I'm not labeling you anything. I'm talking about Apple customers. And if you think I drew that chart myself and you genuinely don't even know what a
Kindle Fire is, why are you even trying to have this discussion?
That's funny, because in an earlier post you said: "Business has not opened up to Apple products". Of course, in another post you were also claiming stats that don't happen fit your delusions are "flat wrong". All you are repeating is your
opinion, based on zilch, while refusing to even listen to actual facts and reality.
So lemme get this straight. You're at least aware that Microsoft has the business market by the balls, and has for decades, with it's Windows and Office software, but you somehow believe that businesses are now going to flock to Apple? What, so they can watch Youtube and download iTunes at their desks?
If anything other than Android (which you seem to be flatly unable to accept is
already the dominant mobile platform) is going to clean up in the business market, it will be Windows, not iOS.
Market cap. Market cap. Blah blah blah. See
post #8
Within a few years of its inception Apple had gone from zero to hundreds of millions in sales. In 1980, with numerous competing computer systems around, Apple famously had the largest IPO since Ford.
At that time you'd have no doubt been jizzing in your pants about how Apple was going to dominate computing for the next decade or two. And why not, everyone else was. Of course, within a few years they had been wiped out by IBM and Microsoft.
That process is already happening again, hence Apple's desperate lawsuits, which they also resorted to in the 80s while they were spinning down the toilet.
I'm now going to argue with a Scientologist; they're far less programmed and far more open to reason and reality.