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by Maursault 1228 days ago
> Mac -28.72% YoY

Macs are quality machines that have a longevity, so most consumers aren't replacing them every two years. I think Apple should get serious about infiltrating enterprise, the world of Microsoft, with seamless desktop solutions that won't cause any extra work for IT. They could pick up a lot of sales with inexpensive hardware undercutting base model PCs for non-power users by creating secretary suites and suites for desk-monkeys that don't use anything more esoteric than email, office apps and web, while cutting power costs dramatically, as long as the software seamlessly integrates with Active Directory, Exchange/O365, and other Microsoft technologies without any hassle or learning curve, and machines that just work without generating any IT incidents, ever or rarely. This seems like a no-brainer to me, because it's kind of silly and expensive giving a secretary a $800-$2500 base model HP or Dell running Windows 11. They should also try to attract power users with more performant Apple Silicon, but the entire point rests on a proactive developer team issuing fast updates to fix Microsoft periodically breaking things with their updates, and never allow Microsoft to confound the Apple enterprise initiative, as Microsoft will undoubted try to do at every turn.

Not Mac sales related, but I also think Apple should infiltrate and take over the residential kitchen with advanced, efficient utilities, a refrigerator, an inductive range top, a microwave that doesn't "KLUNK!" when the door is closed, a toaster-broiler, maybe a faucet and purifier.

And I think they should do these things before they ever release any VR/AR hardware and get burned like everyone else in the history of VR/AR.

2 comments

I disagree. The reason I won't buy a Mac is because I've had bad luck with them.
Just one issue here - Where you will get IT admins for Apple products?
Forget admins, management software and support are nightmares
IT is a generalist field. Techs don't shy away from things they don't yet have experience with, and as long as the machines bind to the directory without hassle, that's all the administration they should need.
> Techs don't shy away from things they don't yet have experience with, and as long as the machines bind to the directory without hassle, that's all the administration they should need.

lol what? how many IT support orgs have you been in? how many have you had to run? Most of my (local) techs had room temperature IQs, and many of the outsourced help, be it in India or NYC, wouldn't do jack until you told them exactly what to do. IT lends itself extremely well to specialization because many fields are so deep that you almost have to specialize; no way I'm trusting a random Linux admin to handle BGP, nor my Network guy to fix my deep-in-the-DB SAN problems.

Plus there is an entire galaxy of software that would have to be ported, made to work, and made to work in ways that satisfy compliance requirements.

Then there is maintenance, updates, RMAs, and training.

It's a big, demanding, ruthless market, and Apple knows this -- and is why they haven't bothered to enter it.