Filed under:
Analysis / Opinion,
Apple

As has been widely emailed by our crack readers, the
Apple Store is down as of midnight. We'd chalk this up to actual maintenance, but since it is officially Tuesday on the US East Coast, we'll give it the new-product benefit of the doubt. Some items, including
Airport Express units and the
Mac Mini, have been reported in limited availability mode for a while, so it's possible that we'll see some revisions come daylight. We also have been told that the iPod touch
January Update is mysteriously unavailable for purchase at the moment (thanks Will!) so perhaps that's in play as well. Of course, it could just be, you know,
maintenance.
The question must be considered: are the Apple Store outages really technically necessary to update the store content, or are they a form of grass-roots marketing that primes the buying audience for something new? After all, Amazon, Dell and Newegg add products constantly and never seem to stall into these extended
cones of silence. Is the Tuesday lacuna just a passive-aggressive way to get our attention, like a child throwing a sulk?
Recently, former Apple staffer
Chuq von Rospach suggested via a Twitter response
to Shawn King that the architecture of the Apple Store really, truly does require extended downtime to make changes to the product lineup. If that's the case, then this is an astonishingly powerful argument for the existence of the
RDF -- only a
marketing force capable of warping the fabric of space could turn an engineering flaw into self-generating hype with every
minor tweak of the product line.
Thanks to everyone who sent this in!
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