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- Newsgroups: comp.sys.mac.misc
- Path: sparky!uunet!gumby!wupost!cs.utexas.edu!tamsun.tamu.edu!dlb5404
- From: dlb5404@tamsun.tamu.edu (Daryl Biberdorf)
- Subject: Re: MACS COST TOO MUCH (NOT!)
- Message-ID: <1992Aug14.182221.6980@tamsun.tamu.edu>
- Organization: Texas A&M University, College Station
- References: <1992Aug13.141824.17000@nsisrv.gsfc.nasa.gov> <c0wHPB5w165w@mantis.co.uk>
- Date: Fri, 14 Aug 1992 18:22:21 GMT
- Lines: 73
-
- In article <c0wHPB5w165w@mantis.co.uk> mathew@mantis.co.uk (mathew) writes:
- >smoon@strfleet.gsfc.nasa.gov (Sang J. Moon) writes:
- >> Mac users are also complaining. Macweek has even taken the stand that
- >> Macs cost too much:
- >> "What can Apple do to respond? For the long haul, the right answer
- >> is to stick to the strategy the company already is pursuing:
- >> developing innovative software that reinforces the Mac advantage,
- >> making it easier for Mac users to fit into enterprise networks, and
- >> accelerating development of the PowerPC Macs.
- >> But in the short run, significant price cuts are overdue, and
- >> this time they should start at the top of the line."
- >
- >Then again, making products obsolete within a year and halving the price in
- >the first six months isn't the way to do it either.
- >
- >I know I moaned about this a week ago, but I'm not the only person fed up
- >with being sold a brand new machine which is in the shops at half the price
- >two months later, and discontinued shortly after that.
-
- There will *ALWAYS* be *someone* who purchases something, only to
- find out it's discontinued not too long after that purchase unless
- a company puts a product line into production forever.
-
- You buy a 1992 model car this year, maybe the 1993 model will be
- completely different. This has the effect (usually) of hurting
- the value of the '92 model your purchased as well as causing
- dealers to cut their prices on any '92 models still in stock because
- people want the newer models instead.
-
- Macintoshes are no different than any other product of any type in
- this regard. You always have to approach these purchasing decisions
- with the following questions in mind: 1) how much power do I need
- right now? 2) how much money do I have to spend right now
- 3) will something happen in <x> months that would make purchasing
- right now a bad decision due to undue depreciation or whatever?
-
- The nicest thing that I can see about the Mac is the fact that,
- even if you're not running the latest, fastest, whizbangingest
- machine, it still runs all the software that both the older *and*
- newer ones do.
-
- >MacUser magazine in the UK is specifically advising readers not to buy any
- >Apple equipment, because of the crashing prices and high-speed obsolescence
- >of the machines. They say to wait for Apple to get its act together.
-
- Well, everyone complained when Apple didn't keep up with the
- plummeting price/performance ratios of the Intel-based clones. Now
- that Apple is more or less keeping up (albeit with slightly larger
- margins than the clones), people complain because their machines become
- obsolete so quickly. You can't have your cake and eat it too.
-
- Get used to it, people! Computer technology is changing so rapidly
- that either a company goes with the flow (which results in
- fast obsolescence) or they don't (which results in the IIfx being
- the most powerful Mac for 3 years while 486s become everyman's
- computer).
-
- I figure Apple *does* have its act together, more or less. They're
- attempting to keep their machines in-line price-wise with the clones
- running Windows while at the same time maintaining some kind
- of profit margins (which means R&D spending to keep the products
- innovative).
-
- Many of the companies vending the dirt-cheap clones will not be around
- at this time next year. By the time Compaq, Dell, Gateway, IBM (yes!),
- and the other 2nd tier companies get done fighting it out, the
- third tier Joe Clone companies will be crushed under the weight.
-
- Daryl
- --
- Daryl Biberdorf N5GJM dlb5404@rigel.tamu.edu or dlb5404@tamsun.tamu.edu
- "You're not messy. You're organizationally impaired."
- _Real_Life_Adventures_, July 3, 1992
-