How Microsoft's Windows 7 Is Impacting Corporate Computer Market [View article]
That may be true in the UK, but on this side of the pond, our Government looks very little at cutting costs, instead focusing on what companies and groups got them elected and then awarding contracts and purchase orders accordingly. Cutting costs....what a quaint idea. More like a pipe-dream over here.
On Dec 24 06:55 AM Davewmart wrote: > Many Governments are looking to Linux to decrease costs
Buying Apple Today: Like Buying Microsoft in 1998? [View article]
"Think about the Cloud. If I can store my data remotely created using Google based spread sheet and word processing applications on line, why would I want to pay for hardware and software with my files resident on a hard drive that needs constant backing up because the drive may die?"
Putting my data on some server, somewhere "out-there", hoping it will always be accessible (server not down, internet connection available, security of the server not breached, etc.) makes me shudder.
Buying Apple Today: Like Buying Microsoft in 1998? [View article]
One thing I rarely see addressed in analyzing Apple is the demographic it serves (averaged broadly) It tends to the younger end of the scale - probably skewed to those under 35-40. As these hyper-loyal customers replace the older generation that grew-up with PCs and Microsoft, the natural evolution of things would seem to be continued growth for Apple and diminishing returns for the PCs and Microsoft. My college aged child is hooked on Apple, and so are most of her college friends. Apple would have to stumble BADLY and probably repeatedly to drive them into the PC world.
I'm in my mid-50s and have thrown in the towel on the Dell / Gates product combo. I find it refreshing to use a computer (Apple) that just works - no crashes, no viruses, no problems. The slightly higher cost is not a deterrent because....it works. At this point, I can't conceive of anything Dell or Microsoft could do to tempt me to ever buy their products again. And more and more of my friends are coming to the same conclusion.
The short-term is always a crap-shoot, but long-term Apple is the 200 pound gorilla, rapidly growing large enough to push the 800 pound gorilla off the mountain top. Some day financial analysts may be comparing Microsoft to Sears.
The Mac vs. PC Debate Was Never Clearer [View article]
I've paid 1,000 twice for MacBooks - one for my college-age child and once for myself. The very few occasions that the laptops required help were easily handled at my local Apple store, with English-as-a-first-lan... technicians. OTOH, when my two Dell desktops needed help, I was stuck dealing with techs in India with an unusual twist on English syntax, making the ordeal a good bit more difficult than necessary. And, in fact, all three times I have used Dell technical help, I have ended up with no workable solution.
I really don't care about a few hundred dollar premium for an Apple. It works like it should, so I can do the same.
Microsoft's Bid for Yahoo: My Signal To Finally Buy Google [View article]
Remember Lotus 123 and WordPerfect - both were Kings of their respective spreadsheet and word processing domains? Then along came Excel and Word, with the muscle of Microsoft and dethroned them both. Windows has become the ugly aunt you have to kiss at family reunions - you can hardly wait for her to die. I relish the thought of Google bumping Microsoft into the wastecan of historical footnotes. Now if Google and Apple would team up against Microsoft....
How Microsoft's Windows 7 Is Impacting Corporate Computer Market [View article]
On Dec 24 06:55 AM Davewmart wrote:
> Many Governments are looking to Linux to decrease costs
Buying Apple Today: Like Buying Microsoft in 1998? [View article]
Putting my data on some server, somewhere "out-there", hoping it will always be accessible (server not down, internet connection available, security of the server not breached, etc.) makes me shudder.
Buying Apple Today: Like Buying Microsoft in 1998? [View article]
I'm in my mid-50s and have thrown in the towel on the Dell / Gates product combo. I find it refreshing to use a computer (Apple) that just works - no crashes, no viruses, no problems. The slightly higher cost is not a deterrent because....it works. At this point, I can't conceive of anything Dell or Microsoft could do to tempt me to ever buy their products again. And more and more of my friends are coming to the same conclusion.
The short-term is always a crap-shoot, but long-term Apple is the 200 pound gorilla, rapidly growing large enough to push the 800 pound gorilla off the mountain top. Some day financial analysts may be comparing Microsoft to Sears.
The Mac vs. PC Debate Was Never Clearer [View article]
I really don't care about a few hundred dollar premium for an Apple. It works like it should, so I can do the same.
Microsoft's Bid for Yahoo: My Signal To Finally Buy Google [View article]