by Doug Aamoth on October 14, 2008
Tags: apple, netbooks
When asked right now in regards to the possibility of an Apple netbook, Steve Employment said something towards the impact of, “The market is just acquiring started out – we’ll see the way it goes.”
Huh? Here’s how the netbook market’s heading,
Microsoft Office Home And Student 2010, Steve: just about each major personal computer organization features a netbook however you. Apple’s a prime candidate for any netbook, also. Know why? Since it is nearly the sole organization that may get away with offering it for well about $500. I wager Apple could offer a netbook for no less than $600 or even more.
So why should Apple,
Office Enterprise 2007 Key, particularly, get into netbooks?
1. It gets individuals in the door at a reduced price point. Remember the Mac Mini? The Mac Mini’s sole goal is usually to get folks that are afraid off by Apple’s comparatively high rates in to the game. But there is an issue; no one truly buys desktops any more — especially not novice and/or basic personal computer users. Everyone buys laptops now.
At $999+,
Windows 7 Starter, acquiring into an Apple laptop is a bit daunting for most men and women. But offer the Apple portable computing experience at near Mac Mini rates, and see what happens. There is no big danger in offering an Apple netbook at $600 or even more, so long as the next minimum expensive option remains at $999. PC notebook manufacturers don’t have that same luxury. You can’t price tag netbooks higher than your cheapest notebooks.
2. Netbooks are big on the whole alternative operating system thing. Regular men and women who would normally buy Windows-based computers are buying Linux-based netbooks without ever having used Linux before. It’s an even shorter leap to OS X. I mean, you already own an iPod, right? I use a PC for day-to-day stuff but I’d buy a Mac netbook for traveling simply because I know it’d be well-built, fast, and great for surfing the web.
“Regular” individuals would probably do the same thing. They’d say, “Oh,
Office 2010 Sale, this doesn’t have Windows but at least I’ve heard of Apple and I like the way it looks.” Plenty of individuals have no less than used a Mac before, also,
Microsoft Office 2007 Professional, even if they usually use Windows.
3. It is time for Apple to put out another small-ish laptop. No matter how light the MacBook Air gets, some individuals still want a computer that’s dimensionally small and lightweight. Howsabout a 10-inch screen? Even bring back the 12-inch screens. I saw an old 12-inch iBook G4 on the train the other week and did a double-take. They just don’t make ‘em like that any much more.
4. The iPhone and iPod Touch desperately need to be integrated with a thing substantial. I’m not saying to go the RedFly or Palm Folio (R.I.P.) route and make the netbook useless on its own, but maybe make the netbook the one device that lets you easily tether your iPhone or perhaps include pre-set wireless synchronization or one thing. I’m also a huge fan of the idea of letting the iPhone/iPod Touch serve as the trackpad for the device, but you want to make the netbook so that folks can buy it without having to own the other devices.
5. Make the decision easy for everyone by giving it a multi-touch screen like the one on the iPhone/iPod Touch and a good keyboard like the one on the MacBooks. Individuals complain relentlessly concerning the trackpads, mouse buttons, and keyboards on today’s currently available netbooks. It might take an innovator like Apple to fix that issue.