home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Newsgroups: comp.sys.amiga.misc,comp.sys.amiga.hardware
- Path: netnews.upenn.edu!dsinc!scala!darren
- From: darren@scala.scala.com ("Darren M. Greenwald")
- Subject: Re: Dump the crappy hardware!!! (was: Haynie joins AT team)
- Message-ID: <1996Mar29.142355.2212@scala.scala.com>
- Date: Fri, 29 Mar 1996 14:23:55 GMT
- References: <4j3ltf$l99@serpens.rhein.de> <4j6dgl$cni@flood.xnet.com> <4jbr88$16g@northshore.shore.net>
- Organization: US Research and Development - Scala Inc.
-
- In article <4jbr88$16g@northshore.shore.net> farren@shore.net (Mike Farren) writes:
- >jcompton@flood.xnet.com (Jason Compton) writes:
- >
- >>Michael van Elst (mlelstv@serpens.rhein.de) wrote:
- >
- >>: Because you cannot make money with selling an operating system.
- >
- >>This is fascinating news for those people who thought Microsoft was a
- >>multi-billion dollar company.
- >
- >That's not from OS sales. Microsoft makes its money, by and large, from
- >its applications, not the OS itself. The profit margins for MS Office
- >are *far* larger than those for Windows.
- >
-
- I don't know what their financial break down is, though I am not
- doubting you are correct. One has to wonder what would have
- happened had Apple ported their OS to the PC platform, and
- developed their own line of business applications for the
- PC? There was a time when Windows was bundled with the
- applications - makes sense really. The OS without applications
- is a hard sell.
-
- Another interesting statistic that I read is that Microsoft
- makes about half of their profits selling outside of the
- United States. What this really comes down to is that
- an Operating System is the beginning, and then what do
- you do with it?
-
- The typical personal computer Operating System is now priced
- less than $100 to upgrade. That is about the price of two
- games, one utility application, and less than the price of
- most full featured applications. Yet, developing an OS
- is expensive, requires on-going maintenance, developer support
- programs, user support, advertising, etc.
-
- The OS is a classic example of enabling technology. Actually
- a computer is an enabling technology. It has potential. Realizing
- that potential is the next step. Profiting from the realization
- of that potential is really what it is all about. It is
- the difference between companies that survive and thrive, and
- companies that have really good ideas but die while the rest
- of the industry benefits from those ideas.
-
-
- --
- -----------------------------------------------------------
- Darren M. Greenwald | Scala Inc. R&D /
- Senior Systems Engineer | darren@scala.com o
- -----------------------------------------------------------
-