Wed Jun 3, 2009 12:01PM EDT
See Comments (39)
Q: How do you make the world stop buying so many netbooks?
A: Stop calling them netbooks.
That's the bizarre advice from Microsoft, suggested by one corporate overlord at this week's Computex trade show in Taipei.
His beef? The term "netbook" implies a notebook that is useful only for surfing the net, but since today's mini-notebooks do so much more than just that, the term should be retired.
His suggestion for replacing the term? The exquisitely Microsoftian "low cost small notebook PC."
Semantics in this space are getting increasingly complicated, though whether you call them netbooks, mini-notebooks, smartbooks, or, ahem, low cost small notebook PC, most of these machines do pretty much the same stuff. (The only real difference in this group is the smartbook, a term which is now being used to describe a notebook-type machine that runs a smart phone operating system like Android or, someday, the iPhone OS.)
But Microsoft is doing everything in its power to move the market away from $400 netbooks and toward $1000-plus traditional laptops. Windows 7 Starter Edition, the egregiously stripped-down version of the company's upcoming OS, will be so severely hamstrung that Microsoft has offered the stated goal of encouraging users to upgrade to a more premium version of Windows 7.
The etymological approach is another step in that direction, I suppose, a subtle jab that your computer isn't powerful enough. The term "netbook" sounds kinda cool. "Low cost small notebook PC" sounds like something designed for a child.
As with many of Microsoft's great ideas, my hunch is that manufacturers will nod enthusiastically at the suggestion... and summarily ignore it.
Viva la netbook!
Join in the discussion. Here you'll see the comments in the order they were posted.
Starter Edition has not been intended for US release to my knowledge. I'm very sure it was intended for developing countries. The problem Microsoft is trying to solve is that many people will take this edition and try and make a profit by selling it on a desktop computer.
Netbook? Why not call it a Compact Travel PC, or just a Travel PC? TPC for short. Sounds good to me.
Why bother with netbooks at all? Get a real notebook/laptop for crying out loud! If size and portability are your big issues, there are plenty of 13" notebooks out there, both Windows and Mac. I could never be happy with the lackluster performance of something as small and limited as a netbook anyway.
Why is uSoft so adamantly opposed to netbook computers? Easy. Because a lot of them run Linux, and uSoft doesn't want people to get the idea that a free OS is perfectly adequate on any machine. Very quickly people would start wondering if it's okay to use it on their 'real' computers, and that would be the beginning of the end for uSoft.
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1 Posted by kupriaa1 on Wed Jun 3, 2009 12:47PM EDT Report Abuse
Chris, are you constantly posting about Starter Edition and Netbooks to annoy me intentionally? At this time there is no proof (netbooks shipping with Starter Edition in the US) to say that Starter Edition will come on Netbooks. And the policy for Starter Edition has always been for developing countries- and that we have proof of. As far as the story itself- I think Microsoft is trying to rebrand the label netbook so that consumers see the device as more functional then the initial netbooks that shipped with small hard drives, limited Linux OSes, etc. To suggest the price will go up- I am not so sure- again the Microsoft rep did say low cost. The name sounds silly but perhaps a new name is advised.