> Perhaps if companies stopped releasing useless crap set to become obsolete within months we wouldn't see such articles over and over again, no?
Is that what happened all previous times Apple released a new product category in the past decade, and such articles about it came out?
For how much inevitable near-future death people forecasted on Apple's new product categories, they all seemed to have avoided the "useless crap that will become obsolete in a month" trap (iphone, ipad, airpods, apple watch come to mind). Am I missing something?
The "become obsolete within months" part is especially inane, given iPhone 5s received a security update earlier this January, and it is a phone from 2013.
One way is to look at the series of products Apple has produced, and they've been successful.
The other way to look at it is the series of 3d vision devices (both tv and goggles) and view how successful those have been.
So, is this the time an Apple product fails big, or is this the time that immersive 3d takes off? It seems a lot easier to say that VR has largely been rejected and it will continue to be rejected, even if Apple is doing it.
Is that what happened all previous times Apple released a new product category in the past decade, and such articles about it came out?
For how much inevitable near-future death people forecasted on Apple's new product categories, they all seemed to have avoided the "useless crap that will become obsolete in a month" trap (iphone, ipad, airpods, apple watch come to mind). Am I missing something?
The "become obsolete within months" part is especially inane, given iPhone 5s received a security update earlier this January, and it is a phone from 2013.