21:39, March 1st 2008
As you might already know, the retail copy of Windows Vista Ultimate will cost $320 instead of $399, while the upgrade version has been reduced from $259 to only $219.
Slashing the price of an operating system that has been introduced just one year ago is quite an unusual move, especially for Microsoft.
Officially, the company said the move is intended to speed up the Windows Vista adoption. It seems like after more than a year, Microsoft is still having hard times to convince users that the new OS is better than Windows XP.
Although Windows
And as the Windows Service Pack 3 is on its way, it will remain to be seen how it will play out for Microsoft. From another point of view, Microsoft’s move to cut the price of its flagship product is not such a big surprise. The market dynamic in 2008 is very different from the one in 2001, the year when Windows XP was introduced.
Still 90 percent of the PCs are running Windows, but in the past years Apple’s Mac OS X and Linux have gained a lot of traction amongst consumers, partially because Microsoft’s repeated delays of its Windows Vista.
According to the Gartner’s estimated in the last year only 39 percent of the new computers were shipped with
The same company, Gartner predicted last month that by 2011, Apple will double its
“Apple's gains in computer market share reflect as much on the failures of the rest of the industry as on Apple's success. Apple is challenging its competitors with software integration that provides ease of use and flexibility; continuous and more frequent innovation in hardware and software; and an ecosystem that focuses on interoperability across multiple devices (such as iPod and iMac cross-selling),” the market research company said.
Let us not forget that the Windows Vista was launched with a delay of at least one year and selling as a premium a product which may have been a real revolution in 2006 is hard even for a big tech giant like Microsoft. So maybe the price cuts are only the price Microsoft should pay for its delays.
However, it is interesting to see if the price cuts will help Microsoft to reach its target of 200 million Windows Vista units sold until the end of 2008.
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