Linked by Thom Holwerda on Wed 22nd Oct 2008 22:36 UTC
Apple Apple has presented its financial earnings for the 4th quarter of the 2008 fiscal year yesterday. Despite an across-the-board slump in growth, spectacular iPhone sales more than made up for the lost growth, beating the ten million iPhones claim. You can read all about it at Ars. What's more interesting were a number of remarks from Jobs regarding netbooks and cheap computers.
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RE[5]: "junk"
by galvanash on Fri 24th Oct 2008 03:23 UTC in reply to "RE[4]: "junk""
galvanash
Member since:
2006-01-25

Actually, that wasn't true either. An Apple IIe was at least $1500 once you added the floppy drive (in 1983 dollars - more than $3000 in today's dollars).


...And Apple courted with private schools HEAVILY to arrange through-your-school purchases of Apple IIs for sometimes as little as $1000 if the school could get enough parents to play along (and the schools were rewarded, depending on the number of purchased machines, some ratio of free machines (i.e. parents bought 20, school would get 2 free ones).

Commodore's were course course cheaper when they became popular, but Commodore (at least in the US) had virtually ZERO presence in schools - actually, other than the occasional TRS-80, PC, PCJr, Apple virtually dominated the education market for quite a while. Apples volume discount programs were brilliant and effective marketing during the early 80s.

Edited 2008-10-24 03:24 UTC

Reply Parent Score: 1

RE[6]: "junk"
by Bobthearch on Fri 24th Oct 2008 17:02 in reply to "RE[5]: "junk""
Bobthearch Member since:
2006-01-27

Our Illinois schools, way back when, had only Commodore computers. I recall the school upgrading from the Vic-20 to the Commodore 64 in 1984-ish. Apple and IBM were both too expensive... I don't know what they used before the Commodores, probably nothing.

The local schools in this area went from early IBM PCs (like the 5150), to IBM 286/386/486, to Apples like the LCii and LCiii, and have been using nothing but PCs (Dell, Compaq, customs) for the last 10-15 years.

The early 1990s seems to have been the only time that Macs were preferred by schools, but they sure did dominate for that short period.

Reply Parent Score: 2