Agreed, and I think that's the point. Apple has shied away from being a computer company for many years now. To wit: it officially changed its name from "Apple Computer, Inc." to "Apple, Inc." in 2007, almost concurrently with the release of the iPhone.
I think this has less to do with a cynical desire not to have to service computers, and more to do with a forward-looking belief that the future of consumer devices has less and less to do with computers (at least as we currently use the term).
I mean, it's not totally inconceivable that Apple will have stopped making any computers, per se, within the next 10 years -- or, at least, that the consumer-facing distinction between "computer" and "device" will have blurred to the point of obsolescence.
I think this has less to do with a cynical desire not to have to service computers, and more to do with a forward-looking belief that the future of consumer devices has less and less to do with computers (at least as we currently use the term).
I mean, it's not totally inconceivable that Apple will have stopped making any computers, per se, within the next 10 years -- or, at least, that the consumer-facing distinction between "computer" and "device" will have blurred to the point of obsolescence.