Indeed, Apple has disrupted the market in a way Nintendo and Sony could only wish for.
They have brought the distribution chain to the masses while retaining light quality control. Nintendo (and more recently Sony) has spent the past two decades building a locked in distribution chain. Their innovation in hardware has been the only thing driving their growth for the past 15.
Now it would seem the current crop of engineers and executives couldn't innovate their way out of a paper bag without sacrificing their secure development/distribution chain.
I'm loving it but I am sad, because mainly, I'm looking for something deeper and more moving than Angry Birds.
1
Indeed, Apple has disrupted the market in a way Nintendo and Sony could only wish for.
They have brought the distribution chain to the masses while retaining light quality control. Nintendo (and more recently Sony) has spent the past two decades building a locked in distribution chain. Their innovation in hardware has been the only thing driving their growth for the past 15.
Now it would seem the current crop of engineers and executives couldn't innovate their way out of a paper bag without sacrificing their secure development/distribution chain.
I'm loving it but I am sad, because mainly, I'm looking for something deeper and more moving than Angry Birds.