Gene - Re: "I think iMac could impact the segment-0 market. Cheap, easy to use by the PC illiterates, and tailored to the net. Will the WinTel faction need to react?"
Looks like all the reviews don't agree with your analysis, Gene.
Read carefully below.
Paul
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The iMac Revisited Now that the iMac is shipping, it's time for a closer look.
When the iMac was announced, I wrote a column about it here. I said, in part, "A year ago, the iMac probably would have rocked the world and jump-started Apple's sales. It would have reaffirmed the beliefs of the Mac Faithful and won new converts from the Wintel camp. But in light of today's market, the iMac comes with a couple of big
Gotchas!"
We discussed those gotchas here -- they were mostly design and pricing issues -- and we compared features and costs with similarly equipped non-Mac systems.
Based on the original specs, my conclusion was that the iMac would be reasonably competitive, but that that wasn't going to be enough. "Even a charitable reading of the iMac specs shows it to be a merely competitive box, roughly on par with similarly priced PCs," I wrote. "It's not a technology leader. It's not a price leader. The only thing the iMac has that no PC has is undeniable Mac style."
Some Mac proponents thought I was being too harsh, and said (in essence), "Wait until August!" Well, the iMac has arrived, so let's take another look.
The shipping version actually is very close to the original specs, except that Apple wisely included a 56K modem instead of the originally announced 33K model. This is a Good Thing: a 33-Kbps modem would have been the kiss of death.
The iMac has stiff competition: The Acer Entra, for example, sells for a whopping $500 less; however, it lacks a few of the iMac's features, such as built-in infrared or Ethernet connections. Few will miss the infrared capability, but I'll concede that Ethernet is important in, say, dormitory settings (and the iMac is mainly a home/student machine). For a fair comparison, you'd have to add an Ethernet card
to the Entra. This would raise its price by $25 to $100, depending on whether you wanted a generic or brand-name card.
Also, in the interest of fairness, I have to admit the Entra's video is anemic, and you'd want to upgrade to a good card. Today, you can get an ATI Rage Pro with 8 MB -- better than the iMac's video -- for $89.
In the same vein, for a fair comparison you'd also have to add a floppy drive to the iMac, raising its price by $150. This keeps the more-or-less $500 price differential intact and in the Entra's favor.
Home offices and students need more than the base machine, of course. You can get an Entra bundled with a
scanner and a color printer for $1,100. Add in the necessary Ethernet and video upgrade, and you have a far more complete system for the same price as a base iMac with no floppy, no scanner, and no printer.
Don't like Acer? For the same price as an iMac, you can get a Compaq Presario that comes with more RAM, a floppy, and a Zip drive. It does lack infrared and Ethernet capabilities, but again, you can add Ethernet to the Compaq for less than what it costs to add a floppy to the iMac.
There are plenty of other examples, but you get the idea.
The home/student market is very price-sensitive, but the iMac isn't even close to being a price leader: It's blown away by the aggressive clone boxes, and is merely price competitive with other top-tier brand-name systems. Plus, the Wintel boxes have more applications available -- not a trivial issue.
I can't see the iMac doing much of anything to woo users away from Wintel boxes, though it may sell well to people already in the Mac camp. As such, it may help Apple survive and maybe even make a little money -- but there's no way the iMac is going to make significant inroads in terms of market share. Apple users will remain on the outer fringes of mainstream computing.
It's too bad, but I have to stick by my initial assessment: I don't think the iMac will make much of a difference in the long run. |