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- From: curt@oasys.dt.navy.mil (Curt Welch)
- Newsgroups: comp.sys.next.misc
- Subject: Re: Stability of Next as a company
- Message-ID: <24507@oasys.dt.navy.mil>
- Date: 2 Sep 92 20:52:21 GMT
- References: <9208242254.AA20021@verbosa.ncd.com> <9208312146.AA27946@verbosa.ncd.com>
- Reply-To: curt@kcwc.com (Curt Welch)
- Organization: KCW Consulting
- Lines: 129
-
- In comp.sys.next.misc, jcb (Jim Becker) writes:
- >i'm not flaming the NeXT, personally i think it's the best computer
- >i've seen (in twenty years). however i was also involved heavily with
- >the Amiga, which teaches one that there are marketplace rules beyond
- >"mere" technology. this is unfortunate, as technically superior
- >products fall by the wayside and those that win out normally lack
- >technical innovativeness and "spirit".
-
- The NeXT may look like it's has some of the same market problems that
- the Amiga has had (better machine but not what the people wanted to
- buy), but the NeXT has many advantages over the Amiga. NeXT will not
- only survive, but they will become one of the major players in the
- computer market.
-
- The Amiga always struck me as a sophisticated toy - a video game
- computer with an operating system. It's graphics and icons just made
- the machine look like a video game - not a professional tool. It was
- too expensive to buy just as a video game machine, but didn't really
- appeal to anyone other than the techno types that could understand it's
- technical merit. It's NTSC video compatibility has given it a life in
- the video business, but other that that, it's only real market seemed to
- be as a home computer for hackers.
-
- The NeXT is also becoming a home computer for programmers (ones that
- have a small ton of money to blow), but it won't be stuck in that
- market. The NeXT is a professional tool. And the NeXT sells well in
- the business market. It won't ever win out in the low end commodity PC
- market, but it will, and is, winning in the high end PC and Mac market
- and the low end Sun market.
-
- The NeXT is the only system I've seen that makes a Unix system as easy
- to use as a Mac (well almost). Unix was designed for programmers, not
- for your average office worker. Many companies have tried to sell Unix
- systems to office workers, and failed. Most of them are out of
- business now. They tried to hide Unix under menu systems and end-user
- applications, but they never quite made it work. For example, the
- systems would still panic if you pulled the floppy disk out without
- unmounting it first. Or if you mounted a floppy before running newfs
- on it.
-
- The Unix companies that survived are the ones that sold their systems
- to programmers, engineers, and VARS. Sun is a great engineering
- workstation. But it sucks as an office automation system. And this
- isn't something Sun can change overnight by adding a windowing system.
- The whole company and all the users would have to change. Sun's sales
- force is used to dealing with engineers. Their sales lit is written
- for engineers. Their manuals are written for engineers. The third
- party apps were written with the assumption that they would be
- installed and run by engineers. All this will have to change if Sun
- wants to compete with NeXT in the office environment.
-
- The NeXT was designed from the ground up to work in the office
- environment. No software install procedures. Just plug your computer
- in the wall and start working. The manuals don't assume you are a
- computer expert. The third party apps are easier to install than most
- DOS packages. And the user interface is as simple as the Mac. But
- unlike the Mac, the NeXT isn't just a pretty face. It has a brain
- too.
-
- The NeXT is the best high end office workstation on the market. It's
- positioned to becoming the perfect office business tool. What does
- every office worker have these days? A desk full of paper, a telephone,
- a computer, laser printer, copier, and fax machine (for generating
- all that paper). These are the basic tools of the office worker today.
-
- The NeXT will be the first platform that will be do a good job of
- integrating these functions. You can use DOS to make a computer act as
- smart typewriter, but to make it function as a phone, a fax machine,
- and a smart typewriter at the same time, you need a real operating
- system underneath the hood. The NeXT is the only computer available
- today that has both the power, and ease of use, required to take over
- this market. The PCs and Mac's are stuck with their toy operating
- systems. They are fighting to replace them, but it will take years.
- The Sun's and HP's of the world have the operating system and computer
- power, but don't have the ease of use required to compete in this new
- high end office market.
-
- ISDN will make office phones digital in the next few years. It will
- give the office Group 4 fax which can deliver a fax that looks as good
- as a xerox copy at about the same cost as a fine mode fax today. And
- it will bring cheap high speed networking to everyone's desk. The
- complexity of modems, and the simplicity of the fax, has limited the
- usefulness of modems and data transfer in the business world. But once
- the phone system turns digital, it will be natural to connect your
- phone to the computer. Your office computer will become the standard
- office super-phone of the future. It will replace the phone just like
- it replaced the typewriter. And the NeXT will be one of the first
- computers to really take advantage of this new market with the PhoneKit
- and the Hayes ISDN Extender (but there's still a lot of software to be
- developed in this area.)
-
- I think NeXT will become the dominant player in this high end office
- workstation market in the next few years. The mision critical app game
- they are currently playing isn't their real strong point. It's just the
- trick they are using to get their foot in the door. It's the one clear
- advantage they can use to sell systems today. They have to do this to
- survive.
-
- Don't think that NeXT is having problems because a retail store like
- Computer Attic is loosing interest in the machine. NeXT machines just
- don't sell well through retail stores like that. They might one day,
- but not now. I'm sure there are still plenty of NeXTs being sold
- through their direct market channels. Didn't I just read somewhere that
- NeXT was getting ready to double its sales force? You don't do this
- if you are having problems selling your merchandise.
-
- Once NeXT gets it foot in enough doors, it will really start to take off.
- There are still far too many people in the world that have never heard
- of NeXT. And far too many others that know about NeXT but have never
- seen or used one. They just don't know what they're missing until they
- see it. But I think NeXT will overcome this problem in time.
-
- And when the front office is filled with NeXTs, then Sun will start
- having problems selling their systems to the engineers. Why buy a Sun
- system when a NeXT is just as good and the rest of the admin staff,
- sales force, and the MIS people all use NeXTs?
-
- NeXT's big markets right now are the computer professionals and the
- mision critical app customers - and that alone will be enough to keep
- NeXT healthy (but small) for many years. But I think NeXT will also
- become the de facto high end office computer in the next few years, and
- they will end up stealing the desktop publishing business away from Apple.
- In 5 years, NeXT won't be a little start-up company. They will be
- the NeXT Apple.
-
- Curt Welch
-
- (And I thought this was going to be a short article when I started
- writing it!)
-