Apple is already being weirdly criticized for an AI effort that hasn't launched yet

Posted:
in General Discussion edited March 19

Apple is in the best position to make a difference in the public perception of Artificial Intelligence and how it's used at home, on mobile, and everywhere -- and the regular folks that routinely peddle false narratives about the company are already taking poorly-aimed potshots at the company and the effort like they always have.

Apple WWDC
Apple's WWDC is just a couple months away



So far, 2024 has already seen the splashy debut launch of Apple Vision Pro and a quieter refresh of Macs and iPads using Apple's latest M3 chips. And, in January, Apple CEO Tim Cook made it clear that the company will debut something big with generative AI in 2024, likely at the 2024 WWDC.

That's not a bad first six months for a company that's ostensibly just "the smoke and mirrors of marketing" without any ability to innovate, assuming that you listen to the folks that have been routinely wrong about everything Apple for the last several decades.

Can't innovate? My ads!



For the last decade and a half of iPhone, Apple has indisputably been the driving force in smartphone designs. Each year Apple defines what the next year of Androids will look like while failing to deliver whatever short term fad its handset competitors have tried the year before.

Apple debuted its capacitive multitouch iPhone in a world full of keypads and slide out keyboards that tech critics were lathered up about, but which soon vanished from the market because critics were uniformly wrong about what customers would want.

After every Android ended up looking just like an iPhone, Apple launched its slim-bezeled iPhone X with its awful, hideous "notch" that everyone immediately stopped laughing about and got to work duplicating. Bloomberg was taking the lead in insisting it was obvious nobody would pay an absurd $1,000.00 for a phone.

That take aged like milk.

iPhone X
iPhone X



Samsung's existing Edge-curved screens disappeared as quickly as they'd arrived, and the technorati stopped clamoring about "when Apple could be expected to launch its own curved-edge screen iPhone." Instead, those same folks pretended to be excited about an Android tablet that folded into a super thick Galaxy phone for the affordable price of just $2k if you don't count repairs.

Again, Bloomberg was taking the lead in cheerleading a false anti-Apple narrative.

Then, Google and minions showed off their tiny "pinhole" cameras that barely took up any notch space at all. At about the same time, Apple launched the Hail Mary of its Dynamic Island on iPhone 14 Pro.

In that Dynamic Island, the Notch instead became a prominent, expanding blackness that integrated notifications and app status with the cameras and sensor hardware in a way that was so genius, desirably sophisticated, and off the well-worn lemming trajectory charted by everyone else that Android's innovators all had to rush back to their drawing boards to perform a quick copy and paste operation.

I could rattle off the same story about the historical trends in smartwatches tacked to Apple Watch, or how TV boxes have largely navigated the seas of smart features using Apple TV at their North Star, or how the tablets that weren't iPads all just sank, or how AirPods took the wind out of competitor's sails.

But, I already have and you've probably already read them. Nobody that reads AppleInsider regularly needs to be convinced that any of this is a controversial concept.

Is it too late to say "that ship sailed?"

The critical gulf between PCs vs EVs



I'm always surprised at how the tech bloggers who style themselves as consumer technology aficionados always castigate Apple for leading the way despite somehow being unable to innovate. At the same time, they'll cheerlead for the teams that all wear the same uniforms because there really united in playing for advertisers, not the viewers.

Are they fans of the sport or do they just hate the home team because it's Apple? Shouldn't critics remain skeptical even when they're being monetized by the same source of surveillance advertising that drives Apple's competitors?

Other industries aren't like that. Among automakers, for example, car magazine writers don't just pick the one company with the most desirable cars to complain about and give a free pass to all the companies copying their designs and strategies.

Quite the opposite. Back when Tesla shook up the car market with its splashy high end electrics with gull wing doors and proprietary hardware supercharging that actually "just worked," and tethered them to a walled garden of conveniently placed EV stations to facilitate the very kind of long distance trips that were holding back EVs from reaching critical mass adoption, the car critics were on the edge of their seats applauding.

Tesla
Tesla



Car enthusiast content creators were not desperately trying to coin some sort of disparaging names for Tesla's signature features, or organizing pitchfork mobs to demand the EU force Tesla's superchargers to implement existing -- albeit problematic -- universal charging plugs and protocols, and they sure weren't telling their readers not to consider a Tesla until it implemented de facto industry standards like CarPlay.

There was barely a finger wagging even after Tesla's wildly expensive Full Self Driving car feature it misleadingly calls Autopilot failed to ever actually materialize in a form anything close to what it promised to be, even many years after Elon Musk assured consumers that if you bought a Tesla, it would pay for itself by moonlighting as a robot Uber driver.

It turns out all these years later, even the Tesla's very limited-duty Summon feature can't actually be expected to pull itself into a parking space for you, let alone navigate an underground garage stall or even a mall parking lot.

Apple would have been roasted for delivering a car that claimed to be fully self driving but really couldn't. Apple is still being roasted for deciding not to deliver a self driving car that couldn't, that will still deliver benefits to the company for a long time.

Having owned a Tesla for a few years now, I can report that its backup cameras are as laggy as an Android phone of 2010, and even its automatic windshield wipers that are supposed to "just work" when it's raining perform less impressively than cars that had that feature a very long time ago.

Last winter, Tesla drivers had to be stranded by frozen batteries that couldn't warm themselves up automatically (even though they technically can if the software had been written to do this), and Tesla's CEO had to come out as a deranged fascist tweeting out Blood and Soil-style genocide whataboutism before it ever became unpopular to worship the man as, ostensibly, the Steve Jobs who founded electric cars.

And that's the case even though Musk didn't even create Tesla, he acquired it and insisted they retroactively name him a founder because he had money. Jobs founded Apple twice, once on the opposite end of IBM's dominance of PCs and again under the unquestioned PC monopoly of Microsoft.

Unlike Musk, Jobs didn't promise fire and just belch out hot air.

Every move made by Jobs up to the moment of his death was painstakingly questioned and every product launch was brutally derided as flawed and incomplete. After he died, Apple's successive moves were compared against what Jobs supposedly would have done, perfectly, because suddenly the man was worshiped by those that would before would just as soon seen him roasting on a spit, now claiming that he had never made a mistake.

Apple was reviled under Jobs leadership, and then reviled because he was gone. All through its history, Apple couldn't ever catch a break, whether as the beleaguered underdog or as the industry leader. It was never about Jobs or about market position.

I've never come across a company like Apple, so begrudged by needling critics and grumpy pundits and industry analysts seeking to belittle its accomplishments and denigrate its lofty-self imposed standards and dismiss its quietly generous and humanistic corporate culture.

While else everyone copied its Mac desktop, its iPod, and its phones, tablets and watches, Apple had to strong-arm the rest of the industry into following its leadership in universal accessibility, hardware recycling, environmental issues, worker rights, workplace conditions, and customer security and privacy.

Apple is like the Star Trek Federation in a universe of Romulan treachery and Borg monotony. Tech critics and foreign governments are demanding Apple put down its phasers and surrender unfettered use its platforms for free and deliver its most attractive features for Android, because resistance is futile and why should the good guys win every time consumers vote with their dollars?

Critics don't lead, they follow behind muttering their discontent



Unlike the world of cars or fashion or anything else where bold innovation and striking creativity is applauded, in the world of consumer technology virtually the only thing bloggers and newspaper journalists get really upset about is Thinking Different.

The most notorious critic of the original Macintosh was the prolific and overly-argumentative John Dvorak. He greeted the Mac with disdain for its mouse and graphical desktop, writing in the San Francisco Examiner in 1984.

"The nature of the personal computer is simply not fully understood by companies like Apple (or anyone else for that matter). Apple makes the arrogant assumption of thinking that it knows what you want and need. It, unfortunately, leaves the why' out of the equation -- as in why would I want this?' The Macintosh uses an experimental pointing device called a mouse'. There is no evidence that people want to use these things."



Apple's mouse and its related developments would subsequently go on to dominate computing for the next two decades. In fact, 23 years later, a mouse would empower Dvorak to publish another opinion, this time advising Apple to "pull the plug on the iPhone," because "there is no likelihood that Apple can be successful in a business this competitive."

Apple Mouse
Apple didn't invent the mouse; it invented a market for it



A lot of bloggerati were cautiously excited about iPhone. They were also very worried that it didn't have Nokia's bulletproof rubber shell and its replaceable batteries, or compatibility with JavaME and Flash, or the tiny keyboards that Jobs announced smartphones shouldn't really require, because it was so much more powerful to have a big bitmapped screen instead.

I spent many years defending Apple's choices for iPhones, back when most people thought I was wrong. But I was even more controversial in seeing the value in iPad, which so many tech critics were even more united in their contempt over.

Apple's iPad launch was famously dismissed as being "just a big iPod touch" while critics lauded Google's plans to beat iPad, first with Android 3.0 Honeycomb, then Android 5.0 Lollypop, as well as its own Nexus 7, Pixel C tablet and the Chromebook Pixel.

Critics were largely optimistic and cheerleading for Android and Chrome OS to somehow shake up tablets or at least dethrone iPad. Even their acknowledgment of Google's flaws were largely worded as hopeful or perhaps faded excitement that Android's tablet-optimized apps would ever appear as expected.


Bloomberg provided disproportionate, informercial-like coverage of Google's Pixel products without any concern for how well they were selling
Bloomberg

, the Wall Street Journal and Japan's Nikki all were so consistently wrong about Apple and its iPad, while their same critics were so hopeful about Google's Android and Pixel tablets that I observed at the time:

"If someone gives you the wrong directions once, you can forgive it as a mistake. But if they chart out a detailed series of turns that are all totally the wrong way, it begins to look like they don't really want you to arrive at your intended destination."

Criticism of the future



When Apple introduced development tools supporting on-device machine learning for organizing your collections of photos and identifying objects in images and text, critics largely yawned. When machine learning was recently rebranded as "artificial intelligence" outside of Apple, they got super excited.

They demanded to know when Apple would enter the AI race? Is Apple hopelessly behind in rushing out a tool to scrape up everyone's existing work and create derivative content from it, or is that more of a Microsoft/Meta/Google thing?

There's a lot of new things Apple could use AI to power. While some tech writers are expressing actual criticism of AI taking over, the scarier part of that would be who is handling the "taking over" part, and with whom their interests would align: customers or advertisers?

Imagine a smart home with AI to control how things should occur in the management of your home. Perhaps turning on lights based on how you have been turning them on yourself, such when it senses you've entered the room, or perhaps related to how you have previous turned on your outside lights at night in the past.

Should this be watched and monitored on remote cloud servers that also host the ads you see, based on what websites you load or which social media posts you see? Or would this be better done on a HomePod or Apple TV you can control?

Would you trust VR eye tracking or environmental room mapping in your home to an ad company that has been collecting your Likes and views and selling that to its advertisers? Or with a company that expressly blocks third party apps from accessing that information unless you expressly opt-in to enable it?

Apple is in a position to sell AI as a feature for hardware devices, and to perform that intelligence securely and privately on those devices, which you have the power to control.

Would you trust such intimate knowledge of virtually every move you make to be done remotely by a company who's trying to sell you things-- or more accurately, to sell you to its advertiser customers?

Or do you want this to be handled by somebody who's creating your experience especially for you, and just you?

It will be interesting to see how critics spin their outlooks as WWDC approaches and Apple further outlines where it plans to take machine learning and generative AI.



Read on AppleInsider

dewmeOndrejVrbinagilly33Bart Y
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Comments

  • Reply 1 of 44
    mpantonempantone Posts: 2,040member
    It's all very simple.

    People take potshots at Apple because they can monetize it.

    When you worship at the Temple of the Almighty Pageview, it makes sense to spew a lot of nonsense about big companies like Microsoft, Apple, Nvidia, Alphabet, Meta, Amazon et al.

    There is nothing new about this. It's not like this is a recent invention by Millennials or industry analysts. This probably started when mass media was invented.

    This is all grandstanding by industry pundits. There's no sense criticizing businesses that aren't recognized by a broad spectrum of media consumers. It only makes sense to bash the biggest, most recognized megacorps.

    Amusingly, the same people criticizing Apple, Microsoft, Alphabet, whatever probably have significant portions of their retirement portfolios invested in those companies (at least here in the USA) even in the form of indirect holdings in a large cap (like S&P 500) or Nasdaq-100 fund. Hypocrisy? Maybe, maybe not. Everyone wants to earn a buck. But it does make you wonder about some people's integrity at times.

    Hell, journalists were bashing Apple's newly announced MP3 player even before they got their hands on it for actual real-world use. Remember the infamous ultra-myopic assessment from CmdrTaco at Slashdot? "No wireless. Less space than a Nomad. Lame." (October 23, 2001).

    Nothing really changes. Same B.S., different decade.

    Article author can repost this five years from now just by replacing "AI" with whatever new tech is in fashion at the time.
    edited March 18 tmaythtAllMdewmekillroy40domigilly33Alex1NBart Ylordjohnwhorfin
  • Reply 2 of 44
    bluefire1bluefire1 Posts: 1,302member
    It’s spelled weirdly, not wierdly. Good article.
    edited March 18 Calvinatorkillroygilly33watto_cobra
  • Reply 3 of 44
    Great article !!! I forgot a lot of criticism Apple endured during the iPhone launch.
    killroygilly33Bart Ywatto_cobra
  • Reply 4 of 44
    I would offer to play the world’s tiniest violin but nothing really weeps like a cello.
    williamlondonkillroyAniMillAlex1N
  • Reply 5 of 44
    Personally, I'd rather see Apple develop its own internal AI.

    BUT, this is probably a smart move. By all counts, you're going to see an Apple front end to this, and when that front end AI cannot generate an acceptable reply, it will punt to Gemini... or possibly something else. It would seem this is similar to their search deal: Google is the default but users can replace it with something else.

    All this to say: Apple gets Google dollars for putting it in as a default, and it also avoids any antitrust issues (for Apple anyway.)

    Don't get me wrong: I think Gemini is a horrible product, so if I cannot swap out the backend for something else, I cannot see me ever using (or at least trusting) it. But strictly from an anti-trust perspective, this makes sense to me.
    killroygilly33Alex1NBart Ywatto_cobra
  • Reply 6 of 44
    We’re living in the Sissy Age. There’ll be a few along in a minute…
    killroygilly33AllMwatto_cobra
  • Reply 7 of 44
    michelb76michelb76 Posts: 621member
    Personally, I'd rather see Apple develop its own internal AI.
    Apple has already been doing that.
    killroygregoriusmAlex1NBart Ywatto_cobra
  • Reply 8 of 44
    charlesncharlesn Posts: 842member
    All true about the Apple-bashing technosphere. But here's the best part: what they say doesn't matter and never has. And it drives them crazy that after decades of railing against Apple, the only people who really matter--consumers--have happily ignored them and made Apple the most successful and admired tech company in the world. But to the bloggers and tech *cough* "journalists," Apple is and always will be doomed. 

    That said, I do think the questions swirling around a seeming lack of AI strategy are more appropriate than weird. Of course, many things are not as they seem to be, and we may find out at WWDC that Apple has had a killer strategy all along. But considering that the jobs of the "creative class" workers who are a foundation of Apple's customer base are in the AI crosshairs for occupations that will be decimated, Apple seems (there's that word again) to have been caught flat-footed by the speed of AI's impact. Let's see what June brings us in terms of Apple's strategy. 
    williamlondonkiltedgreenkillroygilly33Alex1NBart Ywatto_cobra
  • Reply 9 of 44
    AllMAllM Posts: 65member
    Question is, who cares? It’s consumer electronics, and consumer choice. Why read yellow in the first place?
    watto_cobra
  • Reply 10 of 44
    princeprince Posts: 89member
    "When you worship at the Temple of the Almighty Pageview, it makes sense to spew a lot of nonsense about big companies like Microsoft, Apple, Nvidia, Alphabet, Meta, Amazon et al."

    Yes outrageous clickbait does drive attention to various companies, but Microsoft, Google/Alphabet, Nvidia, Meta and Amazon are not continually castigated, their launch flops and absurdist consumer strategies are given a full pass, and the most notorious Apple critics are literally worshiping these other companies, particularly if they have some direct competition with Apple. 

    Mark Gurman has never written his concern and alarm about the supply chains of other companies. 
    Tripp Mickle has never cared about any other American companies manufacturing in China.
    Aaron Tilley doesn't invent narratives about the "spectacular failure" of other companies to create internal components. 
    Kara Swisher doesn't demand to know why other companies aren't innovating. 
    Christopher Mims doesn't insist that other companies must abandon their PC businesses because of iPad.
    Joanna Stern doesn't have any problems with Samsung's hardware quality or whether it fixes issues she reads about.

    And so on. 
    dewmebadmonkkiltedgreenCalvinatorkillroy40domigilly33Alex1NBart Ymattinoz
  • Reply 11 of 44
    AllMAllM Posts: 65member
    prince said:
    "When you worship at the Temple of the Almighty Pageview, it makes sense to spew a lot of nonsense about big companies like Microsoft, Apple, Nvidia, Alphabet, Meta, Amazon et al."

    Yes outrageous clickbait does drive attention to various companies, but Microsoft, Google/Alphabet, Nvidia, Meta and Amazon are not continually castigated, their launch flops and absurdist consumer strategies are given a full pass, and the most notorious Apple critics are literally worshiping these other companies, particularly if they have some direct competition with Apple. 

    Mark Gurman has never written his concern and alarm about the supply chains of other companies. 
    Tripp Mickle has never cared about any other American companies manufacturing in China.
    Aaron Tilley doesn't invent narratives about the "spectacular failure" of other companies to create internal components. 
    Kara Swisher doesn't demand to know why other companies aren't innovating. 
    Christopher Mims doesn't insist that other companies must abandon their PC businesses because of iPad.
    Joanna Stern doesn't have any problems with Samsung's hardware quality or whether it fixes issues she reads about.

    And so on. 
    Maybe they’re paid for it. Anyway, who cares? I don’t even know nobody on that list but the first two. 
    williamlondon
  • Reply 12 of 44
    badmonkbadmonk Posts: 1,295member
    Thanks DED, this article made my day.  God knows what the tech-pundit-sphere would do if they didn’t have Apple to hate or deride. 
    kiltedgreenkillroygilly33Alex1NBart YStrangeDayswatto_cobra
  • Reply 13 of 44
    goofy1958goofy1958 Posts: 165member
    Personally, I'd rather see Apple develop its own internal AI.
    Well, they have been developing it all along - they just called it Machine Learning instead AI.
    killroywilliamlondongregoriusmmichelb76Alex1NBart Ywatto_cobra
  • Reply 14 of 44
    dewmedewme Posts: 5,376member
    Whenever you have a never ending clown parade of critics and politicians you have to question whether they are actually revealing their own true beliefs and values, things they would die on a hill for, or whether they are simply playing to the crowd for entirely selfish reasons, like money, privilege, votes, attention, notoriety, or a combination of one or more of these and many other selfish rewards. Since most of these clowns can speak, write, and supposedly feed themselves, I tend to lean more towards the latter explanation. Taking controversial and even extremely dangerous positions on people, things, and topics is a money and/or influence enhancing opportunity. If the target crowd/mob embraces the performance then someone, say a lobbyist, investor, business, bored billionaire, etc., can benefit financially, psychologically, or ideologically from said performance. It's performance art at best and grift at worst.

    How often do we see, as @Mpantone mentions, those who denigrate Apple, et al, in public while at the same time they are investing their financial future in the success of companies they rail against? What about all those critics of Apple who get caught publicly professing their love and allegiance to the "far superior" Android platform and then get caught posting their distaste for Apple from their personal iPhone? 

    How many critics looking for a payday by tapping into an audience looking for a grievance to fill their empty lives are going to write the 26th consecutive article applauding a recently released Apple product or service? At the very least, nobody is going to pay them to write it or even pay them to host it on their web site. The target eyeballs for the topic have already glazed over. On the other hand, if they are only the 3rd critic to figure out a way to bash an Apple product or service that so many obviously enjoy, they'll rile up those customers who like Apple's latest thing and are eager to defend it. At the same time, they'll pull in some of those who've already decided that Apple is at the root of their discontent to cheer on the critic's negative narrative, whether it's real, exaggerated, or even fabricated.

    You know, when Apple places active safeguards in iPhones to prevent them from crashing in very bad ways, like during an emergency call, Apple is pure evil and must be punished. I suppose they would have preferred the crashing their iPhones. Crash FOMO maybe? Net result is the negative narrative finds a champion in the legal system and, wa la, a Big Payday ensures - for the lawyers. Everyone else, some chump change is coming your way whether you were affected or not, kind of like, but on a much tinier scale, to the Covid stimulus cash-o-rama that paid for a lot of people's new Macs, weighted blankets, and 8K televisions. They would have been smarter to invest the cash in Apple stock because Apple will keep winning despite all of the hurdles intentionally thrown in its path.
    Alex1Nwatto_cobra
  • Reply 15 of 44
    9secondkox29secondkox2 Posts: 2,727member
    Gotta find a way to squeeze a jab at musk in an article not related to him again eh? Sheesh. 

    Apple hasn’t earned ai criticism. If  ccc anything they e been at the forefront, generative or not. 

    Hopefully the Gemini thing is just a rumor. 
    edited March 18 AllMibill
  • Reply 16 of 44
    DoctorQDoctorQ Posts: 51member
    goofy1958 said:
    Personally, I'd rather see Apple develop its own internal AI.
    Well, they have been developing it all along - they just called it Machine Learning instead AI.
    This! It’s a matter of semantics, not tech. Apple applies it in a way that you don’t notice, like good film music.
    killroyAlex1Nwatto_cobra
  • Reply 17 of 44
    Hello, i would like to thank you, for this article 👏 i totally agree… Apple is the most criticized and terorrised company in the world, but just few people realize that Apple is one of the ones that pushes human race forward… just like Steve Jobs said… 
    40domiAlex1NBart Ywatto_cobra
  • Reply 18 of 44
    nubusnubus Posts: 386member
    Apple defined the smartphone by being first to deliver without a keyboard - and with a proper browser + sync.
    Apple defined the music player by being first with this level of storage + fast sync + UI + store.
    Apple defined the modern personal computer by being the first to bring a desktop UI from the labs to mainstream use.
    Apple defined the printer and DtP by delivering the first Postscript printer.
    Apple defined the modern laptop by delivering PB 100.

    Real artists ship.

    Apple wanted to copy Musk and do a car. Spent billions, a decade,  and didn't ship.
    Apple wanted to copy Zuckerberg and do a headset. Why would it be smart to prioritize this over AI? Couldn't Apple have delivered on AI and let Zuckerberg fail for another 10 years?

    Apple then delivered M3 Max with AI performance of iPhone 14 Pro. Obviously Intel and Nvidia have no problem with beating the  performance of a 2022 phone.
    Oh... and Apple killed the eGPU and blocked all memory upgrades making all devices go into rapid depreciation mode. If Cook invites Mother Nature back, I'm pretty sure she won't pleased. Neither are the stock holders, and we should also be "what the... is going on". Apple was the first with Neural Engine - it shouldn't be last on LLMs.
    ctt_zhwilliamlondondanoxmuthuk_vanalingamAllM
  • Reply 19 of 44
    hexclockhexclock Posts: 1,259member
    An article defending Apple against tech punditry criticism while simultaneously criticizing Tesla as a tech pundit. 
    Well done, I guess. 
    williamlondon
  • Reply 20 of 44
    40domi40domi Posts: 68member
    100% Spot on!
    williamlondonwatto_cobra
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