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Is The iBook A Bit Too "Feminine" For
He-Man Road Warriors?
By Charles W.
Moore
Hooooooooeee! Didn't PC World's John C. Dvorak stir up a
proverbial hornet's nest with his column
"The
iBook Disaster?"
Dvorak begins his screed by subtly stating that "the only
thing missing from the new Apple iBook is the Barbie logo.
The system, which looks like a makeup case, promises to be a
disaster once people come to their senses."
Ouch! If you check out John's article, I'll caution you
that it takes a little short of forever to download the page
due to the massive volume of replies posted, many roasting
Dvorak for being "sexist," "homophobic," questioning his
intelligence, threatening him with physical violence, etc.
(Quite a few readers agreed with him too.)
Thing is, while John lays it on pretty thick in the
piece, especially with the "girly machine" stuff, I can't
say that I entirely disagree with him. I took a bit of
polite heat from several readers in my first iBook column
for MacOpinion, in which I was apparently not wildly
enthusiastic enough about iBook to suit them. My criticisms
(and/or faint praise) were focused on the iBook's stingy
port inventory, lack of expandability, and limited
connectivity. Some readers thought I didn't "get it" about
the iBook, and perhaps I don't, but from a specifications
point of view, it is not consonant with my style of
minimalism.
But then there's the styling. Full disclosure here: I
prefer the squared-off functionality of the PowerBook
5300/1400/3400 to the curviness of the WallStreet and the
500 series 'Books, and I thought the Newton-derived Apple
eMate was plug-ugly, which will give you an idea of where
I'm coming from here. I admit to admiring the styling of the
IBM ThinkPad and various "thin" PC laptops as well. These
are points that can't be sensibly argued. You either like
the looks of something or you don't. My tastes in laptop
styling are not necessarily superior to those of folks who
like swoopy, curvy lines, they're just different.
So, you can deduce that if I'm not aesthetically smitten
by the understated voluptuousness of WallStreet and Lombard,
I'm going to be even less enamored of the Rubens-esque
contours of iBook. Indeed, when I saw a photo in my local
newspaper last Friday of Steve Jobs holding an iBook aloft,
the shape reminded me of something, but I couldn't quite
think of what. John Dvorak has jogged my memory. The iBook
does look sort of like a humongous, somewhat retro, women's
cosmetics "compact." (although there's nothing compact
size-wise about iBook -- its bigger than WallStreet and
almost as heavy). Unfortunately, one of John's readers
compared iBook's shape to that of a "giant, portable toilet
seat," and I'm having trouble getting that imagery out of my
head as well.
But as Dvorak puts it: "You expect to see lipstick,
rouge, and a tray of eye shadow inside when you open it up.
You don't expect to see a 12-inch LCD; you expect to see a
12-inch mirror." Now, I hasten to interject here that John
Dvorak is not your typical beige-worshipping PC trogolodyte,
even though he writes for PC World. In past columns he has
praised the iMac's multi-colored motif, and prodded PC
manufacturers to broaden their color palette horizons. I
expect that John is even more appreciative of bright colored
computers than I am. My tastes run to midnight black,
gunmetal and other metallics, or barely-there subtle pastel
shades. I think it's all those suggestive curves that John
finds misplaced on a computer.
Obviously, Dvorak thinks the iBook is the antithesis of
being a masculine statement, but he doesn't think women will
like it much either. "It looks too juvenile -- something a
kid, a little girl, would like. Something you'd get at Toys
'R' Us," he asserts. Well, Apple has targeted iBook at the
student market, and Steve Jobs has two highly successful
kids' movies under his Pixar belt, so maybe that sort of
appeal is exactly what he was going after.
"I challenge anyone out there to pull out this makeup
case in public and not feel embarrassed," writes Dvorak.
Well, I'm not quite that insecure in my masculinity, but I
expect he's on to something there. I may be wrong, but I
don't anticipate the iBook being a hit with the Marlboro Man
set, or in executive suites for that matter, not to mention
the college frat house -- which Dvorak pointedly does.
However, it's arguable that the first two of those markets
at least are not what Apple was going after with iBook
anyway. A 'Book bigger than the already hulking WallStreet
and weighing in at 6.7 pounds, with very limited
connectivity, was never going to be the darling of the
business-travelling and boardroom people anyway, whatever
its color. The frat house? That may pose more of a problem,
given Apple's stated target market for this rig.
Is the iBook "effeminate" and "sissified" as Dvorak
asserts? The foldaway handle does recall a handbag, although
it should prove functionally useful given iBook's
road-hugging weight. Still, if iBook delivered the goods
value and functionality-wise as a computer, lots of people
wouldn't care what it looked like. Does it? You tell me.
Personally I was hoping for both more and less. My vision
for a consumer PowerBook would be something like a revived
PB 1400 form factor, brightly colored if you wish, with a
respectable compliment of ports including either SCSI or
FireWire, the STN passive matrix screen from the MainStreet
Series 1 G3 'Book to keep costs down, and a price below
$1,300. But what do I know? As Hiawatha Bray put it in The
Boston Globe last week, "Apple has learned well the bitter
lessons of the past few years; they're not into loss
leaders."
Oddly enough, the specification and connectivity issues
are a point Dvorak and I vigorously disagree on. I would
have liked to see at least two USB ports instead of one, a
SCSI port, and a removable-device expansion bay, as well as
at least one PC Card slot. Dvorak says he doesn't care about
these things, even noting that "the connectivity for the
system seems well thought out." He thinks the price is OK
too.
It's the looks that bother him, along with the chorus of
cheers iBook got at MacWorld Expo. "Do they spray
mind-numbing gas in these auditoriums where Steve Jobs
speaks?" he asks rhetorically. "Is his 'reality distortion
field' really that powerful?" Is it? Beats me.
Which brings us to John's prediction that the iBook will
be a marketing "disaster." I doubt it, given the
enthusiastic initial welcome it has received. I still want a
less than four pound, not more than an inch thick,
"executive" PowerBook in a tastefully subdued color with
lots of connectivity and expandability, but an Apple dealer
friend tells me that iBook orders are flooding in, sight
unseen. I think the iBook will sell well, although it's not
high on my own wish-list.
Which I do find a bit troubling. The iBook is the first
PowerBook model ever that I don't find myself really
interested in having for my own. The 100 series 'Books were
amazing in their day. The 500s blew me away initially,
although I got tired of their Star Trek styling pretty quick
(while I still find my 5300 pleasant to look at), and they
were a great laptop. I am typing this on a 5300 -- 'nuff
said. I still love the 1400 and the 3400 and the original
G3, and the WallStreet is probably the all-round best
PowerBook yet, despite the fact that I'm not crazy about its
looks. Lombard is a tremendous machine too. But iBook? Maybe
I'll warm to it over time, but so far it doesn't turn my
crank.
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