Between the Lines

Larry Dignan, Andrew Nusca and Rachel King

Apple kills rumor, handles desktop news exactly right

By | March 4, 2009, 3:30am PST

Score one for Apple when it comes to squashing a blogosphere rumor.

The rumor mill had just started spinning its wheels with buzz of a March 24 Apple event - presumably to announce a refresh to the Mac desktop line - when the company unexpectedly made the announcement in the form of a press release yesterday. No splashy events at Cupertino headquarters or San Francisco’s Moscone Center. Just the announcement.

It was exactly the right way to handle it.

Think for a moment back to January and the Macworld event in San Francisco. The blogosphere - myself included - was critical of Marketing VP Phil Schiller’s keynote speech at the convention, the company’s final appearance on that stage. Those announcements - a new Macbook and upgrades to iLife and iWork - were kind of snoozers. They certainly weren’t what we’d come to expect from the opening keynote at Macworld.

A decade ago, Apple needed the Macworld stage to generate some excitement around its newest products - the iPod and iTunes among them. It also needed a showman like Steve Jobs to stand up there and sell not only the products but also the coolness factor.

Today, Apple’s products more or less sell themselves, with a little help from word of mouth marketing and widespread blogging from a loyal fan base. Apple stores have proven themselves to be popular testing grounds for the products. And when the company does make its next revolutionary, game-changing announcement, all it has to do is send a cryptic invitation to the tech press and it shall have all the attention it desires.

Tuesday’s announcement was not the game-changing event that deserved an event of its own. Plus, any Apple event just prompts more questions about Steve Jobs’ health and the company just finished dodging those questions at its annual shareholders meeting.

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Sam has been a technology and business blogger for more than 18 years.

Disclosure

Sam Diaz

Sam Diaz has nothing to disclose.

Biography

Sam Diaz

Sam has been a technology and business blogger, reporter and editor at ZDNet, the Washington Post, San Jose Mercury News and Fresno Bee for more than 18 years. He's a member of the National Association of Hispanic Journalists and a graduate of California State University, Fresno.

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Marketing is what made Apple, and this is bad marketing.
Boulder_Bum 4th Mar 2009
Fine, the announcement wasn't earth shattering. Still,
I hope this isn't a sign of things to come.

Part of the mystique of the Apple products was the
secrecy and anticipation leading up to the product announcements (which you could read about, live on the
blogs).

The anticipation and MacWorld announcements were what
made the products seem fun and exciting. Now the
products seem, eh, even more boring than they would be
otherwise.

Now I'm hoping for a big announcement leading up to a
media server or Apple TV revamp!
0 Votes
+ -
Appearance, it's the future
dascha1 4th Mar 2009
Looking back on things, dressing smarter used to be the way to garner
attention. It's a shame that the bow-tie desktop doesn't exist any more.
Maybe I'm showing my age but the politicians and lawyers, very few
journalists, are the ones who try to sustain that now (sort of shameful).
I'm not saying IBM it again... just that the ol' days, before Edison, there
was attention to appearance. Where are we with that progress now?
0 Votes
+ -
Exactly

It was simply a revision. Lucky to get a press release, many
Apple revisions only get picked up by the page watchers.
Fine, the announcement wasn't earth shattering. Still,
I hope this isn't a sign of things to come.

Part of the mystique of the Apple products was the
secrecy and anticipation leading up to the product announcements (which you could read about, live on the
blogs).

The anticipation and MacWorld announcements were what
made the products seem fun and exciting. Now the
products seem, eh, even more boring than they would be
otherwise.

Now I'm hoping for a big announcement leading up to a
media server or Apple TV revamp!

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