This is how I see it with Apple. Their PC OS (OS X) is far more user friendly than Windows by a mile. All their productivity stuff also is. But it's not perfect and it's not really where they are focusing now anyway.
IMHO in the past decade they have done two great things that have basically made them:
1. Design an interface for a music player that allows the user to easily and quickly find a particular song among thousands.
2. Design a touch screen interface that responds to touch instantaneously and exactly as a physical object would respond.
On the first point. I remember the MP3 players before the iPod. You couldn't find the song you wanted out of even 100 without standing on the middle of the street fiddling with the thing for a minute. That clickwheel was the biggest game changer in terms of music player interfaces. It was a solution to a HUGE problem with regard to a music player holding thousands of songs.
On the second. I have to admit when I first saw the iPhone I was so skeptical that you could properly dial numbers etc. without a keypad. I thought the product was a joke, I mean you couldn't even add contacts on the device. The first version lacked any features that would qualify it as a smartphone. I didn't consider it a smartphone. But they really focused on one issue: INTERFACE. They proved that the interface was the foundation upon which anything could be added. Features without that foundation were worthless. That interface is gold. Even today Android can't properly replicate its feel. It's so natural feeling that innately human beings take to it like fish to water. Hand the device to a 3 year old or a 95 year old and both will "get it" in about 3 minutes. That interface is the game changer of the decade.
So getting to point. Apple comes up with an innovative interface every 7 or so years. Getting these things right is very very hard. There is pure genius in those interfaces. That does not happen often. We can't predict what the next thing will be but I know it takes years and years of development.
The iOS ecosystem and cloud is nothing special. Everyone from Amazon to Google to Microsoft are doing the same and frankly one of those can do it better hands down.
So for Apple to move ahead again that new interface must come out. It must be a real problem that people face. TV right now is pretty horrible even with the best TiVO. Hands free systems in cars are pretty bad also.
It's hard for me to imagine what it could be short of mind control of some of these systems we have to deal with everyday. I think Google tried with Google TV to create a unified source for video content but as usual they aren't very good at making interfaces. But a video device that just asks you what you want and pulls it from Netflix, Hulu, iTunes, Cable, OnDemand whatever without the user needing to care where it came from would be a good system. I suspect that's what they're working on.
A watch would be cool. I guess it would have read gestures "written" in the air above it.
Whatever it is it just has to work perfectly. Reliably, and consistently. I think those things Steve Jobs valued the most. Right now with iOS6 things are becoming buggy kind of Microsoft stuff. That OS needs an overhaul badly.
IMHO in the past decade they have done two great things that have basically made them:
1. Design an interface for a music player that allows the user to easily and quickly find a particular song among thousands.
2. Design a touch screen interface that responds to touch instantaneously and exactly as a physical object would respond.
On the first point. I remember the MP3 players before the iPod. You couldn't find the song you wanted out of even 100 without standing on the middle of the street fiddling with the thing for a minute. That clickwheel was the biggest game changer in terms of music player interfaces. It was a solution to a HUGE problem with regard to a music player holding thousands of songs.
On the second. I have to admit when I first saw the iPhone I was so skeptical that you could properly dial numbers etc. without a keypad. I thought the product was a joke, I mean you couldn't even add contacts on the device. The first version lacked any features that would qualify it as a smartphone. I didn't consider it a smartphone. But they really focused on one issue: INTERFACE. They proved that the interface was the foundation upon which anything could be added. Features without that foundation were worthless. That interface is gold. Even today Android can't properly replicate its feel. It's so natural feeling that innately human beings take to it like fish to water. Hand the device to a 3 year old or a 95 year old and both will "get it" in about 3 minutes. That interface is the game changer of the decade.
So getting to point. Apple comes up with an innovative interface every 7 or so years. Getting these things right is very very hard. There is pure genius in those interfaces. That does not happen often. We can't predict what the next thing will be but I know it takes years and years of development.
The iOS ecosystem and cloud is nothing special. Everyone from Amazon to Google to Microsoft are doing the same and frankly one of those can do it better hands down.
So for Apple to move ahead again that new interface must come out. It must be a real problem that people face. TV right now is pretty horrible even with the best TiVO. Hands free systems in cars are pretty bad also.
It's hard for me to imagine what it could be short of mind control of some of these systems we have to deal with everyday. I think Google tried with Google TV to create a unified source for video content but as usual they aren't very good at making interfaces. But a video device that just asks you what you want and pulls it from Netflix, Hulu, iTunes, Cable, OnDemand whatever without the user needing to care where it came from would be a good system. I suspect that's what they're working on.
A watch would be cool. I guess it would have read gestures "written" in the air above it.
Whatever it is it just has to work perfectly. Reliably, and consistently. I think those things Steve Jobs valued the most. Right now with iOS6 things are becoming buggy kind of Microsoft stuff. That OS needs an overhaul badly.