Path: utzoo!utgpu!jarvis.csri.toronto.edu!mailrus!ames!oliveb!apple!chuq From: chuq@Apple.COM (Chuq Von Rospach) Newsgroups: comp.sys.mac Subject: Re: Apple gets favorable ruling Keywords: Apple, Microsoft, lawsuits, HP Message-ID: <27940@apple.Apple.COM> Date: 27 Mar 89 21:22:02 GMT References: <6271@bsu-cs.UUCP> <1068@Portia.Stanford.EDU> <37812@think.UUCP> <568@madnix.UUCP> <564@apexepa.UUCP> Distribution: usa Organization: Life is just a Fantasy novel played for keeps Lines: 58 In article <564@apexepa.UUCP> peter@apexepa.UUCP (Peter Palij) writes: >I think 25-Mar-89 _The Economist_ put it best: (gads, I like the Economist. Having to read a British magazine to get decent American news is a sad commentary on us, though...) I'm just tossing a monkey wrench into this, just for the hell of it. Please consider my tongue stuck slightly into my cheek. >Imagine what might have happened had an early carmaker >managed to patent the steering wheel, accelerator and brake pedals. >[What's more basic "look and feel" than the above mentioned components >of an automobile?] Actually, some early cars used a rudder-like steering mechanism. The steering wheel has become standardized, but it certainly isn't unique -- or necessarily optimum. I keep seeing futuristic prototypes and many have alternative steering mechanisms. The same can be said for both accelarators and brake pedals. I know of cars that have neither -- look at the mechanisms in the vans of any paraplegic. Again, they're standards -- not necessarily optimum standards, but standards. You can actually look at this two ways. You can say that Apple is keeping people from using the best technology. You can also say that everyone else is trying to jump on the Apple bandwagon instead of going and inventing the next quantum leap in the interfaces. Imagine, if you will, that Apple had decided not to develop the Mac, but instead standardized with the rest of the world with MS-DOS. Where would the computer world be today? Isn't there a good argument for making people take new approaches? Always re-implementing the past doesn't improve the state of technology, it stagnates it. A steering wheel isn't the optimal form of direction change technology. What is? I don't know. But since the auto industry has decided that a steering wheel is 'good enough' it'll be exceptionally hard to make the leap to the next, really better form of the technology. What if all computer manufacturers decided that the MacOS was 'good enough' -- it's good. But wouldn't you like to see what's next? If you take away the rights to protect your R&D investment, you take away any reason to invest. After that, all you get is reimplimentations of the same thing. Infinite varieties of steering wheels. (disclaimer time: I don't believe a word I say....) Chuq Von Rospach -*- Editor,OtherRealms -*- Member SFWA chuq@apple.com -*- CI$: 73317,635 -*- Delphi: CHUQ -*- Applelink: CHUQ [This is myself speaking. No company can control my thoughts.] USENET: N. A self-replicating phage engineered by the phone company to cause computers to spend large amounts of their owners budget on modem charges.