Apple has an expensive OS since they have a proprietary system, and the business model they used, maintaining control of the entire system, hardware through software, has not served them well. I remember being a "code monkey" in the days of the Apple II+ - actually, I did both the engineering and the coding
, writing a large multi-relational database using floppy drives and numbered floppies, in a matter akin to today's tape storage libraries (except the floppy changer was a hand mark 1). Apple had an excellent chance to dominate the pc industry, and history speaks for itself.
Secondly, if you are also in the IT industry, shame on you! Apple the same price as MS! Only in desktop operating systems, and only for the end user. Try purchasing a full slate of MS development tools. Plus, MS is doing the exact same thing as Apple, getting greedy and putting it's business plan at risk. Of course that's comparing Apples and Oranges
, or at least Apples and PC's.
MS is making the same mistakes as Apple, they've just had a more successful business/legal plan (sue any small, innovative competitors that threaten you, and who won't sell, and put them out of business - let's discuss Dr. Dos, Stacker, et al). They also have a huge war chest, and a de facto monopoly. If you want to argue the de facto monopoly bit, look at their profits on their Windows OS/Office products - runn ing at approximately 800-900% from their own balance sheets, one was 0.2 billion in costs on 2.1 billion profits, the other one was slightly less. How can you maintain that level of profit with out a de facto monopoly?
However, they have gotten so greedy, i.e. the proposed yearly license fees, etc. that they've finally pushed the Linux market over the critical point. That's why I phrase it "de facto" monopoly. After a certain point your greed drives people into alternatives, and you lose your control. Microsoft is trying to retrench after doing just that, with the dropping in fees for some of their developer packages. They just dropped one from $249 to $49. It remains to be seen if they can react fast enough, and remain an IBM (after they blew their initial triumph with their PC - which was flawed, no argument there, but they did it mostly right) or end up on the periphery like Apple. I'm betting they will stay big, but lose their monopoly power.
(more on security later, my break is over
)

Secondly, if you are also in the IT industry, shame on you! Apple the same price as MS! Only in desktop operating systems, and only for the end user. Try purchasing a full slate of MS development tools. Plus, MS is doing the exact same thing as Apple, getting greedy and putting it's business plan at risk. Of course that's comparing Apples and Oranges


MS is making the same mistakes as Apple, they've just had a more successful business/legal plan (sue any small, innovative competitors that threaten you, and who won't sell, and put them out of business - let's discuss Dr. Dos, Stacker, et al). They also have a huge war chest, and a de facto monopoly. If you want to argue the de facto monopoly bit, look at their profits on their Windows OS/Office products - runn ing at approximately 800-900% from their own balance sheets, one was 0.2 billion in costs on 2.1 billion profits, the other one was slightly less. How can you maintain that level of profit with out a de facto monopoly?
However, they have gotten so greedy, i.e. the proposed yearly license fees, etc. that they've finally pushed the Linux market over the critical point. That's why I phrase it "de facto" monopoly. After a certain point your greed drives people into alternatives, and you lose your control. Microsoft is trying to retrench after doing just that, with the dropping in fees for some of their developer packages. They just dropped one from $249 to $49. It remains to be seen if they can react fast enough, and remain an IBM (after they blew their initial triumph with their PC - which was flawed, no argument there, but they did it mostly right) or end up on the periphery like Apple. I'm betting they will stay big, but lose their monopoly power.
(more on security later, my break is over

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