Apple, Inc. (NASDAQ: AAPL) has really never been down for the count as a company, although it's been on hiatus a couple of times in its 30 plus year history. Never before has the company seen such product and financial success, though, than in the 2001-current period. Under current CEO and co-founder Steve Jobs, the company is a force in the entertainment business along with ramping up its fortunes in the PC business where it started. We won't even mention the hardware business (iPod, iPhone).But the one elusive crown that Jobs would probably love to see shift to his company is the operating system used by PC customers. Now that current Macintosh computers can run Microsoft Corp.'s (NASDAQ: MSFT) Windows Vista (or XP) operating system, is Jobs slyly trying to wrestle the operating system of choice crown from his longtime competitor? After all, a Macintosh customer can switch between a full Mac OS (operating system) on his or her PC and Microsoft's Windows with a keyboard press. Use one OS for work-related things and another for -- everything else. Guess which is which? And don't think that's just what Jobs envisions when he's made every single Mac computer being sold capable of running Microsoft's Windows. Perhaps he's trying to win a long war with Microsoft on the basis of Apple's cooler-than-cool hardware rather than software?
Apple's Mac OS is stretchable across many of its devices (big and small), while Microsoft must maintain completely separate code bases and support levels for all the various operating systems it manufactures. So, the question is this: is Apple pulling a long-term end-game by trying to slowly but surely erode Microsoft's dominance in the operating system area? This is where Microsoft pulls in two-thirds of its revenue, so it's no small matter. But still, the iPhone taught the world how a hardware device with an easy-to-use operating system (yes, the Mac OS) can win the hearts and minds of consumers. Jobs would love nothing more than to continue seeing the Mac OS fall into the hands of customers on his hardware laptops and iMacs while at the same time taking incremental market share away from Microsoft in a "slowly but surely" fashion. Perhaps the real battle between Apple and Microsoft has just begun?











Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
4-14-2008 @ 6:07PM
Brett said...
Microsoft has nothing to fear. The IT professionals who act as the technology gatekeepers in large businesses will not give Apple their blessing until they are convinced that Apple poses no threat to their jobs and empires.
To the extent that the Mac's are easier to set up, use, and maintain than Windows PCs, IT professionals will find excuses to veto them.
I'm not saying that there aren't some legitimate arguments to be made for eschewing Macs. For example, the number of Mac hardware configurations in limited. Some retraining is required for switchers; custom in-house apps may need to be ported, etc.
But in many cases, Macs have been prohibited even when the above have not been applicable. For IT professionals, the threat of Apple gaining a foothold is real.
4-15-2008 @ 4:06PM
Paul said...
There was a time when IBM was king of the mountain. There were all sorts of IT guys who laughed at the PC's. Well, look what happened to IBM and its IT guys. The same can happen with to MS. If the front office ultimately feels that they can save money by going with Apple OS versus Windows the change WILL happen. Right now MS is bleeding and when you're bleeding you're dying. It's just a matter of time.
4-15-2008 @ 10:33PM
TAOJONES said...
this battle started in 1984 when jobs held his prices and hardware restriction and believed the world would beat a path to the best software. Gates placed his bet on the world going to the cheapest solution… the number of man hours spent chasing DLL's and drivers!!!! (oh the humanity!) apple will win in the end as more people find out how much they can get actually DONE on a mac.