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by nsimpson 6508 days ago
I know I'm going to get downmodded for this but I have to agree with Captain-M.

The attitude that "we're doing better than our competitors so we don't need to improve" is toxic, and usually fatal for a company in the long run (... the others aren't going to be content with sitting in second place forever).

My earlier-gen MBP, iPhone, iPods etc are all rock solid (I'm delighted with them all), but I could easily see a situation where quality could go south on new products in the rush to cut costs and get to market faster.

I hope that's not the case. It would be little comfort to me as a new buyer if my machine bricked for no reason, and some smug fanboy pointed out that other people who bought Macs in the past had no problems (making me the problem?)

2 comments

> The attitude that "we're doing better than our competitors so we don't need to improve" is toxic

Who exactly has this attitude?

Pretty much anyone or anything somewhere at the top of the food chain for an extended period of time.
So you know for a fact that Tony Fadell, Scott Forstall, Sina Tamaddon, Bob Mansfield, and Ron Johnson have this problem?
He said "most" not "all". It's the perfect out when a specific is pushed!
for a masochistic corporate culture that has the motto for something pretty good as 'it doesn't suck', I somehow doubt Apple will have the 'Resting on their laurels' GM syndrome until after Jobs leaves

(I have had no problems with the new intel macbooks and pros)