I have to agree with this article but this is why we have beta testers 

But I do feel that tim cooks leadership is some what more lacs when it comes to 
releasing stable products compaired to that of steve Jobbs,
My personal feeling is that steve made sure that devices and OS's were  
released with less problematic than now, ok we had antenna gate but that I 
think was just a design oversight.

 Guess we'll see what happens  -----Original Message-----
From: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com [mailto:macvisionaries@googlegroups.com] 
On Behalf Of M. Taylor
Sent: Friday, 1 December 2017 5:24 AM
To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
Subject: Oh look, Apple is 'getting sloppy' now - BGR

Oh look, Apple is 'getting sloppy' now
By Zach Epstein.
Well, Apple fans, I have some good news and some bad news for you this morning. 
The good news is that it looks like Apple's new iPhone X is such a smash hit 
that Apple bears are giving the whole "Apple is doomed" spiel a rest for a 
while. A report from earlier this week suggested that Apple sold
6 million iPhone X units. during the Black Friday weekend alone. The remarkable 
feat is made even more mind-boggling when one considers that Black Friday is 
all about deals, and there are no deals at all on Apple's $1,000+ flagship 
iPhone.
Then, of course, we have the bad news. It appears as though "Apple is doomed" 
may have at least temporarily transitioned to "Apple is sloppy," and we're 
getting some truly special hot takes based on this fun new theme.

I've seen a bunch of sloppy takes on Apple's supposed sloppiness over the past 
few days. It wasn't until I came across "Is Apple getting sloppy?" on the BBC 
website that I felt compelled to share some thoughts on this emerging 
misconception.
So, what's the premise of this BBC article? Apple is getting sloppy, you see, 
because the latest versions of its macOS and iOS software have bugs.
Provided as evidence in the article are a grand total of three - yes, three
- bugs. The first is the High Sierra root access bug Apple issued a fix for on 
Wednesday, the second is an earlier High Sierra the revealed forgotten 
passwords instead of providing a hint (also fixed), and the third is the 
infamous iOS bug that auto-corrected "I" to an "A" followed by a question mark 
in a box (yup, also fixed).
The article is a trainwreck from the get go; the caption under the image at the 
top of the page reads "Users are not used to finding major flaws in Apple's 
products." Umm, what? The iPhone line is in its tenth year and I cannot recall 
a single launch before 2017 that wasn't accompanied by at least a few major 
flaws. "Antennagate" is obviously the most famous among them, but there are 
dozens.
And what about software? "Users are not used to finding major flaws" in Apple's 
software? Really? Has there ever been a version of any major operating system, 
let alone iOS and macOS, that has been free of major flaws? That was a 
rhetorical question. The answer is no.
Even if we pretend that all software isn't inherently buggy, in order to accept 
the premise that Apple is sloppy we also must pretend that Apple's software is 
more prone to severe bugs than comparable software. Remember that period of 
time when it seemed like a new apocalyptic zero-day Windows flaw would pop up 
every few months? Well erase that from your memory, please. In fact, let's just 
make believe the many, many, many thousands of Windows bugs that have popped up 
over the past three decades never happened.
There are plenty of instances where Betteridge's law of headlines does not 
apply, but no sane human would argue this is one of them. So to answer your 
question, BBC, no, Apple is not getting sloppy. Software has bugs. Products 
have flaws. To think these statements are anything other than absolute truths 
is ridiculous. The best that we as consumers can hope for is that companies 
work as diligently as possible to fix these flaws. Thankfully, Apple rarely 
disappoints in this regard.

Original Article at:
http://bgr.com/2017/11/30/apple-high-sierra-root-bug-sloppy-lol-kmn/

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