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PostPosted: Thu May 19, 2011 4:53 pm 
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People have often talked about “the cult of Apple”, and if a recent BBC TV documentary is to be believed, there could be something in it.

The program, Secrets of the Superbrands, looks at why technology megabrands such as Apple, Facebook and Twitter have become so popular and such a big part of many people’s lives.

In the first episode, presenter Alex Riley decided to take a look at Apple. He wanted to discover what it is about the company that makes people so emotional. Footage of the opening of the Cupertino company’s Covent Garden store in central London last year showed hordes of Apple devotees lining up outside overnight, while the staff whipped up customers (and themselves) into something of an evangelical frenzy. This religious-like fervor got Riley thinking – he decided to take a closer look at the inside of the head of an Apple fanatic to see what on earth was going on in there.

Riley contacted the editor of World of Apple, Alex Brooks, an Apple worshipper who claims to think about Apple 24 hours a day, which is possibly 23 hours too many for most regular people. A team of neuroscientists studied Brooks’ brain while undergoing an MRI scan, to see how it reacted to images of Apple products and (heaven forbid) non-Apple products.

According to the neuroscientists, the scan revealed that there were marked differences in Brooks’ reactions to the different products. Previously, the scientists had studied the brains of those of religious faith, and they found that, as Riley puts it: “The Apple products are triggering the same bits of [Brooks'] brain as religious imagery triggers in a person of faith.”

“This suggests that the big tech brands have harnessed, or exploit, the brain areas that have evolved to process religion,” one of the scientists says. A meeting with the Bishop of Buckingham, who reads the Bible using his Apple iPad, appeared to back up this assertion. He pointed out how the Apple store in, for example, Covent Garden has a lot of religious imagery built into it, with its stone floors, abundance of arches, and little altars (on which the products are displayed). And of course, the documentary doesn’t fail to give Steve Jobs a mention, calling him “the Messiah”.

Secrets of the Superbrands also looks at the likes of Facebook, which has enjoyed phenomenal success in just a few years. “Like Apple, mobile phones and social networks offer an opportunity for us to express our basic human need to communicate. And it’s by tapping into our basic needs, like gossip, religion or sex that these brands are taking over our world at such lightning speed,” Riley says. He concludes: “That’s not to say that clever marketing and brilliant technical innovation aren’t also crucial, but it seems that if you’re not providing a service which is of potential interest to every one of the 6.9 billion human beings on the planet, the chances are you’re never going to become a technology superbrand.”

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PostPosted: Thu May 19, 2011 9:29 pm 
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Kaffis Mark V wrote:
Digital Trends wrote:
Previously, the scientists had studied the brains of those of religious faith, and they found that, as Riley puts it: “The Apple products are triggering the same bits of [Brooks'] brain as religious imagery triggers in a person of faith.”

“This suggests that the big tech brands have harnessed, or exploit, the brain areas that have evolved to process religion,” one of the scientists says.


There's a part of the human brain that has evolved specifically to process religion?

I'm thinking that scientist was smoking something. I call bullshit on that categorically. Time for some scientist to show his work. Citation please!

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Just what area has evolved specifically to process religion?

http://www.brainwaves.com/brain_basics.html

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PostPosted: Thu May 19, 2011 9:58 pm 
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Says the man with the irrational reverence for everything Apple...

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PostPosted: Thu May 19, 2011 10:13 pm 
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The snake is gone for from the Garden of Eden.

Adam and Eve are long gone, and they were the only ones forbidden to eat of the fruit of knowledge.

Take a bite of the golden apple at your closest Apple Store.

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PostPosted: Thu May 19, 2011 11:47 pm 
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Sounds about right. ;)

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PostPosted: Fri May 20, 2011 12:49 am 
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There is nothing good about Apple or their products.

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PostPosted: Fri May 20, 2011 1:05 am 
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If you held their stock you might disagree.

I like my iPhone.

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PostPosted: Fri May 20, 2011 4:11 pm 
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I love my iPhone. Don't know what I'd do without it. I've also purchased an iPad recently, and am really enjoying it. I'm also considering getting an iMac at some point in the future. But I am no Apple fanboy, and I find the idiots that take it to those extremes very humorous. You can use and enjoy something without becoming a complete loon or an irrational fanatic. Normal people can, at least.

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