When Good Firmware Goes Bad
I’ve loved my shiny new iPod since November of last year, when I gave in to an acute case of technolust and bought the 40GB model.  Six months on, despite the entry cost, the inability of Apple products to live happily in a PC universe without loads of expensive accessories, and the disconcerting set of scratches that appeared on the display almost immediately, I’d still say I was very happy.
 That is until last week.  Apparently, while I was running a standard firmware update (to the 4/28/04 release), the basic file system on my iPod became corrupted without warning, and everything on the pod was — erased.   *38 GB* of all sorts of personally and professionally important files evaporated without so much as an unhappy face…
 As it so happens, I was planning to wipe and rebuild anyway, so I’ve decided to look at this incident as an example of pre-emptive self-cleansing on the part of an exceptionally eager to please iPod, instead of a catastrophic file system failure.
 But I’m still pissed.  I have strong memories of using a Mac at a design studio in ’99, and deciding that I should wear a helmet to work because it crashed so often.  This reminds me of that in a more personal and equally frustrating way.
 And it’s going to cost Apple some money, to boot.  I just decided that I’d replace my aging Dell laptop with a tasty new Powerbook – and now I think I’ll be buying something else.  Great design and marketing don’t make up for unreliability.
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Category: The Media Environment | Tags: apple, userexperience Comments Off Comment »