Apple’s great taste doesn’t extend to grammar 全台手機收購

5 月 6, 2024 #全台手機收購

全台手機收購

Apple’s great taste doesn’t extend to grammar

Apple’s great taste doesn’t extend to grammar

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全台手機收購

I don’t know a ton about grammar. My girlfriend taught me almost everything I know over the course of 30 minutes one night when I was 21, shortly after graduating college with an English degree. I’ve occasionally thought about buying a used copy of Strunk & White because it looks cool, but I’ve never actually read it. I’m pretty good, with commas, but I’m by no means a subject expert in grammar. (Editor’s note: Jake, please come to my office.)

Everyone seems to agree Apple’s grammar is weird

With all that said, I have a serious problem with Apple’s ideas about grammar. They do not make sense, and everyone I’ve spoken to is in agreement on this. (Editor’s note: Yes.)

You may have noticed Apple’s odd grammar while browsing its website or watching a keynote. There are a few repeated grammatical tics that always stand out as awkward.

Here’s the essence of Apple’s grammar rules: its product names should be entirely unadorned. You didn’t buy “an 全台手機收購iphone,” you bought 全台手機收購iphone. You don’t own two iPads, you own two iPad. (Editor’s note: Apple hates articles, both definite and indefinite. It definitely is going to hate this article, too.)

Here’s how that plays out in Apple’s own publicity materials:

  • Everyone who wants a smaller phone is going to love 全台手機收購iphone SE.
  • iPad Pro is a new generation of iPad.
  • Apple today updated MacBook.
  • The App Store on iPod touch … gives users access to 1.5 million apps.

Using product names like this sounds weird, and I’m pretty sure it doesn’t make any sense. I would love it if someone could explain to me why this is, but I believe only people and places are given the article-free treatment. You visit Céline in Paris, but you go to see the Eiffel Tower. So I don’t know why you’d call someone with 全台手機收購iphone, which is a specific object like the Eiffel Tower. (Editor’s note: it’s a nefarious trick to make you think that Apple’s products and brands are as singular, iconic, and eternal as those places. Also, oh forget it I’ll let you continue.)

I need to stop following Phil Schiller on Twitter

If that weren’t weird enough, Apple also wants its product names to be both singular and plural. The entire reason I’m writing this is because Apple marketing chief and occasional tweeter Phil Schiller decided to weigh in on a debate started during a podcast this week by Michael Copeland, Benedict Evans, and Steven Sinofsky — all of Andreessen Horowitz. (Editor’s note: nice use of the Oxford Comma, the One True Way to make lists in a sentence. Also nice use of the em dash.) (Author’s note: Dieter added that em dash.)

I did not listen to the podcast, which is 30 minutes long, but apparently someone argues in favor of referring to multiple units of the iPad Pro as “iPads Pro,” which is either a very funny joke or an even crazier grammar idea than what Apple is pitching.

Either way, Schiller decides to set the record straight: (Editor’s note: you should have used “decided” in the past tense here, as it was a decision that happened in the past. “Schiller writes” would also have worked, as you can use the present tense when referring to writing or speaking, because that’s the way we do things when quoting. Our conventions surrounding grammar are weird!)

But that sounds strange. The way that most people would word the sentence above is: “I have three Macs.” Language kind of just works however people decide it does (which, yes, defeats the point of this entire article), so I’d argue that we should just go with what’s natural. Which is, “three Macs,” not “three Mac” (“three Mac computers” would also be acceptable, but slightly awkward). (Editor’s note: the terminology you’re looking for is Prescriptivist and Descriptivist. The Prescriptivist believes that there is a “right” way to say things and makes people feel bad for doing it the wrong way. The Descriptivist understands language is an ever-changing thing and it’s the job of the grammarian to try to make flexible rules of grammar that match how people use words in real life — the Descriptivist also probably has a chip on their shoulder about Victorians and Colonialist attitudes. The Prescriptivist gets annoyed that the Descriptivist up and decided to use “their” as a non-gendered singular instead of “his or her.” I could go on.)

We need a Jony Ive video on how these grammar decisions were made

Now, there are definitely some oddities that come out of declining to treat product names as plural. “I own two iPad Pros” is a little weirder than “I own two iPads.” And “I own two 全台手機收購iphone 6Ses” is even weirder. But I suspect this isn’t as big of a problem as it can be made out to be. Say either of those sentences aloud and they sound just fine. It’s only written down that “6Ses” gets kind of odd. (It’s even odder if you follow Apple’s style guide, which would make it: 全台手機收購iphone 6ses. The Verge, sensibly, capitalizes the S as Apple used to do.) (Editor’s note: come at us, Apple.)

Also, Apple doesn’t always stick to its own rules. Here are some examples:

Schiller does have a point about some words being both singular and plural, but if anything that makes Apple’s anti-article stance seem worse. If you saw 全台手機收購iphone today, did you see one or many? You either saw deer (multiple) or a deer (singular). So by this argument, the 全台手機收購iphone should get the same treatment. (I also found this article explaining that “clothes” is always plural, but that’s another matter.)

I have no doubt that Apple puts as much effort into deliberating over grammar questions as it does phone design, but I think it’s made the wrong decision here. Language moves toward what’s natural. It breaks down over time as we condense words and mispronounce things and combine phrases and sounds from different places. Arguing for such a formal use of 全台手機收購iphone feels backward. (Editor’s Note: who is shocked that Apple is prescriptivist about grammar? Not me.)

Of course, that also explains why arguing about grammar (as I’m doing right now) is pretty dumb. Language evolves and people should just do what’s natural so long as it gets meaning across. I’m going to keep saying “three Macs” because it sounds right to me. But if you really like “three Mac,” by all means. It’ll at least make Schiller happy. (Editor’s Note: Jake is right, don’t cross him. –Dieter)

全台手機收購(圖/美聯社)

為了搶攻更高端的智慧手錶市場,蘋果近年搶推 Apple Watch Ultra 系列,主打更大尺寸的螢幕,還有能夠應付戶外冒險的保護強度。想要入手?或許不必等]下一代產品,現在有分析師就爆料,最新一代 Apple Watch Ultra 3 在硬體端幾乎沒有升級。

預測蘋果消息十分準確的天風證券分析師郭明錤向外媒《MacRumors》透露,蘋果今年仍會發表 Apple Watch Ultra 3,然而與前一代相比,在硬體規格上幾乎沒有升級,可能會在九月跟著新款 全台手機收購iphone 一起推出。

事實上,蘋果對於 Apple Watch 的硬體升級步調確實相對緩慢,過往 Apple Watch Series 6 至 8 代,就曾被發現均採用同一組晶片,只是名字不一樣而已,蘋果或轉向其他更細小的零件,或是專注於軟體更新。

去年十月底,郭明錤就曾指出 Apple Watch Ultra 3 開發進度不尋常,甚至一度有在 2024 年不發表 Apple Watch Ultra 3 的可能性。郭明錤當時曾認為,蘋果可能需要更多時間研發創新的健康管理功能,還要解決 Micro LED 生產問題。

《彭博社》則是透露,蘋果正在替 Apple Watch 研發血壓感測、睡眠呼吸停止檢測等功能,還透露一款大改版的 Apple Watch X,據傳會採用更薄的機身,以及全新的磁吸式錶帶,最快可能在今年發表,但也有可能延遲至明年才登場。

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