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"Like the iMac, Steve Jobs is cheeky and iconoclastic. And visionary. By comparison, other computer makers appear stodgy."
KARL NYQUIST
Glasgow, Scotland
In the wake of recent events, social and economic, Apple should be commended for its bravery in the high-tech marketplace [TECHNOLOGY, Jan. 14]. The new iMac computer is an eye-catching symbol of Apple's vision and leadership. Apple's user-friendly operating system, Mac OS X, is employed by everyday users who are happily unaware that it is a state-of-the-art system.
TOBY SMITH
Pittsburgh, Pa.
The new iMac is cute, but after cute, then what? At my local computer store, Mac-compatible software titles are vastly outnumbered by those for the PC. Apple grabbed the graphics industry, while the PC people took over the rest of the field. The number of users who want to edit movies and sound is small, and you can do these things on a PC as well. If Apple is to survive, it must become a bit more mainstream and a lot less cult driven.
BARRY PEARLMAN
Chesterfield, Mo.
It is refreshing to see Apple get some of the credit it so richly deserves. Every day I am amazed at the effect the original iMac has had on industrial design, from computers to dustpans. Apple's computers make our workday fun.
AIMEE GIESE
Denver
Steve Jobs is out of touch with today's consumers. More than ever, the personal computer is seen as simply another home appliance, much like an expensive toaster. Most machines, regardless of their operating system, incorporate the same general functionality. The new iMac is not revolutionary. It is simply a prettier toaster.
BRIAN LAVALLEE
Quebec City
Jobs has an uncanny gift for knowing what people want their computers to do. Nearly all Apple's good ideas have been copied by others, but they can never make the concepts work as well or with as much style. Apple says, "Think Different," and I agree. So I say to computer users: Watch out. If Steve is doing it, you are likely to see an imitation of it soon.
MICHAEL KLEIN
San Antonio, Texas
Once again Apple releases a cute but basically irrelevant desktop computer, and the media fawn over it. Any Joe Average can go to a store and walk away with a Windows box that has a nice, fast Pentium 4 processor and is compatible with almost everything. Apple can sell overstyled toys to its fanatical 5% of the market, but why should the rest of us care?
MIKE YURKOVICH
Lincoln Park, Mich.
I own a Mac, but even for Mac fans, your story on the new iMac was over the top. Writer Josh Quittner gushed so much, I felt as if I had been under Niagara Falls for an hour. Jobs is a miracle man and knows his creation best, but I'm willing to bet that the new machine won't live up to the hyperbole.
JEFF TOPPING
Phoenix, Ariz.
The new iMac is just another Apple with a pretty face. What's next, a racy-looking vacuum cleaner?
TRACY J. EVANS
Albany, Ore.
--Distinctly unimpressed by the design of the new iMac, some of you offered barbed comments on its resemblance to less-than-sleek objects. "It took Apple two years to come up with something that looks like the blower unit of my grandma's old hair dryer!" chortled a Canadian reader. A New Yorker cracked that "the machine is even uglier than the original iMac; its base resembles a Hostess Sno Ball." "Looks like a broken table lamp," wrote a Californian. And an Ohioan entirely shrugged off the importance of design, saying, "Jobs can make the iMac look like the Space Needle for all I care. I don't give a darn about making computers pretty!"
Bush's Domestic Agenda
RE "The War At Home," about what President Bush will try to accomplish on the home front [NATION, Jan. 14]: It seems Bush needs to quit listening to his so-called advisers, especially to their ideas that try to capitalize on his overinflated 90% approval rating. If one of Bush's proposals is to encourage people to volunteer and give to charity, he definitely is missing the boat. The American people don't want to hear that they have to give more and serve more. What they want to know is simple: What does Bush plan to do about the economy? If the Republicans are worried that "the public will lose its focus on the war and start brooding about the economy," they should be. That mind-set is already very close to reality.
CATHERINE B. BROWN
San Antonio, Texas
Unraveling at the Seams
The Argentine crisis is the result of the total failure of globalization and free-market economics implemented by the U.S. and the International Monetary Fund [GLOBAL AGENDA, Jan. 14]. These policies are skewed to benefit investors at the expense of ordinary people, particularly in the Third World.
ARNALDO YODICE
Worcester, Mass.
The Argentines seem to blame their own leaders more than they blame America or the IMF for aggravating their financial distress. By remaining committed to Argentina's need to recuperate while being sensitive to its sovereignty, the U.S. can keep it that way.
KRISTINA BERLIN
Greenwich, Conn.
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