As expected, Windows 8 tablets not price competitive with Android or iPad

Don’t say I didn’t warn you, but reports from Taiwan are now confirming what I’ve said since the beginning of this year. Windows 8 tablets will not be price competitive with Android tablets and the iPad, even for the ARM version, so expect the Intel tablets to cost even more.

ARM situation is very bad

Manufacturers from Taiwan are complaining that Windows 8 RT licenses will cost them $90-$100 per device. That may not seem that much at first (even though it should compared to Android, which is free), but this $100 comes on top of a cost of components of around $300 for an ARM tablet. So Microsoft is increasing the tablet’s price by 33% with their Windows 8 license.

Keep in mind that as a general rule of thumb, and unless the manufacturers are a very efficient supply-chain (like Apple) or unless they minimize their profit margins as much as possible, then the retail price of these consumer electronics products should cost around twice as much as the price for the components at retail. Because you still have to account for stuff like salaries, research, distribution, packaging, marketing, and finally the profit for the company.

So if they use $200 components, add the Windows 8 license of $100, and double up to get the retail price that’s $600 at a minimum for a Windows 8 ARM tablet that will not compete with the high-end Android tablets or the iPad in terms of specs and performance. To get the latest specs, including high-resolution displays like the one in iPad (which should appear for Android tablets soon, too), you need to pay at least $300 in components like Apple does.

Intel situation, even worse

Even so, if you add the Windows 8 price now, and double it up, you get an $800 tablet. But let’s be generous and say it’s only a $700 tablet – without LTE, and without any significant number of tablet apps (still talking about Windows RT tablets so far). Remember when Motorola tried putting a $700-$800 tablet sans apps on the market; remember the Xoom? That didn’t go so well, did it?

For Intel tablets, the situation is even worse. ARM chips at the high-end cost around $20-$25. A dual core Atom (which is what the first Windows 8 tablets will have) should cost up to $100 with its affiliated components. Again, when you double up these component costs, the number get pretty crazy, and if these tablets would have exactly the same specs, build material, slimness, etc, as the high-end ARM tablets and the iPad, the only way the manufacturers could make them cost only 50% more than the competitors, is by seriously undercutting their own profits.

Not much of a choice

So the customers of Windows 8 tablets will be stuck between getting a significantly more expensive Windows RT tablet that has about the same battery life as Android tablets and iPad. At least in theory it should work well, since I presume they removed some of the bloat from the x86 version, and it will only have to deal with light HTML5  apps anyway – or they will have to choose an even more expensive Atom tablet, quite likely twice as much as some high-end ARM tablets by then. This won’t even have anything close to retina display because Atom can’t handle such high resolutions (ironically, this might bring them in line with the ARM tablets pricing which do have high-resolution displays, but hopefully customers are smart enough to realize the difference).

windows 8 arm qualcommGranted, the x86 version will have more apps than the RT version, but those apps will not be optimized for touch, and perhaps even more importantly, they won’t be optimized for running on such low-end hardware. Why is it that Android or iOS apps can seem to run just as fast, if not faster than your normal programs on a quad core PC (which in theory, it should be 50x faster)? Because those are mobile apps, imagined and built to work on mobiles and be lean and fast.

The x86 Atom tablets will not benefit from that, and the experience should be as poor as it ever was on a Windows tablet – expecially a low-end one. I will safely assume that a $1200 Core i5 tablet, like the one they used to demo Windows 8 earlier this year, is out of the question for most people. Plus, the battery would last only 2-3 hours under heavy use.

Conclusion

I think there will be quite a few manufacturers pushing for Windows 8 tablets, because they are desperate for a successful alternative to the iPad, but I fear they will be disappointed when they realize most people won’t be interested in buying much more expensive tablets than what’s already available.

Microsoft made a mistake choosing Windows 8 instead of WP7 to be their tablet OS, but it was an intentional “mistake”. I knew they would do this even way before they announced this move – because I knew how Microsoft would think in this situation. Instead of doing anything that jeopardizes their Windows revenues (in their minds), they’d rather choose to ask $100 for their tablet version than $15 like for WP7.  This is the main reason they chose it.

They were afraid that this will be the future, a future where they have to charge $15 for their OS. And I expect them to dramatically raise the price on Windows Phone 8 OS, too – maybe to $50 at least. That would make them even more expensive than the high-end Android phones, but still with 2 year old hardware.

Unfortunately for Microsoft, they have to realize that this is not 2005 anymore. They now live in a world where the free open source Android dominates in the mobile market, and that puts pressure even on their other products’ pricing. They can’t just keep on charging $100 per license as if nothing has changed.


This article, As expected, Windows 8 tablets not price competitive with Android or iPad , was originally published at AndroidAuthority.com - Your Android News Source.


Microsoft playing dirty again, plans to ban Firefox on ARM-based Windows 8 PCs and tablets

firefox vs internet explorer

Although for many it might be a model worth following, Microsoft has a longstanding tradition of not only discouraging competition, but trying to eliminate it by any means possible. That includes dirty, unorthodox, and sometimes even illegal moves through which they’ve managed to monopolize the desktop operating system market, and, for a long while back in the ‘90s and early ‘2000s, the browser market.

Internet Explorer was practically the only browsing solution users could possibly “choose” until 2004, when Mozilla launched Firefox. Not only was the browsing market situation unhealthy and unnatural, but as history has proven, it also delayed some technological advancements.

While we all thought that the browser monopolies were a thing of the past, Microsoft is apparently trying to once again eliminate competition by all means, including dirty moves. At least that’s what Mozilla officials are claiming, saying that Microsoft will prohibit Firefox from upcoming Windows 8 computers and tablets using ARM processors.

“They’re trying to make a new version of their operating system which denies their users choice, competition, and innovation.” said Harvey Anderson, Mozilla’s general counsel, in a recent blog post, adding that “making IE the only browser on that platform is a complete return to the digital dark ages when there was only one browser on the Windows platform.”

As most of you might know, Microsoft’s Internet Explorer has been on a downward slope for the past few years, but is still number one in worldwide usage, beating both Google Chrome and Mozilla Firefox, according to market share reports.

However, recent estimates have shown that IE is no longer the most used browser in many important countries, including the United States. Furthermore, global desktop stats from StatCounter show that Internet Explorer has a mere 3% lead over Chrome in April 2012 (34% – 31%), while Firefox is itself pretty close, with a 10% handicap against Microsoft’s browser. It’s no wonder therefore that Microsoft is doing its best to prevent competition from taking the lead in such a high stakes battle.

Getting back to the issue at hand, we should mention that Microsoft has declined to respond to Harvey Anderson’s claims, which means that we might not know the whole truth on the matter as both sides see it. Also, Anderson admits that Microsoft might not end up forbidding the use of other browsers besides IE on their future machines and that they “could have subsequent releases that allow third-party browsers.”

If, however, Microsoft will choose to fight this battle in such an “unmanly” fashion, Mozilla will surely not refuse the fight. “Sometimes they need some pressure. If it turns out to be legal pressure, that could be the thing.” said Harvey Anderson, suggesting that his company is not afraid of suing Microsoft for abusive conduct.

Microsoft’s Windows 8 could be released as soon as next fall, which is probably when we’ll know for sure if ARM-based PCs and tablets running the new OS will in fact only support Internet Explorer. It will also be interesting to see Google’s reaction to this whole shenanigan, as Google’s Chrome browser is the runner-up with the most chances to dethrone Internet Explorer.

Could we be heading towards a long legal war between Microsoft, on one side, and Mozilla and Google, on the other? If so, do you think that Microsoft has any chance of leaving unscathed?


This article, Microsoft playing dirty again, plans to ban Firefox on ARM-based Windows 8 PCs and tablets , was originally published at AndroidAuthority.com - Your Android News Source.


Daily Update for May 9, 2012

It's the TUAW Daily Update, your source for Apple news in a convenient audio format. You'll get all the top Apple stories of the day in three to five minutes for a quick review of what's happening in the Apple world.

You can listen to today's Apple stories by clicking the inline player (requires Flash) or the non-Flash link below. To subscribe to the podcast for daily listening through iTunes, click here.


No Flash? Click here to listen.

Subscribe via RSS

Daily Update for May 9, 2012 originally appeared on TUAW - The Unofficial Apple Weblog on Wed, 09 May 2012 15:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Office for Mac 14.2.2 rollup patch now available (Updated)

Image

Update: A reader tells us "After installing the updates from Microsoft, each of the programs wanted me to re-enter a product key as though I never entered one many months ago." He confirmed this as an issue according to a Microsoft support call, although we don't know how many people it might affect.

Microsoft today announced the availability of the Office for Mac 2011 14.2.2 Update. According to Microsoft, "this update fixes extremely important issues and also helps improve security. It includes fixes for vulnerabilities that an attacker can use to overwrite the contents of your computer's memory with malicious code."

This is a rollup patch, meaning that it includes all of the improvements released in previous Office 2011 updates since the 14.1.0 update. To install the update, you must be running Mac OS X 10.5.8 or later and have previously installed the Office 2011 for Mac 14.1 update. Office users can verify that the previous update is in place by opening any Office application and checking the "About" dialog box.

The update should appear if you're running Microsoft AutoUpdate, or it can be downloaded directly from Microsoft.

Office for Mac 14.2.2 rollup patch now available (Updated) originally appeared on TUAW - The Unofficial Apple Weblog on Wed, 09 May 2012 11:45:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Daily Update for May 8, 2012

It's the TUAW Daily Update, your source for Apple news in a convenient audio format. You'll get all the top Apple stories of the day in three to five minutes for a quick review of what's happening in the Apple world.

You can listen to today's Apple stories by clicking the inline player (requires Flash) or the non-Flash link below. To subscribe to the podcast for daily listening through iTunes, click here.


No Flash? Click here to listen.

Subscribe via RSS

Daily Update for May 8, 2012 originally appeared on TUAW - The Unofficial Apple Weblog on Tue, 08 May 2012 14:15:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Microsoft wants Mac SkyDrive users

The competition between Microsoft and Apple is moving gradually from the desktop to the cloud. As noted by The Next Web, a recent marketing push by Microsoft tries to woo Mac users away from iCloud and into Microsoft's cloud-based SkyDrive service. The webpage and video highlights the advantages of SkyDrive by pointing out that Microsoft's service gives you access to every file, everywhere, even across platforms and, unlike iCloud, it integrates well with Microsoft Office.

These features of SkyDrive may not entice Mac users to abandon iCloud, but it could get those Office users to consider using the service along with iCloud. You potentially could use iCloud for your music and photos and push your productivity stuff into Office and SkyDrive. I personally wouldn't do it because iCloud and DropBox works just fine for my needs, but heavy Office users might want to take a closer look at Microsoft's service. SkyDrive includes 7 GB of free storage and has an app for the iPhone and iPad.

[Via The Next Web]

Microsoft wants Mac SkyDrive users originally appeared on TUAW - The Unofficial Apple Weblog on Tue, 08 May 2012 09:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Microsoft sides with Barnes & Noble to tackle Amazon and Apple, to invest $605 million in B&N

GoodEreader

Though Microsoft is no stranger to patent battles of its own, the company isn’t shy of reaching a win-win settlement with other corporations. It looks like Redmond just killed two birds with one stone when it decided to jump into the e-book market by investing in Barnes & Noble’s Nook reader, while settling its patent lawsuit against the e-reader company.

Announced yesterday, the deal between Microsoft and Barnes & Noble Inc. sees Microsoft getting 17.6% share of the newly established e-book and college book business unit, in exchange for $300 million, which will leave B&N as the majority shareholder with $1.4 billion. Over the next five years, Microsoft plans to inject an additional $305 million.

Barnes & Noble has toyed with the idea of spinning off its Nook and e-book business, which has been the saving grace for the company’s brick-and-mortar bookstore chain, at a time when less people choose to purchase physical books and opt for digital ones instead. Though it wasn’t first to release an e-book reader to the market, Barnes & Noble’s Nook digital reader was still able to capture a 27% market share, against Amazon’s Kindle 60% share and Apple’s 10%.

With the backing of Microsoft, Barnes & Noble will have more financial resources to support the R&D effort of its e-book reader, which has proven to be quite expensive and dragged down its profit in the past. According to William Lynch, the company’s chief executive officer, the partnership will allow Nook to branch out to the international market and to develop new reading software that will run on Windows platform.

Microsoft, on the other hand, will get a strong footing right off the bat in the increasingly lucrative digital book market, one that even Apple has been pushing aggressively with the introduction of iTunes U, a dedicated college textbook service. With six months to go before Microsoft is expected to launch its touch-friendly Windows 8 operating system, this guarantees the inclusion of a Nook app on the upcoming tablets. Let’s not discount the possibility of future Nook tablets and e-readers running Windows 8 OS as well.

An analyst at McAdams Wright Ragen, Sid Parakh, puts it best: “It gets Microsoft in the game for e-readers, and gives them access to a market that has been growing nicely and they’ve basically sat out of. It also makes Windows 8 a more compelling platform from an e-readers perspective,” he said.

Considering the amount of money that Microsoft has, the planned $305 million can be considered as a very small investment, but it’s one that can pay off nicely for both sides.


This article, Microsoft sides with Barnes & Noble to tackle Amazon and Apple, to invest $605 million in B&N , was originally published at AndroidAuthority.com - Your Android News Source.


LG bids Windows Phone adieu, plans to focus on Android [Update: Denied]

Bloomberg

With Windows Phone failing to make a dent in the smartphone market, at least in its pre-Nokia Lumia 900 days, some phone manufacturers are getting uncomfortable with the special relationship between Microsoft and Nokia. One supporter of the platform is even going so far as to stop releasing Windows Phone altogether.

LG Electronics, South Korea’s second largest phone manufacturer and a loyal supporter of Microsoft’s Windows Phone from the beginning, told Korea Herald that they are not going to release any Windows Phone in the near future. Claiming that the company hasn’t reaped any financial benefits from partnering with Microsoft, the spokesperson said that “the total unit of Windows Phone sold in the global market is not a meaningful figure.” The Windows Phone woes, we’re assuming, contributed to LG’s painful failure to make money over the last seven quarters. But it’s not all bad news for LG, because in Q1 2012 the company has finally got back in the black territory.

Despite the break up, LG plans to maintain its good standing with Microsoft and the Koreans will still “continue research and development efforts” on Microsoft’s mobile operating system.  We’re not sure what this implies, but given that Steve Ballmer is apparently scheduled to visit Seoul on May 22 for a tech conference, it’s likely that LG’s double talk is just a way to get some attention from Microsoft’s top guy.

With Windows Phone device development on hold, the spokesperson said that LG will focus on developing Android smartphones, which seems to be where the money’s at for a lot of manufacturers, with Samsung raking in top dollars and HTC expecting to make a return to profit in the next quarter.

In any case, we still think that the more is the merrier when it comes to mobile platform competition and how it fosters innovation. Regardless of LG’s not-so-memorable contribution to Windows Phone’s roster of handsets, the company’s decision to abandon ship will be a blow to Microsoft, though the jury’s still out on whether it’s just a minor or major one.

On the up side, this means we’ll get more LG handsets of the Android flavor this year. Any particular model you’re looking forward to the most?

[Update] According to Pocket Lint, a LG spokesperson dismissed Korea Herald’s report as speculation:

“None of it is true. Korea Herald is showing its speculative side again,” a spokesman for the company in Korea exclusively told Pocket-lint before adding, “We are still on board with Windows Phone, but right now, we’re focusing on Android because that’s where the demand is.”

So, what is it: mind games or unsubstantiated rumor?


This article, LG bids Windows Phone adieu, plans to focus on Android [Update: Denied] , was originally published at AndroidAuthority.com - Your Android News Source.


Apple, Microsoft asked to explain pricing to Australian government

Apple and Microsoft are among a few tech companies going before the Australian Parliament this week, asked to explain what many are seeing as price gouging in the Australian market. Here in the US, for example, Apple's Mac OS X Server 10.6 sells for $499, but in Australia, the same software sells for $699. Similarly, iTunes albums that sell for $9.99 in the US often sell for more than $20 overseas, despite the Australian and US dollar being less than a few cents different.

In the past, electronics companies have claimed that Australia is a smaller market to deal with, and that setting up support structures and other delivery systems there raise costs. But Parliamentary representatives are saying those excuses aren't good enough, and are inviting Apple, Microsoft, and others to represent themselves in Australia this week.

[via TechCrunch]

Apple, Microsoft asked to explain pricing to Australian government originally appeared on TUAW - The Unofficial Apple Weblog on Mon, 30 Apr 2012 16:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Microsoft adds new scalp to its Android licensee collection

steve ballmer

Steve Ballmer, all warm and fuzzy

You might know that Microsoft is the owner of several important mobile-related patents, and that the Redmond giant has never been afraid to use said patents to squeeze some bucks from… well, everyone in sight. That’s the bad news.

The good news is Microsoft, unlike another iconic company, is willing to talk before shooting, although some would replace “talk” with “extort the living  daylights”. As a result, many Android manufacturers (supposedly infringing MS’ patents) have entered licensing agreements with Steve Ballmer’s company, which sees them paying a fixed amount per device sold, in exchange for some legal peace of mind. Among the notable exceptions, we have Barnes & Noble and Motorola (close to be owned by Google now), who preferred to take it to court rather than to give in to Microsoft’s demands.

On the other hand, other major Android OEMs, including the mother-of-all-Android-manufacturers, Samsung, have accepted Microsoft’s indecent proposal.

Microsoft’s chief legal head, Horacio Gutierrez has bragged that the tech mammoth now has licensing agreements covering 70% of all devices sold in the US. It looks that Microsoft can add other notch to its list, as the Taiwanese electronics maker Pegatron has announced that it settled its legal business with the software maker.

In line with the agreement, Pegatron will pay MS an undisclosed fee for every tablet, smartphone, e-reader, Chromebook, or game console it sells. Importantly, Pegatron also makes computers running Windows 7, so the Taiwanese had all the interest to maintain their good standing with MS.

With this new addition to its collection of Android licensees (which is in the dozens now), Microsoft has agreements with four out of the top five Taiwanese ODMs. Just imagine the amount of cash flowing towards MS from the bustling Taiwanese tech sector, which churns millions of devices out every week.

It’s no wonder that Microsoft is so serious about its patent peddling operation – on a side note, a few weeks ago, Microsoft agreed to buy $1 billion worth of patents from struggling web giant AOL, only to sell the same patents to Facebook (who’s engaged in an arms race to protect itself against Yahoo and others) about a week later.


This article, Microsoft adds new scalp to its Android licensee collection , was originally published at AndroidAuthority.com - Your Android News Source.