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Ten Rules for Buying Apple Products

[17 July 2009 | 0 Comments | ]
Posted by Eric Santillan

from macbookscreen.com.au

from mac​bookscreen​.com​.au

This one I got from iLounge, and was writ­ten by Jeremy Hor­witz, its Editor-in-Chief.

Every time Apple Com­puter announces a new prod­uct, our read­ers ask the same ques­tion: “should I buy now, or wait?” After Apple’s most recent It’s Show­time event, the most com­mon topic is, “should I buy the 80GB fifth-generation iPod, or wait for a widescreen iPod?” — sim­i­lar ques­tions always come up over new Mac note­book and desk­top machines, too.

After years of watch­ing Apple Com­puter and buy­ing dozens of Macs and iPods, iLounge’s edi­tors have a reli­able answer to this ques­tion that comes in two ver­sions: with and with­out an expla­na­tion. Since the expla­na­tion is impor­tant — itself a “ten-step guide to happy pur­chases of new Apple prod­ucts,” we’re pub­lish­ing the whole thing, with the shorter, sim­pler answer as a con­clu­sion at the bottom.

1. Expect Con­stant Improve­ments. Apple is one of the world’s most inno­v­a­tive com­puter and con­sumer elec­tron­ics com­pa­nies, and tries to keep its prod­ucts at or ahead of each industry’s trends. In the com­puter indus­try, this most often means fre­quently updat­ing inter­nal com­po­nents, while in the con­sumer elec­tron­ics (read: iPod) indus­try, this more fre­quently requires both exter­nal and inter­nal changes.

2. With Macs, Expect Fre­quent Major Com­po­nent Updates. If Apple has recently released a com­puter with a “brand new” exter­nal case, like the mid-2006 Mac­Book, it would be unusual for the com­pany to entirely replace the case before two years have passed, but inter­nal major com­po­nent changes (CPU, mem­ory, graph­ics chips, hard disk, wire­less fea­tures) can come every four to six months to keep up with indus­try trends. These changes are most com­monly seen as price reduc­tions or fea­ture bumps, where one cycle’s top model becomes next cycle’s mid­dle model, with value improve­ments vary­ing from $100 (low-end mod­els) to $500 (Pro mod­els) per change. Most recently, Apple has started to fre­quently replace entire CPU lines — G5 with Core Duo chips, then Core Duo with Core 2 Duo chips — as part of its cycles, but this won’t con­tinue forever.

3. With iPods, Expect Fre­quent Stor­age and Enclo­sure Changes. Apple has recently changed the cas­ings of each of its iPod mod­els on a nearly annual basis, but some­times, it can take longer. If Apple has recently released an iPod with a “brand new” exter­nal enclo­sure, like the Sep­tem­ber, 2006 iPod nano, it would be unusual for the com­pany to entirely replace the case before 1112 months have passed, but inter­nal changes (gen­er­ally stor­age capac­ity) can come every four to six months — most likely six, some­times sooner, some­times later, depend­ing on indus­try trends. These changes are most com­monly seen as price reduc­tions or stor­age bumps, vary­ing from $30 to $100 in value.

4. With All Apple Prod­ucts, Expect Some Quiet Changes. Dur­ing any price reduc­tion or major feature/storage bump, Apple fre­quently changes other com­po­nents inside its Mac or iPod hard­ware, some­times qui­etly, some­times not. Gen­er­ally, these com­po­nent changes are designed to make the prod­ucts look a lit­tle bet­ter, which Apple may or may not pub­li­cize (brighter LCD screens in Cin­ema Dis­plays, iMacs or iPods), or exhibit fewer failures/problems, which Apple will almost never pub­li­cize (MacBook/MacBook Pro logic boards), or will play down (replace­ment of entire iPod nano case with more resilient alu­minum). Occa­sion­ally, a change will be designed to decrease man­u­fac­tur­ing costs, and actu­ally result in slightly degraded qual­ity (replace­ment of iPod 3G/4G screens or nano 1GB screens with less bright ver­sions), which Apple will never dis­close. The ratio of “good” changes to “bad” changes is typ­i­cally skewed heav­ily in favor of the good ones.

5. Don’t Expect More Than Five Major Options. Apple tends not to expand its major prod­uct lines past five dis­crete options at a time, and gen­er­ally dis­con­tin­ues one prod­uct to make room for a new one. Today, the Mac lineup has the Mac mini, iMac, Mac Pro, Mac­Book, and Mac­Book Pro. The iPod lineup has the iPod shuf­fle, iPod nano, iPod, and the U2 iPod. Each prod­uct within the lineup typ­i­cally comes in 2 or 3 pri­mary ver­sions — iden­ti­fied in Macs by screen size or proces­sor speed, iPods by stor­age capac­ity — but some­times comes in only one.

6. Expect Stag­gered Launches. Very rarely will Apple update its entire lineup (Mac or iPod) at once — the Sep­tem­ber 2006 “It’s Show­time” event was one such rare, but par­tial excep­tion to this rule. Most often the com­pany will stag­ger new prod­uct launches at dif­fer­ent times through­out the year, mak­ing it pos­si­ble that a new model could arrive at any time, on short notice. This isn’t done to con­fuse con­sumers — it’s done to keep com­peti­tors on their toes– but it does both.

7. Dis­count Rumors and Spec­u­la­tion, Par­tic­u­larly on Tim­ing. Apple almost always main­tains a pol­icy of strict secrecy regard­ing unre­leased prod­ucts, as a con­se­quence gen­er­at­ing intense pub­lic spec­u­la­tion as to “what’s next.” To feed this demand, a num­ber of web sites offer claimed “insider” infor­ma­tion (rumors) about new Mac and iPod prod­ucts, and finan­cial ana­lysts have recently become a sec­ondary source of spec­u­la­tion on the company’s plans. Apple gen­er­ally dis­likes “rumors and spec­u­la­tion” because they (a) are some­times par­tially or totally inac­cu­rate, (b) always occupy poten­tial cus­tomers’ minds with prod­ucts they can­not buy, and © some­times par­tially or totally accu­rate, and then limit the company’s abil­ity to debut sur­pris­ing products.

Sim­ply put, though rumors and spec­u­la­tion are a fun part of life for Apple watch­ers, they are gen­er­ally ter­ri­bly inac­cu­rate in one crit­i­cal regard: tim­ing. Assum­ing that the gen­eral spec­i­fi­ca­tions of a rumored prod­uct are cor­rect, the actual prod­uct — Mac, iPod, or acces­sory — may not actu­ally come to mar­ket for a year or more after it is first rumored, if at all. Wait­ing for a rumored prod­uct to appear can deprive you of many months of enjoy­ment of an actual prod­uct; unfor­tu­nately, this hap­pens to peo­ple all the time.

8. Beware of First-Generation/Revision A Mod­els. Despite the rush of imme­di­ate pur­chases Apple expe­ri­ences with every new prod­uct launch, the company’s prod­ucts rou­tinely suf­fer from “revi­sion A,” “first-generation,” or “early adopter” bugs. Part of this is due to the cutting-edge tech­nolo­gies and designs it uses; another part is due to the secrecy-obsessed, quiet pre-release test­ing it employs. As frog design founder Hart­mut Esslinger told Busi­ness­week mag­a­zine recently, “Apple inno­vates in big ways and small ways, and if they don’t get it right, they inno­vate again.”

Though Apple’s cus­tomer sup­port remains top-ranked in the com­puter indus­try, the work­ing assump­tion with any new Apple prod­uct — par­tic­u­larly Macs — is that the first ver­sion will have some major issues, which will be qui­etly resolved in the four to six months after its release. The good news is that Apple takes care of cus­tomers with legit­i­mate major issues, and ulti­mately almost always fixes the prob­lems in the end. Unfor­tu­nately, rather than receiv­ing an e-mail or tele­phone call that a pur­chased item has a known issue, cus­tomers gen­er­ally are forced to iso­late the prob­lems, bring them to Apple’s atten­tion, and wait a period of time to get them prop­erly resolved. As such, if you’re con­cerned about pos­si­ble issues, you’re best off wait­ing for “revi­sion B” or a “second-generation” Apple prod­uct — they tend to have fewer issues.

9. Remem­ber, Used Apple Prod­ucts Still Have Value. Though it varies from model to model, Apple’s com­put­ers and iPods tend to hold onto a con­sid­er­able amount of resid­ual value even after being “replaced.” Our Buy­ers’ Guides and Free iPod Books have pointed out the resid­ual value of used iPods on eBay, Ama​zon​.com, and other ser­vices; years later, they’re still worth some­thing. As such, you can often sell a used Apple prod­uct and have a fair amount of money to use towards the pur­chase of a new one. If you’re on the fence about a pur­chase because you really, really believe the rumors that some­thing new is com­ing, you could always buy some­thing now, and then re-sell it when the new product’s release is announced or more appar­ently imminent.

10. Big Changes (Typ­i­cally) Come in Six-Plus Month Cycles. When it comes to com­put­ers and con­sumer elec­tron­ics, the real­ity is that there will always be some­thing newer and bet­ter com­ing out, avail­able 6 or 12 months after you make your pur­chase, no mat­ter what major brand you buy. Apple in par­tic­u­lar has never apol­o­gized for con­tin­u­ing to update its prod­ucts, even when its pac­ing was lam­pooned by Sat­ur­day Night Live: new iPods announced at the start of the par­ody were dis­con­tin­ued only min­utes later. As seen in the Sep­tem­ber 2005 intro­duc­tion of the iPod nano at a sep­a­rate event from the Octo­ber 2005 fifth-generation iPod, it is entirely pos­si­ble that a totally new model will emerge only shortly after another one, though it’s highly unlikely that this will hap­pen with a direct replace­ment — the 5G iPod replaced the 4G iPod, while the iPod nano replaced the iPod mini. For bet­ter or worse, Apple typ­i­cally intro­duces a prod­uct and keeps it around for a while at a sim­i­lar price.

Apple has bro­ken this rule and angered con­sumers. Apple’s Jan­u­ary 2006 intro­duc­tion of the “2-3X faster” Intel iMac came less than three months after the release of the final G5 iMac, sur­pris­ing the many late Decem­ber gift recip­i­ents who thought they were get­ting the lat­est and great­est new Macs. In fact, they were — but only for a cou­ple of weeks. This was prob­a­bly Apple’s quick­est and most dis­turb­ing prod­uct replace­ment, ever — the only one that still makes us wince. (The rapid price drops of the $599, 60GB Octo­ber 2004 iPod photo down to $399 came close.)

The Short Answer:

  • Should I Buy Now, or Wait?
  • After years of watch­ing Apple, our view is that the pur­chase of any Apple prod­uct can be made on a sin­gle ques­tion: does the prod­uct avail­able today have the fea­tures that will sat­isfy me? If the answer is yes, buy it and enjoy it. If the answer is no, wait. But don’t second-guess your deci­sion or wait around for a replace­ment that may take years to arrive. If you buy soon after release, you’ll have the longest oppor­tu­nity to enjoy the fea­tures and per­for­mance before some­thing else comes along and makes you envious.

    There are only two caveats. First, cau­tious peo­ple should wait around three weeks after ini­tial release to buy any new Apple prod­uct — this pro­vides ample oppor­tu­nity for the ear­li­est adopters to dis­cover and under­stand any basic prob­lems or defects it may have. Read up on the known issues — if they don’t bother you, jump right in.

    Sec­ond, super-cautious peo­ple should wait until the product’s “revi­sion B” — typ­i­cally once the prod­uct has received its first major fea­ture bump — so that they get the ben­e­fits of the new fea­tures, and don’t have to even slightly deal with what­ever seri­ous bugs or defects were dis­cov­ered in the first ver­sion. If you fall into the “super-cautious” camp, you may well be more sat­is­fied with the “revi­sion B” ver­sion of an older Apple prod­uct than you would be with a “revi­sion A” ver­sion of a cutting-edge, newly released one.

    Remem­ber, if you buy some­thing that Apple replaces soon there­after, you can prob­a­bly return the item to the store where it was pur­chased for a com­plete or par­tial refund. Apple stores give you a cou­ple of weeks, other mer­chants as much as a month. If you’re past that point, you can always con­sider eBay or other options to sell your pur­chase and upgrade.

    Every Fri­day is Organize-Your-Life 101 Day at AngPere​grino​.Com.
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