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[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]Re: [tlug] Re: Post my article on tlug.jp?
- Date: Thu, 26 Jul 2007 13:39:40 +0900
- From: "Stephen J. Turnbull" <stephen@example.com>
- Subject: Re: [tlug] Re: Post my article on tlug.jp?
- References: <46A6130A.3020108@autotelic.com> <d8fcc0800707241540q1c94dc5eqdb70f17135f7c846@mail.gmail.com> <46A69804.30304@gmail.com> <46A6A5CA.6020404@articlass.org> <d8fcc0800707242216w1ae2ea70i41307900e7c00dbd@mail.gmail.com> <46A76AD9.3080209@articlass.org>
Dave M G writes: > http://tlug.jp/tmp/dave-mg.html > > Please post here if you have any major objections. No objections to posting it publicly. > Corrections on points of fact or grammatical errors You consistently misspell "Kingsley" as "Kinglsey". > I hope you all like it, Generally, it's very good. For my taste it's probably about 30% too long. AFAICS it's still the case that variety and slickness of apps still goes to Mac and Windows. This is the so-called network externality effect: without paying customers, the app writers won't come, and without the apps, the customers don't. (Of course this is not the whole story, but it's an important influence IMO.) I have no evidence at the moment, so there's no reason to respond by editing the article. But for background, my feeling is that drivers really are important, although you kind of gloss over that. Not so much the customers worrying about supported hardware, but the app writers. Note that Microsoft taxes *both sides* of the market. Not only does it substantially enforce installation by PC manufacturers, but it also gets its drivers for free. My brother has worked on PC peripheral equipment at DEC and USR, and in both cases he said perhaps 40% of software engineering was directed at Microsoft and Apple compatibility, a burden borne by the peripheral manufacturers. He said it's nuts in most cases to lock out the Linux driver writers, as far as he can see; he suspects it's arm-twisting from the big customer more than protecting their own trade secrets. Some background that probably belong directly in the article: Ordinary people believe in dumping, but trade economists don't. Dumping cases are almost entirely driven by the political strength and historical monopoly power (which trickles down to the unions) of the domestic industry losing market share. U.S. companies (including Microsoft) engage in such "dumping" all the time, but they rarely get called on it. What's actually happening is price discrimination: you cover all the common overhead (eg, non-locale-dependent R&D) in the market where you have the strong brand (or other protection), and just recover costs and a sliver of operating profit in the market where you're still trying to establish a brand. True dumping (aka predatory pricing which doesn't even cover direct costs) is even more rare in international trade than in domestic trade. Complaints about dumping and other allegedly unfair trade practices (off-shore outsourcing and H1B visas, eg) play well on Slashdot, though. (Or at least they did when I swore off Slashdot for life because I was sick of seeing them. :-) Trade economists have been aware for years of the "loss-leader" nature of pirated software, and on the Free Software Business list (inactive for several years now) at least one guy from an emerging economy (Trinidad and Tobago) claimed that MSFT's enforcement activity seemed strategically aimed at the critical point where professionals started to depend on Windows-based accounting and so on. In some larger markets (Russia, China, and Japan), piracy was backed by government agencies, so the SPA obviously had to get the USTR to crack down on that. I guess this hasn't penetrated the Slashdot consciousness, though. So AFAIK Microsoft is aware of the loss-leader effect. I don't think they really need to worry about leaked memos, either. They simply reply that there's no conspiracy, they'll start distributing free copies in appropriate ways as soon as they can get piracy down to comfortable levels. They can explain the T&T case as "it wasn't worth cracking down until we saw piracy reached the small business, and then it took time to get it done."
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