The iPhone launch is proof positive that technology can still generate a huge
buzz if reputation, product specification and marketing are fully aligned. And
with the iPhone at least, the greatest of these appears to be marketing.
Apple broke one of its old tenets by pre-announcing the product and will
surely do so again with its next gewgaw, judging by the unprecedented levels of
frenzied expectation the launch of this gadget has generated.
Although the first-night reviews for the iPhone are positive, the public
version of stress testing is still to come, and there is no guarantee that it
will be an enduring success. After all, Apple’s Newton technology was also
supported by much hype and initially strong sales before slumping into
laughing-stock status.
Hype is one thing, value quite another, as buyers of all stripes should know
by now. It is to the credit of the IT industry and its maturing status that hype
is largely a consumer-sector phenomenon these days. Some products are keenly
awaited, certainly, but the days of believing in silver bullets have long gone.
Is it overly cynical to think this loss of faith is a good thing?
Comments
Have your say on this article