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- From: lithgow@toy.usl.com (Malcolm Lithgow)
- Newsgroups: comp.sys.acorn
- Subject: Acorn's New Babies
- Message-ID: <9208310420.AA17552@ucbvax.Berkeley.EDU>
- Date: 31 Aug 92 04:18:40 GMT
- Sender: daemon@ucbvax.BERKELEY.EDU
- Lines: 71
-
- Well!
-
- After the flood of Acorn announcements it was interesting to read the
- reactions. Quite a few were very predictable. Some were not.
-
- Here's mine:
-
- Congratulations Acorn!
-
- Unlike a lot of the people on this newsgroup, you know what you are doing!
-
- The advice that I gave a couple of weeks ago seems to have been similar
- to Acorn's thinking. (I don't want to say, 'I told you so', but I did.
- ;->)
-
- In reply to those whinging about a lack of high-end machines -- wake
- up! This is a world-wide recession! Acorn is showing their smarts by
- releasing low-end, cheap machines that can still bring in a decent
- profit, especially with their (hopefully) high volume sales. Releasing
- a high-end machine right now would be rather pointless -- not many
- people would buy it, and the pound is currently ridiculously
- overvalued, making exports difficult for Acorn, so it wouldn't do well
- overseas, either.
-
- The AUN sounds like it's coming along well. And hard disk sizes for the
- A5000 are finally starting to sound more impressive.
-
- As for pricing -- it looks very good to me. The Amiga 600 can be
- nothing but a vastly inferior machine and is only slightly cheaper. All
- that remains is to put together a really good demo to convince
- on-the-spot shoppers that the A3010 is worth the extra. The demo should
- maybe have 'this is the A600 and this is the A3010 doing the same
- thing' bits, with the A600 versions doing it in lower resolution and a
- lot slower. ;-)
-
- The overall product announcement was very impressive, too. If Acorn can
- live up to these words, I think we can look at the Acorn market share
- increasing a lot.
-
- The only not-so-impressive part of the announcement (though I don't
- intend to buy any of the new machines -- only the A4 holds interest for
- me at the moment, Oh, and RISC OS 3 of course) was the Pocket Computer
- thingy. This is a reasonable marketing move, I suppose, and Psion's
- Series 3 *is* the best in its class *at the moment*, but I don't think
- it lives up to Acorn's technical excellence, and doesn't really
- integrate with their product range. (The WP's data format is Microsoft
- Word, the language is an extension of Psion's whatever-it-is instead of
- BBC BASIC, and the CPU isn't even remotely related to an ARM!) Oh
- well. I suppose something has to replace the Z88, eh? How about
- something to compete with the Newton?
-
- (BTW, to those who complained that the new machines are not really a
- new product range -- surprise, surprise! IBM hasn't released a new
- range of machines into the PC market place since 1981, when they
- released the original IBM PC/XT. The PS/2 is simply an improvement on
- the AT architecture, and the AT is an even smaller improvement on the
- XT. Apple hasn't release a new architecture since 1984, when they
- released the Mac -- the Mac II is merely an improvement. The PowerPC
- will be the first new release for Apple for a long time, and maybe for
- IBM, too. Commodore hasn't had a new architecture since 1985, and Atari
- hasn't had any success with the TT. I'm not sure whether the Falcon
- could be classed as a new architecture.
-
- Acorn, with two entire architectures to their credit since 1981,
- doesn't seem to be doing that bad to me.)
-
- Anyway, well done Acorn! Keep it up. I'm sure that, after these new
- machines have been rolled out, everyone can get on with the next round
- of juicy, world-beating stuff. ;-)
-
- -Malcolm. lithgow@usl.com These are merely my opinions.
-