By
Ina Fried
Friday, June 26 2009 10:25 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/software/0,39044164,62055490,00.htm
Microsoft plans to charge PC makers the same for the business version of
Windows 7 as it did for Windows Vista, while cutting the price of Windows 7
Home Premium as compared to its predecessor, a top Windows executive said Thursday.
That matches a similar move for the boxed copy of the software.
Microsoft's pricing plans for Windows 7, which will be available October
22 on both new PCs, has been the source of considerable tension between the
PC makers and the software maker, both of which are trying to grapple with both
declining demand and falling prices for traditional PCs.
In an interview on Thursday, Senior Vice President Bill Veghte acknowledged
that there has
been tension between Microsoft and the PC makers over pricing, but said that
is always the case when Microsoft readies a new version of its operating system.
"They'd love to have everything at dramatically lower prices," Veghte said,
of the computer makers.
On the mainstream consumer side, Microsoft is offering only one
version--Windows 7 Home Premium, whereas with Windows Vista, Microsoft offered
both a basic and premium version.
Veghte says he understands that, from the PC
makers perspective, Microsoft took away an option for low-cost PCs. In part, he
said, that's why Microsoft decided to charge a price for Windows 7 Home Premium
that was more than Vista Basic, but less than Vista Home Premium.
"We took a blended approach," he said. "It wasn't like I am trying to jack up
the prices."
For Windows 7 Professional, as Microsoft did on the retail side, the software
maker will charge PC makers essentially the same as it did for Windows Vista
Business. However, he said, buyers are getting more with Windows 7 because the
professional version also includes the consumer media features, something that
wasn't the case with Vista.
PC makers, though, have continued to see both average selling prices and
profit margins under continued pressure.
Veghte said Microsoft, too, has seen the amount of money it gets for each
copy of Windows drop in recent years.
"Our average selling price has been declining as well," Veghte said. "It's
not like we have sat there at the (same) price points the last five years."
For his part, IDC analyst Richard Shim said the fact that PC makers are
complaining about price--and not the product itself--is a positive sign for
Windows 7.
"If the only thing the market is squabbling about is price, that's a good
thing for Microsoft," he said.
One of the biggest changes Microsoft did make in response to PC maker
concern, was to lift a restriction on
the Windows 7 Starter edition it is selling for use in Netbooks. Initially,
Microsoft planned to restrict Starter-based PCs to running no more than
three applications at a time.
Veghte said lifting the Starter restriction was important to computer makers
and consumers and something that Microsoft could live with. The
three-application limit began with Windows XP Starter Edition, which was aimed
at first-time computer users and sold only on new PCs in emerging markets.
"It clearly was not winning any popularity contests," he said of the limit.
"I don't think it fundamentally changes the business approach."
It does, though, pave the way for Windows 7 Starter to become the dominant
operating system on Netbooks, Shim said. IDC forecasts that the Netbook market
will shift largely from Windows XP to Windows 7 next year, but Shim said that
much of that will be the lower-priced Starter Edition.
That means, Microsoft's Windows 7 revenue could be in for a hit if
traditional notebook and desktop sales don't pick up. The upside, Shim said, is
that Microsoft will benefit when sales do pick up, even if it is next year.
"Even if they only hit a single or double with the launch, they can get some
extra bases in the coming years," he said.