Are Macs an Acquired Taste?

by Chris Seibold May 23, 2006

Dieter Glaser, in a testament to indirect knowledge gleaned from clever experimentation, has discovered that most of the animal world cannot discern the very useful, to humans, taste of artificial sweetener. According to Burkhard Bulger writing in The New Yorker, Dr. Glaser has spent a considerable amount of time offering sweet treats to a wide variety of animals only to discover that most of them could not appreciate the treats flavored with bogus sugar. Hence, if you ever see a dog drinking a Diet Coke you can be certain the dog is drinking the beverage out of thirst rather than ingesting the soda for the Aspartame rush (On a personal note, I avoid Diet Coke as it makes my back hurt).

Much like the craving for sugar substitutes is limited largely to Homo sapiens it seems that the enjoyment of the Mac is limited to just a further subset of bipeds. Should an anthropologist ever take up the question of computer preference from an evolutionary standpoint, I suggest the new tribe be named Homo sapiens sapiens emulatian.

Before venturing further, it is necessary to cast your mind back to last June. Standing in front of an audience of enthusiastic developers a thin, balding, bespectacled, yet somehow still enviably cool, Steve Jobs began selling the attendees on a radical departure for the Mac. The screen behind Steve said simply and cleverly: It’s true.

What Steve was pitching to the developers at WWDC ‘05 was the switch from PowerPC based machines to chips made by Intel. Through various graphs and hand waving Steve, naturally, made the switch to Intel sound like the most logical thing in the world. Of course, that is the Steve Jobs’ magic, he could announce that Macs were going to be powered by vacuum tubes and make it sound as reasonable as saying that the sun will rise in the East.

Steve Jobs’ persuasiveness aside, the inclusion of Intel processors was a major change for Apple. Not only had Apple openly mocked previous Intel offerings, but a large part of the price differential between Macs and PCs was justified (erroneously) in users minds by the differences in the cost of the chips. As big as the switch to Intel was for Apple it was an even bigger deal for the technology pundits.

Those who expound incessantly about technology viewed the switch to Intel as everything from the beginning of the continuously inevitable demise of Apple to the catalyst that would finally vault Apple to its rightful place of dominance in the computing realm.

One thing that was widely viewed as a near certainty was a fierce battle against piracy. John Dvorak, to note but one example, saw the Intel switch as precursor to OS X for any capable machine. Mr. Dvorak reasoned, incorrectly it seems, that OS X would be cracked and the ensuing piracy would force Apple to release a shrink-wrapped version of OS X for anyone who cared to cough up enough of the green stuff to take a copy home.

The first part, the cracking of OS X’s anti piracy measures did occur. The developer versions of OS X that shipped with Apple’s developers only Intel boxes were busted wide open. A standard PC could run OS X for the cost of a big download and a little bit of time. There was a big hoopla, videos showed up, people wrung their hands and then something very surprising happened: nothing.

That isn’t to say that Apple didn’t respond. Later releases of Tiger didn’t yield to cracking like a piñata soaked in vodka for a week, but the genie was already out of the bottle. OS X for generic PCs is available and very few are taking advantage of the third party “try before you buy” program.

How can we be sure that there isn’t a secret society of generic PC users taking full advantage of OS X goodness? Pick any statistic you like: sales, browser share or OS share. What you’ll note when looking at said marvels of objectivity is very little has changed. The Mac is picking up steam, but there is no reason to attribute the uptick to anything other than increased sales, or Microsoft delays, take your pick.

The assumption implicit in the predictions of widespread piracy is the notion that people value OS X much more than they value Apple designed rectangles. A reasonable assumption after years of hearing the grousing about the “Apple tax” (a tax hard to find on the new MacBooks). Hence, we are left with an obvious conclusion: people buy Macs as much for the box as the OS inside.

That conclusion just raises another question. If people aren’t secretly after the OS, if people want the whole experience, then why aren’t Macs more popular? As noted previously, the trend is up but demand for OS X on any whitebox PC seems to be non-existent. Perhaps it is analogous to Dr. Glaser’s studies on artificial sweetener, it takes a different breed to appreciate the taste of the Mac.

Comments

  • Perhaps it is analogous to Dr. Glaser’s studies on artificial sweetener, it takes a different breed to appreciate the taste of the Mac.

    I don’t really think that’s the analogy I would use.  Imagine Dr. Glaser coming to you and saying, “I have this sweetener.  It’s almost exactly the same as regular sugar.  Same ingredients, slightly fewer calories.  It basically does everything your regular sweetener does only it comes in much fancier packaging and costs more money.

    There would be some takers, but the advantages of the alternative aren’t great enough to pursuade consumers to pay a premium for the product. 

    Premium products, which basically have the same functionality with a fancier name/design/packaging are relegated to niche markets by design.  Only in the case of the Mac do people seem to be enamored with the idea of dominating the market.  While they often compare it to the Mercedes or BMW of the computer world, one would never argue that it’s only a matter of time before everyone is driving a BMW or that BMW market share would explode with this or that feature added.

    Beeblebrox had this to say on May 23, 2006 Posts: 2220
  • The major hole in this argument is the notion that “A standard PC could run OS X for the cost of a big download and a little bit of time.”

    For the typical user that’s just not even close to the truth.  I mean, the typical user can’t even begin to fathom bittorrent, let alone opening the proper ports on their firewall.  And that’s just to get the download working!

    Now, you gotta figure that your typical corporate IT guy probably knows HOW to do it, but he’s not about to deploy a hacked-up, illegal version on any wide scale.

    Most people want the easy way out.  And most people want the legal way out.

    That some hacked-up, illegal, may-or-may-not work version of OS X hasn’t taken the world by storm is hardly evidence that OS X isn’t popular, disirable or widely appealing.

    tplants had this to say on May 23, 2006 Posts: 1
  • I discovered another type of computer user yesterday: The bigot.

    Quoting from OS X’s own thesaurus one who is bigoted can be: biased, partial, one-sided, sectarian, discriminatory; opinionated, dogmatic, intolerant, narrow-minded, blinkered, illiberal; racist, sexist, chauvinistic, jingoistic; warped, twisted, distorted.

    Bigots are worse than zealots. Zealots are simply blinded by their own over-zealous enthusiasm. Sure they’re a pain and you can’t reason with them. Bigots on the other hand, are blinded by their prejudices.

    Referring to an IT tutor at the college I attend, someone said to me yesterday “He doesn’t like Macs.” The tone of the statement conveyed in no uncertain terms what this tutor thought of Macs.

    That is pure bias. It’s not based on any rational thought or evaluation. There’s no reason to not like Macs, just as there’s no reason to not like PCs.They are both tools that can and do successfully complete the same tasks.

    You can prefer one to the other if you wish to be objective.

    I do agree that Macs are an acquired taste. Simply because they work differently. My experince though is there are a lot of predjudiced PC users in places of IT authority and that’s holding back Macs more than them being an acquired taste.

    It’s like kids who say “I don’t like that” and the parent says “But you’ve nevere tried it!” and the kid says “But I know I won’t”

    So, I agree Chris, I suspect that it does take a different breed to appreciate the Mac - and dare I say it, a breed that is not bigoted.

    Chris Howard had this to say on May 23, 2006 Posts: 1209
  • I suspect that it does take a different breed to appreciate the Mac - and dare I say it, a breed that is not bigoted.

    C’mon, Chris.  There’s the reasonable point that some PC users are bigoted.  And then there’s the preposterous fantasy that Mac users aren’t bigoted at all.  In fact, I’d argue that Mac users, in both degree and percentage of users, are vastly more prejudiced.

    I do agree with, however, that “bigot” is a better word than “zealot.”

    Beeblebrox had this to say on May 23, 2006 Posts: 2220
  • oops! yes. you are right Beeb, I didn’t mean to insinuate that there are no bigoted Mac users. (falls off chair laughing)

    I just wanted to say the PC users that would switch, are the ones who aren’t bigoted.

    Chris Howard had this to say on May 23, 2006 Posts: 1209
  • Ah, of course.  Thanks for clarifying, Chris.

    Beeblebrox had this to say on May 23, 2006 Posts: 2220
  • ”(On a personal note, I avoid Diet Coke as it makes my back hurt)”

    I’m not even sure if I dare ask…

    CapnVan had this to say on May 24, 2006 Posts: 68
  • Old joke, I thought no one would bite (where are ya when I need CKH?):
    (On a personal note, I avoid Diet Coke as it makes my back hurt)”

    from licking my (insert fave word for posterior here) to get the taste out of my mouth

    Chris Seibold had this to say on May 24, 2006 Posts: 354
  • @Tplants

    You were mentining mac and pc prejudice, and yep to a great degree i agree absoutely.

    You definately arent a zealot for mentioning this.

    However you said that you feel a lot of Authority IT types are possible holding Macs back.

    I believe the real reason for this is more to do with network architecture.  Microsoft has done a huge amount of work to let PC’s form some amazing networks easily and securely.

    Linux is famous for networking, and as it’s free and multi platform and open source, it just works wonders in this sector.

    Then theres that operating cost…companies writing / buying software for their chosen platform.

    But… where are the mac super computers?
    Servers… and workstations…

    Now i’m no “know it all” but i know theyre either few or non-existant.

    But that brings us back to the very roots of Macintosh.  “Computers for regular people”.  In the old days the IT thing was big blue IBM, what Apple was against.

    Apples never really been a server company. Thats IBM Dell and Sun.

    Even desktop PC’s dont touch a lot of what the IT sector is.  Theres a lot of companies running some beastly mainframes.

    MacSuxWindozSux had this to say on May 25, 2006 Posts: 2
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