Why Microsoft should fear Apple -Scot Finnie

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aryayush

Aspiring Novelist
Opinion: Why Microsoft should fear Apple
By Scot Finnie, Computerworld

Editor’s Note: This story is reprinted from Computerworld. For more Mac coverage, visit Computerworld’s Macintosh Knowledge Center.

Should Microsoft fear Apple’s Macintosh? Maybe not quaking-in-your-boots scared, mind you, but Redmond should certainly be concerned.

I’ll tell you why. Apple has gotten smarter about how it competes with Microsoft. Clearly the underdog, Apple has to make moves that can be seen as both supportive of the Windows marketplace and good for its Mac customers at the same time.

The switch to Intel was just such a chess move. Intel hardware makes it easier for Microsoft to create apps for the Mac. It solves a performance problem Apple had. It creates a better experience for Intel-Mac owners because it better supports Windows applications. The CPU architecture also puts Mac and Windows hardware on an easy-to-understand, level playing field. Perhaps most significantly, though, all these advantages appeal to potentially millions of Mac-curious Windows users because it makes the Mac more familiar.

For the first time in its 23-year history, the Mac is finally able to move fluidly into and out of the world of Microsoft Windows and its applications — both in the workplace and at home. Microsoft’s own Office suite plays a big role in that. Microsoft’s commitment to Office 2008 for the Mac lends additional support.

But the untapped source for the Mac is software designed for Windows. VMware is offering a public beta of its Fusion virtualization product for the Mac; the final release is due this summer. In the meantime, it’s the Parallels Desktop software that has been truly transformational for the Mac.

Parallels isn’t just an easy-to-use virtualization utility for running Windows on the Mac. The company’s Coherence feature lets Windows apps run in an all but invisible Windows instance on your Mac. They look for all the world like they’re running on your Mac, not in Windows. Parallels also makes it easy to switch back and forth between a full-screen version of Windows and your full-screen Mac. And Windows XP runs flawlessly on the Mac in Parallels. (Parallels also supports Vista, but not the Aero interface, yet.)

For people who haven’t tried it recently, the most surprising thing about the Mac in 2007 is that software is simply not a problem. Most average Windows users have no idea how rich a software base the Mac has grown in recent years. With convenient access to Windows applications, as well as access to an intriguing, growing market of Mac-specific software, finding great software that runs on the Mac is easier than ever before.

That insidious Macintosh

OK, so full disclosure: I am a recent Mac convert. But before you chalk me up as an apple-eyed Mac fanboy, I’m not your average Windows-to-Mac switcher. No one knows better than me (well, maybe Microsoft’s accountants) how firm a grip on the computer industry Microsoft has. As a Windows reviewer since almost the beginning of Windows (my first tests were of Windows 2.11), I have no illusions about Microsoft’s market lock.

If the Mac or any other desktop OS were to truly put a dent in Microsoft’s desktop market share, it would take 15 years for Windows to “die.” And that’s assuming Microsoft stood still and did nothing. In other words, it ain’t gonna happen.

I also don’t hate Microsoft. I’m not a fanatic. I’m just someone who recognizes a good thing when he sees it. I undertook a simple three-month trial of the Mac last autumn, with no intention of sticking around, and realized four months later that I wasn’t going back.

But here’s the kicker: I am very definitely not alone. A lot of people who were previously confirmed Windows users have given the Mac a try over the last year. Windows Vista is the most ambitious version of Windows since Windows 95, but it’s far less compelling than Windows 95 was. Vista isn’t a bad product; it’s just not a great one. After six years of waiting, it was time for something significantly better. We didn’t get it.

Because I made the switch recently, and did so publicly, I’ve gotten hundreds of messages from Computerworld readers (as well as readers of my personal newsletter, Scot’s Newsletter) informing me that they, too, switched to the Mac recently. Many are IT people. Some confess that they manage Windows users by day, and run Macs at home. Others tell me that they’ve switched in the office, and it’s no big deal. The all-but-universal experience is that the transition was much easier than expected, and that using the Mac has made switchers more productive.

What’s especially intriguing to me is that many IT managers have reported that execs of all stripes are switching to the Mac at their companies. I’ve seen the same phenomenon. At my company, three very highly placed execs have used Macs for many years. The vast majority of people have used Windows. Over the course of the last year, however, several new Mac users have appeared, including three in my area of the company. Mac users are beginning to come out of the woodwork. And the word is spreading that it’s OK to do that.

So, while I don’t think Microsoft has anything to fear in the market share department, when it comes to mind share, it has a lot to lose. The Mac is experiencing a renaissance. It’s about Intel inside. It’s about Unix at the core. It’s about virtualization technology. It’s about the surprising availability of software. It’s about a superior operating system, and attractive hardware. It’s about serious buzz.

People are talking about the Mac throughout the industry. Admit it: Whether you love it or hate it, you’re talking about the Mac at the water cooler. Many IT pros tend to laugh up their sleeves about how expensive and eccentric Macs are. But they’re still talking. It’s one of the top 10 technology stories of the year.

Macintosh TCO

There are three essential truths that I have come to believe about Macs:

1. The mythology surrounding the Mac isn’t true. It’s not impervious to problems. Like any computer, a Mac can really come apart on you in a bad way. I’ve seen it happen.

2. When Macs go bad, the conventional wisdom is that they’re harder to fix than Windows machines. I used to believe that myself. It may have been true under pre-OS X versions of the Mac OS, but I no longer find that to be the case. As a relative Mac newbie, I’ve had no trouble figuring out Mac problems — and that includes a couple of doozies.

3. That said, Macs go bad less often than Windows PCs. Mac users are more productive than Windows users because Macs experience fewer problems. There’s nothing mystical about it either. There are some obvious reasons why this is the case: The Mac is a closed hardware/software system. The OS isn’t forced to contend with a vast variety of hardware, and the hardware is carefully vetted so that it works perfectly with the software. Apple controls the horizontal; it controls the vertical. The hardware and software are a matched set.

Apple has also had an enduring, consistent vision about usability. It’s willing to sacrifice both power and flexibility to create a user interface that is far more intuitive than other operating systems. So Macs work better and are easier to use. That’s it in a nutshell.

What would you pay for a computer that doesn’t currently need anti-malware software? On most Windows PCs — especially consumer-spec’ed PCs — the security software is robbing the PC of so much system overhead that the user experience suffers. This one difference alone delivers a small reduction of software costs and a large reduction of helpdesk calls.

When it comes to hardware, Macs have long been perceived as overpriced and underpowered — and that may have been true in the past. But when you compare today’s premium Windows-based hardware, such as the Lenovo ThinkPad T60 series, to the Apple MacBook Pro, what you find is that you don’t pay a premium for the Mac hardware. You can easily pay a lot more for a high-end Lenovo notebook than for a MacBook Pro. Of course, it’s also possible to pay less for Dell hardware than you would for Apple hardware.

The point is that Apple isn’t necessarily the most expensive hardware vendor out there. And given the productivity and reliability of Mac hardware, it’s not as expensive as it may seem. Of course, if you don’t already have Macintosh expertise in your helpdesk, then it’s a big deal to add. But more and more companies have already accepted that challenge.

The problem in assessing Mac total cost of ownership comes at the low end. Apple should create economy-oriented, business-class desktop and notebook hardware. The iMac is a home machine. And while the MacBook is fairly inexpensive, there are too many tradeoffs — such as its Chiclet-like keyboard — for it to succeed in the business world. (Not everyone agrees with me on this point. Some believe that Apple’s consumer Macs are enterprise-worthy.)

Since Apple offers very few SKUs, it’s almost impossible for enterprise buyers to save money by specifying this or that lesser feature in order to reduce cost. Without a model specifically designed for low-end business desktops, Apple just isn’t competitive there.

Microsoft’s buzz kill

There was a time when people jokingly described Apple as Microsoft’s advanced software lab. Anyone who follows operating systems — please, be objective if your knee-jerk reaction is to disagree — has to realize that Microsoft has imitated literally hundreds of features and behaviors of Apple’s OS X. Yes, there are some advantages that originated with Microsoft (such as file icon thumbnail previews). But OS X is clearly leading the desktop OS parade. Everyone is copying Apple — and with good reason.

The time for joking has passed. Microsoft hasn’t exactly failed with Vista. But it’s more like a double than a home run. Apple is innovating not just with the software and hardware it creates, but with the value proposition it is building in the marketplace. Apple hasn’t ever been particularly good about that before. Sure, it’s managed to appeal to people’s aesthetic sensibilities, but almost never to people’s wallets. While Macs still aren’t cheap, you get a lot more bang for the buck than you once did.

And that’s why Microsoft should read the vibe and think twice about ignoring Apple this time. Microsoft nearly missed the boat on the Internet last decade. It backed into a giant antitrust brouhaha. It has had huge problems with security this decade. Through its own inattention to Internet Explorer, it allowed Mozilla’s Firefox to gain a bridgehead on browser market share. Even dyed-in-the-wool Windows enterprises are fed up with me-too Microsoft upgrades, the never-ending blizzard of security patches, the increasing hardware requirements for Vista, volume licensing snafus, and a litany of other complaints and sore points.

Nothing lasts forever. The bloom is coming off the rose on Microsoft. I would never put it past the software giant to come up with a way to remake itself in a better light. But the current course doesn’t appear to me to lead in that direction. As much as Apple is doing things right, Microsoft is doing things wrong. That’s a great combination for Apple, if it can keep walking the current tightrope.

In the end, this is about perception. It isn’t about Apple’s market share or even its quarterly sales numbers. (Apple’s notebook computer sales for the fourth quarter were 4.1 percent of all portable computer sales, according to DisplaySearch.) What this is about is that Apple is reaching the right people with its product, winning new converts, Windows user by Windows user — and creating buzz.

How do you measure buzz? You don’t. It’s something that experienced people in this industry can just feel. And that’s the condition Microsoft should fear. Because buzz can turn into something much harder to combat than sheer numbers.

Scot Finnie is Computerworld’s online editorial director.


Via Macworld
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This is the most level headed opinion column about Apple and Microsoft that I have ever read and I felt it was worth posting here. Scot Finnie has always been a Windows user and when he switched to the Mac platform, he realised how much better it was - just like thousands of other people.

Windows users around the world say that when people switch from Windows to Mac, they become fanboys. What they don't realise is that this statement itself gives away the immense insecurity they feel. They know that if people become fanboys on switching to a Mac, there's got to be some reason behind it. They do not gain anything by supporting Apple. They do so because they know it is the better option. :)
 

anandk

Distinguished Member
TRUE !

microsoft shud fear apple ! in fact it is my considered opinion that any market leader MUST (not fear really...thats being a litle too colorful) be AWARE (or atmost WARY) of its closest competitors. and, well quite far away, apple IS the closest corporate competitor ms has.

objectively speaking, mac NEEDS TO integrate itself with windows in view of the latters really l-a-r-g-e user base. so mac now taking steps "to move fluidly into and out of the world of Microsoft Windows and its applications" is a step necessitated out of its own complusions; and not out of choice; or love for windows users !

being a giant tends to make most entities a little lethargic. but on my redmond visit i learnt things which were rather impressive. ms is alive and kicking...and kicking hard ! esp the work which dr gary flake (founder director of live labs) and his live labs is doing...is the futue. his presentation impressed me the most there !
*battellemedia.com/images/gwf-small-tm.jpg
(now someone pls dont say gary flake looks like a mac user :D)

and ya mac and competitors are on ms radars, make no mistake about that ! it admiited very candidly it had misd the internet and the search bus ! but the algorithms for search are ever-changing and the future was where they (live) r working hard now. search as we know it WILL be re-defined !

change is the only constant. nothing lasts for ever. either u keep reinventing urself or u perish. to me, microsoft looks ever alert and responsive to tackle this scenario; prophecies, by all and sundry, notwithstanding.

the future will be towards integration. and while some respective fans of each will continue to slug it out at ground zero saying 'mine is better than urs', dont be surprised if u see new alignments, new corprate formations or even creations of new cartels in the future ! its not so far-fetched an idea, really !
 
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aryayush

aryayush

Aspiring Novelist
anandk said:
TRUE !

microsoft shud fear apple ! in fact it is my considered opinion that any market leader MUST (not fear really...thats being a litle too colorful) be AWARE (or atmost WARY) of its closest competitors. and, well quite far away, apple IS the closest corporate competitor ms has.

objectively speaking, mac NEEDS TO integrate itself with windows in view of the latters really l-a-r-g-e user base. so mac now taking steps "to move fluidly into and out of the world of Microsoft Windows and its applications" is a step necessitated out of its own complusions; and not out of choice; or love for windows users !

being a giant tends to make most entities a little lethargic. but on my redmond visit i learnt things which were rather impressive. ms is alive and kicking...and kicking hard ! esp the work which dr gary flake (founder director of live labs) and his live labs is doing...is the futue. his presentation impressed me the most there !
*battellemedia.com/images/gwf-small-tm.jpg
(now someone pls dont say gary flake looks like a mac user :D)

and ya mac and competitors are on ms radars, make no mistake about that ! it admiited very candidly it had misd the internet and the search bus ! but the algorithms for search are ever-changing and the future was where they (live) r working hard now. search as we know it WILL be re-defined !

change is the only constant. nothing lasts for ever. either u keep reinventing urself or u perish. to me, microsoft looks ever alert and responsive to tackle this scenario; prophecies, by all and sundry, notwithstanding.

the future will be towards integration. and while some respective fans of each will continue to slug it out at ground zero saying 'mine is better than urs', dont be surprised if u see new alignments, new corprate formations or even creations of new cartels in the future ! its not so far-fetched an idea, really !
A very nice, objective viewpoint. I appreciate it. :)

I think Microsoft, as a corporation, is not doing much wrong. But when it comes to Windows, they seriously need to improve their standards to ever compete with Mac OS X. They have always been playing catch-up. I know MS can afford to be loose because of the huge user base and the inertia and initial cost of ownership that prevent people from switching sides - but the scenario is changing, albeit at a very slow pace. Apple is picking up more and more followers and Windows is being criticised by almost every critic on the planet, including long time Windows supporters such as Scot Finnie and Paul Thurrott.

If Vista had taken one or at the maximum, two years of development, it would have been an awesome product. But if this is what Microsoft has to offer at the end of five long years, their development team seriously needs to take a look at the things they are doing wrong.
 
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iMav

The Devil's Advocate
aryayush said:
If Vista had taken one or at the maximum, two years of development, it would have been an awesome product. But if this is what Microsoft has to offer at the end of five long years, their development team seriously needs to take a look at the things they are doing wrong.
well i think that we dont know what goes on behind closed doors so it would be rather difficult for us to comment on that ... i am sure that bill gates too didnot anticipate a 5 yr gap (hampers profits for sure) but then there had to have been some serious reasons as to why vista took so long and in all fairness it is a good product comparing it to the previous versions ... and the time iv spent on vista well they have given windows OS an absolute make over of sorts

coming back to the topic ... as anand said it is important for companies to know what the other is doing for eg. nokia and SE, they have to know what the other is upto coz its a competitive market so any edge 1 gets over the other is all that makes the difference
 

anandk

Distinguished Member
anandk said:
the future will be towards integration. and while some respective fans of each will continue to slug it out at ground zero saying 'mine is better than urs', dont be surprised if u see new alignments, new corprate formations or even creations of new cartels in the future ! its not so far-fetched an idea, really !

Microsoft has JUST started private testing of the next version of Office for the Macintosh, which is due out in the second half of the year. Microsoft has started private testing of the next version of Office for the Macintosh Office 2008 for Mac, as the product is known, helps bring the desktop suite back into compatibility with two key technologies. First, the product is the first version of Office that runs natively on both Intel- and Power PC-based Macs.
 

shantanu

Technomancer
IN a hundred years also Microsoft is not needed to fear Apple... Apple is a very nice company with great products , but Comparing them to M$ is a threat to Apple... :p
 

nepcker

Proud Mac Pro Owner
Microsoft has JUST started private testing of the next version of Office for the Macintosh, which is due out in the second half of the year. Microsoft has started private testing of the next version of Office for the Macintosh Office 2008 for Mac, as the product is known, helps bring the desktop suite back into compatibility with two key technologies. First, the product is the first version of Office that runs natively on both Intel- and Power PC-based Macs.
Yes, Office for Mac is great - greater than the Windows version. I've now moved from MS Office to OpenOffice.org-based office suite called NeoOffice. I use Keynote 3 for my presentations. Though I may purchase Office for Mac 2008 too (I just have the Office for Mac 2004 trial that came with my mac - it feels like an OS X app, not Windows app, so I like it).

IN a hundred years also Microsoft is not needed to fear Apple... Apple is a very nice company with great products , but Comparing them to M$ is a threat to Apple...
How is comparing them to M$ is a threat to Apple?
 

shantanu

Technomancer
its because M$ is a relatively a very big infrastructured company in comparision to Apple, and the money and market stability is well very higher than Apple. :)
 

nepcker

Proud Mac Pro Owner
^^ Apple is a pretty big company itself and comparing Apple to M$ is not a threat at all. It's not about how much money you have - it's about the people you have, how you're led, and how much you get it.
 

shantanu

Technomancer
M$ is having 70000 Employees,,, how much does Apple have... Microsoft is a Billonare company.. Apple isnt.. and 120000 people are affilated to M$.. 85% or more population uses windows ... i aint fighting.. but really you cant compare M$ to Apple...
 

nepcker

Proud Mac Pro Owner
Apple has 17,787 full-time; 2,399 temporary employees. Apple is also a multi-billionaire company. And it also doesn't matters on market share - Apple's market share is bigger in the computing industry than BMW and Mercedes combined have in the automotive market. What's wrong with being BMW or Mercedes? Do you buy an iPod because it has the highest market share? No. You buy it because it is the greatest portable media plater.
 

shantanu

Technomancer
i think you cant provide a SOLID reason.. the reasons are lame,, so do dome R&D first.. buddy!!! nothing personal.. but look at the huge margin in workers and all..
 

manishjha18

In the zone
I think its a dream for Mac to even compete with Mac--don’t know why people think cool to abuse Microsoft--and even if they do it why don’t they switch over to Linux--its better than Mac any day.

Q: What is the difference between a Mac User and a Terrorist?
A: You can negotiate with a terrorist
 

nepcker

Proud Mac Pro Owner
^^LOL! But Windows and Linux fans also don't move to other OSes.

Linux is better than Windows - no doubt about it. But Mac OS X is way better than Linux.

@shantanu_webmaster:
It really doesn't matter how many employees you have. Even if they have far more money/employees than Apple, all they can do is copy from Apple and other companies. Can you give me a "solid" reply to this? Can you tell me a couple of revolutionary things that are 100% microsoft original?
 

gxsaurav

You gave been GXified
Apple has 17,787 full-time; 2,399 temporary employees. Apple is also a multi-billionaire company. And it also doesn't matters on market share - Apple's market share is bigger in the computing industry than BMW and Mercedes combined have in the automotive market. What's wrong with being BMW or Mercedes? Do you buy an iPod because it has the highest market share? No.

Source about the Apple employee count plz. R U an Apple employee or working in there marketing team?
You buy it because it is the greatest portable media plater.

& I thought Pizza Platters are best :D. About it being gr8....ya right. Already proven many times how lame & close technology iPod is.
 

nepcker

Proud Mac Pro Owner
Source about the Apple employee count plz. R U an Apple employee or working in there marketing team?
I copy-n-pasted it from Wikipedia. And I'm not an Apple employee - I'm an Apple customer.
 
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aryayush

aryayush

Aspiring Novelist
@shantanu_webmaster, everyone - including nepcker - knows that Microsoft is several times larger than Apple. They have a near monopoly in the computer software industry.

What nepcker challenged, and rightly so, is your silly statement that "Apple is a very nice company with great products , but Comparing them to M$ is a threat to Apple...". That is a very ridiculous claim. How can comparing a company to another be a threat to either company! Do think before you post something. No hard feelings. :)
 

iMav

The Devil's Advocate
nepcker said:
You buy it because it is the greatest portable media plater.
i dis-agree and will under no circumsatnces say its the best its not coz i own it and my frenz own others so i can comment on the portable media player segment
 
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aryayush

aryayush

Aspiring Novelist
gx_saurav said:
Source about the Apple employee count plz.
You are not in any authority to demand the source from him or anyone else. If you do not wish to believe his statement, you are free to do so.

gx_saurav said:
Already proven many times how lame & close technology iPod is.
You say that Windows is obviously better than Mac OS X because almost everyone in the world and their brother uses Windows.

But when it comes to the iPod, your logic does not hold true anymore. Great! I appreciate your equity of scale.

You cannot have it both ways - either iPods are the best music players in the market or Windows sucks! Choose whichever you want.
 
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