ARM has a stronghold in the smartphone and tablet market. ARM can do so due to its low power rating (improves battery life, decreases the need for cooling the device, etc)
Intel has a stronghold in the laptop, PC, and enterprise market.
ARM has started to encroach on Intel's space in the laptop and enterprise market.
Is Intel doomed?
Perhaps not :
Monday, January 28, 2013
That's Why Amazon Added "Accelerated"
The power charger for the Amazon Kindle HD is sold separately. And interestingly, it is being touted being "Accelerated". This caused me to scratch my head a bit. Perhaps Amazon wanted to emphasize that although the Kindle HD can be charged through a laptop USB port, it will be very SLOW. Pay up $20 to speed up the charging.
Well, with Google's Nexus tablet out, which included a charger, now I see why Amazon wants to make sure that Nexus buyers know that the Amazon charges for a power adapter, but it is way better than the one included with Nexus.
Well, with Google's Nexus tablet out, which included a charger, now I see why Amazon wants to make sure that Nexus buyers know that the Amazon charges for a power adapter, but it is way better than the one included with Nexus.
Thursday, January 3, 2013
The New 99 Cents
Fast food trains have found that $0.99 is a terrific way to draw customers to your door. Once there, the predictable "up sale" occurs - customers buy other items such as drinks, etc. Fast food chain like Wendy's also created / followed the $0.99 menu, in reaction or causing reactions from Burger King and McDonald's.
But as the focus on revenue growth continues, the $0.99 menu was unsustainable or hampering growth. The power of $0.99 can't be ignored, though. How do you rectify? A bean counter will probably and predictably do this:
1. decrease the number of items available on the $0.99 menu to force buyers to buy high priced items
2. decrease the serving size of the items available on the $0.99 menu to force them to buy MORE $0.99 items
3. price creep original $0.99 items to $1.29, but add lower cost replacement items to $0.99
If Wendy's did this unilaterally devaluing the $0.99 menu, they will lose business to Burger King and McDonald's. Somehow with a little game theory, Burger King and/or McDonald's started the first move to reduce the $0.99 menu. With that first move, Wendy's followed as well.
Wendy's
| Devalue | Don't
M ---------+------------+-----------
c Devalue | 5 5 | 7 2
D ---------+------------+-----------
Don't | 2 7 | 1 1
So if McDonald's devalue their $0.99 meal unilaterally (make it less attractive), Wendy's will benefit at (7,2). But Wendy's will be selling lots of cheap $0.99 burgers - not really helpful to profit. With the same pressure as McDonald's on profit, Wendy's will also devalue their $0.99 menu, and bringing it to the (5,5) equilibrium.
Net result is high profits for Wendy's, Burger King, and McDonald's.
Subscribe to:
Posts
(
Atom
)