Well you're certainly welcome to your opinion, and it sounds like a lot like what others have said. And what do I know anyway? I'm a Piney and an artist... but also an investor who puts his money where his mouth is and I've done quite well in recent years. Let's just say I couldn't disagree more on this topic. It's kind of comical the way they trot out Bill Gates to get media coverage these days, then he goes back to his real passion, which is his foundation of course. Microsoft looks like the ultimate example of "design by committee" to me, and that's something I have no patience for personally. And look at the vast resources they devoted to Vista, with such lackluster results. I agree they desperately needed something new, but they can't get around their proprietary mindset and it continues to hold them back. Jobs took a huge gamble in moving the Mac to unix, and had to endure some rough times along the way, but it has really paid off in the long run.
I think you're failing to see what's really going on when you say
"Apple has had a little bump recently". Take another look at that link I posted:
http://finance.yahoo.com/q/bc?t=5y&s=MSFT&l=on&z=m&q=l&c=aapl
That's hardly a "little bump", but a steadily rising mountain with Apple increasing shareholder value by about
2,000% over the past 5 years while Microsoft has flatlined. Yes, I've heard all the apologies about iPod fads, but don't think that explains it. Now I know... you're talking about operating system market share. And to me, those numbers are even more remarkable and many people don't seem to understand the significance. Apple is approaching an 8% market share now, and again this chart looks like a steady progression to me and not a "little bump":
http://marketshare.hitslink.com/rep...=4&qpcustom=Mac&qptimeframe=M&qpsp=85&qpnp=24
That's a 76% rise in the last two years. Now there's no argument that Microsoft is still king of the heap there, but its market is steadily eroding. Will it vanish overnight? Of course not. But the point is, when you have a 91% market share, the only direction is DOWN, but when your share is 8% then the sky's the limit. And Apple's share of the laptop market is over
17% which truly boggles my mind; they've become a major player in that category:
http://arstechnica.com/journals/app...otebook-market-share-making-gains-over-summer
I just got a MacBook Pro and am running both Windows XP and MacOSX on it. It's FAST under both systems (2.4ghz core2 duo with 4GB RAM and 256MB GeForce 8600M GT). It can boot directly into either OS, or it can run XP as unix processes in MacOS using Parallels which I find works very well. So if you could have it all, why wouldn't people buy a machine like this instead of just a PC? It brings it all down to a question of price and software licensing. Steve Jobs has steadfastly resisted licensing MacOSX to other companies, but my guess is that he will eventually cave in because the astronomical profits to be made. Michael Dell said he was interested several years ago. But we shall see. If and when that happens, Microsoft may really have something to worry about...
Now I guess this is sounding like a Ford vs. Chevy debate - sorry. I just enjoy digging into this issue, and I have been a Microsoft contrarian for a number of years now, much to my profit. My only regret is that I didn't sell my MSFT stock sooner. Your post is thoughtful and probably represents the prevailing wisdom. I just don't buy it. Recently I read an article that said the Microsoft-Yahoo deal smelled like "AOL Time Warner 2.0". My sentiments exactly.
OK, sorry for the rant, now back to the Pines!
