April 24, 2009, 8:07 am
Microsoft has achieved something of a Pyhrric victory against Linux-based Netbooks: it now claims 96 percent of the Netbook market, but its earnings continue to be battered by the lower revenues and profits that come with the low-end Netbook phenomenon.
Even as Microsoft “wins” in Netbooks, it loses, as ZDNet’s Largy Dignan writes. Microsoft expects “the overall spending environment to remain difficult,” but it may not yet appreciate just how much worse it can get.
After all, Canonical, which develops Ubuntu, the world’s leading consumer-focused, Linux-based desktop operating system, on Monday released a Netbook-optimized Ubuntu distribution, as IDG reports.
Better battery life. A nicer visual experience. An operating system tightly tuned for applications like email, Web browsing, and office productivity. All for a price that is dramatically less than Microsoft Windows…even after Microsoft discounts.
Microsoft’s love-hate affair with Netbooks is about to get worse. Competition does that to a company.
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