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Revealed: iPods Of The Rich And Famous.
The latest example comes from the web site WindowsMedia and the WindowsMedia section. About mid-way through the web page you’ll see a close up of an Apple iPod. The headline below the iPod graphic says “Piracy Crackdown” followed by “Taking the offenders to court.” What’s that look like to you? iPod users are thieves? People are using iPods to steal? That graphic and headline brings to mind images of iPod users stealing company secrets on their iPods, or stealing music while online and storing it all on their iPods.
The whole iPod graphic and “Piracy” headline just looks too misleading to me and smacks of a previous attempt by Microsoft to bash Apple’s diminutive iPod. Click Here for that attempt. As you’ve figured out already, such misleading techniques are the vogue these days. For example, our headline is, “Revealed: iPods Of The Rich And Famous.” Then there’s an obviously doctored photograph of Bill Gates holding an iPod mini. I doubt if any such photograph exists anywhere in the world, and certainly not on the planet inhabited by Bill Gates. Imagine the message that would send. “Bill Gates loves his Apple iPod mini-- says other music players are second rate.” Woo hoo! That would make for an interesting day, eh? The problem, of course, is that headline baiting is nothing new, poking at a competitor is nothing new. It’s just getting worse these days. It’s worse because there are so many more media outlets; and many more opportunities, if you will, to misinform the public.
“Bill Gates Says iPod mini Is Defective.” One look at that headline and an accompanying photograph is about all most folks need to form an opinion. A negative opinion. Bill Gates is now slamming the iPod mini. It doesn’t take much to inform the public. It takes even less effort to misinform the public and that’s happening more and more these days. For example, a recent article by Ina Fried appeared on ZDNet comparing Mac OS X Tiger’s search capabilities with Microsoft’s upcoming “Longhorn” Windows operating system. Click Here for the comparison. Comparisons are fine. Tiger is shipping on April 29th. Longhorn is shipping in the second half of 2006. Let’s compare my new 2005 Infinit with a 2007 (fall of 2006) Lexus. That’s absurd, right? Not according to Ina Fried. Another example: Ina writes, “Microsoft also plans to reshape icons within Longhorn. Instead of being a static graphic indicating the type of document a file is, an icon in Longhorn will be a smaller representation of the first page of a document. In its preview pane, today’s Mac OS offers that for some document types, such as PDF files. However, its implementation is not as universal as what Microsoft is proposing.” So, as Ina seems to say, what Tiger has already is not as cool or “universal” as what Microsoft is proposing for about 18 months from now, right? The whole article, just like the headline and graphic on this article, is misleading and misinforming. In other words, not very accurate. Accuracy is what you’d expect from a journalist in the tech field. Maybe Ina’s fresh out of college. Maybe not.
Microsoft’s chief Windows architect, Jim Allchin is also quoted by ZDNet’s writer: Allchin said Microsoft plans to go further than Apple has with Tiger. “Tiger is nice in that they’ve put search capability in a lot of places, but there’s a lot more (in Longhorn),” Allchin said. “This is trying to slice and dice the data and let you visualize the data in a much richer way than what’s in Tiger.” Hello? Are we comparing shipping Apples to still-growing Oranges here? Since there’s been barely 12 months, on average, between Jaguar, Panther, and Tiger, could we expect Apple to introduce, oh, I don’t know, how about “SabreTooth” about the time Microsoft finally slaps Longhorn together and shoves it out the door? OK, I’ll clarify the “iPods Of The Rich And Famous” so you don’t go away empty handed, President Bush has an iPod. Actor Will Smith has a bunch of iPods. Other iPod owners include Madonna and Tony Hawk. I’m sure there are many others since Apple gave away a few thousand each year for the past few years at the Grammy Awards and Oscars. I didn’t get one. Oh, one more thing. “I’m baaaaaack!” Check out the daily list of our 9 Word mini-Reviews at NoodleMac, and Kate's daily in-depth Mac software reviews at PixoBebo. Off Topic #23 - Mac OS X Leopard is now at version 10.5.2 which we’re proclaiming the best yet, though we expect version 10.5.3 soon. If you haven’t upgraded yet, don’t forget that Leopard is on sale at the Mac360 Store, and so are the latest Leopard books. If you plan to order Leopard or a Leopard tips book from Amazon, please consider using the Mac360 Store to place your order (it’s really Amazon). Click Here to look at the latest Leopard books. Off Topic #58 - Do politicians use personal computers? Of course. We’ve heard Barack Obama prefers a Mac, while Hillary Clinton uses a Dell, though, apparently neither of the candidates can bowl. Does Obama’s potential vice president use a Mac? Even Clinton acknowledges Apple’s brand power but says she can’t afford a Mac. Maybe she’d win if she used a Mac.
• Article by Tera Patricks • Published on Monday, April 18, 2005
• Category: What's New • 17 Reader comment(s) • Email This • Digg This • Shop Now
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Talk Back to Kate, Ron & the Mac360 staff LOGishi86 says:
The pictures of Bill Gates holding those iPods is the lolz.
LOGishi86
— Posted on Fri Feb 08 at 2:38 pm by LOGishi86
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