| > An Apple CPU is another version of the ARM chip. How do I buy a Whopper at McDonalds? It's not that you want to buy a Whopper at McDonalds. It's that you have a Ford and if you try to drive it to Burger King to buy a Whopper they disable your car because Ford owns McDonalds and Chevy owns Burger King. Which in turn keeps anyone from producing a new make of car or a new brand of food, because no existing source of food will serve you if you're not in the parent company's vehicle and no one can scale a new restaurant or grocery chain enough to make some other brand of vehicles viable when people in existing vehicles can't patronize it. This kind of tying is meant to be prohibited. > Pepsi chooses to not serve customers who go to McDonald’s and Costco chooses not to serve Amex customers. People who want Pepsi can go into McDonalds, come out with a Big Mac, pick up a Pepsi at any vending machine or convenience store and go sit down and have them together. People who buy a washing machine at CostCo on their Visa can go buy detergent for it from Walmart with their Amex. > You either choose to work with customers where they are or you don’t. Just like video game makers The same antitrust action should be applied to video game consoles. |
We are talking about ARM chips, anyone with the money can design their own ARM chips and contract TSMC to manufacturer them. There are at least a dozen companies that do so. No one forces you to buy phones made by Apple just like no one forces you to buy burgers from McDonalds.
If people are willing gk pay more for a gourmet burger at an upscale restaurant (Apple) than McDonalds (Android$ because they feel like the burgers are better, that’s people making an informed choice.
> The same antitrust action should be applied to video game consoles.
Are you saying that video game makers should also be forced to license their IP so other manufacturers can clone their consoles?