letters to the editor
DOI: 10.1145/1409360.1409363
apple Builds Great Platforms, too,
not Just Products
Why is Michael Cusumano puzzled about Apple? The main point in
his Viewpoint column
“Technology Strategy
and Management” (Sept. 2008) was
that you can either build products
or you can build platforms. He then
claimed that Microsoft is successful
because it builds platforms and said he
was puzzled by Apple’s success since
it creates only products that, no matter how great, are still not the basis of
a computing platform. Isn’t Unix, on
which OS X is based, a platform? OS X
is the user-interface platform on top of
Unix, and Cocoa is the object-oriented
development platform.
Cusumano might say they are not
industrywide platforms, but that is
rather the fault of an industry that
fawns too much on incumbent monopolies. Indeed, Apple has done well
to survive in such an environment.
The old VHS vs. Beta chestnut is
irrelevant. A Google search finds the
real reasons for Beta’s failure: not
technically superior to VHS in all respects and certainly not, for consumers, in the most important one—tape
play time. The VHS vs. Beta war involved hardware formats; we deal in
software, a much different world.
Cusumano then said that Apple
copied its GUI from Xerox and by implication Microsoft then did the same
to Apple. However, Xerox rather invited Apple to create such systems.
Microsoft took some of Apple’s code
without Apple’s permission, resulting
in a legal case that was finally settled
in 1997.
The Viewpoint’s pull quote hailed
that “Despite faster recent growth
than Microsoft, Apple relies too much
on the fleeting nature of ‘hit’ products,” completely ignoring the design
and technical excellence of Apple’s
products and platforms.
Apple indeed has an excellent platform—OS X, Cocoa, and Unix—that
is the basis of Macintosh, the iPhone,
and other products. Apple developed
its own business model, while Microsoft relied on the old IBM business model of “Someone else has a
good idea, copy it, and crush them.”
Cusumano ignored this aspect of Microsoft’s “success.”
ian Joyner, Sydney, Australia
author’s Response:
The subject of Apple vs. Microsoft always
stimulates emotional and even religious-like responses from the faithful, sometime
impolite diatribes as well. I simply have
been looking at what these companies
have done for the past 20+ years and
invest no emotion in them or their products.
In my interpretation, Apple is primarily a
product company and Microsoft primarily a
platform company.
michael cusumano, cambridge, mA
should manufacturers
fear RfiD tags?
I see few of the advantages cited by
Brian L. Dos Santos and Lars S. Smith
in their article “RFID in the Supply
Chain: Panacea or Pandora’s Box?”
(Oct. 2008, Virtual Extension), which
claimed that wide deployment of RFID
could increase espionage among companies and limit the technology’s potential as a competitive edge because
they could all read the content stored
in one another’s RFID tags.
The article further said that new
laws might be required to protect the
investment companies make in their
supply chains. But laws introduced
too early that fail to fully consider the
interests of all stakeholders, or of society in general, could stifle research,
in the same way the U.S. Digital Millennium Copyright Act of 1998 made
research in encryption and security
more difficult.
Though I agree that rewritable tags
that store a product’s historical data
might pose some risk to user companies, any company’s ability to read
RFID tags might also be improved, ultimately representing the killer app of
RFID tags.
If consumers were able to check
tags and see where, say, a particular
item was manufactured, the result
could be a more informed choice
among RFID-using manufacturers
and their products by, say, making it
easier to avoid sweatshops or factories
that do not comply with environmental regulations; embedded tags that
store product histories might also allow for easier recycling or disposal.
Rewritable tags could further help
consumers check when an item was
manufactured, helping them avoid
items marketed as the latest and greatest but that actually spent months on a
shelf in storage, even as suppliers were
counting on consumer ignorance.
Empowerment is great for consumers but would require more honesty
from manufacturers and suppliers, so
some companies might resist. This is
where I would want to see new laws regarding the types of data that could be
stored on RFID chips.
tomasz Rybak, bialystok, Poland
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