"""the low end eats the high end: that it's good to be the "entry level" option, even though that will be less prestigious, because if you're not, someone else will be, and will squash you against the ceiling. Which in turn means that prestige is a danger sign."""
Maybe this is usually true, but I can't help thinking Apple is an exception to this rule. They make high end products, but they sure don't seem to be getting squashed against the ceiling.
Apple isn't really high-end -- they have a range from lower-middle to upper-middle. The high end is supercomputers, carrier networking gear, and high-availability OLTP systems for finance. Which are so thoroughly squashed against the ceiling that only specialists know what exists these days.
Maybe this is usually true, but I can't help thinking Apple is an exception to this rule. They make high end products, but they sure don't seem to be getting squashed against the ceiling.