Cmdr_Crimson
Well-Known Member
Oohhh exiting 3D!
NoDo they have the Electrical Parade and fireworks on this yet from the preview?
…just…shocking
A bit of context. They have enough inventory to carry them through until the next version is released. This is standard manufacturing process.
A bit of context. They have enough inventory to carry them through until the next version is released. This is standard manufacturing process.
Who could possibly have seen this coming?
But even successful product lines have been in that position. You can still get a new 9th generation iPad, with a nice discount, six months after Apple stopped selling it directly. They are not being manufactured, have not been in at least several months, but there is still inventory out there and available.Yes and no.
This is true, but it's also misleading -- the reason they have enough inventory is because the sales figures are dramatically below projections. They did not originally plan to stop production this early.
But even successful product lines have been in that position. You can still get a new 9th generation iPad, with a nice discount, six months after Apple stopped selling it directly. They are not being manufactured, have not been in at least several months, but there is still inventory out there and available.
This is never going to be more than a niche product. There are certainly some innovations once mocked that became ubiquitous (smart phones, tablets, video calls, etc). However, the writing is on the wall for a device that requires a person to wear a headset over their eyes. It’s just not a comfortable experience that’s ever going to be widely adopted for the same reason that 3d television and 3d movies never took off despite repeated attempts to make them take off. It also can’t be ignored that there is significant evidence that extended use is really bad for people whose eyes are still developing (basically everyone under the age of 18).Sure, but that's not the case in this specific instance. We know that demand is far lower than Apple expected.
It feels like spin to hand wave it away as standard manufacturing process. This product line has not been successful (at least compared to Apple's expectations).
Ummmm…nobody’s buying the damn thingBut even successful product lines have been in that position. You can still get a new 9th generation iPad, with a nice discount, six months after Apple stopped selling it directly. They are not being manufactured, have not been in at least several months, but there is still inventory out there and available.
It’s not really all that different. A variety of discontinued iPads are still available new and unopened because demand was lower than expected. That’s the only way that happens.Sure, but that's not the case in this specific instance. We know that demand is far lower than Apple expected.
It feels like spin to hand wave it away as standard manufacturing process. This product line has not been successful (at least compared to Apple's expectations).
It’s not really all that different. A variety of discontinued iPads are still available new and unopened because demand was lower than expected. That’s the only way that happens.
Just in general the iPad is a story of a niche device that hasn’t really changed anything the way Apple has pushed/hoped. Yes, more have been sold than the VisionPro but very very few expected the expensive VisionPro to do gangbusters business out of the gate. There’s an episode in the first season of Modern Family about Phil wanting an iPad. It’s dweeby Phil who wants the just introduced device that was mocked for sounding like a feminine hygiene product because it wasn’t seen as something with mass appeal like the iPod (which itself went through several versions before becoming a widely known product), it was a weird nerd thing. The iPad 2 ended up really hitting but the line as a whole has never really done what Apple wanted. Sales have been (yes, higher than the VisionPro) but a bit stagnant and flagging for years now. They keep introducing new features, versions and gimmicks to try and kick things up but it’s not really working. People buy them but they’re used as media consumption devices that they use occasionally and hold onto for years. For most people the answer to which one to buy is the cheapest one. The iPad mini was just refreshed with what is being described as a leftover parts model, using processors that apparently didn’t make the cut for use in iPhones, because the demand isn’t really there but they’ve also apparently found a niche with pilots. Beyond the iPad there really isn’t much of a tablet market.
The AppleWatch 10 is shipping with watchOS 11 because Apple had to completely revamp the software in order to finally figure out a device that has some appeal.
A product doesn’t need to iPhone numbers in order to be a worthwhile endeavor. It can be something that people buy once, use from time to time and hold onto years. The VisionPro wasn’t a make or break product that Apple bet the whole farm on. They still rake in billions while sitting on a massive pile of billions. They can at times be stupidly stubborn (see the last years of the x86 laptops) but also a willingness to play a long game and try different approaches.
The other reason 3D never took off was competing systems. While passive glasses could be interchanged with other passive systems, active glasses could not be moved between manufacturers. Having multiple standards just confused everyone.This is never going to be more than a niche product. There are certainly some innovations once mocked that became ubiquitous (smart phones, tablets, video calls, etc). However, the writing is on the wall for a device that requires a person to wear a headset over their eyes. It’s just not a comfortable experience that’s ever going to be widely adopted for the same reason that 3d television and 3d movies never took off despite repeated attempts to make them take off. It also can’t be ignored that there is significant evidence that extended use is really bad for people whose eyes are still developing (basically everyone under the age of 18).
The other reason 3D never took off was competing systems. While passive glasses could be interchanged with other passive systems, active glasses could not be moved between manufacturers. Having multiple standards just confused everyone.
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