"In the mind of Steve Jobs the entire incident had no downside, none at all, which is yet another reason why he is not like you or me." "So Apple still comes out $75 million ahead, which is important to Steve Jobs."
Jobs is a CEO. Making money for the company and the company's stakeholders is what he does. Its his job, if you will. So yes, coming out ahead is important to Jobs... and every other competent CEO.
And as for the Gates comment, "He has to know he can never win"... Define 'win'. The way I see it, Apple is indeed winning... they're just not playing the same game as Microsoft anymore.
So, they set the price, and people bought it. End of story. They didn't force anyone to. If someone thought it was worth $600 when, as Cringely says, the 'real' price was the current price, then you made the mistake.
Interestingly, they do guarantee that if the price drops within 14 days of you buying the product then you can pay the lower price.
http://store.apple.com/Catalog/US/Images/salespolicies.html#...
As the return period is 14 days too, this is probably to stop people returning the product just to get a new one at the lower price.
Of my friends who own iPhones, I haven't heard any of them complaining. They just had to go out and spend top dollar for the latest shiny gadget as soon as it became available. They've done it before, and they'll do it again. As such, none of them were surprised to see a big price drop.
Considering all the planning that goes into all public presentations by Jobs, that is not plausible.
Cringely is spot on here.