Contributor 01月14日
The iPhone 17 will be a step backward–again
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本文分析了科技行业中普遍存在的模仿现象,尤其点名了戴尔在产品命名上模仿苹果的案例,并指出这种行为对整个行业造成伤害。文章还探讨了小屏手机的困境,指出尽管市场上有小屏手机的需求,但主流厂商却纷纷推出大屏手机,导致消费者难以选择。文章认为,无论是产品设计还是市场策略,科技公司都倾向于追随潮流,而非真正满足用户多样化的需求,这导致了同质化竞争和消费者选择的缺失。

📱 戴尔在产品命名上模仿苹果,将旗下产品线命名为Dell, Dell Pro, 和Dell Pro Max,这种明显的模仿行为引发了人们对科技公司缺乏创新能力的质疑。

🐑 科技行业的“羊群效应”导致了产品同质化,许多公司都倾向于模仿市场领导者,而非开发独特的产品,这限制了消费者的选择,也扼杀了行业的创新活力。

📏 尽管有用户需要小屏手机,但包括苹果在内的主流厂商都倾向于推出大屏手机,导致小屏手机市场萎缩,消费者难以找到满足需求的产品。

Macworld

Long-time readers of his column will know that the Macalope is not above grazing on low-hanging fruit. Far from it. First of all, who doesn’t like a nice piece of fruit? Second, it’s right there. At mouth level.

C’mon.

So, you might think he’s going to chomp into a mouthful of Mark Zuckerberg’s comments about Apple on Joe Rogan’s podcast. Yes, the guy who acquired Instagram and acquired Oculus and acquired WhatsApp and acquired Messenger thinks Apple doesn’t invent anything anymore.

Okay.

No, the Macalope is going to eschew Zuckerberg’s bitter barbs and instead take a look at, well, some other low-hanging fruit: Dell’s rebranding effort. (Look, the Macalope’s not made of stone. If they don’t want the Macalope to graze on it, stop hanging it so low.)

For a company that doesn’t make anything anymore, Apple sure gets copied a lot. This time, however, it’s names.

Dell announced that it is ditching names like “Inspiron” and “Latitude” in favor of some it totally came up with on its own, what are you even talking about, they resent the suggestion: Dell, Dell Pro, and, um, Dell Pro Max.

Any similarity to existing product names, living or dead, is purely coincidental.

Michael Dell even got into a huff when called out on it:

… I asked CEO Michael Dell a simple question: “What does Dell gain by copying Apple?” Needless to say, he didn’t look pleased.

Devindra Hardawar, Engadget

He always looks like that. He’s got resting Michael Dell face.

This got the Macalope thinking about companies copying Apple, from smartphones to laptop designs to even product naming conventions. We laugh about it, but it really does a disservice to the industry as a whole.

And, to be clear, it’s not just other companies copying Apple, although they certainly take their cues from Apple. Let’s be generous and call it more of a herd mentality. The market is supposed to give us choice, but very often it settles on a particular type of product and everyone makes small variations of it. (Companies even herd on how much to donate to incoming U.S. presidential administrations that have said they’ll put tariffs on companies that don’t play ball.)

IDG

Let’s talk about small phones.

Yes, again.

No, you get over it.

Not only does Apple not make a small phone anymore, but it continues to bump its existing screen sizes every couple of years. Reportedly, the size of the base iPhone 17–the current one, at a not-insubstantial 6.1 inches, having been ranked by Marques Brownlee as the best small phone of 2024–will increase to 6.3 inches.

The Macalope might be tempted to huff dramatically and suggest that he will simply take his business elsewhere (like he would really do that other than as a stunt), but he simply can’t. There aren’t any. All of these companies making smartphones and you can’t get a small one.

Well, that’s not completely true. You can’t get a name-brand small phone. Some somewhat fly-by-night companies sell phones with screens as small as 4 inches, but they have slower processors, lower quality materials, and poor to no support.

Android Authority helpfully provides lists of the best small smartphones of whatever year of our Lord it happens to be. The problem is, the definition of “small” has become so warped by the current obsession with making aircraft carrier-sized phones that all the phones on the list have screens that are 6.1 inches or larger.

That is not a small phone.

Living in the Apple ecosystem has always meant dealing with fewer choices, but all of the name-brand smartphone manufacturers have simply decided that every phone should be large. As Apple came relatively late to larger phones, we could say this was an instance of the company copying others. But however you chicken-and-egg this, no one is targeting people who might want smaller phones. The Macalope bit the bullet and upgraded to the 6.1-inch iPhone 16 this past fall, now he’s hearing he needs to go a 6.3-inch phone if he wants to upgrade again?

Ungulates are usually all for herding, but this is getting ridiculous.

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相关标签

模仿 小屏手机 创新 同质化 苹果
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