So here's a snippet that caught my eye from the company-wide mailer from
the CEO of the company which employs me.

"So there is a step-by-step process we are going to get through
-- using reference architectures, systems that connect to Sun
by default, managed services, customer-ready systems and
capacity-on-demand technology -- to reach a time and place in
which every product group has thought about what services are
delivered via the network.  Ultimately, I see a not-too-distant
future in which Sun owns and operates the equipment for the
customers and charges them a subscription or utility-based fee.
Translation:  Recurring revenue for Sun."

What I find interesting is the last sentence. Now, it makes some sense
to me that when a technology reaches a certain level of maturity, it
could simply become an infrastructural feature (like the telephone),
which is owned/updated/managed by someone for a fee. Now, so far as I
can see, the computer has not yet reached that level of maturity. I'd
think it would take another decade. But either way, it seems that once
the consumer doesn't own it any more, there would be much less
motivation for this unceasing upgrading/bells/whistles stuff because
now, replacing the cpu or even extending the software, would cut into
the bottom line rather than add to profits.

Comments?

Joanna

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