Conclusion

It has definitely been a busy few months in the Apple world. September delivered the iPhone 6 and 6 Plus, along with iOS 8, and a preview of the still mysterious Apple Watch. This month we got the iPad Air 2, the iPad Mini 3, the iMac with Retina 5K display, iOS 8.1, Apple Pay, and OS X Yosemite. Those last three points are some of the most interesting, and they all happen to be part of Apple's software ecosystem. I don't think that's a coincidence. We're reaching a point where it's becoming more and more difficult to differentiate your products based on hardware alone. Great software driving a great experience is where the focus needs to be moving forward.

Apple's strategy to provide that experience appears to be deep integration of their services across all of their product lines. It starts with the cloud, with new additions to iCloud like iCloud Drive and Photo Library. From there it goes to software commonality, with a design language that exists on both iOS and OS X, and applications that exist on both platforms. On the opposite end of the spectrum from the cloud are the new continuity features which provide integration between all the devices that you have right there with you. SMS Forwarding and iPhone call transferring expands communication on iPad and the Mac to new areas, while Handoff makes the transition between applications seamless and accurate right down to where your cursor was. 

What interests me the most about Apple's stategy is how it provides incentive for a user with one Apple device to buy other Apple devices. This exists to a certain degree with other manufacturers as well. If you own a Samsung smartphone, you may be more inclined to buy a Samsung tablet due to the similar hardware design and user interface. But apart from any brand loyalty you feel, you don't really have any incentive to buy a Samsung laptop which runs Windows and doesn't integrate with your other devices. Apple's integration covers their entire lineup of devices. An iPhone user has a lot to gain by choosing a MacBook over a Windows Ultrabook, and an iPad over a Nexus 9. It would be interesting to analyze what percentage of people purchasing a new Apple device already own one or more Apple products.

Overall, I'm happy with the work that Apple has done with iOS 8.1 and OS X Yosemite. It's clear that a lot of this has been in the works for some time now, and integrating products and services to this degree requires a lot of planning to position your hardware and software so that it will be capable of working together in the ways you want them to. The Yosemite redesign has also gone quite well, and there aren't as many jarring inconsistencies as there were with iOS 7 at launch despite OS X being a more expansive operating system. Apple has definitely learned from their experiences with the iOS redesign. That being said, there is still a lot of work to do. Apple Pay needs to expand rapidly, and iCloud Photo Library isn't as far developed as I had expected it to be.

It's hard to say where Apple will go as we move forward. It will be hard to outdo the work that has been done with Yosemite. However, history tells me that there are still great things yet to come from Apple. It seems that year after year Apple is able to make updated products and proclaim them to be the biggest advancements in that product's history, and regardless of my initial reaction, I somehow always find myself agreeing .

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  • Anandrian - Monday, October 27, 2014 - link

    maybe quicksilver was his choice :D. Quicksilver is an awesome launcher but I stopped using it after Yosemite was released. I never used the power features of Quicksilver.
  • solipsism - Monday, October 27, 2014 - link

    Before it was in the upper-right corner. Even if you pressed ⌘-Space Bar it was still a tiny text field. The current design pulls from 3rd-party launchers to integrate a lot more services that are now possible with it being in the center of the screen and very large.

    My guess is he probably had apps in the Dock that were always running like most Mac users.
  • Brandon Chester - Monday, October 27, 2014 - link

    I have my most often used apps in the Dock and I also use launchpad and Finder when I happen to be in it.
  • slatanek - Monday, October 27, 2014 - link

    I'd say the Yosemite thing is... like a live beta. I've updated my girlfrined's MBP retina (late 2013) and everything feels just more laggy and a lot of things just lack polish and looks kinda meh. The login screen sometimes presents itself as it suppossed to do and sometimes it's just a blank page , totally random. I still can login but the password you type in is not visible as the background isn't. The way the search field in spolight comes on in the middle of the screen - horrible looking and annoying.

    The rest of it is just the same as usual - not bad, not particularly good either. Finder still stays lightyears behind windows explorer. Copying/moving/deleting stuff in OSX is still a pain. Also when you go with finder full screen there is a visual bug as well the open enlarge dots get strangely squashed under the top bar as it comes down when highlighted. I wonder when will they drop the file system overall ;-)

    Messy Apple, this time it's messy...
  • bwanaaa - Monday, October 27, 2014 - link

    HackerNews had an interesting ref about the new 'insecurity model'. All your stuff that you are working on (email drafts, unsaved textedit docs, etc) is now stored in iCloud (silently).
  • xxsk8er101xx - Monday, October 27, 2014 - link

    No it doesn't. You can choose to not do that. It's not done as a conspiracy it's done to improve the user experience.

    Take the tin foil hat off!
  • sjprg2 - Monday, October 27, 2014 - link

    No! the Icloud is to retrain the newcomers to the process of the mainframe mentality with all software eventually on the Icloud(mainframe) with remote administrators. With hardware locked down (soldered in) we are now back in the 1960s. With no local abilities we only get what the manufacturers want to give us at their price. IBM's apps used to cost 10-20 thousand each.
  • name99 - Monday, October 27, 2014 - link

    Oh for crying out loud...
    Grow up. The Matrix is NOT a documentary, you know.
  • Slaanesh - Monday, October 27, 2014 - link

    Translucency was already in Vista, right?
    And is that a gadget sidebar in the screenshot on p2?
  • blackcrayon - Monday, October 27, 2014 - link

    Translucency was in Mac OS X 10.0 in 2001.

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