5/17/06
author: Mosley


OS X was an invite for computer geeks to check out the new Mac operating system and expand the Mac market. It has expanded, but not as much as hoped, because Apple has had to protect their reputation and has been killing off users. Apple has secretly had over 270 worm viruses. As Apple employees get support calls and recognize the symptoms, they have the unfortunate task of keeping Apple's virus track record safe. This is the very reason why Apple towers have gone up in price with the release of OS X. It is to fund the self destruct mechanisms in each new Apple computer and to pay for Apple's secret task force.

When it seems a new virus is being described to Apple's support, a myriad of checks and balances occur internally at Apple, but they happen quickly. Apple has task force members spread all over the country. Once a task force is contacted and given the address of the possible virus, the operative is first to try to go in covertly and break in. If that is impossible, the OS X user must be eliminated to keep Apple's dirty virus secret away from the public. Although Apple's new patches address protecting further infection from found viruses, Apple has found it to be a better financial move to elimate users remotely. If a support call comes into Apple and the symptoms have already been identified as past virus issues, the poor, unsuspecting Mac user is instructed to go through a series of key commands and it launches an instant self destruct mechanism that insures the user is within the proximity of the computer and erradicated from being able to spread any news of a potential virus on the Mac.

Apple has militarized their market and is protecting their investment by any and all means necessary.


Prior: Microsoft's Latest Threat to Pull Office from Macs