home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Path: sparky!uunet!cs.utexas.edu!sun-barr!olivea!pagesat!spssig.spss.com!uchinews!ellis!sip1
- From: sip1@ellis.uchicago.edu (Timothy F. Sipples)
- Newsgroups: comp.os.os2.advocacy
- Subject: Re: FCC will proclaim Microsoft is run by Communists! :)
- Message-ID: <1993Jan2.005948.26604@midway.uchicago.edu>
- Date: 2 Jan 93 00:59:48 GMT
- References: <1992Dec21.225330.14706@nosc.mil> <9212213006@ritz.mordor.com> <1992Dec29.205926.10277@microsoft.com>
- Sender: news@uchinews.uchicago.edu (News System)
- Reply-To: sip1@midway.uchicago.edu
- Organization: Dept. of Econ., Univ. of Chicago
- Lines: 56
-
- In article <1992Dec29.205926.10277@microsoft.com> philipla@microsoft.com (Phil Lafornara) writes:
- >>And who is to decide what "MOST PC buyers WANT?" The Ziff-Davis crowd
- >>who MSoft has put in their pocket through advertizing $$$??? No thanks.
- > No, it's the OEMs, who listen to the feedback from their customers.
- >Right now, those customers overwhelmingly want DOS/Windows. If
- >that changes in the future, it may become economical for OEMs
- >to offer other preinstalled OSes. Right now it simply is not.
- >>I think it should be up to the individual customer to CHOOSE what operating
- >>system they want rather than deal with the heavyhanded and monopolistic
- >>practices of Msoft.
- > The individual customer _does_ choose. It isn't up to
- >Microsoft, or OEMs for that matter, to offer you the system that you
- >want at the _price_ that you want - if the world worked that way,
- >I'd be driving a Ferrari and eating filet mignon for pennies a day.
-
- The Microsoft pricing strategy for DOS is pretty clearly deemed
- anticompetitive according to the case law, as far as I've been able to
- determine. We can debate the macroeconomic effects of any action
- taken against Microsoft on this point until the cows come home, but
- the FTC is likely going to object to the DOS pricing contracts. This
- is a pretty settled issue, actually.
-
- It is not entirely clear that customers demand Microsoft DOS/Windows.
- If Microsoft was so assured that customers would overwhelmingly select
- Microsoft DOS and/or Windows, then why construct a DOS pricing
- contract like the one they have?
-
- To refresh everyone's memory, Microsoft offers two DOS pricing
- contracts to computer vendors. The vendor can purchase DOS at a
- higher price and pay only for each copy of DOS software shipped. Or
- the vendor can opt for the second pricing scheme, where the vendor
- pays a (lower) fee for each machine shipped, regardless of ultimate
- use, and agrees to ship DOS with that machine regardless of the
- customer's wishes.
-
- Now, quite simply, if Microsoft DOS were such an easy sell, why even
- offer the second pricing plan? Put yet another way, the OEM contract
- contains that requirement (that Microsoft DOS must ship with the
- hardware no matter what) for a reason. That requirement obviously
- isn't something an OEM would do voluntarily, other things being equal.
-
- By the way, if bundled sales of DOS/Windows with PCs is evidence that
- customers overwhelming "want" Microsoft DOS and Microsoft Windows,
- then I suppose it is equally plausible that IBM ValuePoints and PS/2s,
- which are selling rather briskly bundled with OS/2 2.0, demonstrate
- enormous customer demand for OS/2.
-
- To carry that a bit farther, perhaps Olivetti PCs sold in Europe --
- and bundled with OS/2 2.0 -- demonstrate customer demand for OS/2
- there. Ditto Compaq.
-
- --
- Timothy F. Sipples | Read the OS/2 FAQ List 2.0h, available from
- sip1@ellis.uchicago.edu | 128.123.35.151, anonymous ftp, in /pub/os2/all/info
- Dept. of Econ., Univ. | /faq, or from LISTSERV@BLEKUL11.BITNET (send "HELP")
- of Chicago, 60637 | [Read the List, THEN post to ONE OS/2 newsgroup.]
-