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Technology Stocks : Disk Drive Sector Discussion Forum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Mark Oliver who wrote (3795)6/24/1998 5:10:00 PM
From: LK2  Respond to of 9256
 
Mark and GM, additional thanks for your conference notes.

PS: Mark, you are getting to be a master of brevity.

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

***On topic/off topic***
Sub $100 computers are finally here!!!!!!
(Special promotion as part of Win 98 launch)

>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
news.com

Windows 98 sparks
midnight madness
By Stephanie Miles
Staff Writer, CNET NEWS.COM
June 24, 1998, 12:40 p.m. PT

Customers may be lining up around the block to get
Windows 98 after all.

That's because retailers are offering up $98
computers and other special, one-time deals to
bring customers into stores for the launch of
Microsoft's upgraded operating system.

Retailers will kick off a
series of special events at
the stroke of midnight
tonight in an effort to jump
start sales for Windows
98, the successor to
Windows 95. Although
the attending hoopla pales in comparison to the
global extravaganza surrounding the Windows 95
launch, the deals will likely draw some customers.

Tonight, CompUSA will host "Late Night at
CompUSA." Starting at midnight, the 98-minute
sale will include limited quantities of $98
CompUSA brand PCs equipped with Celeron
processors, as well as CD-ROM drives and
56-kbps modems for 98 cents. Computer buyers
can also get a $98 printer or monitor. By far the
largest Windows 98 third-party launch event, the
retailer is encouraging its customers to line up at its
stores.

"We believe this is the biggest software release
since the launch of Windows 95," said a
CompUSA spokesperson. "We also had an
exciting promotion for that launch, and this will be
similar." CompUSA would not comment on
whether the event was co-sponsored by Microsoft.

Tandy is hosting "block parties" at its 100
Computer City stores, according to a company
spokesman, except in cases "where city zoning may
be restrictive."

The block party theme will include tent sales, live
bands, vendor demonstrations. Additionally,
contest winners will be selected for a trip to San
Francisco for the Windows 98 official launch party
tomorrow at 5 p.m. The parties will start at 9 p.m.
tonight, and run through 1 a.m. in the morning, "but
if the customers are still there, and still want the
product, they will stay open later," according to the
Computer City spokesman.

Some promotions seem to come from the
bait-and-switch theory of retailing. T-Zone, a Bay
Area computer store, is offering free Windows 98
upgrades on select computers purchased tonight.
Most manufacturers have already announced free
upgrade programs.

Other computer stores, especially online retailers,
have been taking early orders of the upgrade, with
promises to deliver the product on June 25. Insight,
which counts 90 percent of its business from
business customers, says early Windows 98 sales
have been steady, despite the fact that Windows
98 is positioned as a consumer platform.

"We have focused in on selling the product over the
last few months," said David Williams, manager of
Microsoft products for Insight, where Windows 98
has been available for pre-orders for $89.90 since
March. "So the customers receive the product on
June 25."

Customers swept away by upgrade mania may also
begin purchasing hardware that's newly supported
by Windows 98, according to IDC analyst Kevin
Hause, a bonus for computer superstores.
CompUSA, Insight, and other computer retailers
may be an early beneficiary of the native support
Windows 98 offers for PC add-ons like DVD
drives, TV tuner cards, or any peripheral device
that connects to the computer through the Universal
Serial Bus (USB).

"It's a much larger milestone for retailers [than for
PC makers]," Hause said. "They really need to get
people into the stores to sell the add-ons, the USB
peripherals, as well as other software."

Most major PC makers have been shipping
upgrade certificates with their Windows 95
computers for the last few months, redeemable for
free or discounted upgrades to Windows 98.


Copyright c 1995-98 CNET, Inc.
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