jmeller's comments

jmeller | 9 years ago | on: Open Letter to Tim Cook

To be honest I don't really know much about Dediu but I did read his article and I didn't get the impression that it lacked substance.

What is wrong with his methodology or assumptions that invalidate the 45% number?

I am honestly curious because I don't want to continue to cite a bad source.

jmeller | 9 years ago | on: Open Letter to Tim Cook

> That doesn't make them dominant in any way. That's only a good thing for apple shareholders and bad for their customers.

Yes it does. They are the envy of every other device manufacturer, and not just because they make the most money.

The reason why Apple gets more profit than its competitors despite lower market share is because customers are willing to pay high prices for a better computer. How do we know this? When surveyed, users have consistently give Apple top marks in customer satisfaction. They've done it 13 years in a row.

http://www.macrumors.com/2016/09/27/apple-tops-pc-customer-s...

jmeller | 9 years ago | on: Open Letter to Tim Cook

> The question in my mind is related, but slightly different: what percentage of Apples revenues and profits came from these segments? Were there other markets out there that perhaps Apple wasn't dominant in but still contributed significantly to Apple's overall revenues? That said, I wouldn't be surprised if these two segments were the majority.

Unfortunately Apple's financial reports don't break things down in detail necessary to answer your question, but because of the power hindsight, we know that Steve gave this keynote when Apple was months away from folding (http://www.macrumors.com/2011/09/19/steve-jobs-apple-almost-...).

If Apple had other significant sources of revenue, he likely would have touted them as prominently as he did educators and creative professionals. Since he didn't, we can conclude with some level confidence that these were the only sources of ongoing significant revenue.

jmeller | 9 years ago | on: Open Letter to Tim Cook

> This idea of creatives being the core market for Apple during its early years is often floated. I'm not questioning its veracity, though I'm curious if anyone knows of references that backs this up with numbers or research?

Check out Steve Job's first keynote after returning to Apple in 1997 starting at 18:35. He enumerates the assets the company still has at its disposable to claw its way out of almost imminent bankruptcy. He specifically mentiones creative proffesionals and educators and backs them up with some interesting stats.

https://youtu.be/IOs6hnTI4lw?t=18m35s

jmeller | 9 years ago | on: Open Letter to Tim Cook

Apple built its PC business on the backs of creative professionals because they were among the few groups who thought Macs were worth more than $0.00, thanks to its superior experience with Adobe's creative suite when compared to Windows.

Apple now has a dominant position in the PC market, not because they catered to creative professionals, but because they listened to their initial creative audience and focused on making their computers better.

Apple doesn't focus on the Mac Pro because they want to abandon creatives, it is simply because the Mac Pro doesn't enable any meaningful use-cases not served by the 5k iMac or its notebook line.

Form-factor, screen quality, battery life, weight, speed of I/O, and all the other design goals the author dismisses, are perhaps the most important metrics meaningful for the current generation of laptop buyers, including professionals.

jmeller | 9 years ago | on: Ask HN: Who is hiring? (October 2016)

Kolide | https://kolide.co | Boston, MA | Full-Time | Remote

Kolide is a platform that enables you to ask computers important questions, get back immediate answers, and take decisive action. Kolide does all this by leveraging the awesome power of Facebook’s osquery framework and extending it with built-in security and operations expertise. Mike Arpaia, the creator of osquery at FB is a co-founder. Investment was lead by the creator of Snorby, Dustin Webber, and that investment was matched new practitioner lead Hack/Secure investment syndicate.

Anyone interested in joining a dream team cyber security company at an early (yet well funded) stage should consider reaching out.

Stack: Golang, React, Docker

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Get in touch with me directly [email protected]

jmeller | 9 years ago | on: Ask HN: Who is hiring? (September 2016)

Kolide | https://kolide.co | Cambridge, MA | Full-Time, onsite

Kolide is a platform that enables you to ask computers important questions, get back immediate answers, and take decisive action. Kolide does all this by leveraging the awesome power of Facebook’s osquery framework and extending it with built-in security and operations expertise. Mike Arpaia, the creator of osquery at FB is a co-founder. Investment was lead by the creator of Snorby, Dustin Webber, and that investment was matched new practitioner lead Hack/Secure investment syndicate.

Anyone interested in joining a dream team cyber security company at an early (yet well funded) stage should consider reaching out.

Stack: Golang, React, Docker

We need Golang back-end engineers and we need a front-end dev comfortable with React. Check out the job details at https://angel.co/kolideco/jobs.

Get in touch with me directly [email protected]

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