Ah, I see. I have to hate this review not because it says anything incorrect or unreasonable but because we "all know" that the reviewer is a very very bad man.
No, because what you are calling a 'review' is nothing of the sort, at least not of the iMac. It was a series of unfounded and baseless bashings with a not-so-subtle implications that Apple was going into negative territory with its new products and thus heading towards failure.
Read the entire article. It is not a review (at least of the iMac). It is mostly an attack on Apple. A review implies he got a machine and worked with it. He did not do so. He looked at some pictures of the iMac, decided he didn't like it, and then made up a irrelevant thing to complain about. He was not only wrong (the iMac is actually quite stable).
So it doesn't actually matter if he makes a perfectly reasonable point,
It is not a 'perfectly reasonable point'. The glass is not going to shatter and cut up your kids feet as you flee an earthquake. There are a million things to worry about in an earthquake before you worry about what the glass in an LCD is doing. Calling this a 'perfectly reasonable point' is beyond silly.
the review still counts as evidence of an evil, evil attack on Mac because that's what he always does. Except this time, when he gets extra sneaky by making a perfectly reasonable comment. That bastard.
Nice try. But he was taken to task for this idiocy in 2005 and was proven wrong.
Here's an idea; if he's always attacking Macs unfairly, why not find a review where he actually does make an unfair attack on Macs? If he does it all the time it must be pretty easy to find ONE example, no?
From the same article:
"The Lisa was a bone headed product that showcased how little Apple actually knew about the business market and both offerings showed what can happen if you focus too much on form and not enough on function."
uh - the Lisa was about function over form. I mean,
take a look at it. Lisa was all about technology and was hardly boneheaded, it just had little appeal,was way too expensive and when the mac came into being it became irrelevant. Oddly enough it sold well with some upgrades and price changes as the Mac XL.
(Plus, isn't going back to 1984 a bit of a stretch? Isn't this like complaining about the limitations of DOS in 2005? Why not bring up the Apple III?)
Continuing:
"Remember that Apple exists largely because Xerox didn't want to take a risk with a graphical user interface and a mouse. "
Please.
Repeating computer's urban legends?
In the same article he predicts the shuffle and Mac Mini to be failures. Or rather he predicts that the shuffle will steal sales from the iPod, thus cutting down on Apple's profits (and leading to their DOOM!). Didn't happen.
For the Mac Mini he says: "Most people expecting a $500 Mac will find they are paying as much as twice as much than they intended if they buy Apple peripherals and at least half again as much if they buy from third parties. "
Ummm, the Mac Mini worked with USB PC peripherals. It was not meant as a stand-alone start-up Mac and was not marketed that way. That was the iMac's realm.
Oddly, he seems to likes iWork. OKfine, but he takes a swipe at Apple in the review - hinting that Apple exists only at the whim of Microsoft.
And he ends with prognostications about how Apple will be struggling because of his issues (some real, mostly imaginary) with the products. The predictions are poor with apparently little thought behind them. He was shown to be desperately wrong:
http://www.apple.com/pr/library/2005/oct/11results.html