Platformonomics
Microsoft's netbook pricing dilemma continues. It is tough to optimize for both unit share and revenue, but my former colleagues in Redmond remain undaunted. In our last installment, I suggested:
Starter Edition seems to be dead on arrival (in fact, to go back to a stock soundbite, you can't spell Starter Edition without the letters D, O and A...), but they can always keep offering the immortal Windows XP if necessary.
Since then, Starter Edition has gone back to the drawing board and XP has gotten yet another life extension.
But wait, no stone is being left unturned in this campaign:
Microsoft at Computex has said it wants PC builders to avoid using the term "netbook" in the future. Microsoft now plans to call them "low cost small notebook PCs"
Microsoft at Computex has said it wants PC builders to avoid using the term "netbook" in the future.
Microsoft now plans to call them "low cost small notebook PCs"
As the kids say, good luck with that. So what if the category name is too big to fit on the packaging of most netbooks. Suggested official pronunciation: "lick-snips" (handy mnemonic: put your tongue in a weed-whacker). I for one am heartened that the oft-criticized but much misunderstood Microsoft naming department survived the recent layoffs.
Some suggest it is more than just another step in a relentless quest for terminological precision:
While ostensibly claiming it's primarily a definition, Microsoft is believed to be using the new label to better let it force system makers into using more expensive versions of Windows 7 on certain computers. Vendors have already been told that they can only install Windows 7 Starter Edition on notebooks with no more than a 10-inch screen, 1GB of memory, a 250GB hard drive and a single-core 2GHz processor. By exempting systems that don't quite fit into the category even if their characteristics are similar, Microsoft could require that they pay for the significantly costlier Windows 7 Home Premium.
In other news today:
Comments [1]
Remember Me
I’m Charles Fitzgerald and this is my blog. I write infrequently and nominally on the economics of platforms, or whatever else captures my interest.
Contact Me via Email
Follow Me on Twitter.