King Shrek
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From the Wall Street Journal:
Apple, based on the information in that article, don't you you think it would be smart for you to start an advertising campaign concerning the security problems with Windows and how such problems are nearly non-existant on the Mac?
I think this would actually get a lot of Windows users who are fed up with viruses, spyware, adware and malware, etc., more aware of the security advantages of using the Mac platform and actually get them interested in opening up their wallets and switching to the Mac!
Go for it, Apple!
Still, iPods and wireless networking are on the periphery of digital entertainment, whose center remains the Windows-dominated PC. Apple's operating system and machines are generally hailed as superior to their Windows counterparts, but much as it'll pain the Appletistas to hear it (again), that superiority isn't enough to cause enough people to switch camps. For things to truly change, there has to be a fundamental and widely perceived problem with Windows, one that goes beyond geekspeak about operating systems.
Guess what? There is such a problem. In fact, it's the biggest issue in tech today: the drumbeat of viruses, spyware and other maladies that plague Windows and are practically nonexistent in the Apple world. It's true that this perceived immunity is partially a reflection of Apple's small market share, but that won't matter to consumers tired of computing anxiety and pain. Sure, it's a lot to ask folks who've lived in the Windows world for years to switch -- Apple tried that campaign a couple of years ago, with little success. The difference between then and now is that the combination of Windows' security woes and greater familiarity with Apple products, a combination we think will be what Apple needs to unlock that market. It's happening slowly right now, but it's happening, and it'll gain momentum in the months to come. And while it won't alter the commercial-PC landscape at first, it'll put Apple in a position to consider whether it wants to try to make inroads into that market as well.
Click here to read entire article. . .
Apple, based on the information in that article, don't you you think it would be smart for you to start an advertising campaign concerning the security problems with Windows and how such problems are nearly non-existant on the Mac?
I think this would actually get a lot of Windows users who are fed up with viruses, spyware, adware and malware, etc., more aware of the security advantages of using the Mac platform and actually get them interested in opening up their wallets and switching to the Mac!
Go for it, Apple!