TidBITS#540/24-Jul-00
=====================

  Apple stole the show at Macworld Expo with major hardware
  releases, so we  concentrate first on the technical and pricing
  details and then analyze what Apple's announcements mean for the
  rest of the Mac industry. In other news, Netscape released
  Communicator 4.74, Apple posted a $200 million profit, TidBITS
  Publisher Adam Engst was named as the 2nd most influential person
  in the Mac industry, and IncWell released SuperCard Personal
  Edition.

Topics:
    MailBITS/24-Jul-00
    New iMacs, Multiprocessor G4s, and G4 Cubes
    Can Innovation Become Business As Usual?

<http://www.tidbits.com/tb-issues/TidBITS-540.html>
<ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/issues/2000/TidBITS#540_24-Jul-00.etx>

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MailBITS/24-Jul-00
------------------

**Netscape Communicator 4.74** -- Netscape Communications has
  released Netscape Communicator 4.74 for Macintosh. Communicator
  4.74 includes the new option of removing all mail from POP or IMAP
  servers when you quit the program. However, the release also
  includes several Macintosh-specific fixes and enhancements: URLs
  can now be handed off to applications specified by the Internet
  control panel or Internet Config, Command-~ cycles through
  windows, and the package includes StuffIt Expander 5.5 (although
  other bundled utilities like RealPlayer still aren't up to date).
  Version 4.74 also corrects Mac-specific JavaScript bugs with frame
  targeting and infinite recursion, adds printing from the Finder
  (and from script-created windows that lack standard menus), fixes
  crashing bugs with automatic address completion, properly handles
  long URLs in bookmarks and the personal toolbar, and loads plug-
  ins properly when using Mac OS 9's Multiple Users feature.
  Additionally, this release fixes cosmetic problems with italic
  text and instances where plug-ins may not have been able to draw
  correctly to the browser window, enables roaming access profiles
  to read email configurations correctly, and changes the built-in
  Java VM to identify the Temporary Items folder correctly under
  internationalized versions of the Mac OS. Netscape Communicator is
  a 13.6 MB download, and requires a PowerPC-based system running
  Mac OS 7.6.1 or later. Version 4.74 is the latest official release
  for Mac, although Netscape is also currently conducting a public
  preview of Netscape 6, based on technologies from the open source
  Mozilla project. [GD]

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05927>
<http://www.netscape.com/download/>
<http://www.netscape.com/download/previewrelease.html>
<http://www.mozilla.org/>


**Apple Posts $200 Million Profit & Returns to Circuit City** --
  Apple Computer posted a $200 million profit for its third fiscal
  quarter of 2000 on revenues of over $1.8 billion, for an overall
  revenue gain of 17 percent. Apple sold more than one million
  machines during the quarter, including over 450,000 iMacs and
  350,000 Power Mac G4 systems, for a 12 percent rise in unit sales
  from the year-ago quarter. Apple's profits included $37 million
  from continued sales of ARM Holdings plc., without which the
  company's profit would have been $163 million, an increase of 43
  percent from the year-ago quarter. (A year ago, Apple posted a
  $203 million profit, but $89 million of it was from sales of ARM
  Holdings.) Apple's margins were up to 29.8 percent, and
  international sales accounted for 46 percent of the quarter's
  revenues.

<http://www.apple.com/pr/library/2000/jul/18q3results.html>

  Apple also announced that Circuit City will once again carry Apple
  products in nearly 600 retail stores throughout the U.S. Circuit
  City will feature Apple's consumer-oriented iMac, iBook, and
  AirPort product lines, and will also display digital video cameras
  connected to iMac DV systems, highlighting Apple's FireWire and
  iMovie technologies. The move marks Apple's return to Circuit
  City; in 1998, Apple pulled out of most retail superstores to
  focus on CompUSA's "store within a store" concept for Apple
  products - and because the large chains did a poor job of
  promoting, supporting, or even displaying Apple products. It
  remains to be seen whether Circuit City can do better this time
  around. [GD]

<http://www.apple.com/pr/library/2000/jul/18circuitcity.html>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=04711>


**We're Number Two!** Congratulations to TidBITS publisher Adam
  Engst for his second place ranking in the MDJ Power 25, a survey
  ranking the 25 most influential people in the Macintosh community!
  Adam's ranking was second only to Apple iCEO Steve Jobs - who
  claimed the top seat by a wide margin - but also well ahead of
  other Apple executives, influential developers and technical
  folks, plus industry luminaries like Adobe's John Warnock and
  Microsoft's Bill Gates. The survey, which marks the relaunch of
  the highly regarded MDJ, the Daily Journal for Serious Macintosh
  Users, compiled private responses from a large group of Macintosh
  insiders, development executives, programmers, journalists, and
  industry observers, who were each asked to name who they felt were
  the five most powerful and influential Macintosh people. MDJ
  compiled the responses, listing the top 25 vote-getters, honorable
  mentions, and figures mysteriously missing in action. When I spoke
  with Adam (who's still in New York after Macworld Expo) about the
  survey results, he said that it was an honor to be recognized in
  this way by prominent figures of the Macintosh community. Over the
  last ten years, we at TidBITS have strived to make friends rather
  than enemies, and to focus on the person behind the personal
  computer rather than doggedly pursuing technology for its own
  sake. It's tremendously rewarding when people in every part of the
  Macintosh community find that work useful and worthwhile.

<http://www.tidbits.com/adam/>
<http://www.macjournals.com/pages/gcsf/mdj_power_25.html>
<http://www.macjournals.com/pages/mdj/>

  Subscriptions to the relaunched MDJ are $30 per month; you can
  sign up for a free limited trial subscription at the MacJournals
  site. [GD]

<http://www.macjournals.com/pages/mdj/mdj_free_trial.epl>


**SuperCard Personal Edition** -- IncWell DMG and Solutions
  Etcetera have released SuperCard Personal Edition, a version of
  the well-regarded multimedia authoring and scripting environment
  aimed at individual users and folks working with Apple's all-but-
  officially abandoned HyperCard. SuperCard features full-color
  authoring capabilities that are well suited to demos, project
  prototypes, presentations, utilities, multimedia software, and
  more, using a structure similar to HyperCard's card-and-stack
  metaphor. SuperCard Personal Edition differs from the full version
  of SuperCard in that it can't encrypt scripts from prying eyes or
  enable users to build commercial applications, and it lacks a
  royalty-free license to distribute SuperCard applications
  (although other folks can still run projects using the free
  SuperCard Player). SuperCard Personal Edition includes all of
  SuperCard's other capabilities (including voice recognition,
  sophisticated QuickTime authoring, and the capability to convert
  many HyperCard stacks to SuperCard projects), and price is
  attractive: through a special promotion with MacNN, SuperCard
  Personal Edition is available for $50. The full version of
  SuperCard costs $150.

<http://www.solutionsetcetera.com/SCPE/>
<http://www.apple.com/hypercard/>
<http://www.macnn.com/>

  For more background on SuperCard, see Matt Neuburg's review of
  SuperCard 3.0 in TidBITS-369_, and TidBITS technical editor Geoff
  Duncan's review of SuperCard 3.5.2 for Macworld's May 1999 issue.
  SuperCard's current version is 3.6. For details of HyperCard's
  current status, see "Alas, HyperCard!" and "The Business Case for
  HyperCard" in TidBITS-453_ and TidBITS-454_. HyperCard's situation
  remains essentially unchanged, but it's now over a year and a half
  more moribund than when those articles were published. [GD]

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=00716>
<http://macworld.zdnet.com/1999/05/reviews/supercard.html>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05155>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05169>


**Poll Results: Buy and Buy** -- Last week's poll asked where
  readers prefer to purchase Macintosh-related hardware, and (a sign
  of the times) online retailers were the clear favorite, cited by
  more than 60 percent of the poll's respondents. Also faring well
  were the more traditional sources of mail order catalogs (41
  percent) and local Apple dealers (32 percent), while nearly 20
  percent of respondents said they prefer to purchase directly from
  manufacturers, and 15 percent liked office and computer
  superstores. In retrospect, we should have called out campus
  dealers and other education-only channels separately, but it
  doesn't seem to have confused many respondents, with the "Other"
  category getting only three percent of the votes. [GD]

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbpoll=49>


**Poll Preview: Mac Attack!** Last week at Macworld Expo, Apple
  completely revised its desktop computer offerings (see the article
  below), so the new systems are the subject of this week's poll. If
  you were going to purchase one of Apple's just announced Macs
  _today_, which one would you buy? Are your decisions driven
  primarily by price (the $799 iMac), design (the G4 Cube), sheer
  horsepower (500 MHz dual-processor systems), or other factors?
  Cast your vote on our home page! [GD]

<http://www.tidbits.com/>


New iMacs, Multiprocessor G4s, and G4 Cubes
-------------------------------------------
  by Geoff Duncan <geoff@tidbits.com>

  In his keynote address at Macworld Expo in New York, Apple iCEO
  Steve Jobs took the wraps off a complete revision of Apple's
  desktop computer offerings - plus unveiled new displays, a new
  keyboard, and an optical mouse.


**Mouse & Keyboard** -- The oft-reviled "hockey puck" USB mouse
  introduced with the original iMac never made Apple many friends,
  and Apple's abbreviated USB keyboard ruffled plenty of feathers
  when it became standard issue with Apple's professional computers.
  To rectify the situation, Apple has introduced the optical Apple
  Pro Mouse and Apple Pro Keyboard. The Pro Mouse sports a soap bar
  shape and uses optical sensors instead of moving parts to track
  movement, so it should operate accurately on a variety of
  surfaces. Also, its entire top surface serves as the mouse button,
  levering down in front to perform a click. The force required to
  click the mouse is adjustable, so the mouse should work for a wide
  range of Macintosh users - and no moving parts means no cleaning
  (although the clear plastic surface will probably be permanently
  smudged). The 108-key Pro Keyboard features 15 full-size
  programmable function keys, a standard configuration of navigation
  keys (arrows, Home, End, Page Up, Page Down, etc.) plus a key to
  eject a CD or DVD disk, although it lacks a Power key. Pressing
  any key on the keyboard will turn on or wake up the Mac systems
  Apple just released, but people who use it with earlier USB-
  equipped Macs will have to use front-mounted power buttons
  instead. (The new Eject key reportedly takes the place of the
  Power key for use with Apple's MacsBug debugger.) The new mouse
  and keyboard will ship standard on Apple's desktop systems (see
  below), and can be purchased separately from the Apple store for
  $60 each.

<http://www.apple.com/mouse/>
<http://www.apple.com/keyboard/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbser=1057>


**New iMacs** -- Apple's latest iMacs introduce new colors -
  Indigo, Ruby, Sage, and the all-white Snow - but also sport
  aggressive pricing and performance enhancements while retaining
  the standard iMac form factor, 15-inch display, and convection
  cooling that eliminates the need for a noisy fan. The low-end
  model Indigo has an appealing $799 price, and features a 350 MHz
  PowerPC G3 processor, 64 MB RAM, a 7.5 GB hard disk, a 56 Kbps
  modem, two USB ports, 10/100Base-T Ethernet and a slot-loading
  CD-ROM drive, although it lacks FireWire and AirPort capabilities.
  Next, the AirPort-ready $999 iMac DV is available in Indigo or
  Ruby and adds a 400 MHz G3 processor, a 10 GB hard disk, VGA video
  mirroring, two FireWire ports, and iMovie, but carries a 24x
  CD-ROM drive rather than a DVD-ROM drive. Moving on up, the $1,299
  iMac DV+ is available in Indigo, Ruby, and Sage, and offers a 450
  MHz G3 processor, a DVD-ROM drive, and a 20 GB hard disk, and the
  high-end iMac DV Special Edition (available now in Snow as well as
  a slightly modified Graphite) sports a 500 MHz G3 processor, 128
  MB RAM, and a 30 GB hard disk. The $799 Indigo model is due in
  September, but the other new iMac models are available
  immediately.

<http://www.apple.com/imac/>


**Dual-processor Power Mac G4s** -- Apple also revised the high
  end of the professional line to include dual-processor Power
  Macintosh G4 systems running at 450 and 500 MHz. During Jobs's
  keynote, he and Apple Vice President of Worldwide Product
  Marketing Phil Schiller demonstrated that a single 500 MHz G4
  system easily outmatched a 1 GHz Pentium system at rendering a
  real-world Photoshop file; they then went on to show a 500 MHz
  dual-processor Power Mac G4 system deliver Photoshop performance
  roughly equivalent to a theoretical 2 GHz Pentium chip - it would
  have been nice to see them compare the dual processor G4 with a
  dual processor Pentium. Although software currently must be
  designed specifically to take advantage of multiprocessor systems,
  Apple's forthcoming Mac OS X will offer symmetric multiprocessing
  capabilities for all Mac OS X applications as well as "carbonized"
  applications developed for the current Mac OS, so the performance
  benefits of multiprocessor systems will increase over time. Dual-
  processor G4s are now standard at the high end of Apple's Power
  Mac G4 line: 450 MHz systems start at $2,500 and 500 MHz systems
  at $3,500, while a single-processor 400 MHz G4 system still starts
  at $1,600. All Power Mac G4s now sport gigabit (1000Base-T)
  Ethernet.

<http://www.apple.com/powermac/>


**And Next... the G4 Cube** -- The real eye-opener of Jobs's
  keynote address was the introduction of the Power Macintosh G4
  Cube, a surprisingly tiny 8-inch cube on a transparent plastic
  base that sports a 450 or 500 MHz G4 processor, 64 MB or 128 MB of
  RAM, a 20 GB or 30 GB hard disk, FireWire, USB, 56 Kbps modem, and
  Ethernet, plus support for up to 1.5 GB of RAM and 40 GB of
  storage. The small box might be confused for an air filter or
  perhaps an odd-looking speaker on your desk, but it's AirPort-
  ready, features a slot-loading DVD drive on top, offers easy
  access to internal components (just turn it over, pop up a handle,
  and pull), and - even better - the system is cooled by convection,
  so it has no fan and is virtually silent. (If all that silence
  gets you down, Apple includes special 20-watt Harman/Kardon stereo
  speakers.) Essentially, the G4 Cube features everything a mid-
  range professional G4 system would offer (except PCI expansion) in
  a 14-pound form factor that's one quarter the size of a standard
  G4 minitower. Prices start at $1,800 ($2,300 for the 500 MHz
  version) and G4 Cubes should be available in early August. For a
  display, you can use any VGA monitor, or choose among Apple's
  three new offerings, below.

<http://www.apple.com/powermaccube/>


**New Displays** -- Apple also rolled out three new displays, each
  of which combine power, video, and USB into a single cable. The
  $500 17-inch Apple Studio Display features a transparent chassis
  with a flat Diamondtron CRT display and an ultra-bright Theater
  Mode. The all-digital $1,000 15-inch flat-panel Apple Studio
  Display LCD display offers a 1024 by 768 resolution. Apple also
  updated its $4,000 high-end 1600 by 1024 LCD Cinema Display to use
  the all-in-one cable for USB, power, and video.

<http://www.apple.com/displays/>


Can Innovation Become Business As Usual?
----------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>

  In last week's Macworld Expo keynote, Steve Jobs walked on stage
  and, wasting no time on reviewing Apple's corporate position,
  launched into a long keynote address that was almost entirely full
  of new hardware announcements. The releases started with the new
  Apple Pro Mouse and Apple Pro Keyboard, continued with new iMacs
  and multi-processor Power Mac G4s, and finished with the elegantly
  designed Power Mac G4 Cube and a trio of new monitors. Sprinkled
  in the middle were a quick address by Adobe's president, a demo
  from Microsoft's Kevin Browne of Office 2001's Macintosh-only
  features (due in October), confirmation from Alex Seropian that
  Microsoft's recently acquired Bungie Division will release Halo
  for the Macintosh, and a brief announcement that Apple and
  Microsoft are working together to bring all of Microsoft's games
  to the Mac. Jobs also lingered over his demo of iMovie 2, showing
  proficiency with the software, and breezed through some minor
  updates to the HomePage part of iTools (though he passed over the
  much improved and expanded iReview, which now includes a review of
  TidBITS - if you have a moment, we'd appreciate additional reader
  reviews).

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05986>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05763>
<http://ireview.mac.com/WebObjects/iReview.woa/wa/GoReview?site=379>


**Apple Continues to Execute** -- Apple's barrage of new product
  announcements set the tone for the rest of Macworld Expo, which
  can be best summed up with a single word: businesslike. Since Jobs
  took the helm at Apple, he has led the company through a recovery
  spearheaded by the release of the iMac and a solidification marked
  by the completion of the four-box product matrix plus 11
  consecutive quarterly profits. It's clear that Apple is once again
  healthy, but when you're Apple Computer, corporate health means
  continuing to push the envelope at all times. Although Apple's
  product announcements weren't revolutionary on a superficial
  level, some of them stack up better when viewed in more depth. For
  instance, the inclusion of the new optical mouse with all Mac
  models, putting gigabit Ethernet onto the motherboard of the Power
  Mac G4s by default, and dropping a second PowerPC G4 processor
  onto the motherboards of the top two Power Mac G4 models (without
  increasing prices) all raise the bar as to what is generally
  considered standard equipment. Apple isn't interested in entering
  a futile price war with PC manufacturers, but by beefing up the
  standard Macintosh, Apple can significantly close the gap with
  comparably outfitted PCs.

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=04880>


**Innovate with Elegance** -- Also worth a closer look are the
  Power Mac G4 Cube and, to a lesser extent, the new monitors. The
  monitors are interesting mainly for their new cable, which reduces
  desktop clutter by combining video, USB, and power. It's easy to
  dismiss this cable as yet another of Apple's wacky custom cables,
  but I think we'll see this cable remain standardized across all
  desktop Macs that connect to monitors for one simple reason:
  elegance. Cable nests are one of the most inelegant physical
  aspects of computers, and under Jobs Apple has pushed to reduce
  and eliminate cabling with the AirPort wireless networking, by
  switching to flexible technologies like USB and FireWire that
  support daisy chaining of different device types, and now with
  this combination monitor cable. If you're trying to set new
  industrial design standards with your hardware, it only makes
  sense to address cabling at the same time.

  Viewed in terms of specs and price, the Power Mac G4 Cube is by no
  means revolutionary and isn't even all that interesting, since it
  costs more than comparable Power Mac G4s and lacks expansion slots
  (those who want multiple monitors may have to try to justify
  buying a $4,000 22-inch Cinema Display to compensate). But Jobs's
  stroke of genius two years ago was to rephrase the computer buying
  decision in terms of design and color in favor of specs and price.
  The G4 Cube takes this design aesthetic to new levels, reducing
  the size of the computer to the point where it can easily fit on a
  desk, eliminating the fan to reduce noise. It also builds in slick
  features: for instance, according to an Apple rep on the show
  floor, the top-mounted power switch is a proximity sensor that
  replaces the physical relay generally used to turn on the
  computer.

  Apple didn't sacrifice functionality for form either, making it
  easy to access the parts of the G4 Cube that are expandable merely
  by removing it from its convection tower. And though Apple clearly
  meant the unit to sit in full view, Chris Kilbourn of Mac-centric
  Web hosting provider digital.forest (a TidBITS sponsor) said that
  he wanted to see how the G4 Cubes would fit into a server rack
  mount, since they pack such power into a small space. I could
  imagine a fan-cooled "pegboard" into which you could place
  multiple G4 Cubes, with the pegboard providing USB and monitor
  switching to a shared keyboard, mouse, and display.

  When Jobs showed the new product matrix, the G4 Cube took its
  place between the iMac and the Power Mac G4. The position is
  accurate in multiple ways, since there are numerous iMac buyers
  who would have wanted a larger screen or smaller unit, and some
  people who went for the full Power Mac G4 dislike its size and
  consider the PCI slots a waste of space. The G4 Cube may be more
  expensive now because of all the work necessary to reduce its
  size, but I wouldn't be surprised to see Apple readjust pricing
  over time to slot the G4 Cube more squarely between the iMac and
  Power Mac G4 lines. I expect the G4 Cube to be a success.


**Future Product Speculation** -- In adding the G4 Cube to the
  product matrix, Jobs cleverly opened up a slot between the iBook
  and PowerBook G3 in the portable arena. He glossed over it quickly
  in the keynote, but the fact that he didn't just expand the
  desktop part of the matrix was a sneaky way to fuel speculation
  and anticipation for the machine to occupy that box. Although it's
  hard to separate desire from logic, my bet is that we're looking
  at some sort of a subnotebook for that part of the product line.
  Apple has clearly been emphasizing miniaturization, and both the
  iBook and PowerBook G3 lines are heavy and clunky in comparison
  with the current generation of PC subnotebooks as epitomized by
  the Sony Vaio. Some suggested the empty slot could be filled by a
  Palm OS-based PDA, but that seems less likely since it's not clear
  to me how Apple could add significant value to the Palm OS.

  Along with a revised PowerBook design informed by the iBook
  (likely powered by a PowerPC G4 chip), I strongly suspect we'll
  see a subnotebook in the near future, perhaps at January's
  Macworld Expo in San Francisco, since Apple will want to make a
  splashy announcement and there's no chance Mac OS X will be
  shipping then, what with the public beta being pushed back to
  September and the release date advertised as early in 2001.


**Technology Imitating Art** -- Steve Jobs said during his
  keynote, "We want Apple to stand at the intersection of art and
  technology." Although it's compelling to see Jobs's intersection
  as one that you encounter on a journey, it's important to think of
  it not as a crossroads, but instead as the place where two roads
  meet at a fork and continue on together. Apple may never be the
  choice of the masses, but speaking for those of us for whom it's
  important to integrate technology into our lives in a humanistic
  fashion, we should continue to look to a Steve Jobs-led Apple not
  to just stand at the intersection of art and technology, but to
  accompany us along the path of integration.

  There will be missteps, such as the abbreviated keyboard and
  much-reviled puck mouse that put form over function, but no other
  technology company puts as much effort into humanizing technology
  through art as Apple. The day before the show, I toured the
  Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum's Triennial Design Exposition
  and saw (along with the iMac and iBook) an Aztec pyramid-like
  "Simple PC" commissioned by Intel. Apple has no monopoly on great
  design - this machine was visually arresting and appeared
  functionally complete. But did Intel have the guts to ship it? No.
  Sure, it might have been expensive to build or have suffered other
  problems that weren't obvious, but where Intel allowed its heavily
  designed PC to be purely an academic exercise, Apple has pushed
  hard to make its designs available to anyone.

<http://www.si.edu/ndm/>


**An Industry Challenged** -- I've intentionally said nothing
  about the rest of the show, because, despite the businesslike
  tone, there was no single overriding theme that stood out this
  year. (However, we will be publishing our traditional Macworld
  Expo Superlatives article, highlighting some of the noteworthy
  products and events at the show.) It wasn't until the very end of
  the three days that I realized that the lack of a theme was in
  fact emblematic of what was going on - the revitalized Macintosh
  industry is growing and maturing. Colored plastic no longer
  attracts attention: it's simply assumed (although with Apple's
  change in iMac colors, I'd warn vendors against trying to match
  the hues and instead aim for a complementary approach). FireWire
  was everywhere at the show, but as cool as FireWire is, it's just
  a connection technology used primarily for storage devices and
  camcorders, with the occasional scanner or printer thrown in. Many
  booths had little or nothing to do with the Macintosh
  specifically, focusing instead on services or technologies that
  would be of interest to the Macintosh user. Thanks to the increase
  in size and importance of the Mac, companies like Epson, Hewlett-
  Packard, Brother, and Canon featured vast arrays of printers,
  cameras, and other peripherals that are only now becoming
  compatible with the Mac.

  In short, what I took away from the show was that many companies
  now believe that the Mac industry is real, worthwhile, and here to
  stay. That's great, and it's an important step, but it's not
  enough. Look at how Apple has innovated in the design space while
  maintaining the functionality we all expect. Innovation isn't
  easy, but that's how Apple has chosen to differentiate itself from
  other computer manufacturers. In the past, the reasons to buy a
  Macintosh came as often from outside Apple as within, but Apple's
  hardware has taken some emphasis away from the solutions provided
  by other companies in the industry.

  Here then is my challenge to everyone who produces hardware or
  software for the Macintosh: impress me! Knock my socks off, break
  through my hype-hardened shell and show me something that on its
  own can be a reason to be a Macintosh user. Show me - and show the
  world - that Apple isn't alone in offering products so compelling
  that we change our ways of thinking. It won't be easy, since we're
  all too immersed in our lives to acknowledge mediocre solutions to
  tough problems. But if you can innovate then execute, I personally
  promise to recognize your efforts to the extent they deserve.


$$

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