My friend and co-worker Tom has a thesis about Appleâs biggest problem: Google is getting better at design faster than Apple is getting better at web services.
Iâm a long-time Mac user and a diehard Apple fan, and even I will admit that Appleâs approach to the web has been a clusterfuck. iCloud, nĂ©e MobileMe, nĂ©e .Mac, has only ever been adequate at best. Iâve heard (or been victim to) countless stories of duplicate or lost contacts, calendar syncing errors, or email downtime. Outside of sync services, Apple has other web problems. Here are a few examples:
Apple canât update its online store without taking it offline first.
A popular Game Center game was able to bring down the entire network.
Apple requires you to re-friend everyone on Game Center, Find my Friends, and Shared Photostreams.
Notes requires an email account to sync.
The iTunes and App Stores are still powered by WebObjects, a mostly dead framework written almost 20 years ago.
iMessage for Mac lives in an alternate dimension in which time has no ordered sequence.
Almost anything Apple does which involves the internet is a mess, save for their excellent web browser teams.
Meanwhile, Google, specifically Android, has been steadily improving its entire platform. To me, it still doesnât have the same quality of polish and feel that Apple software does. However, itâs getting harder to argue that point, especially since their web services all tend to Just Work. Features like Google Now and near-instant voice commands are starting to give Android a serious leg up on iOS. Design is coming along as well. Android is still ugly, but itâs much less ugly than it was a few years ago. Google seems to be actively addressing this, and if Apple isnât worried, they should be. Tom is the first friend Iâve had who has switched from iOS to Android, and he is unlikely to be the last.
Hereâs what Iâm getting at: Apple should buy Twitter, and they should do it now.
Iâm hardly the first to suggest such an acquisition. Apple and Twitter have talked before and much speculation has already been made. Most, if not all, of this speculation centered around how Apple needed to buy a social network, because Apple needed âSocialâ â whatever that means. Owning a social network only solves one of the aforementioned problems (finding friends) and it only does so only partially: Both friends must already be a part of that social network for it to work. It seems ludicrous to suggest paying billions of dollars for half a solution to the symptom of a problem.
So thatâs not that argument I want to make.
I would posit that the cause Appleâs lackluster web skills stems from their inability to recruit or keep talented web engineers. Historically, if youâre into databases, servers, or web application frameworks, then Apple was probably pretty low on the list of places you aspired to work at. Apple has always positioned itself as a consumer products company, and even killed off its server hardware over the years. Mac OS X Server remains, but who knows for how long.
Where Apple falls short, Twitter flies. Not only does Twitter use some of the most advanced web technology, they invented it. They own scale. They know how to send hundreds of thousands of tweets a minute. Further, Twitter is social network with values that (used to) reflect Apple: focus and simplicity.
Apple should buy Twitter not for its social network, but for its talent and technology. That talent and technology could undoubtably help bring Apple and iCloud into the 21st century. The social network is basically an added bonus.
Twitter is a company struggling to make financial sense. With over $1B in funding and over 1500 employees, they need to figure out how to stay in the game for the long term. Hence, the disappointing pivot and the user backlash. Exhibit A, exhibit B. While Twitter may make a lot of money for its investors, having many of your original users abandon ship isnât good for your long term prospects.
Apple has boatloads of money, and although itâs extremely conservative with it â you donât get rich by spending money, after all â I donât think itâs out of the question for them to make a heavy strategic investment like this.
An Apple buyout of Twitter wouldnât be welcomed by all. With so many Twitter employees, I imagine at least a few hundred of them are dedicated to Twitterâs advertising arm. Since Apple is unlikely to be interested in that aspect of Twitterâs business, many of those jobs would likely disappear. It wouldnât be pretty. (Then again, maybe they could help turn around iAds?)
If it doesnât happen soon, it likely wonât happen at all. The larger Twitter gets, the more likely an IPO, and Apple isnât dumb enough to pay the grossly inflated market prices for a publicly traded social media company. Further, the more Twitter becomes a âmedia companyâ the less engineering talent it will retain. Anecdotally, Iâve already heard of quite a few key engineers leaving the nest.
All said, I think this is pretty unlikely to happen. Maybe Iâm just jaded, but Twitter probably thinks of itself as being too big and too primed for money-making to be acquired at this point. Also, stomaching the layoffs of much of itâs staff doesnât sound like something their leadership would be up for. Apple is probably too in denial about the failings of itâs antiquated approach to the web to consider dropping such a huge amount of money.
The fit seems so good, itâs hard to not wish for.
Update: A previous version of this article referenced a statistic about Twitter handling hundreds of thousands of tweets per second. This was an error, the rate Twitter quoted was 327,452 per minute. My apologies. Still, itâs quite an impressive number, considering the one-to-many nature of Tweets.