chris.addotta.1
New Member
Smart move
I love my chromebook especially to use as a traveling device. But I can not use it as a full os. I need something I can load android developer tools on to communicate with my devices. I use a macbook for that. And though the macbook has a much better screen the chromebook performs better as far as surfing the web. But have to revert back to the macbook for writing articles. So I can not rely on chrome for every day use for an extended period of time.I just moved a Sony Viao out of my media center, replacing it with a $150 Asus Chromebox. Now I get frustrated with The lag on my two Windows systems. That box does about 99% of everything the Windows systems do, but much faster. I would think Microsoft (and Apple) may want to move in that direction. I don't have to endure the McAfee madness on the Chrome system either.
I think it all comes down to the battle for the pc. Especially the enterprise market - if MS loses that and all the revenue from Windows and Office they are basically dead. PC and laptop/mobile aren't going to remain "separate" markets. Google is trying to sort of backward integrate to capture/steal those pc/Office revenues from MS, while MS is trying to forward integrate to protect itself and maybe steal a piece of the mobile pie.
MS was late to the game and executed poorly, because all those pc/Office users would have been easy to entrench in a seamless mobile platform. Looks like they're making a course correction to focus on seamless compatability to protect their core business - focus on maintaining the best pc/office software and remove mobile as a hurdle preventing users from sticking with you.
Maybe in a few generations, we'll see something other than Windows PCs, but I really don't think that's where the battle line will be drawn..
??? What???Businesses have Windows on their pc's mostly so they can run Office.