In article
<
helpfulharry-0...@203-118-175-133.nzwide.ihug.co.nz>,
It functions as a phone. But without OS updates, it functions less
usefully as a smartphone. To the extent that its client apps are still
supported, it will be a smartphone, but that's not a given; most major
app writers have abandoned iOS generations prior to iOS 4.
> Plus Apple knows that many people change their mobile phone almost more
> often than their underwear (as soon as they lose it, drop it or the plan
> contract runs out). Apple also knows that computers TV sets are not
> changed as quickly.
I'm not sure what you mean by "computers TV sets", but computers are
replaced at three to five year intervals, and TV sets are approaching a
six year interval, although that may have been an artifact of widespread
HD adoption. See research by Forrester for more information.
> Even if you assume that Apple was silly enough to somehow make a three
> year old TV set completely obsolete, then it will still have the same
> connections (or can have adapters) as every other TV and so you will be
> able to simply plug in a comparatively cheap external box to cope with any
> new formats.
I actually gave you four to five years (three years for the OS, one to
two more for the client apps). Apple, for all of its (past) "computers
for the rest of us", remains a largely upscale brand. Replacing a TV
every three to five years would likely be not a problem for a lot of
Apple's customer base.
Why do you assume an Apple television would have a full set of
interfaces? Maybe an HDMI, for a cable box, but Apple's general plot
seems to be to eliminate wired interfaces. I'd expect an RJ45, WiFI, USB
micro for de-bricking (same as on AppleTV), and maybe an HDMI. But I
wouldn't be surprised--not my expectation, but not surprised--to see no
HDMI and a single cable connection, and an internal DVR function. Apple
is not about expandability and aftermarket options for its mainstream
products.
> And again, this isn't an "Apple problem". You have the exact same issue
> with every other "smart" TV set from any other manufacturer.
No disagreement. Personally, I am a separates buyer, so I prefer the
extra box as it's cheaper to upgrade it. But I am an outlier for Apple
Marketing. It will be interesting to see if AirPlay licensing, as
rumored earlier this year, really comes about, or if other vendors rely
on DLNA or some other protocols.
BTW, I am not at all an Apple hater; quite the opposite. I'm typing this
on a 2008 MBP, and I hate to confess how many Apple products I have at
home. The earliest is an Apple ][ from 1981; the most recent is a 2010
MP. The only "PCs" are a Bootcamp partition (games) and Fusion running
XP for some apps that just aren't available in any form on Mac OS. But I
know that this MBP is becoming limited for some high-performance
operations, so I'll probably replace it in a year or two. I'm not yet
ready to go the desktop-and-iPad route, because the iPad looks the be
even more of a treadmill to stay up with the most recent options.
Here's a question for you: if you owned a good, big CRT in the last
several years that you expected to last another five, would you have
replaced it with an ATSC-native TV during the digital change, or would
you have kept it and gotten a set top converter? Neither answer is
incorrect, just curious.