home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=94TT1513>
- <title>
- Nov. 07, 1994: Technology:Computer Dating
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Nov. 07, 1994 Mad as Hell
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- TECHNOLOGY, Page 57
- Computer Dating
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> To break out of its narrow niche, Apple contemplates a historic
- alliance with IBM
- </p>
- <p>By John Greenwald--Reported by David S. Jackson/San Francisco and Thomas McCarroll/New
- York
- </p>
- <p> Apple Computer is in the odd situation of scoring victories
- in a war that it seems well on its way to losing. On one hand,
- the company reported two weeks ago that profits of $114.7 million
- in the latest quarter were more than 40 times as high as those
- of a year ago. Thanks in part to its hot new Power Macintosh
- line, Apple shipped more than 1 million computers in a single
- quarter for only the second time in its history. Those signs
- of improvement under chief executive officer Michael Spindler,
- who succeeded the mercurial John Sculley last year, have helped
- boost the price of Apple stock 3 3/4 points, to 42 1/8 at the
- end of last week, since the earnings came out.
- </p>
- <p> On the other hand, Apple may have to join forces with a cash-rich
- partner to survive in the long run. While many customers swear
- by their easy-to-use Apple machines, the company, based in Cupertino,
- California, commands just 8% to 10% of the $75 billion market
- for personal computers and has been stuck at that level since
- 1984. The market is ruled by software giant Microsoft and chipmaker
- Intel, whose products run IBM-compatible machines, accounting
- for an astonishing 80% of the personal computers used around
- the world. "Apple still makes the best desktop systems out there,
- but it doesn't matter," says Richard Shaffer, president of Technologic
- Partners, a computer consulting firm. "With just a 10% market
- share, the best isn't good enough."
- </p>
- <p> It thus came as no surprise in recent weeks when reports again
- swept Wall Street that IBM was about to make a substantial investment
- in Apple, or perhaps even buy the company. As a team, Apple
- and IBM could develop a universal operating system for their
- current and future desktop computers that could lure customers
- from Microsoft. "Right now it's like Switzerland," says Tim
- Bajarin, president of Creative Strategies Research International,
- which studies the computer industry. "You've got four different
- languages--Apple's Mac OS, IBM's OS/2 and Unix, and Microsoft's
- Windows NT--all looking for a single vehicle to work on."
- </p>
- <p> But for such a plan to work, Apple would have to agree to license
- its Macintosh operating system to IBM, a step that could lower
- Apple's profits in the short run--after all, the company would
- lose its exclusive franchise--and cast doubt on IBM's commitment
- to the much touted new version of its OS/2 operating system.
- </p>
- <p> These clashing interests help explain why IBM and Apple, after
- spending so many years competing, now have trouble collaborating.
- The two agreed in 1991 to sign on with Motorola in the venture
- that produced the chip at the heart of both the Power Mac and
- IBM's long-awaited Power PC. But analysts say conflicts within
- IBM's personal-computer unit over whether to pursue a joint
- strategy have prevented the company from keeping pace with Apple:
- while that company has shipped some 600,000 Power Macs since
- March, IBM is still waiting for software companies to develop
- additional programs for its Power PC and is not expected to
- launch the machine in the general market until sometime next
- year.
- </p>
- <p> "We've seen before where IBM signs an agreement on something
- but the follow-through is not there," says Barry Bosak, who
- watches the company for Smith Barney. "And with all the turmoil
- and constant changes taking place at Apple and IBM, there's
- some question as to whether this new deal will actually get
- done."
- </p>
- <p> If they can pull it off, however, a healthy alliance would give
- Apple, which now relies solely on its own operating system,
- the chance to break out of its almost cultish market niche.
- It is stuck there largely because of its past refusal to license
- its system to other computer makers. As a result, software companies
- would rather write games, spreadsheets and other programs for
- Microsoft's Windows, which runs on eight times as many computers
- as the Apple system does. Without an abundantly growing supply
- of software, Apple has little chance to expand its reach. "People
- are abandoning ship and doing things for Windows now," says
- Chuck Farnum, director of product development for Digital Deviations,
- a California company that has written programs for Apple for
- the past 10 years. "It's a larger user base. More people will
- buy your stuff."
- </p>
- <p> At long last, Apple seems to be confronting the problem. Spindler
- disclosed in September that Apple will soon license its Macintosh
- operating system to selected computer makers. The first licensed
- clones are expected next year. By making the "family jewels"
- available to others, Apple hopes to increase the number of computers
- that run the Macintosh system by 1 million, or 25%, within two
- years. "They need licensees out there," says Philippe de Marcillac,
- an analyst with the research firm Dataquest. "There's not much
- chance that they can get 15% to 20% of the market by themselves."
- </p>
- <p> Microsoft, of course, is hardly standing still. The Redmond,
- Washington, company is pushing ahead with plans to launch Windows
- 95, its newest operating system, by the middle of next year.
- Originally scheduled for introduction by the end of 1994, the
- new version is designed to rival the Apple system for convenient
- use. Not everyone who has seen it believes it will. "It comes
- much closer," Shaffer says of the new system. "But it still
- in my opinion is not as good as the Mac." With IBM behind it,
- Apple may finally succeed in spreading its culture beyond a
- small band of devotees.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-