chevy said:Seems reasonable. I don't know if they will name it G6, but the geometries and speed are reasonable.
ocelot said:Except that Apple is a hardware company first, meaning their bottom line is based on selling computers. If anybody were able to run OS X (simply a solution to sell computers: "Want a good OS? Buy our machine.") on other, cheaper machines, Apple would slowly lose hardware business and, eventually, money, leading to a dramatic decrease in the innovations we have come to know and love.
However, I think the rest of your arguments are valid and on track.
arden said:ocelot said:Except that Apple is a hardware company first, meaning their bottom line is based on selling computers. If anybody were able to run OS X (simply a solution to sell computers: "Want a good OS? Buy our machine.") on other, cheaper machines, Apple would slowly lose hardware business and, eventually, money, leading to a dramatic decrease in the innovations we have come to know and love.
However, I think the rest of your arguments are valid and on track.
I agree that Apple is a vertical model at this time but the profit margin from selling software is much much greater than selling hardware - this is why all the PC clone companies have been struggling. I want Apple to make money and gain influence in the computer industry as a whole. I don't think Apple would lose much of their already small hardware market share offering their OS to other hardware platforms. They only stand to make more money in an OS market that is becoming more and more frustrated with Microsoft's monopoly. The big question is: when is the market ripe for a release of OS X for other than Mac hardware so that Apple, even if they lose hardware sales, can make money with it. - john.
That's nice, but it's unfortunately wishful thinking. These are the last numbers I saw (and I doubt it's changed much since then, I think this was late 2002 or early 2003):ocelot said:I agree that Apple is a vertical model at this time but the profit margin from selling software is much much greater than selling hardware - this is why all the PC clone companies have been struggling. I want Apple to make money and gain influence in the computer industry as a whole. I don't think Apple would lose much of their already small hardware market share offering their OS to other hardware platforms. They only stand to make more money in an OS market that is becoming more and more frustrated with Microsoft's monopoly. The big question is: when is the market ripe for a release of OS X for other than Mac hardware so that Apple, even if they lose hardware sales, can make money with it. - john.
arden said:That's nice, but it's unfortunately wishful thinking. These are the last numbers I saw (and I doubt it's changed much since then, I think this was late 2002 or early 2003):
It would be nice to be able to run OS X on any old PC hardware lying around, but it would be very bad business for Apple, especially since they'd have to compete with Windows for the same hardware. Plus, software would have to be completely re-written to take advantage of OS X on Intel/AMD architecture, meaning you'd have to buy your software anew (as with Windows/Linux). So it would be nice, but it's not going to happen.
- Profits from computer sales: $1.1 billion
- Profits from software sales (including OS X): $160 million