#354077 - 13/08/2012 04:39
Re: Microsoft's latest failure
[Re: wfaulk]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 10/06/1999
Posts: 5916
Loc: Wivenhoe, Essex, UK
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And of course the current connector is still far too big for a tablet Really? It's about half the size of USB-A and about twice the size of microUSB. Hardly gigantic. It isn't twice the size of microUSB, eyeballing it it looks more like just over 3 times the thickness. The thickness of the Thunderbolt/DisplayPort connector is over half the thickness of the iPad 2. You could only add a Thunderbolt port to a tablet the thickness of the iPad by letting the ThunderBolt port drive the case design (either by making at least one side flat, adding a large hump or some sort of fiddly fold down port). I guess the x86 Surface will be a bit thicker than the ARM one, so I imagine that one would have space. But I wasn't really thinking about chunky x86 based devices when I was talking about tablets
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#354078 - 13/08/2012 04:58
Re: Microsoft's latest failure
[Re: andy]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 10/06/1999
Posts: 5916
Loc: Wivenhoe, Essex, UK
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In fact, it would appear that the 15mm thick Surface Pro does have room for a Mini DisplayPort/Thunderbolt connector, because it does have one (DisplayPort that is)...
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#354079 - 13/08/2012 07:15
Re: Microsoft's latest failure
[Re: andy]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 18/06/2001
Posts: 2504
Loc: Roma, Italy
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AFAIK, Surface Pro comes with DisplayPort but not Thunderbolt: these were the rumors around its presentation times and pictures seemed to suggest that was the case. But, who can tell (yet). Edit: Actually, specs from www.surface.com do mention MiniDisplayPort but not Thunderbolt (x86). That sounds somewhat "official" to me. I doubt specs will change for the better as we get closer to release. Personally, that's too bad. With Thunderbolt and related expansion possibilities, that would have been almost my ideal tablet.
Edited by taym (13/08/2012 07:22)
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#354138 - 14/08/2012 15:21
Re: Microsoft's latest failure
[Re: Taym]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 18/06/2001
Posts: 2504
Loc: Roma, Italy
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[Surface]RT is of no particular interest to me. Ok. I'll take that back if the pricepoint of $199 is true, and will buy one on day one. Actually, I may buy one on day one even if it costed $299. In addition to the Surface Pro which I'd buy on day two, if it stays <$1000.
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#354139 - 14/08/2012 16:04
Re: Microsoft's latest failure
[Re: Taym]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 12/11/2001
Posts: 7738
Loc: Toronto, CANADA
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I'm not sure how they'll sell it for $199 while also paying Apple for the design patents. Unless of course they're taking a significant loss.
Surface may guarantee that other OEMs stick with Android. Which may not be such a bad thing for Microsoft considering they're making money there too.
IMO, this was the only reasonable play for MS, it's just a shame they're (so far) realy bungling the positioning/marketing. No more "metro," the UI is now called "Windows 8 Style" - what happens when Windows 9 comes along? MS has really been failing in the strategy department since Windows XP. I'm not confident Microsoft will hold on to their long-established desktop-OS lead long-term.
Edited by hybrid8 (14/08/2012 16:05)
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#354144 - 14/08/2012 16:55
Re: Microsoft's latest failure
[Re: hybrid8]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 18/06/2001
Posts: 2504
Loc: Roma, Italy
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I actually think $199 (if true) is a winning strategy if the loss per unit (assuming there is) is contained enough, as profits would come in from other sources, assuming sales are as good as one (I, for example) would expect with such a low price. While for some people, as myself, the few existing apps + real office alone (well, and printing, and access to the FS) would make Surface RT a much more interesting option than the iPad even if they had the same price tag, at this price it would be a no brainer choice for many, many customers. This would be a strong push towards the MS Store and related ecosystem, which is the real weakness of MS at this time. MS Mktg to me looks very good in these days. They may even fix brand perception, at some point, which would be unprecedented. Can u imagine? People sticking the MS logo just as they do with the Apple one on the back of their cars. Just the though of it makes me laugh. P.S.: "Windows 8 Style" is no more. "Modern" is possibly the new name. or whatever.
Edited by taym (14/08/2012 16:59)
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#354145 - 14/08/2012 17:51
Re: Microsoft's latest failure
[Re: Taym]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 08/06/1999
Posts: 7868
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I'd expect printing support for Windows RT to be limited similar to iPad printing. Many printers have shifted part of the process into the drivers, and this is going to require a rewrite for Windows RT.
Surface Pro with the x86 Windows 8 won't have this issue, since any driver written since Vista should just work fine, and possibly older XP drivers.
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#354148 - 14/08/2012 18:37
Re: Microsoft's latest failure
[Re: drakino]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 18/06/2001
Posts: 2504
Loc: Roma, Italy
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I'd expect printing support for Windows RT to be limited similar to iPad printing. Many printers have shifted part of the process into the drivers, and this is going to require a rewrite for Windows RT. It seems it will be significantly more extensive since day one. We'll see if that's actually true.
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#354155 - 14/08/2012 19:23
Re: Microsoft's latest failure
[Re: Taym]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 12/11/2001
Posts: 7738
Loc: Toronto, CANADA
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There are strong rumors to indicate that Office will be released for iPad this fall. Microsoft would be shooting themselves in the foot not to release it.
Selling Surface at a loss would, without a shadow of a doubt, completely infuriate every Windows OEM on the planet even more than they are now. This would not be a good strategy going forward unless Microsoft intends to sever ties with OEMs as part of their broad goals.
Microsoft has a long road ahead of it. The only traction "Windows" has, is on the desktop. For mobile it's "less than zero." The general public doesn't actually want "Windows" they just want the most popular OS that they perceive is compatible with everyone else. That's always been Windows for the desktop, but Windows RT isn't going to have this draw.
And guess what happens if Windows OEMs stop supporting the platform? Microsoft can't hold the kinds of numbers it used to have without its OEMs. Not in the current market and not with the current company structure/mentality. This would need a long term fundamental shift toward Apple's model.
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#354157 - 14/08/2012 21:27
Re: Microsoft's latest failure
[Re: hybrid8]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 18/06/2001
Posts: 2504
Loc: Roma, Italy
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There are strong rumors to indicate that Office will be released for iPad this fall. Yes, and assuming it had the very same feature-set as the "actual" office, that would turn the iPad into a much more useful device for many (myself included). Unfortunately, I doubt it will in fact be released in the short term, unless in a much more simplified version. Whether MS takes the friendly or hostile approach to the iPad via Office, though, largely depends on the nr. of WinRT units they succeed in selling in the short term. If in high numbers to the point that the average customer start asking himself which way to go, Office as a concurrent driving force towards WinRT (=> increase in Apps and ecosystem) rather than iPad would make more sense. If WinRT is not as successful and the iPad stays the totally dominant device in the non-x86 tablet segment, probably Office on iPad will generate instead more profits. I don't share at all your confidence in one outcome (or the other); especially at $199, it is well possible to see millions of WinRT sold in the (very) short term. That may change the scenario quite a bit, (and for the better, I would say, considering the hw and software quality of Surface and some other - Lenovo, for example - WinRT devices). I think time will tell.
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#354158 - 14/08/2012 21:38
Re: Microsoft's latest failure
[Re: Taym]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 12/11/2001
Posts: 7738
Loc: Toronto, CANADA
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Keep in mind I was just relaying the (looking likely) rumor about Office for iPad. However, I don't believe it will make much difference to iPad sales one way or the other. You can already buy Keynote, Pages and Numbers for iPad, Apple's own office-like set of programs. Many will argue the desktop versions are better than their Office counterparts in many ways.
As far as iOS office versus Windows office, who knows. The rumors indicate it will be similar to the RT version. Office for Mac has always been pretty good, and again many would argue even better than the concurrent Windows versions.
Plenty of people think Microsoft is a giant train that's just going to run everyone else down. That may have been the MS of 15 years ago. Today they're still big, but no one at Microsoft is fooling themselves about who the "800 lbs Gorilla" is in the consumer space today. I'm sure some of them even realize that for MS to flourish doesn't mean Apple can't. MS is in much bigger danger from Google at this time (again, the OEM business).
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#354160 - 14/08/2012 21:53
Re: Microsoft's latest failure
[Re: hybrid8]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 18/06/2001
Posts: 2504
Loc: Roma, Italy
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Keep in mind I was just relaying the (looking likely) rumor about Office for iPad. However, I don't believe it will make much difference to iPad sales Yes, I think so too. I was instead considering how MS could use Office to foster sales of Windows RT tablets. Yes, very high Windows RT device sales would indeed impact on iPads sales, but I find hard to say by how much, because tablet market is expanding significantly, and there will definitely be room for more than one big player. I suppose the question is more wether or not MS will succeed in being one of them.
Edited by taym (14/08/2012 21:55)
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#354169 - 15/08/2012 11:25
Re: Microsoft's latest failure
[Re: Taym]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 30/04/2000
Posts: 3810
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More excitement: Maybe Microsoft will release a $199 tablet. If they're selling hardware at a loss, versus Google breaking even on the Nexus 7, that would be very interesting, for among others the hacker community who would find a way to port Android to the thing.
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#354170 - 15/08/2012 11:31
Re: Microsoft's latest failure
[Re: DWallach]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 18/06/2001
Posts: 2504
Loc: Roma, Italy
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Yes, I would guess that Android on SurfaceRT will happen in any case, "for fun and profit".
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#354172 - 15/08/2012 14:02
Re: Microsoft's latest failure
[Re: Taym]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 12/11/2001
Posts: 7738
Loc: Toronto, CANADA
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Let's get this myth out of the way right now. Google are *not* breaking even on their tablet. COGS is more than just BOM, and there's no way in hell that COGS is under $199/unit. Costs will drop, but initially, Google are putting a lot more in than they're getting out. That means they're losing money.
Personally, I think MS would be stupid to enter this race trying to play the console game. It's not the same thing and I'm afraid they'll get badly burned for it. There's nothing wrong with a $199 price point, but losing money is not a workable long-term strategy. It's possible, though not probable, that they can make a tiny bit of money at $199. I just don't see how at this time. Maybe their deal with Apple didn't involve any monetary expenses. Maybe they're in this only to disrupt the current market - again, unless you're intending to make money, it's not a workable long-term strategy.
We'll find out soon enough. We'll also see what Apple has planned in a couple of months. There's one thing I know for sure however, it's that Apple will not be selling their product at a loss or even a break-even amount.
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#354182 - 15/08/2012 20:39
Re: Microsoft's latest failure
[Re: hybrid8]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 30/04/2000
Posts: 3810
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The bill of materials on the Nexus 7 is allegedly $152. Manufacturing + shipping, I dunno, but if they're not breaking even, it's certainly close. Also, that's for the 8GB version. Add another $50 for the 16GB version, and maybe they're more balanced. Certainly, they're not making a killing. What they are doing is changing around the market.
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#354184 - 15/08/2012 21:29
Re: Microsoft's latest failure
[Re: DWallach]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 12/11/2001
Posts: 7738
Loc: Toronto, CANADA
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I didn't mean to imply they're making money at all, but in fact losing. You can't sell a product with a BOM of $152 at $199 for any kind of profit, that's plainly obvious, but breaking even would still be a pretty big challenge. Remember that this thing is made by ASUS, and it's unlikely THEY're going to eat a loss, therefore there's little to no chance that Google is getting it as low as BOM. Add in manufacturing costs, documentation, packaging... Nevermind the software development....
Back to Microsoft. This giant is really showing it doesn't have balls lately, which is a shame. IMO, the whole "Metro" name debacle should have had Microsoft swinging the big hammer - they should most definitely not have backed down from that name. Metro AG be damned. There are other Metro trademarks around the globe, but the OS UI moniker is hardly a trademark violation against the name of a SUPERMARKET.
Now MS is disallowing the use of the word "Metro" in any app submitted to its store. So forget about a "Metro Map" app. What is even "Metronome" and "Metropolis" get blocked?
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#354187 - 16/08/2012 01:39
Re: Microsoft's latest failure
[Re: hybrid8]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 14/01/2002
Posts: 2858
Loc: Atlanta, GA
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I think the point of a $199 price point is to get their foot in the door. If MS can't get into the tablet market, they are going to be hurting in a few years on the desktop side of things. If they can handle a loss and get people comfortable with their OS in tablet form, they can keep their share of desktop users.
I polled my three coworkers today (of the four, two of us have tablets- one iPad and one android). I think all four of us would pick up the $199 model if that's really the price point. I don't know about the other iPad users in the office, but I can see MS getting their new OS/approach to apps out there very publicly if they can pull off $199.
Edited by JeffS (16/08/2012 01:40)
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#354188 - 16/08/2012 03:01
Re: Microsoft's latest failure
[Re: JeffS]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 12/11/2001
Posts: 7738
Loc: Toronto, CANADA
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What happens if (when) Apple release a smaller iPad at $199? Should MS try to beat that price point taking a larger loss?
And let's suppose that MS gets in the door as far as unit sales go, and moves to a comfortable number 2 in this space thanks to the loss-leader Surface. How many sales of the higher priced x86 units will they have cannibalized? How many OEM sales suffering the same fate? Where will they make money, from transaction fees on app sales through their store?
It's a tough road - and this isn't the console market where this kind of thing has been done a few times before with marginal success.
They're going to be losing a boatload of money selling a 10" tablet at $200 and probably completely destroy the market for any/all licensees. If they can hold out a few years until the technology costs allow for a profit, I suppose it could pay off. But that's a big if and then some serious deficits to make up for. All in a market that is already completely dominated by someone else. MS has been down this road before with Zune.
Now that this rumor has received such press, what's going to happen if the tablet comes out at $299 or $399?
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#354189 - 16/08/2012 07:17
Re: Microsoft's latest failure
[Re: hybrid8]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 18/06/2001
Posts: 2504
Loc: Roma, Italy
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It's a tough road - and this isn't the console market where this kind of thing has been done a few times before with marginal success. Indeed a tough road, but your point here is what I find very interesting: tablet's market is VERY similar to that of the console, and from this perspective a consle-like approach could make very much sense. It seems to me that an almost irrelevant minority buys a tablet for what it can do (and indeed it can do good things) - no stats or sources here. Just my best guess -. Most people buy a tablet because it is "fun", because of the games and apps available. Or for what it means socially, or because of some form of peer pressure; or so that "children play with it". I have tens (actually more!) of example in my mind right now where people I know got the iPad for the very same reasons why you would buy a new wrist watch, or a new a bit expensive toy (like a console). Most people I know or hear of, don't have clue of what a Tablet is when they buy it, and yet they do. It's the "to do" thing these days. Clearly it is a set of people who are not in this BBS. This is entirely different than the PC market. Microsoft needs to have people touch and feel for themselves how "fun" it is to use a WinRT/8 device (assuming it is. I literally loved using it like no other OS ever, but others supposedly hated it like no other OS ever), and create a social phenomenon around it. You won't beat the iPad with features only (unfortunately), or price/performance ratios. You have to put it in technologically unaware ppl's hands first, and then make it "cool". See, now that I think about it, it seems to me that what they also really, really need is a great Facebook App. The iPad one is very limited, Android one is too, WP one is just as bad. Once an hypotetical Facebook App for SurfaceRT becomes widely known as "great", Surface RT will sell like bread for $500, I think I am being sarcastic here, of course, but the idea behind the joke seems to be quite valid, if I observe ppl around me. I'd be curious to read some more accurate mkt research. A very tough road, and not at all a crazy one.
Edited by taym (16/08/2012 07:21)
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#354190 - 16/08/2012 08:01
Re: Microsoft's latest failure
[Re: Taym]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 14/01/2002
Posts: 2858
Loc: Atlanta, GA
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I agree it's a tough road and very likely to end up at the same place as the Zune, only with more detrimental effects to the company. I also think that MS really needs to connect with a hail Mary here if they want a future. The iPad is a HUGE threat because people are doing on it what they've traditionally done on PCs.
In my own house I almost never use my PC except as a media content provider- and that is certainly not a strength of the OS. Almost everything I used to do on my PC I now do on my iPad. Why? Because its convenient to carry around and just turn on and use whenever I want it.
Sure MS has the workplace for a while, but now many years will it take of people not using their products at home before the natural shift occurs to not using them in the workplace either? Already when we go to our planningmeetings where we need to update our project plan we have a mix of iPads and laptops in attendance.
The whole Windows 8 approach is evidence that MS takes the iPad threat seriously- they are fundamentally changing their OS usage pattern so they can try and compete. This absolutely must not fail from their perspective- this isn't like Silverlight or the Zune where it's a part of their strategy that can be jettisoned if it doesnt work out.
And if they fail (which I don't see unlikely)? We'll all move on and adapt. That's the free market for you. But I do hope someone is able to challenge Apple and give them a good run.
And yes, I typed this post on my iPad.
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-Jeff Rome did not create a great empire by having meetings; they did it by killing all those who opposed them.
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#354191 - 16/08/2012 11:14
Re: Microsoft's latest failure
[Re: JeffS]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 12/11/2001
Posts: 7738
Loc: Toronto, CANADA
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Jeff, I'm in total agreement with your thoughts.
Taym, the tablet market is not really like the console market and a number of important differences make the loss-leader strategy an entirely different beast especially. Consoles have a product cycle of at least 5 years - that's a significant amount of time to amortize development and to lower BOM costs. Tablets are refreshed every 6 months to a year, constantly pushing the fringe of current technology.
Consoles have only a small number of companies even attempting to monetize the platforms. Traditionally 3-4 hardware producers and a very small number of software publishers. There aren't 20-50 OEMs also trying to compete on hardware sales here. The hardware produces, also the platform licensors, take a large royalty or license fee for every piece of software sold from every publisher.
As far as the "irrelevant minority" purchasing tablets... Apple are already the industry leader in profits. If you include iPad sales, they are also the industry leader in mobile computers by units. By more than double HP in second place as of this past May. I'll give you that "OTHER" tablets may be insignificant, but the iPad is anything but. It's been a major disruption in portable computing.
For an insignificant product it sure did light the industry on fire with absolutely everyone producing or attempting to produce copycat products. And lastly, as Jeff mentioned, Microsoft's entire focus and strategy has shifted. MS is betting large on the tablet.
MS just need to wake up and realize that they are a software company, not a window company. Not everything needs to have Windows and there's plenty of money to be made with other software.
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#354192 - 16/08/2012 11:59
Re: Microsoft's latest failure
[Re: hybrid8]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 18/06/2001
Posts: 2504
Loc: Roma, Italy
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Jeff, I'm in total agreement with your thoughts.
Taym, the tablet market is not really like the console market and a number of important differences make the loss-leader strategy an entirely different beast especially. Consoles have a product cycle of at least 5 years - that's a significant amount of time to amortize development and to lower BOM costs. Tablets are refreshed every 6 months to a year, constantly pushing the fringe of current technology.
Of course, but not my point. What I mean is: just like consoles, you (=most people today buying tablets, that is not somebody who would be on this board)don't buy a tablet, or I should say the iPad, becouse of its inherent technical feature set, but because of the Apps and Games available, and also very very much because of peer pressure, and other social factors (which I mentioned in my previous post). So it is crucial to create a social dimention to a platform, which explains the attept - assuming the $199 is real - to just bring millions of units in the market to begin with. You need to get a tablet in those people's hands. Once you succeed in making your platform popular enough, then the ecosystem is there. There does not need to be a Surface2 at $199. Depending on how successful they are with this strategy, this approach may actually make a lot of sense. As far as the "irrelevant minority" purchasing tablets... No, no, the "irrelevant minority" is that of those buing tablets because of what the tablets can do versus those who buy them for other reasons which I listed before, most times not knowing at all what the iPad can or cannot do. Please, read my post again if you wish and sorry if I wasn't clear. My English may be failing me as it happens.
Edited by taym (16/08/2012 12:25)
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#354194 - 16/08/2012 13:09
Re: Microsoft's latest failure
[Re: Taym]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 08/07/1999
Posts: 5546
Loc: Ajijic, Mexico
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Most people I know or hear of, don't have clue of what a Tablet is when they buy it, and yet they do. It's the "to do" thing these days. I didn't know that you knew my wife! She has an iPad that she got to replace the netbook that she got to replace the laptop that she got to replace the iPod Touch that she got in addition to her iPhone. None of which she knows how to operate in any but the most rudimentary fashion. That is, she makes and receives phone calls on the iPhone. I think she one time looked at an email on the Touch. I put Rosetta Stone on the laptop, but she never ran it. To the best of my knowledge she has never used the netbook. She takes the iPad on trips to read her email. But, by golly, she is proud to know that she has all the latest toys. tanstaafl.
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#354196 - 16/08/2012 13:27
Re: Microsoft's latest failure
[Re: tanstaafl.]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 12/11/2001
Posts: 7738
Loc: Toronto, CANADA
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Taym, I agree about the social/title/app availability thing. Your English is great in fact, but thanks for explaining what you meant with the previous comments, I understand now, and of course you can see I originally thought you meant something else.
So on the one hand I can see the same things and appreciate the motivation for such a fire-sale strategy, I just question its long-term success for this type of product/platform. It's a very risky move and I can't think of any examples where someone has introduced something at a loss and then later started making profit on the device by increasing retail pricing.
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#354197 - 16/08/2012 13:46
Re: Microsoft's latest failure
[Re: JeffS]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 08/07/1999
Posts: 5546
Loc: Ajijic, Mexico
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In my own house I almost never use my PC except as a media content provider- and that is certainly not a strength of the OS. Almost everything I used to do on my PC I now do on my iPad. That is just... I dunno, words fail me. But, wouldn't you know it, Jeff, just like always when you and I get to talking it is about a difference in religion. I cannot imagine trying to use an iPad in place of my computer. A quick look through my "Programs and Features" in Control Panel shows a LOT of things an iPad can't do, because an iPad is NOT a computer. Below is a list of just some of the applications I use most regularly. There are many more that are used only occasionally. Probably some of these can run natively or have their complements with an iPad, but there arenone of these that I can do without. APPLICATIONSAdobe Acrobat Agent Ransack (Directory tree print utility) Audials transcoder & DRM remover (audio) AVG Anti-Virus Calibre eBook management & transcoder Clip-Trak Windows clipboard manager Copy-Trans Manager dBpoweramp Epubor DRM removal tool (eBooks) Garmin MapSource HyperTerminal Infothek scanner software Karen's replicator (backup software) LastPass password manager Microsoft Office 2010 Nero CD/DVD management Net Transport (fast download utility) OverDrive Media Console (download audio from public library) Quake III Arena Rio Emplode (!) Rio Music Manager Rosetta Stone Switch file transcoder TomTom Home map updater Total Recorder TurboFloorplan (architectural design) Vuze torrents downloader Winzip PERIPHERALSMaco-capable keyboard Fujitsu scanner HP Color laser printer CD/DVD player/burner Altec sound system Webcam External HDD (2@) USB charging stations (6@) Unlike many people, I use my PC for relatively serious (to me, anyway) work. It is not a toy to carry around and do bits and pieces of odd jobs with. Clearly, YMMV tanstaafl.
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"There Ain't No Such Thing As A Free Lunch"
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#354198 - 16/08/2012 13:52
Re: Microsoft's latest failure
[Re: hybrid8]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 08/07/1999
Posts: 5546
Loc: Ajijic, Mexico
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I can't think of any examples where someone has introduced something at a loss and then later started making profit on the device by increasing retail pricing. In the 1970s, SunTour and Campagnolo totally dominated the bicycle component market, SunTour on the low end, Campagnolo at the high-end, professional level. Don't laugh, that is a multi-billion dollar business. Shimano came into the market with equipment priced at or below SunTour level and of equal quality and far better functionality than Campagnolo, selling at a loss for long enough to become the dominant supplier. SunTour is either gone or a very small niche player, Campagnolo is still there but a pale ghost of its former glory, and Shimano components are perhaps the costliest (and best performing) available. tanstaafl.
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"There Ain't No Such Thing As A Free Lunch"
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#354199 - 16/08/2012 14:03
Re: Microsoft's latest failure
[Re: tanstaafl.]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 18/06/2001
Posts: 2504
Loc: Roma, Italy
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In my direct experience, which of course is not a scientific study of any sort, 99% - or maybe more - of the people I know who own an iPad are exactly like Doug's wife, albeit to various degrees and in various ways. And I don't mean it in a negative sense. It is perfectly fine to me that people buy whatever they wish for whatever reason they choose. It is a fact that I observe. The iPad is very largely a social phenomenon. You can't fight that type of war only with a rich feature set, or with the promise (as real as it may be) to offer the same potential than a laptop if you wish, or stating that you'll bring the effectiveness of the same UX across many devices types, or witha device that can join cirporate domain, access NTFS+ACLs, print on your shared network printer at home or in the office - all great things for me, all reasons that I very much like MS approach with Windows 8, besides liking the OS per se. Those are all order winners to me. But my point is that's just not enough. You can't rely on customers evaluating some technical benefits if most of your customers could not care less about technical benefits, provided a basic feature set is there. I think not only MS needs to have many Apps and the right ones; which means establishing a strong ecosystem. But also and even more importantly MS needs a toy to be perceived as a valid alternative to the cool toy - iPad; it needs to be "the latest toy" to make many customers curious and then proud to own it, even if they just use it to scroll pictures or play mp3s. Nothing to do with whether or not it comes with an x86 cpu, or if it can run real office, or if it grants access to the NTFS file system+ACLs, or if it can join your corporate domain, or if it can print on your shared network printer both at home and in the office. , etc. etc. I actually see little alternatives there other than >also< using a fierce price battle (even though $199 is very, very low and may be too much to sustain) because you need to put the new toy in people's hands to begin with. Indeed I see interesting things happening before year end.
Edited by taym (16/08/2012 14:07)
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= Taym = MK2a #040103216 * 100Gb *All/Colors* Radio * 3.0a11 * Hijack = taympeg
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#354203 - 16/08/2012 15:50
Re: Microsoft's latest failure
[Re: Taym]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 30/04/2000
Posts: 3810
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The $199 price point is magical, in that it gets into many people's "sure, what the hell" toy budget.
Amazon figured this out first with the Kindle Fire. Everybody else is piling in after them. Maybe the $199 Microsoft Surface will be a 7" tablet, just like all the others. Maybe Apple's 7" iPad will also clock in at $199 for the base model. It seems like Amazon established the right baseline, and the next challenge will be who can first hit $149 or $99.
For what it's worth, I've seen a bunch of incoming college freshmen coming through my office this week and it's interesting to see what computers they've pulled out. Most have oversized monster laptops from Dell, HP, and the like. One had a three-year-old netbook. One had an iPad plus Bluetooth keyboard. I didn't see a single MacBook Air or equivalent PC ultrabook. I'm not sure what that says...
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#354205 - 16/08/2012 15:56
Re: Microsoft's latest failure
[Re: DWallach]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 25/12/2000
Posts: 16706
Loc: Raleigh, NC US
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It says that they haven't yet realized how much walking they're going to be doing on campus yet.
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Bitt Faulk
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