Comment by grishka

5 hours ago

You seem to have missed my point about manufacturers moving in lockstep.

Most people use a phone for at least two years. The way it happened in the 2010s, by the time someone is looking at buying a new one, all available phones on the market have already grown larger compared to their current one. So, they get sad and buy whatever is available.

Which is perhaps why Apple tried the iPhone Mini, to go back and see if they were missing a large market segment. Their answer was that some people bought it, but not enough to justify the product at Apple's scale.

There isn't a grand conspiracy to make everyone sad with big phones they don't want.

  • > Their answer was that some people bought it, but not enough to justify the product at Apple's scale.

    This is the key thing. It’s not that no one wants it. But it’s a lot of engineering to produce another distinct hardware model and the market is tiny compared to the larger models.

  • Anecdotally, I, personally, know several people who bought the iPhone mini, some of them still using it.

    I still blame Apple for considering that 3% of total iPhone sales is a failure. And then launching the iPhone air, as if it will do any better...

    • And I know several people who bought and are passionate about small, lightweight 2-door cars with manual transmissions.

      Sometimes that isn’t enough to justify dedicating a mass production line to that product.

      3 replies →

  • Apple will have like 15 macbook skus but a small iphone is the straw that breaks the camels back.

    • They don't have 15 different Macbook chassis sizes. Most of those SKUs are swapping SoC and memory configurations on the same board and chassis design.

      By that logic the iPhone 17 (base model) is at least 24 SKUs.

      If for example the 15" MacBook Air ended up being less than 3% of Mac sales, I wouldn't be surprised if Apple killed it off.