Path: utzoo!utgpu!jarvis.csri.toronto.edu!mailrus!cornell!uw-beaver!rice!sun-spots-request From: smith@origin.life.uiuc.edu (Steven Smith) Newsgroups: comp.sys.sun Subject: Suns in the Personal Computer market Keywords: Miscellaneous Message-ID: <8904222133.AA04813@origin.life.uiuc.edu> Date: 6 May 89 08:20:06 GMT Sender: usenet@rice.edu Organization: Sun-Spots Lines: 49 Approved: Sun-Spots@rice.edu Original-Date: Sat, 22 Apr 89 14:33:32 PDT X-Sun-Spots-Digest: Volume 7, Issue 270, message 17 of 19 With the advent of the new SUN 3/80, Sun is in a position that the company has never been in before. Sun can now offer a system that is functionally as good as (better) than a similarly equipped Macintosh for a lower price. This places Sun in a much larger market share than they have held in the past. Sun can now deliver software "compatible" products that span all the way from desktop micro to graphic workstations to large scale mainframes, and in the process, blur the lines dividing them a bit more. But will Sun be ready for the micro market? Sun has always been a pioneer in the bang per buck club, under cutting the likes of DEC and IBM in any price/performance comparison. They accomplished this by limiting their profit margin in favor of market share. Well, once again it is time for Sun to take this approach, but this time it must be in software. In order for Sun to make any dent in the personal computer market, their notions about software pricing must change. Since their migration to SunOS 4.0, Sun has made it known they see software as a profitable commoditiy. The "unbundling" of 4.0 says this loud and clear. Fortran and Pascal, once considered part of the standard Unix release are now considered unneeded by the average user, and thus should be sold seperately. At the same time, new tools such as SunWrite/Draw/Paint are priced at an outrageous $1000, even though such tools are considered mandatory for any functional personal computer in today's market. Sun will sell such tools as NeWS for a reasonable cost. But the primary reason for this appears to lie in Sun's wishes to make NeWS a standard. If Sun does plan to move into the low-cost market, then they must make it affordable to program and use their machines. There is a lot to be said for the NeXT machine for this reason alone. The $6500 that an educator pays gets him much more than just a black box. Why Jobs even bundled Mathematica, not to mention all of the basic tools. So Sun, if you are listening, you have a chance to knock the top right off of the low end market. But you must make it worth while for people to make the big jump to Unix. You must convince the cottage software industry that you will help not hinder them in development. And you MUST make it cheaper for people to get basic work done. Steve Smith U of Illinois, Microbiology smith@origin.life.uiuc.edu These opinions are my own, and not necessarily those of the University of Illinois, faculty, or board of trustees. /*Please mail flames directly, no need to jam the Digest*/ [[ Whoosh! --wnl ]]