QOTD
“Free is not a business model. We are a commercial company, we will look to gain revenue and profit from our activities. You’ll have to ask our competitors if they’ll make money on free things.”
“Free is not a business model. We are a commercial company, we will look to gain revenue and profit from our activities. You’ll have to ask our competitors if they’ll make money on free things.”
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John Paczkowski has been poking fun at the tech industry and the personalities that drive it since 1997. From 1999 to 2007, he wrote the award-winning tech news Web log Good Morning Silicon Valley for the San Jose Mercury News, Silicon Valley's daily newspaper. Read more »
Here is a statement of my ethics and coverage policies. It is more than most of you want to know, but, in the age of suspicion of the media, I am laying it all out.
12:58 AM: Breakfast: Two schools of fish from Tokyo Bay. Calories: 782,000. How I was feeling when I ate this: confused, irradiated, hating my size.
11:37 AM: Exercise: “Taxi Stomp” (alternating legs, for 30 blocks). Calories burned: 148,900,183.
1983. The Beatles announce their first tour in thirteen years, but likewise announce that Michael Jackson will be going on tour with them as a one gigantic mega-concert event.
Best video mashup ever.
A Facebook Memorial
Wow.
Worth it for the Rickrolling photo alone.
Excellent.
Flughumor!
… you vacuous, toffee-nosed, malodorous perverts
Stephen Fry and zoologist Mark Carwardine meet the kakapo — a fat, flightless and very randy rare parrot.
Comments
That is fundamentally untrue. Free is quite often a business model. Especially when you’re talking about software, which always requires some hardware to run it, to use it.
A Windows 7 Ultimate DVD for $399 is completely worthless unless you buy a PC from HP/Dell or Apple. Android is free but also worthless unless you buy an HTC or other generic handset to run it.
Other examples:
- Firefox is free to the user, but when you do a search query, Mozilla gets paid by the search engine.
- Windows or Windows Mobile pre-installed is essentially free to the user, but when you buy a PC or Windows Mobile phone, Microsoft gets paid by the PC or phone vendor.
- Razor handles are essentially free, the manufacturer makes nothing from them, but they make great money from the razor blades you need to use the handle.
- Google Search is free for the user, but Google gets paid by ad placements.
- iPhone OS and Blackberry OS are free for iPhone and Blackberry users, but Apple and RIM gets paid on the phone hardware.
As usual, Ballmer is so far out of touch that it’s amazing. It’s just amazing to hear him braying the same old foolishness. No wonder they are still trying to sell the same old Windows and Office on DVD that they sold on CD that they sold on 3.5 inch floppy that they sold on 5 inch floppy. They have not even adapted to the Internet yet at all.
Finally, I have to say, if I was the CEO of a company that just shat out Windows Mobile 6.5 a full 3 years after Windows Mobile 6.0 and the iPhone, I would resist the temptation to criticize anyone else’s mobile products or strategy. If Android is so bad, why has it replaced more than 50% of the Windows Mobile installations? Because Windows Mobile is 100 times worse.
Ballmer’s talk is even cheaper than Android. His company has done absolutely nothing but fail for the entire 21st century. Windows 2000 is the last product that you can even pretend is a success. XP sold a lot of copies, but it also created the Botnet and it has 20,000 new viruses a day and no in-place upgrade to Windows 7. These are terrible, terrible failures.
Posted by Fred Hamranhansenhansen at October 8th, 2009 at 7:11 pm