On Wed, Jun 9, 2010 at 05:50, David Cake <[email protected]> wrote: > > The point is that it makes both things much less useful as > search terms. Got a problem with ssl on your iphone? Google ios ssl > and there are already 294,000 search responses, all of which are > wrong.
Your average user isn't going to even know that it's called iOS. They're going to search for "iPhone ssl" or more likely "Why doesn't my apple phone work?". And anyone knowledgeable enough to know to search for "iOS SSL" is going to be smart enough to search for "iOS SSL Apple" or "iOS SSL iPhone". I give it about a week or less, once the iOS is actually shipping, before it's the Cisco users that are having an issue with searching. And I bet they'll know to add "Cisco" as well. >> Dont read so much into the name from that angle And i can >>guarantee the general public has no clue or cares. The keynote was >>about what it had to be to combat google and the press. > > The keynote was to developers. They can cope with naming the OS > something that uniquely identifies it. The keynote may have been "for developers" (I'd argue that point as well), but you're fooling yourself if you think developers were anywhere near the top of the list in addressing concerns with assigning a new name for the OS. -- arno s hautala /-| [email protected] pgp eabb6fe6 d47c500f b2458f5d a7cc7abb f81c4e00 _______________________________________________ OSX-Nutters mailing list | [email protected] http://lists.tit-wank.com/mailman/listinfo/osx-nutters List hosted at http://cat5.org/
