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October 15, 2008 12:00 AM

MacBook Announcement Proves Microsoft Is Right About 'Apple Tax'

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On a day in which Apple released a long-overdue update to its notebook computer line but refused to lower prices on its expensive new hardware, Microsoft shared its thoughts about it calls "the Apple Tax." The idea, basically, is that Windows still offers better value for consumers because Apple includes hidden extra costs in its solutions. This is true both in the up-front cost of Macs--which are generally significantly more expensive than Windows PCs--and after purchase.

"You can get a PC laptop with a bigger hard drive, more RAM, a media-card reader, more USB ports, and a bigger screen, for much less than a Mac," a Microsoft representative told me. "[And while] you can upgrade just about any Windows desktop PC, the only significantly upgradeable Mac is the Mac Pro, [which has a base price of] $2799.00." And that's sans display.

Macs aren't just more expensive than PCs. They also do less out of the box than PCs. You can get modern features like HDMI, Blu-Ray, eSATA, MediaCard Readers, built-in 3G, Fingerprint readers, and TV Tuners built-into PCs, but none of these features ship with any Mac models, meaning you'll have to add them externally and pay extra, over and above the more expensive base price of that Mac.

This fact is especially noticeable on the just-released new MacBook machines. In typical Apple-knows-best fashion, there are no media card options, no integrated 3G wireless networking, no fingerprint readers, and no docking solutions offered. And the machines are expensive, all the more so after you factor in the additional cost of buying the needed external peripherals that aren't even offered.

This release comes amid an historic financial crisis. But rather than address the needs of a changing market, Apple actually raised the base price on its new notebooks by $200: An entry-level MacBook now costs $1299, compared to $1099 for the previous version. (the next model up is $100 more than its predecessor.) To silence critics, Apple is also selling a stripped down version of the previous MacBook model for $999. But this is a previous generation machine that first went on sale in early 2006. It is also Apple's first and only-sub $1000 notebook, and it is competing with a huge number of new PC notebooks that cost as little as $500.

Microsoft notes that the Apple Tax extends far past the initial purchase, however. If you need to do things like add a wireless router, add more storage, or perform other tasks, the relevant Apple solutions are often several hundreds of dollars more than the PC-based solutions. And if you're switching to the Mac, the cost of repurchasing necessary software can be hugely expensive.

To be fair, Microsoft's Apple Tax concept, while very real, is also self-serving: The company is trying to stem the flow of Windows users to the Apple platform. But you don't have to spend too much time in an Apple Store to notice the differences between the Apple and PC worlds. That surprised look you see on customer's faces in Apple retail locations has as much to do with the price of Apple's solutions as their industrial design.

Critics of the software giant--by which I mean fans of Apple--will complain about Microsoft's Apple Tax theme, but I think it's accurate. That's especially true when you consider the rumors that were floating around last week about Apple's supposed plans to ship a $799 MacBook model. Apple miss that target by a whopping $500--the price of dozens of PC laptops at your local Best Buy, by the way, And the company only artificially made it into the sub-$1000 price category by continuing to sell a dated, previous-generation machine. As Stanley Morgan commented in a recent research note, "The remaining source of growth [in the PC market] is increasingly the sub-$1,000 market where Apple does not play."

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Comments
  • First
    4 years ago
    Oct 21, 2008

    People can go on and on about Mac vs PCs... but going back to the point of this article and the so called, "Apple Tax", I am going to repeat what I wrote before and that shuts down Paul's ridiculous argument - study after study shows Macs have a LOWER TCO then PCs.

    --
    THE REAL FACTS:

    The following site provides links to Total Cost of Ownership studies comparing Macs vs Windows by:

    IDC
    Brookfields
    Gartner
    Evans Research
    Ingram Labs
    J.D. Powers
    Consulting Technology Newsletter
    Gistics
    ...and many others.

    STUDY AFTER STUDY SHOW THAT MACS HAVE A SIGNIFICANTLY LOWER TCO!

    So in conclusion:
    My sources = Independent research provided by IDC, Brookfields, Gartner, Evans Research, Ingram Labs, J.D. Powers, Consulting Technology Newsletter, Gistics.

    Paul's sources = Microsoft's marketing department.

    Web site: http://www.macvspc.info/pages/03.html

  • John
    4 years ago
    Oct 19, 2008

    Wow... just saw that Microsoft "apple tax" chart. Talk about outrageous deception and dishonesty. Claiming that the average PC user upgrades their 4 year old computer with a new video card and blueray drive is hilarious. Where did they get those statistics? Mars?

    I believe Paul himself has advocated the replacement of machines younger than 5 years old for anyone buying Vista.

    Last time I checked, Vista shipped with a graphics subsystem that wouldn't work on systems far younger than 5 years old, while Leopard runs and looks identical on 866mhz G4s. Sorry, but most people don't upgrade their video cards. Never mind that you can't upgrade laptops, which are becoming the dominant computer for most users.

    That Paul finds this kind of thing acceptable from Microsoft but calls Apple a lying company is classic. Paul has truly become a pure shill. He's nothing more than an extension of Microsoft's marketing, from his criticism free celebration of all of their advertising, to this mindless repetition of their talking points.

  • John
    4 years ago
    Oct 19, 2008

    Oh, Paul. I just love how you feel justified in uncritically parroting Microsoft's talking points like a mindless shill, yet routinely attack defenders of Apple as lemmings of the "iCabal". Your boosterism is hilarious. Your hypocrisy is blatant.

    While the rest of the OEM assemblers can continue destroying their margins in a race to the bottom, I'm very happy to see Apple successfully balancing price, performance and profit while continuing to grow their share.

    The Apple platform is healthy and growing. The WWDC is selling out in weeks. The iPhone is likely to outsell Windows Mobile on a quarterly basis very soon. All this adds up to a winning strategy. If you think the value equation in the Mac isn't there... don't buy one. But arguing that they don't have a successful strategy is just stupid.

    Pursuing market share at the expense of profit with no other benefit is a strategy of failure. Apple's share is good enough to entice growing development. That why you see big devs like Intuit re-writing their apps like Quickbooks and Quicken for leopard. They're investing in a great platform with a userbase that actually BUYS SOFTWARE. That's all that matters.

    Paul, you work for Microsoft. Officially or not. You are an organ of Microsoft's marketing department.

  • First
    4 years ago
    Oct 19, 2008

    >>How's that for software compatibility and choice!
    >>While PC's have more hardware choice, Macs now
    >> have the most software choice."

    > visitor, that's a shoddy argument and you know it.
    > Apple doesn't allow you to run OS X on anything
    > but Apple hardware, so that is not the fault of
    > anyone except Apple, and it is them RESTRICTING
    > choice, not expanding it.

    The simple fact is that Mac users can run the Mac operating system and thousands of Mac software AND XP/Vista including the thousands of Windows software AND any linux operating system and software. You can't run all 3 operating systems on any other platform which means Macs have THE MOST choice in terms of operating systems and software. That's a simple fact.

    Mac Hardware = the most operating systems and software.

  • MysterMask
    4 years ago
    Oct 18, 2008

    The 'Apple Tax' thing is actually the MS' "embrace and extend" strategy applied to the "Microsoft tax". Go buy a PC and you'll end up paying a Windows licence even if you buy a PC without OS..

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