Apple has stated on its website that will add support for Windows 7 to Boot Camp later this year. “Apple will support Microsoft Windows 7 (Home Premium, Professional, and Ultimate) with Boot Camp in Mac OS X Snow Leopard before the end of the year. This support will require a software update to Boot Camp.”
Tag Archives: Apple
Apple declares war on the entire PC industry
By Joe Wilcox, Betanews
There is absolutely nothing coincidental about Apple launching new products today. The big product launch is Apple’s first preemptive marketing strike against Microsoft, Windows 7 and the entire PC industry. It’s a bold move exploiting a position of strength against an industry weakened by low-margin, low-priced netbooks.
Windows 7 officially launches in two days. Best Buy already has Windows 7 PCs on sale, but not for purchase. Dell started taking Windows 7 over the weekend. Gartner is telling businesses they must upgrade to Windows 7, despite any hardships migrating from Windows XP. Microsoft is priming the marketing pumps. The PC industry is collectively turning its attention to Windows 7, which Microsoft is trying to launch with some bang rather than a whimper.
But what has the geek world been babbling about for the last 24 hours? Apple. Firstly, there were rumors of new iMac, revamped white MacBook, new Mac mouse and updated Mac mini — all products Apple unveiled early this afternoon. Secondly, late yesterday, there were Apple’s blow-out fiscal 2009 fourth-quarter results: $1.67 billion profit and 3.05 million Macs shipped, the majority notebooks. Apple outperformed Wall Street’s consensus, blasting past the econolypse’s effects like it was business as usual.
Exactly who is talking about Windows 7 today or will tomorrow? Or gasp, on launch day — Oct. 22nd?
Netbooks are a Plague
Apple’s new product release timing is clearly deliberate, designed to pull attention away from Windows 7. But Apple also is looking to pull away Windows PC sales at the high end, where Macs are strongest and PCs are weakest. Surely, Apple executives realize that the PC industry is hoist with its own netbook petard.
I’ve complained about netbooks for months. They are cannibalizing Windows PC sales at an alarming rate. By comparison, laptops commanded higher margins and average selling prices when their popularity started to increase. PC manufacturers — and even Microsoft — benefited from notebooks’ reversing the trend of falling computer ASPs; for a time. By comparison, netbooks are a plague, because they dramatically lower ASPs and margins and pull away sales from real laptops.
Last week, Gartner and IDC issued preliminary PC shipment data for third quarter. Both analyst firms once again identified netbooks as driving portable and overall PC shipments. Gartner observed the negative impact on ASPs. Mikako Kitagawa, Gartner principal analyst, said in a statement:
The consumer mobile PC market drove US shipment growth in the third quarter of 2009, fueled by back-to-school sales. However, the results came with a revenue loss because of very steep declines in average selling prices…Consumers were comfortable buying PCs, but they were relentlessly looking for bargains. Our preliminary research shows consumer mobile PC ASPs declined more than 20 percent compared to a year ago.
On October 8, DisplaySearch explained netbook’s derisive impact on PC ASPs. Laptop ASPs fell to $688 in second quarter from $704 in first quarter and $849 in Q2 2008. Netbook prices fell to $361 from $371 and $506, respectively, during the same time period. Additionally, netbooks accounted for 22.2 percent of overall PC sales and 11.7 percent of revenues. Netbook sales jumped a staggering 264 percent year over year, while overall laptop sales (without counting netbooks) declined 14 percent.
Netbooks remain the Windows PC industry’s huge Achilles tendon, exposed and ready to be cut by an aggressive Apple. Windows 7 isn’t going to lessen demand for netbooks. Consumers might find them even more appealing because of Microsoft’s new operating system.
The “Pay More” Principle
Apple positioned Macs as the alternative for people willing to pay more, which is a surprising number of buyers given the gloomy economy. Today’s new Mac product announcements give potential shoppers more reasons to look Apple’s way — even with Windows 7 launching on Thursday. For Betanews readers frothing to comment, I want to be absolutely clear: I am not suggesting Windows 7 won’t sell well. But I am asserting that many new Windows 7 sales will be on netbooks, not the high-priced, margin-rich systems Microsoft and PC partners need to sell.
Something else — and this is hugely important: Last week, there was speculation that PC and peripheral manufacturers may have overproduced for the holiday quarter in big anticipation of Windows 7 demand. Based on my own quiet channel checks, I have the same concern. I’ll predict now that Windows 7 PC supply will be greater than consumer or small business buying demand during fourth quarter. If OEMs anticipated big demand for netbooks, then the bigger problem will be for Microsoft, which makes less on Windows 7 Starter Edition than other 7 versions. But if OEMs bet big on pricer systems, they will stuff the retail channel this holiday season.
The resulting price war would be good for consumers looking for bargains, but further sap tight OEM margins. Macs have remained largely immune to the economic gloom or even the potential threat of lower-priced Windows PCs. But Macs have competed against Windows Vista PCs. Can Macs defy Windows 7 gravity? Because of the netbook scourge, I must say yes. Few Windows PC manufacturers are competing where Apple sales are strongest: Computers selling for $1,000 or more. But all major OEMs are fighting for sales in the segment for the smallest, least powerful, lowest-cost and least profitable portables. Are their executives insane?
I’m on record as asserting that Windows 7′s release will stall Mac market share gains. My reasoning: Windows 7 netbooks are sure to drive up PC unit volumes. But market share is but one measure of success. Yesterday there was an interesting Twitter discussion about market volume versus sales margins. Jason Snell, Macworld editorial director tweeted: “Apple sold 2.3M laptops at an average price of $1,265 per unit. Imagine how much money it could have lost if it had a netbook!” He’s absolutely right, and so is Apple for choosing not to compete in a portable segment where brands and margins are lost to lowest price.
Mind Share versus Market Share
Apple has got geekdom’s attention, and that of Wall Street and even consumer and trade publications. For today and tomorrow and quite possibly Thursday, which otherwise should belong to Microsoft and Windows 7. Some enthusiasts will be quick to point out many apparent Mac shortcomings. Windows PC defenders will rightly observe that:
- “The new MacBook packs less RAM and storage than comparably priced Windows PCs.” Maybe, but the $999 price will appeal to enough buyers, who will get a sturdy, attractive new enclosure and big battery life.
- “The 27-inch iMac is too big and too pricey at $1,699.” Maybe, but the screen size makes the desktop a potential computer and TV, when streaming or playing programs or when attached to a tuner from companies like El Gato.
- “The updated Mac mini remains pricey at $599.” Maybe, but price is low enough for many people thinking of adding a Mac as second PC. The $999 Snow Leopard Server Mac mini has huge potential appeal to small or home-based businesses.
There seems to be a blind spot when it comes to understanding Macs in relationship to Windows PCs, and I don’t understand why. Many analysts, computer enthusiasts and reporters miss something simple: Macs compete against Windows PCs, while Windows PCs compete against, well, Windows PCs. Apple can compete differently because Macs are the alternative to a big, saturated Windows PC market. Macs are the new thing, while another Windows PC is just another old thing. Macs will compete against PCs, but in the PC market Windows XP (and some Vista) will compete against Windows 7.
Yesterday with record Mac sales and today with new Mac products, Apple has declared — at least for holiday 2009 — war on the entire PC industry. To win, Apple just needs to make more money off lower volumes. Apple doesn’t need to gobble up market share. A few points of share here or there are huge to Apple but losses to Macs have little impact on PC OEMs. It’s an unfair battle in some ways, because the PC industry isn’t fighting Macs but a civil war of Windows old against Windows new. Sadly, netbooks will scorch the earth behind every sale.
Nokia Sues Apple for Patent Infringment
Remember when Steve Jobs unveiled the iPhone, and proclaimed, to much applause, that they patented the hell out of it? Well, apparently Apple likes to boast about its own patents, but when it comes to dealing with other’s they’re not so willing. That is, if you believe Nokia: the largest phone manufacturer in the world has sued Apple for patent infringement.
Windows 7 Can Be a Success Without Hurting Apple
On October 22, Microsoft will unleash the much-anticipated Windows 7. After the commercial disaster that is Windows Vista, it is believed the new release will turn the tide for the world’s biggest software maker. A lot of people also believe it will put a halt to Mac OS X’s growth, but I personally think we need to remember the timeless quote form Steve Jobs: “We have to let go of the notion that for Apple to win, Microsoft has to lose.”
Why is John Hodgman smiling? Data loss isn’t the only Snow Leopard problem
By Scott M. Fulton, III, Betanews
If Snow Leopard, the latest version of the Mac operating system released late last August, were seriously plagued with bugs, writes a volunteer contributor to Apple’s discussion forum, the company would be besieged with complaints. But that may very well be the problem, as evidenced by this screenshot from a Snow Leopard user who attempted to formally report his problem to Apple through his operating system, and was met with this message: “An error has occurred. Please report the error to Apple Inc. by emailing the error detail to devbugs@apple.com.”
As the user reported on Apple’s forum, “I’d laugh if I wasn’t in an apoplectic rage.”
Apple has reportedly acknowledged the existence of a critical data loss error affecting numerous Snow Leopard users, although the company actually has yet to release a complete statement on the issue. As a result, The Unofficial Apple Weblog has resorted to taking a reader poll, asking readers when they believe Apple can fully resolve this issue for release 10.6.2 (developer builds for which are now being distributed). About a quarter of TUAW’s readers are confident Apple can roll things up by the week of October 26.
As this situation continues to develop, there is now one big issue and at least three subsidiary issues that branch from it. The main problem concerns the apparent fact that Snow Leopard is deleting the wrong data when exiting a Guest account.
In Mac OS X, the Guest account was devised as a convenient way for a non-authorized user to be able to use the computer with limited privileges, in such a way that no permanent changes or extra files remain when the user logs off. But since Snow Leopard’s release, a growing number of users are discovering that the system is deleting the wrong account: Their main user accounts are missing, along with most of the data stored under those accounts.
Why this problem was not discovered during testing (assuming testing even occurred) is baffling. In the absence of raw data from Apple to help users resolve or avoid the issue, once again, Mac users are left with independent sources and volunteer contributors to Apple’s forums to help them out.
Based on what those folks have been able to compile, here is what we’ve been able to assemble thus far: The problem seems to be concentrated among users who have upgraded to version 10.6.1 from earlier versions. The theory there is that the format of the existing Guest account may not have been upgraded to conform to the new version of the operating system.
Mac users who upgraded to version 10.5 Leopard once before noticed something unusual in the same category, but not as destructive: After upgrading, their main accounts’ home directories appeared to be missing. It turns out that they were only moved to a temporary location, and that the upgrade process for some neglected to relocate contents from the /home-preserved directory that Leopard created and the new /home directory. It took a little prestidigitation for users to resolve that problem, but in that case, data was not lost.
But the existence of the problem itself suggests that Apple is changing the structure of user accounts with new releases (which is a likely reason why Leopard would have been relocating user’s files in the first place). Theoretically, code that was designed from the ground up to handle a new account structure may be disrupting the old one, in situations where the upgrade process to Snow Leopard failed to make the appropriate change — as appears to be the case with the Guest account.
The three subsidiary issues arising in the wake of the Guest account problem are, in and of themselves, quite serious, though in terms of possible damage they pale by comparison. First, users who are genuinely trying to restore their data using Time Machine, Apple’s built-in backup utility, are discovering it didn’t back up their complete contents. According to one Web developer’s report, Web pages associated with users’ accounts do not appear to have been restored, and were probably not backed up to begin with.
A second issue that’s probably unrelated technically is being given extra weight with regard to Snow Leopard’s other problems: Users of the Mac’s Airport wireless devices are reporting continually dropped connections only since having upgraded to Snow Leopard. Several volunteers have suggested any number of solutions including upgrading router firmware and changing the format of security keys to something stronger, but no solution seems permanent.
What may relate this issue to the bigger issue of account deletion, if anything, is this one common thread: Folks who believe their solution is fixed (their Airport stops dropping connections) only come to discover the problem un-fixes itself after their machine is powered down or hibernated. As one afflicted Mac user writes, “Something tells me that Airport just isn’t meant to be cycled off and on numerous times a day to reestablish a connection.”
Another potentially common thread has to do with external hard drives, many of which are connected using Airport. Many Snow Leopard upgraders are reporting they cannot launch their Finder application for these drives — specifically, they’re receiving a message that reads, “The application Finder.app can’t be opened – 10810.”
Some users report being able to reconnect to their external drives and launch Finder, but only after uninstalling whatever drive they’re using for their continual Time Machine backup. And once again, in cases where users appear to have found solutions, their fixes mysteriously disappear after having powered down or hibernated their systems. “Now have the choice of no Finder or no backup,” writes one user. “We need an answer from Apple.”
As with other cases in the past, we’re seeing some independent contributors to Apple’s forums who respond to complaints by coming to Apple’s rescue. For example, some contributors have now taken to responding to demands that Apple issue a solution to the Guest account debacle by citing Apple’s EULA, specifically the section headed, “9. Limitation of Liability.”
That’s the section that states that by using the Mac in the first place, you agree that Apple cannot possibly harm you with serious intent. The section reads, in part, “In no event shall Apple’s total liability to you for all damages (other than as may be required by applicable law in cases involving personal injury) exceed the amount of fifty dollars ($50.00). The foregoing limitations will apply even if the above stated remedy fails of its essential purpose.”
One can imagine Justin Long seated behind a desk in front of a queue full of complaining users, and passing out fifties.
But throughout the Apple forums, perhaps for the first time, there appears to be a split in the ranks, where not everyone is rushing to the company’s defense as if it’s the one being damaged. One user bit by both the Guest account and Time Machine problem reported she had grown so comfortable with the idea of just having a Mac that she never really thought she’d have to learn about using it to the extent she has in the past few weeks.
And another user, in exasperation after being bitten by “Error 10810″ for the last time, simply shouted, “This is Mac for God’s sake!”
Guest Account Bug in Snow Leopard Causes Data Loss
Apple vs. Microsoft: Top 20 Stolen OS Ideas
InfoWorld’s John Rizzo chronicles the 20 most significant ideas and features Microsoft and Apple have stolen from each other in the lead up to Windows 7 and Mac OS X Snow Leopard. ‘Some features were stolen so long ago that they’ve become part of the computing landscape, and it’s difficult to remember who invented what.’ Windows 7′s Task Bar and Aero Peek come to mind as clear appropriations of Mac OS X’s Dock and Expose. Apple’s cloning of the Windows address bar in 2007′s Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard as the path bar is another obvious ‘inspiration.’ But the borrowing goes deeper, Rizzo writes, providing a screenshot tour of Microsoft’s biggest grabs from Mac OS X and Apple’s most significant appropriations of Windows OS ideas and functionality.
The roots of all evil: Apple, Google, Intel, and Microsoft
By Scott M. Fulton, III, Betanews
Americans love a winner, and will not tolerate a loser.
- General George S. Patton (as portrayed by George C. Scott)
Throughout the information technology industry, there has been a certain pathology that somehow precludes any segment of it from evolving in any pattern other than consolidation, centralization, and the investment of authority and leadership in a dominant power. With every new market segment that’s ever come into fruition — “PC clones,” laptops, smartphones, applications, operating systems — the initial players can be scattered across the field like seeds strewn randomly in a flower bed. Once they coalesce, the pattern tends to look the same: a few dominant players, but usually just one, with the rest searching for new ways for their marketing or legal teams to plea for fairness and relief.
The argument against any government regulation of technology markets is that, left to their own devices, businesses will seek their own level of competition, manufacturers will develop their own unique strengths, and customers will decide for themselves which one provides the best product or service. Yet historically that has always been half-true: Left to its own devices, a technology market will always wind up with a dominant player, whether it’s by accidental circumstance, fair competition, or fiendish design.
Markets make dominant players in order to have a center of activity — almost every strategy among vendors leverages the dominant player’s position either toward mutual goals or opposite goals. You’d think it would be nice if governments seeking to regulate the activity of dominant players could find them wholly guilty of the circumstances that led to their unfair success, and present to public scrutiny the evil motives and terrible plans that led to their rise to power. And yet it’s never happened that way:
- Intel. As documents emerging from antitrust proceedings against it in Europe, Asia, and from AMD in the US indicate, Intel probably did make deals with its customers for exclusivity or near-exclusivity. Yet those documents also very clearly indicate that it was Intel’s customers themselves who specified those terms, like a would-be victim who gives the bank robber the gun to hold to his head, asking him to make him open the vault so he too can get a share of the loot. Customers such as Dell and HP were willing to buy CPUs in quantity, and appear to have been auctioning their virtues to the highest bidder. Intel’s customers constructed its platform of dominance during the 1990s and early 2000s; they paved the way for it to become an exclusive supplier, to tip the scales against AMD. They fostered Intel’s desire to win and they used it to their advantage. Any government seeking to assess Intel’s liability for creating an unfair market must take into account the conduct of its customers for their mutual role in its creation.
- Apple. There is absolutely no question about the fact that Apple won the digital music market, and is leveraging that stake to gain a big share of the smartphone market, through its brilliant marketing strategy and fabulous designs. But Apple knowingly, intentionally, and probably without malice rushed into a void left by its competitors. Apple did not create the MP3 player, but it was capable of building a digital music empire that continues to undermine the existing business model for media, mostly because it accurately assessed the short-sightedness of competitors in not reconstructing that business model for themselves. With Macintosh, every tenth-of-a-point of market share gained for Apple has been a hard-fought, bloody slog. But with iPod, Apple walked into a market that no one else was willing to build, and was immediately welcomed as the dominant player. Instantly Steve Jobs became the icon of the revolution, whereas with about 20 minutes more foresight, it could just as easily have been Michael Dell.
- Google. In the history of cakewalks, however, Apple’s will not be the most astounding. The Internet has really never had a viable, long-term business model. Almost every company whose revenue is dependent upon the Internet, rather than just invested in it as a side venture, perceives what it’s doing now as a stopgap or an interim business, in lieu of what it can or should be doing once the “Second Bubble” bursts or the recession ends or someone else comes up with a better idea…or when Google invents it. Google has been everyone’s savior. It’s the lovable giant, the big daddy, the central source from which all fairness springs forth. It has cleaned up everybody’s mess. When no one was successful at building “portals,” Google created a big one for everyone. When no one could sell ads for themselves because it meant having to differentiate and strategize and all those…thinking things that require brainpower, Google stepped in and sold ads for everyone. When publishers couldn’t find a way to build libraries, Google said, we’ll make a digital Alexandria just for you (whether you’re dead or alive). If only publishers and manufacturers and vendors and advertisers and governments could just let go and let Google, it would be just so happy to take care of everything for us while we have our nappy-time.
- Microsoft. The road to power for Microsoft has always been paved by the blunders, errors, and completely foolish ideas of its adversaries. Everyone knows now that Microsoft came into being through the short-sightedness of IBM. And along the way to software market dominance, it made severe errors in judgment and committed illegal acts. But the facts that Windows is the dominant operating system, that x86 is the dominant CPU architecture (because it runs Windows), that Office is the dominant applications suite, and that Exchange and SQL Server are becoming the sources for digital communications and digital storage, respectively, are due to the most obvious reasons of all: This is what Microsoft’s customers want, and no one else ever stays in a position of competitiveness long enough to offer a reasonable, affordable, working alternative. WordPerfect and 1-2-3 and, as time goes on, Oracle didn’t lose their dominance entirely because Microsoft drove them into the ground; it’s because they had their own shovels and, for whatever reason, dug their own graves. Microsoft leads, in markets where it does lead, because it lets its competitors fail on their own account. And in markets where it doesn’t lead, it almost doesn’t matter all that much.
The reason there are dominant players in IT markets is because we made them — we the customers, we the OEMs, we the software developers, we the Internet users, we the readers. And the reason we made them is because we wanted to make them, and circumstances favored these candidates at the time and not others. If not for maybe a missed appointment here or a botched marketing campaign there, Motorola, Dell, Yahoo, and Digital Research could have been the subjects of this column.
We talk about “net neutrality,” as if our goals for any one technology market have always been to level the playing field, favor no one, and let the best design concept succeed through the merits of pure and fair competition. But who are we kidding? In what other competitive field do we not seek a dominant player — a majority party, a “most-watched network,” a “nation’s team,” a “best seller,” a “blockbuster,” a “guaranteed hit?” We expect Darwin to select the survivor, but then we always rig the ballot box. In the absence of a dominant player, we will appoint one.
I was in the room for the unveiling of the world’s first clamshell portable computer, the Data General One. It was a thing of beauty, or so it seemed, being able to boot up DOS from any place with an electric outlet. Too bad, an analyst told me at the time, because once IBM sees this it’ll do it too, and Data General will be a remnant of history and IBM will own the market. Why? “Come on, seriously?” the analyst returned at me, like I just fell off a turnip truck. “Tell me you see the pizza-box computer market being owned by Data General!”
Nearly three decades later, the need persists for a dominant player, if only to generate Web site traffic. In market segments where a dominant player doesn’t develop itself organically, publishers and bloggers often strive to invent it artificially. In data storage, for example — a segment which editors have historically found dull, and have even used to banish writers they don’t like, like stationing them in Siberia — from time to time, the talk among editors will inevitably turn to, “What dirt can we get on EMC?” If only EMC could be framed as some kind of Microsoft or Apple or Intel, with an evil moustache and a pocket protector and electrical tape holding up its glasses, we could centralize our focus, get commenters to start bashing someone…and we’d really get traffic.
To some extent, a great deal of so-called “technology news” — or at least the chunk of it that people actually read — isn’t even really about technology (tell me you read our series on high-k-plus-metal-gate fabrication). It’s about the dominant player, or when dominant players collide as was the case with Google Voice on Apple’s iPhone, or when dominant players flounder in unfamiliar territories. Just the word “Zune” excites exponentially more readers than will ever own a Zune or touch a Zune. In the IT news business, there has been one word for fair markets: boring. So even when companies make fair deals with purely benign, mutually advantageous goals — for instance, between Microsoft and Novell, or Microsoft and Yahoo, or Google and Verizon — even in the absence of any evidence of unfairness or collusion or anti-trust activity, people will inevitably invent it.
The biggest irony there is in this entire scheme is that every government investigation involving a dominant player using its dominance to obtain more dominance, has been conducted in the name of protecting something called “competition.” In the real world — in the world that has existed for millennia, since the distant ancestors of Steve Jobs and Eric Schmidt swung from trees — since when has competition not been about winning? And how can anyone win without, at some point, whether by accident or its own design or someone else’s design or perhaps, just perhaps, by necessity…becoming dominant?
Imagine there’s no dominant player. I wonder if you can.
The viewpoints expressed here are those of Scott M. Fulton, III, who is solely responsible for his content.