“Ars Technica’s John Siracusa looks back with a decade’s hindsight at his early reviews of Mac OS X. He talks about what went right, what went wrong, and what he’s still waiting on.” I’ve read them all over the years, and Siracusa is by far the best reviewer on the web. His Mac OS X reviews are worth it for the technical details of the inner workings of Mac OS X alone – even if you don’t use or like Apple’s operating system.
I used the context to constrain the ^aEURoeBest Reviewer on the Web^aEUR title that you^aEURTMre conferring on Siracusa to the specific area of ^aEURoewhen it comes to Mac OS X^aEUR. If that is in fact what you meant then I agree with you. He is the best Mac OS X reviewer, putting a huge distance between himself and second place. Before it starts sound I^aEURTMm throwing him under the bus, I will say that his reviews should be compulsory for the whole body of Apple-faithful and Apple-curious because you learn far more about Mac OS X from him then from Apple. Objectively, you don’t learn enough.
If instead you actually meant that he is literally the greatest reviewer on the web then I strongly disagree, because he^aEURTMs not even a good one. That^aEURTMs disappointing too because he is such a good writer who has so much knowledge and insight. Of course, he doesn^aEURTMt stand alone as a low quality reviewer either on the web or when in comes to Mac OS X. In fact, being the best Mac OS X reviewer turns out to be SKAFC territory (Skinniest Kid At Fat Camp), and I can^aEURTMt help but wonder if he^aEURTMd start doing a better job if he had any real competition. To me, "i>>?Siracusa^aEURTMs reviews read like a popular Foodie plying his trade on Kentucky Fried Chicken^aEURTMs ^aEURoeDouble Down^aEUR product. It^aEURTMs entertaining. It^aEURTMs insightful. It^aEURTMs even marginally useful. However, it rather misses the point, which become even more obvious if you^aEURTMve ever stood in the lobby of a KFC or listened in to a Yum! Brands shareholder call.
He is “not even a good [reviewer]”, but he is a good, insightful, knowledgeable writer.
You don’t learn enough from him, but he is essential reading if you are considering an Apple product.
Sorry, but what on Earth was your point?
You never stated any solid reason why you consider him poorly in spite of your otherwise glowing recommendations. Something like, “he is a bad reviewer because he omits important details” would have sufficed. Much better in my opinion, than a bird’s nest of mixed metaphors and ambiguous analogies that did more to induce groans than understanding.
His reviews are technical, well thought out, with strong rational reasons given to everything he dislikes or disagrees with, what else would you want in a reviewer?
I think you may just be standing to close to the RDF.
Edited 2011-05-14 13:29 UTC
A review of a reviewer that criticizes him for a lack of substance, without any substantiated criticism*? My brain is collapsing in on itself…
*it’s like poetry, so that it rhymes
Wonder what will be after OS X Lion.
The cat hierarchy is pretty much exhausted now except if they name the next version after the extinct Sabretooth or something which I think they wont do.
Talking nonsense now..OS XI will eventually happen but I wonder, marketing wise, if the OS eleven will sound right enough for Apple.
Windows did not name Vista windows 6. It did although use 7. What I’m getting at is that number 7 and 10 have symbolic type value. 7 is lucky and 10 is perfect.
My guess is the next version will be a word?
Lion is a word…
Lion is an OS/X. I think he mean OS/XI would be a word instead of “OS/XI”.
iOS is OS XI