Citizen XVIII
Honorable
Apple doesn't release any product until it's been thoroughly tested, redesigned, tested again, etc., etc. By the time their product hits the shelves, they are so convinced they have it perfected, that nobody else is allowed to do squat with it, hence the golden cage allegory.
Google likes to get something to the point of being functional, and throw it out into the world. Their philosophy is more, "We made this thing, what would you do with it?"
With Apple, you get a product that knows what it is and does it well right out of the gate. But, it really doesn't evolve unless Apple is directly involved. Google likes to give us products that are still in developer mode: functional, but still trying to find its place in the world. When an end user finds a good use for it, the community can take the product in a whole new direction and run with it. Neither approach is better than the other, they each work for different segments of the population, but to claim that the i-watch 'already beats Android Wear' is foolish. Apple's product may be superior at launch, we'll see. But Wear has much greater long-term potential thanks to crowd-development. In this specific instance, I think Google's head start will make all the difference.
Google likes to get something to the point of being functional, and throw it out into the world. Their philosophy is more, "We made this thing, what would you do with it?"
With Apple, you get a product that knows what it is and does it well right out of the gate. But, it really doesn't evolve unless Apple is directly involved. Google likes to give us products that are still in developer mode: functional, but still trying to find its place in the world. When an end user finds a good use for it, the community can take the product in a whole new direction and run with it. Neither approach is better than the other, they each work for different segments of the population, but to claim that the i-watch 'already beats Android Wear' is foolish. Apple's product may be superior at launch, we'll see. But Wear has much greater long-term potential thanks to crowd-development. In this specific instance, I think Google's head start will make all the difference.