[OT] Mac/Window duopoly assumptions

Roger Eller roger.e.eller at sealedair.com
Wed Oct 21 14:52:42 EDT 2015


Take a look inside corporate America.  Mostly PCs, mostly running Windows.
Refine this to companies who print on flexible packaging that require
precise calculations of image distortions when specific materials are run
through a heat-shrink tunnel, or convolved in many ways to meet other
manufacturing needs.  We use PC's and Macs, but the software we buy for the
PCs cost a minimum of $7,000. per seat.  Photoshop is a toy when it comes
to what we do.  I normally keep quiet when the fanboys chirp, but you
struck a nerve.  PC's are every bit as capable as a Mac, and we DO buy
software for them!  Gah!

~Roger


On Wed, Oct 21, 2015 at 11:58 AM, Bob Sneidar <bobsneidar at iotecdigital.com>
wrote:

> These things have been debated before. The question is not how many
> computers are out there with operating system n, but how much software do
> people with operating system n purchase. As it turns out, people who
> purchase the cheapest PC they can find are rarely interested in purchasing
> a lot of expensive software on top of it. Linux users are predominately so
> because the OS cost them nothing (although this has been the case for OS X
> users for some time, and now Windows is in the zero sum game). So they are
> likely interested in no cost open source apps. This leaves OS X users, who
> are willing to pay top dollar for a computer they feel is the best choice
> for them, and are much more likely to use the same judgement when
> purchasing software.
>
> As the saying goes, there are lies, there are Damnable lies, and then
> there are statistics.
>
> Bob S
>
>
> On Oct 20, 2015, at 11:46 , Richard Gaskin <ambassador at fourthworld.com
> <mailto:ambassador at fourthworld.com>> wrote:
>
> The desktop is a Windows story.  With 86% of the market, both Mac and
> Linux as niche players there.
>
> But the average price of a Mac is roughly twice the average price of a
> Windows-compatible PC, making that segment an unusually desirable
> demographic disproportionate to its market share.
>



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