?
"When I take my car in for repairs, the mechanic never tells me that my older model car is "no longer supported," or that my new tires are incompatible with my older chassis."
If he works for a dealership I'll be he does. Even if they'll work on an older car, you'll be told at some point that you can't get parts for it (try finding electrical switches for a vintage Midget, or original dashboard trim components for a Mark II Jetta). And the tires example translates poorly, since basically every manufacturer draws on the same set of specs for tires.
"I am not forced to stop using my refrigerator because my new food is suddenly incompatible with it."
Bad example again. If your computer's job was simply to hold food, that'd be valid. Generally, though, hard drives don't start refusing to hold data because it's incompatible (see, there's a valid analogy).
"And while I'm on the subject, I don't understand why I need a desktop or a laptop computer at all to use my iPod or my other smart devices. Has no one ever thought of making an ethernet or wireless adapter so that we can download our tunes directly from the internet? Of course not!"
REF: iPhone with iTunes Wireless Music Store. The Zune has WiFi, too, though it's not worth much.
"Because then people might decide they don't need a $2000 laptop just so they can listen to music in the car. Slam dunk!'
Not so much, really.
"We ended up connecting the new iPod to a truly ancient PC that we have in the basement, then transferred the video files through our home network so that my son could finally watch his favorite cartoon on it. But we are not pleased."
Then you should return the iPod. Ranting about the situation on Wisebread is unlikely to turn Apple's head. If you feel you've got beef, get your money back. According to you, money is all this is about (and exactly how that's a crime for a company whose entire purpose is to generate shareholder value is beyond me).
"This is a message to all of you entrepreneurial geeky types out there. I want a smart, hand held device that "just works--really." I want it to be platform agnostic, so that I can use any file type with it. I want it be robust, long-lasting, and durable. I want it to do a lot of jobs for me, but be ridiculously simple-minded to use. I want it to come with a decent warranty and be totally independent so that I never have to connect it to my computer unless I want to. You give me this, and you've got a customer for life. And I have a feeling there are a lot of other folks out there who feel the same way."
Buy an Archos product.
And by the by, there's a world of difference between "simple to use" and "simple-minded to use". I'll take "simple" if it's all the same.
I expect better of Wisebread than this kind of lame, ill-informed rant. Really.
You're right, Xin. There's no way to know if it is an actual Evil Conspiracy. It could be that they either didn't have the time or resources to make it backward compatible. I would expect, though, that if it wouldn't actually sync, the computer could detect it in "disk mode" which it doesn't, which makes me wonder if this is deliberate. We have Nintendo Game Cube, Game Boy, DS, and Wii, and we are hugely appreciative of the seamless backward compatibility in those systems. It's a great example of doing it right.
In answer to some others, I know that there is an attitude of entitlement on Apple's part regarding its users paying big bucks to upgrade to newer operating systems, and for some reason certain customers really buy into this. Personally, I don't agree. The cube, when it was purchased, came loaded with system 9 software, in spite of the fact that OS X Panther was out already. Why were they selling a computer with obsolete system software right off the shelf? Not to mention that OS 9 was a horrible OS and they should have given everyone who had it a free copy of OS X just to make up for inflicting OS 9 on them. I paid the money for Panther, but no I will not pay an Apple Tax every couple of years just so that I can have the latest system software. Eventually I will need a new computer, either because my current one died, or because the new technology really is too much for the old processor. How I've been treated by Apple will definitely influence my decision. If I expect that a new Apple is not only going to be more expensive, but is going to give me more headaches and cost me more money in terms of upgrades...well, the competition is starting to look a lot better. Once upon a time, I chose Apple because I saw it working easily and intuitively while my friends with PCs were struggling with unstable software, having to hack their own machines and spend hours on customer support to get them to work. Now, the situation seems to be reversed.
Catherine Shaffer
Wise Bread Contributor
My pretty new ipod won't work with the version of itunes I have on my work computer. Too bad my ipod mini died completely last week.
There's a lot of expense in maintaining old OS's, especially when the technology is changing so rapidly.
I, too, have been a loyal Mac fanatic. My 1997 Apple laptop still works --and I retrofitted it for wi-fi usage, but there's a limit to how much the 64 MB RAM (maxed out) and the old processor can handle.
With my PowerBook G4 (almost 4 years old), I've updated from Panther to Tiger to Leopard as the new OS's have become available. I added a gig of high-quality RAM. I would like to buy a new MacBook Pro when it has the multi-touchpad.
Now, I can do everything except run Windows natively (I have it running virtually if I should need it) and iMovies 08 (many prefer the older version, which is not as easy but has more technical features, I believe).
You should be able to return the iPod, but you might look at a new (refurbished) iMac from the Apple store web site, or buy one from a friend who is looking to upgrade. All of my original Macs still work (but I've donated several).