MajorOutage wrote:Decavolt wrote:Apple is highly aware of that.
Sure doesn't seem that way to me. Unlike Macs, not every single PC is made by the same company, but Apple still treats them that way.
Apple doesn't treat PC's as though they all come from the same hardware manufacturer, they never have. They're going after the Windows OS, not the hardware at all, and that's been the case for years with it kicked into high gear most recently. Mac OS (in all forms) has been easily available on clone hardware for well over a decade, and now with this new architecture shift it'll run on just about anything a PC will run on. Once again, the market has nothing to do with hardware anymore, it's all about the OS & software. So, what possible advantage is there for Apple to attack hardware in their ads? None, which is why they don't do it. Maybe one word in this campaign could be changed, from PC to Windows, but it's very obvious they're talking about software throughout, not hardware.
MajorOutage wrote:Their "arguments" about stability (or lack thereof) are made like it's a problem for every single PC out there.
Of course. It's a weakness, wether it effects every single PC or not, and one can't possibly blame Apple for exploiting that in their marketing. Should they pull their punches and paint their competition in a better light just to be more fair? No. Like any company, Apple needs to sell product, not make friends with their competitors and go soft on them.
Windows boxes are indeed prime targets for virii, in part, because of their popularity but that isn't the only factor by any stretch. Integrating IE into the OS was a catastrophic security blunder, and Windows has been paying for it ever since. Longhorn might tip the scales on that front since IE will not be integrated. We'll have to wait and see.
No machine is virus-invulnerable, and there is already a small number of virii for OSX (and Unix for that matter - OSX doesn't run a Linux core, it's based on FreeBSD which a is variant of true-Unix ). The Unix OS has been around for 40 years (Windows only 21) and has been and still remains the most widely used server OS on the planet. The entire concept of virii started with Unix systems, and yet it remains more secure as a whole than Windows installations. The popularity-increases-vulnerability argument can be made, but it's a flimsy one as a foundation.
Is Apple going to cover all of this in their ads? Nope, because they're just trying to sell product, just like their competitors. At present, it's a fact that there's a drastic difference in the amount of virii for Windows vs OSX, and we can't blame Apple's marketing department (the envy of the entire advertising industry) for using that to their advantage as much as possible. Likewise, they're going to use the public perception of PC's that lock up and even the dork-vs-cool angle as much as they can because it's a smart thing to do.