noone is suggesting that it all be given away for free.....

Microsoft spend big dollars before each release working out exactly what $$$
amount would net them the most sales/most income..(not alway the same
thing)...

It just seems that mandrake has not put a huge amount of thought into what
they should be charging for CS2

- Is more copies sold better then fewer at a higher cost???
- What maximum cost is the market going to bear..
- What costing would result in the best combination of number sold vrs
income..
- what inpact does production and distribution costs have to this...

if you only sell 5000 copies of CS2 at its current cost..
or 40,000 at a lower cost.. what is better??

I read an article ages ago, that microsnot spends a great deal of time and
effort pricing their packages to get the most dollars at the end and the
most people using it...

That was my point is all...



rgds

Franki



-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of Vincent Danen
Sent: Thursday, 6 March 2003 4:59 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [expert] Mandrake's Golden Opportunity


On Thu Mar 06, 2003 at 04:39:13AM +0800, Franki wrote:

> my concern with all of this..
>
> is that M$ is telling people that the lower cost of linux (ie they mean
> free) is
> not the full picture, and the extra training etc and so on should be taken
> into account when working out TCO...
>
> with redhat and Mandrake server products.. the actual product price is
> fairly high also..
> add the extra training and so on required.. and the M$ point will start
> looking like it has validity

Well, anyone who told you that linux has a $0 TCO was obviously lying and
likely should be taken out to pasture.  I don't think anyone from
MandrakeSoft ever indicated that the TCO was nill.  Cheaper, sure.

You seem to forget the software side of things.  If, say, Corporate Server
2.1 is coming close to the TCO of a Win2k server, think about what you get
with each OS.  You want a mail server?  How much is Exchange?  Web server?
How much is IIS?  SQL server?  How much is MS SQL?

Add those figures up and then re-look at your TCO.  And before you tell me
you can use MySQL and Apache under Windows, remember part of your argument
was training.  How many Certified MS Monkeys have training with MySQL or
Apache?  They'll need some training as well, so add that to your TCO if
you're going to use OSS software on windows.

> so really, the one that looks most impressive on a server to people
looking
> at the cost of implimenting linux is debian.....

I won't argue with that.  But look at debian's development pace and lack of
commercial support.  A lot of companies will continue to use RH, SuSE, and
Mandrake due to support offerings.  IIRC, Debian doesn't provide this.  For
home users proficient in Linux, this may not be a big deal.  For others, it
is.

I mean, the other argument is we can start giving everything away for free
and be dead and buried in a year.  Which would you rather see?

People who think that they deserve everything for nothing should remove
their rose-colored glasses and wake up.  Why should MandrakeSoft provide
everything to everybody?  We can't, and we shouldn't.  I appreciate the many
ideas people have, but sometimes you have to sit down and think about things
realistically.  We're spread pretty thin right now as it is... if we go any
thinner, quality starts to suffer.  How many people are going to use
Mandrake Linux, the "has-been" distro?  No one will use a crappy distro, so
why try to do everything and do it half-assed?  I'd rather see us say
"sorry, but no" and concentrate on areas where we excel so we can continue
to provide a quality product and quality services.  If people can't
understand that, I guess there's no help for them.  Maybe they should be
using Debian then.


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