It's been an interesting year for the world's most
interesting company: we've seen bigger phones, surprising shopping
sprees and what could be the beginning of a high profile adventure in
the world of high fashion. But it hasn't all been good: Apple also
suffered from broken glass, unwanted U2 and a bad case of the bends.
Let's discover the highs and lows for Apple in 2014.
Highs
1. Apple Watch It won't ship till spring, but the Apple Watch is the most-wanted wearableThe worst-kept secret in tech was a secret no more in 2014: Apple unveiled the Apple Watch
and its many incarnations this year, and the release of the
accompanying SDK gave us a good idea of what we can expect from its
software when the watch ships in the spring. If it's a hit it means
Apple will become a hugely important fashion brand, and the signs are
certainly pointing in that direction: Apple generated more column inches
with a watch it isn't shipping yet than all other smartwatch
manufacturers combined. 2. iPhone 6 and 6 Plus Apple succumbed in style to demand for bigger handsetsBad news for anybody with little hands but great news for anyone who wanted bigger iPhones: Apple unveiled not one but two bigger devices in the form of the iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus.
They're both big-screened beauties with typically great design, but
that thinness also introduced bendyness. More of that in a moment. 3. Buying Beats Buying Beats was a power play for Apple's music businessEven by Beats' pricey standards, $3 billion is a lot for some headphones - but when Apple bought Beats it
was really interested in the talent behind Beats Music, which is now
part of the iTunes empire. The acquisition doesn't just give Apple the
Beats technology and streaming deals: it also gives Apple Jimmy Iovine, a
renowned music business figure and famous deal-maker. 4. Retina iMacs Apple committed to Retina with the iMac this yearWe
can't afford them, but eventually we'll all be able to. Retina displays
are clearly - pun intended - the future for all of Apple's devices, and
seeing one on the biggest iMac
is a retinal revelation. It's particularly flattering to OS X Yosemite,
whose fonts and design choices aren't quite as nice on non-Retina
devices. 5. Apple + IBM Palling up with IBM show Apple getting serious about the business marketAs partnerships go this one doesn't sound very exciting, but it's potentially massive: Apple and IBM up the enterprise tree, K-I-S-S-I-N-G.
Apple wants its iPads in enterprises and IBM has enterprises' ears
thanks to decades of sterling service, so the news that the two firms
are teaming up is likely to have put Microsoft's Satya Nadella in a very
bad mood indeed. 6. Apple Pay, maybe Apple Pay isn't a success yet, but all the elements are thereIt's
too early to tell whether Apple's plan to become a major payment
provider is going to pay off - Black Friday results were inconclusive,
with some users apparently baffled by the whole thing - but Apple Pay
does appear to have learnt from Google's Wallet missteps and created a
service that retailers, payment providers and punters could all get
behind. 7. Cook comes out Tim Cook became the first Fortune 500 CEO to come outTim
Cook's sexuality wasn't a secret, but he broke his customary silence
about his personal life to talk openly about it in an article for
Businessweek. Having the CEO of the world's most valuable and
interesting company come out is a huge deal in a world where not one
Fortune 500 CEO was openly gay.
Lows
1. Bendgate The news that thin metal things bend cause ructions for AppleWhat do you get if you combine the laws of physics with hit-hungry websites? Bendgate:
the not-overhyped-at-all story that found thin metal things bend if you
apply sufficient force. Cue dullards going into Apple Stores to try and
break iPhone 6 and 6 Plus handsets, endless "Apple is doooooomed!"
columns and the sound of a molehill being blown up to mountain size. 2. iOS 8 Apple took a few goes to get iOS 8 rightHere's our new OS! Oops, it's broken! Here's an update! Oops, it's more broken than the broken one it was supposed to fix!
Google's Lollipop had release issues too, but it wasn't as bungled as
the iOS 8 launch. The only way Apple could have bungled it more would be
if it had put a picture of Bungle from Rainbow on every iPhone's lock
screen.
That isn't the only problem with iOS 8.
There's a developing story over iOS 8 extensions, which are supposed to
give developers the tools to share data with other apps: at the time of
writing Panic's excellent Transmit app has been forced to remove iCloud
Drive sharing because of confusing and contradictory developer
policies. A developer backlash may be brewing. 3. U2 U2? You didn't get a sayU2
have just announced a world tour, and wags have suggested that instead
of booking venues they'll just break into people's houses and do gigs
whether the owners want them or not. That's more or less what happened
when Apple gave away their latest album, Songs of Innocence: instead of
offering it as a free download Apple automatically added it to everybody's iTunes.
Many people thought they'd been hacked, others were just appalled that
Apple thought they'd want a U2 album, and Apple was forced to create a
U2 removal tool to banish Bono. 4. Endless iPads
There's an iPad for everyone after this year's launches Is
it just us or does Apple appear to be losing its laser-like focus on
making a handful of very good products? Since Autumn's new launches
Apple now offers more iPads than Marks & Spencer has pants: there's
the iPad mini, the iPad mini 2, the iPad mini 3, the iPad Air and the iPad Air 2,
all in Wi-Fi or Wi-Fi and Cellular options and various colours. A £199
iPad mini is certainly cheap by Apple standards, but given the pace of
change in iPad-land we're not sure the owner will stay cheerful for
long. 5. 2014 Mac Mini
The Mac Mini was overdue an update, but this wasn't what we wanted The late 2014 Mac Mini
is a long-awaited update to a computer last refreshed in 2012, and
while the lower price tag is welcome the lower specs aren't. Quad-core
processors are no longer available and the RAM is soldered in, so you
can't upgrade it later. The Firewire port's gone too. For many Mini
fans, what Apple giveth doesn't compensate for what Apple hath taken
away. 6. Apple TV
With limited services, Apple TV carries on looking like an afterthought So much for an app-happy update to Apple's "hobby". With fresh rivals from the likes of Google's Chromecast and Amazon Fire TV, Apple TV
couldn't look much longer in the tooth if it were a sabre-toothed
tiger. It's still good for AirPlay streaming, but here in the UK
especially its lack of services means it's looking less attractive by
the day. 7. Sapphire Sapphire dreams shattered as Apple's screen supplier couldn't keep pace2014 was going to be the year of sapphire screens,
but it didn't work out that way: Apple's manufacturing partner, GT
Advanced Technologies, encountered both technical problems - it couldn't
make enough usable sapphire at the price Apple wanted to pay - and
business ones, with apparent organisational chaos ultimately forcing the
company into bankruptcy protection. GT says it's all Apple's fault,
Apple says it's all GT's fault, and over at the Gorilla Glass factory Corning executives probably popped open the champagne.
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