On Fri, Oct 1, 2010 at 21:30, Sinner from the Prairy <[email protected]> wrote: > Fabrice Facorat wrote: > >> I'm still amazed by the technicals limits of the iPhone, and how >> people can still want to buy them ... same for iPod ... >> >> iPod : no mp3, no FM radio, no USB mass storage support >> iPhone : no standard visio, no ability to create without iTunes or >> third party tools photo albums, less capable facebook integration, no >> FM radio, no flash, and so on ... > > iProducts don't have all the bullet points, all the technical specs that an > UberGeek would like. > > But the ones they have: work great, are integrated with the rest of the > ecosystem, are user-friendly and they are aesthetically pleasant.
And (and that's an important bit to differentiate when entering a new market or pushing a new product revision): they almost never feature-match existing potentially competing products on the market. By doing so, they prevent customers to compare their products with the competition feature against feature. So comparison and choice happens on something else than the common feature set you would expect for a industry-standard product; it happens on something they are better at than the competition, be it a set of innovating/differentiating features or design. Romain
