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No Windows 95?? Bummer!!
Message
From
23/08/2001 15:53:57
 
 
General information
Forum:
Visual FoxPro
Category:
Other
Miscellaneous
Thread ID:
00547019
Message ID:
00548266
Views:
9
Same disclaimer for me (as anyone can tell)

Well car makers, refrigerator makers etc ad nauseum all have the same problem, yet that find ways to get along.

Do you think that maybe MS has lost its capability for innovation that has served it so well until now? Do you think that people just might buy upgrades - as they used to - if there was real value in doing so? I think they would.
Do you think that maybe MS should get used to a little lesser cash-flow, in line with virtually all other companies on the planet? Maybe just do so while they find their innovative capabilities once again? You know, the capabilities that made their products so attractive and "needed" inthe first place.

You know, Doug D. started all this on the basis of my "I don't know. ...maybe it is greed" statement.
The fact is, I don't know, but I do smell a rat - something that is in the best interests of MS while decidedly not in the best interest of its customers.
Furthermore, we don't really have the proper outline of how they intend to do this. But I will say that I cannot fathom how they could improve the situation (of software distribution/payment) over today's model with a subscription service.

Cheers
JimN

>Disclaimer: I am not an economist. :)
>
>It seems to me like a good reason for this is market saturation. In the begining, not many people had their own computers. Now most of the ones who want one have one. (In more affluent countries at any rate.) Once everyone that wants to buy a product has done so, you run out of people to sell to unless you can convince them to buy another version of what they already have.
>
>It's affecting the PC market, and I don't see how MS is any different.
>
>Michelle
>
>
>>Well how did they get into this cash-flow "bind"? How did their prior model go sour on them? Seems to me they (MS) probably had something to do with it. Perhaps a bad model, possibly diminishing value in their products or maybe more savvy customers.
>>You're really grasping at straws with this one Doug.
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