Macs and quality -> getting worse, part 2
Sunday, August 31st, 2008Apple’s quality problems in the recent time don’t affect only hardware, but also software. It is still not like in the Windows world, but it’s getting close. I still like Apple’s products, and I wouldn’t change for Windows or Linux desktop, but the sad truth is that it’s on it’s way down…
I think Apple tried to add as many new features as they could, but this, of course, affected the quality. Quite well engineered, but poorly built.
Couple of years ago when I bought my first Mac, I had OS X Panther. This version was still quite early release in the development, but you know, it was a slow and sometimes painful transformation from the OS 9 -> OS X, so many things were not in the state as we would like to see them. At that time OS X had maybe 4 years of life, and so it had some features that crippled user experience (I would maybe say bugs). As I remember, the worst was file manager. I mean the system component, since when some process created some file, the running applications were not able to refresh open dialogue panels to show the new file. Quite stupid, right? But I think this was one of very few remaining problems from the old OS 9, and it was fixed in Tiger.
Tiger was the best release so far. No problems at all. Really great!
At the time Loepard was supposed to be released, I was looking forward to see super cool, stable OS without any problems. Bah, big mistake. I was hoping that since Apple postponed Leopard, so I thought they will make it a really good system. But as it turned out, they just wanted to shuffle developers there and back to iPhone without worrying about the new release quality. Just to get the f* iPhone out.
The problems with Leopard started at the beginning, and are not fixed yet. The first problem is that Leopard cannot keep WEP2 wireless connection. I see all the time connection dropping. Leopard almost every hour or half hour disconnects from the network without any reason.
Besides the connection dropping, there are more problems with network. Why is it so hard to remember networks that I have used, and to which I have password in my keychain, and why is it so hard to connect them as Tiger was doing? I just don’t get this. Why should I click on some stupid dialogue to choose a network I want to connect? I use just ONE network at home in Prague, ONE network at my parent’s house in Olomouc and ONE network at school, and that’s all! I don’t use any more networks. And Leopard is not able to remember it.
Couple of days ago I have encountered another glitch (read as fatal flaw) in my Macbook Pro. Freezing. FREEZING. Complete freezing after switching from Automatic network settings to some other. This happened three times so far. It is random and happens after couple of seconds. You cannot move mouse, press any key, screen doesn’t display any change. Nothing. Reboot.
I mean that these problems are probably not unusual in PC world, but for me, it’s been quite disappointing.
I think Apple is currently more interested in their iPhone business than in the good old computers business. They probably moved a lot of quality assurance control to iPhone, and QA for Macs is not what it used to be. Hopefully they have noticed that, and Apple announced the Snow Leopard which should be evolved Leopard with focus on stability and quality than on new features…
Even though I am quite angry on the current state of Macs. So at the end I can say only one thing: Apple, do something about this mess!