Apple Surpasses Dell in EU Education Market 88
wackymacs writes "According to a report from Macworld UK, Apple has confirmed it has taken the number one spot in the Western European education market. The company's education market share in the region is now 15.2 percent, placing Dell, with 14.7 percent, to second place. Gartner analyst Isabelle Durand confirmed: 'During the fourth quarter 2005, Apple became the number one PC vendor in the Western European Education market. The company has continued to grow very strongly (+22.4 per cent) and achieved a 15.2 per cent of market share in Q4 2005.'"
Either way... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Either way... (Score:2, Informative)
What? I thought Dell were finally opening their monolithic doors to AMD, which have processors which would be quite popular in "Green" Europe.
Re:Either way... (Score:2)
Re:Either way... (Score:2)
It wasn't that long ago... (Score:2)
Sure it will, it's a closed system.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:It wasn't that long ago... (Score:2, Funny)
Smart move for Apple (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Smart move for Apple (Score:2)
Re:Smart move for Apple (Score:5, Informative)
Of course, whenever someone makes that "Think of the children!" argument, I tend to smack my lips and say "Mmm, delicious!"
Re:Smart move for Apple (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Smart move for Apple (Score:2)
Re:Smart move for Apple (Score:3, Insightful)
Except that, at one time, Apple was THE option in US education. However, DOS/Windows became the staple of business, largely riding on the back of the "nobody ever got fired for going with IBM" mentality.
DOS had all the business programs. Apple started with stuff like VisiCalc but never got much further than that. DOS had 1-2-3, Wordstar, dBase, Paradox, Wordperfect, etc. So they became king of the business world. And people bought home computers so they could work on stuff from work, at home.
Apple machines
Re:Smart move for Apple (Score:2)
Plus, now it sounds like the Mac holdouts in K-12 EDU land are shitting because virtually all of the software is Classic-mode "abandonware" that won't run on the Intel models.
Re:Smart move for Apple (Score:1, Funny)
but now I'm having the worst time trying to find any software for my TRS-80.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Smart move for Apple (Score:2)
http://www.jeca.com/SMG/AFTS/afts.html [jeca.com]
they pretty muched owned the edu market through the "apples for the students" program. even if there were some pcs in a school, they never got used since a lot of the in house "techs" were either teachers or students. the counter to this was that parents often used on pcs at work. since there wasn't an "apples for the home" program, they bought what was familiar and cheap. besides, for what most people do, the OS really doesn't matter as much anymo
Re:Smart move for Apple (Score:1)
Most of my friends who run Windows first started out with it because they wanted to play certain games that wasn't available on a Mac. Then they just stuck with that because that's what they knew and didn't want to have more than one c
Of course apples are the best choice for schools.. (Score:4, Funny)
(And we all know how much teachers like apples to begin with)
Re:Of course apples are the best choice for school (Score:2)
Re:Of course apples are the best choice for school (Score:2)
I'm no apple supporter, but... (Score:1)
What would indeed be ironic is if th
Re:Of course apples are the best choice for school (Score:2)
Now... (Score:1)
Re:Now... (Score:2)
Re:Now... (Score:1)
No wonder... (Score:5, Funny)
Good call......
dumbass.
Re:No wonder... (Score:1)
Re:No wonder... (Score:2)
Actually at the time it was. Apple's current success has far more to do with iPods than their computers. Apple's future may have more to do with iPods and turning their computers into digital appliances than with computers themselves. I'm thrilled to see Apple move to Intel, but it is really mostly hype. The performance difference between x86 and PowerPC was irrlelevant to most o
Common misconception (Score:5, Informative)
There is also this common misconception that, on the global desktop & server PC market, Apple is extremely small compared to Dell. People think that Apple sells 1% or less of the total number of PCs sold by Dell. But this is wrong, Apple has got 1/7th (14%) of Dell market share. Given this perspective, Apple suddenly appears much bigger...
Re:Common misconception (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Common misconception (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Common misconception (Score:2)
Perception (Score:5, Insightful)
Also, they might have much higher expectations for a GUI and point out all the bad stuff about the windos standard we who've grown up with it don't even notice anymore.
When my mother got her first PC, I put Linux on it. For surfing and mail it was perfect. Later on she took one of those "internet course" things. She came back with a strong dislike of "that windows thing" she had to use there. I'm certain anyone whose first exposure to computers was a Mac will have a much stronger opinion.
Re:Perception (Score:2)
You got trolled.
You might as well have taken it seriously if somebody posted this one again:
I don't want to start a holy war here, but what is the deal with you Mac fanatics? I have recently upgraded from a Mac 8600/300 w/64 Megs of RAM to a new G5 dual 2GHz with AGP 8X and PCI-X to help me at my freelance gig where I needed to copy a 17 Meg file from my home network to a desktop folder. On the G5 it took about 20 minutes. At home, on my Pentium Pro 200 running NT 4, which by all standards should be a lot s
Re:Perception (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Perception (Score:2)
That's why Apple is doing it right moving into the market where people are first exposed to computers.
Macs on Campus (Score:1, Troll)
If anything, putting their computers in an environment like a school to show young people that Mac
Re:Macs on Campus (Score:2)
Re:Macs on Campus (Score:3, Interesting)
I remember the Macs at school then. They really did suck. A lot. Looked nicer than the PCs though, but the OS and the keyboard and the mouse did suck.
Since then, the OS has overtaken Windows substantially, Windows gets reamed by viruses and spyware too easily, and Apple's hardware still looks nicer. 'Macs suck' is just a silly teenage opinion now, rather than being based upon any real fact. Still, the UK Macs still have the @ and " swapped from the usual W
Re:Macs on Campus (Score:2)
I'm sure that there are a few things you do not want to change just because some random person thinks that you should use the hottest, newest thing available? Why don't you be a real man and run OpenBSD [openbsd.org]. What, is it too hard to read clear, detailed instructions? [openbsd.org]
Re:Macs on Campus (Score:1)
Re:Whis is this modded troll? (Score:2)
Re:Whis is this modded troll? (Score:1)
Re:Macs on Campus (Score:3, Interesting)
The only problem I ever really saw with them was that they tended to have every application on them always running in the background, because Windows users never seemed to understand that Quitting an application from the menu is differe
Something doesn't jibe. (Score:4, Informative)
If anything, putting their computers in an environment like a school to show young people that Macs *do indeed actually crash quite a bit, even under OS X* is a bad idea.
I own 4 macs: a 15" Powerbook, a 12" iBook, a dual 2.5 GHz G5, and a 1 GHz G4 (MDD). These 4 machines are up and running 24/7. Two of them are servers exposed to the Internet. One of those servers also runs Final Cut Pro, email, etc.
I can count on one hand how many times these machines have crashed since 2002 (three times). Applications do occasionally lock up but can always be force quit.
If your macs are running OS X and the hardware is not faulty, your Macs are not going to be crashing. Since 50% Mac share at your school suggests more than a few Macs, my intuition is that you're making this up or that the users at your school don't know what a crashing Mac looks like. In other words, I think either you're lying or you have no idea what you are talking about.
Do you have any details about these crashes?
Re:Macs on Campus (Score:5, Informative)
1. Before Mac OS X version 10.2, I would have agreed, Macs certainly did suck. Especially Mac OS 9 and earlier. It really sucked bigtime. I hated Macs back then.
2. If all those G5 iMacs are operating worse than the PCs on a regular basis, they need to get someone in there to maintain them who has half a clue. Those Macs should be rock solid. I speak from experience with a couple dozen different types of Macs running Mac OS X 10.2, 10.3, and 10.4. We're talking anything from G5 towers to gumdrop iMacs from 6 years ago. And proper maintenance is not rocket science either.
You're either full of it or the techs in charge of that campus are morons. Not to mention that anyone with a little training can set up a Mac server and netboot every Mac in the building whereby it's possible to make them basically foolproof and impossible to mess up. You can make them boot from a fresh disk image every time. Great for school environments. But hey, if you hate them that much I know several million people who would be happy to take them off your hands, cheap.
If you've got a specific piece of software that keeps crashing, here's an idea: Stop blaming it on the Mac and replace it with a different piece of software that doesn't crash. It doesn't matter how stable your OS is, if your application is crap it will still crash.
Re:Macs on Campus (Score:2)
The ability of OS X to multitask aside, OS 8.6 was as stable as OS X is today.
hm, really? (Score:2)
Re:hm, really? (Score:2)
Well, I live within minutes of two major universities. One has a few macs here and there and one has as many macs as PCs. The latter is a very, very big school. At my own alma mater, we probably had more Sun machines than macs, although we had a several labs of each, and at least and as many PC labs as macs. Heck, we even had a lab full of Next machines. I wonder if they are still there? It all depends upon the university.
Re:hm, really? (Score:2)
It's the only school I know, but there were lots of macs floating around if you wanted to look for them.
Re:hm, really? (Score:1)
Re:Stupid headline (Score:2)
Apple is now the #1 computer hardware supplier in the EU education market.
It's not comparing Apple to MS; its comparing Apple to Dell.
How many systems did Microsoft ship last quarter; oh, that's right: Zero.
Re:Stupid headline (Score:1)
Now that's a headline! (Score:2)
Got an iBook G4 here :) (Score:4, Interesting)
Basically they thought that there are too many smart people out there with great ideas and lots of self-learnt knowledge but who are stuck in the system. "Let's make nerds into company owners."
I really like this education. Rule #1 is "Don't follow the rules."
Anyway, sorry for the rant. To get to the point: When we started, everyone got an iBook to use for the course. They chose to go with Mac because it has really low support costs for them ("it just works"), and it's based on UNIX so we can run and test most Open Source applications locally without hassle (through Fink or DarwinPorts). They explicitly state that we are free to format it and install Linux or BSD though, no courses rely on Mac-specific software.
Oh, and
Re:Got an iBook G4 here :) (Score:2)
Is that unusual? I know of a CS course in a major public university that uses it as well.
Proper suspend (to RAM) (Score:1)
Re:Proper suspend (to RAM) (Score:2)
Re:Proper suspend (to RAM) (Score:1)
The thing that p*sses me off with ACPI (weird implementations & funky video bios) is no longer being able to just open the laptop, work a little/do something quick/whatever and close it a
Re:Proper suspend (to RAM) (Score:2)
Intel's compiler complies with Intel's specs, while microsoft's compiler is tollerant of errors as is their implementation of ACPI in windows...
Implementations of ACPI in other os's is intollerant of errors, as per Intel's original ACPI specs, and thus often fails to work with microsoft-oriented ACPI implementations.
Also some ACPI implementations
More information (Score:2, Informative)
Hewlett Packard at 14.2 percent, Acer at 9.5 percent, Fujitsu at 7.8 percent, and the remaining PC vendors taking 38.6 percent. Dell is still outcompeting Apple in the US, where Apple reportedly garners 22-23 percent of the education market share. Macworld UK reports that Apple's biggest European success is in Switzerland, where Apple holds 54.4 percent of the market-- Apple also ranks number one in France with 19.5 percent,
Apple is a lock in company (Score:2)
Its a moral issue, and its a p
Greetings from Switzerland (Score:1)
We are doing just fine here, thank you very much.
You can play whatever you want on the iPod.
Mac OS X is *nix. There is a good implemetation of X11 out of the box. You get Perl, Python, Apache, MySQL, etc. out of the box (no need to install Cygwin). With the native GUI applications you get, again out of the box, you can do pretty much anything you want. I can't think of a better system for Education.
On a Mac y
Re:Greetings from Switzerland (Score:2)
Its what Stalin asked. One answer was given by the Gulag Archipelago. But here is another. Because freedom to choose is a value in itself. I like it for countries and governments, for religions, and for operating systems. Buy OSX and you have to run it on Apple hardware. Buy the new Intel hardware and the only thing it will run is OSX.
People should be able to buy this if they want. But I am speaking about what is
Relax, pal (Score:1)
Re:Greetings from Switzerland (Score:1)
Re:Apple is a lock in company (Score:2)
From my experience, the Apple platform is actually a lot more open than the MSWindows platform, especially in handling files. A Phot
Re:Apple is a lock in company (Score:1)
Re:Apple is a lock in company (Score:2)
Darwin is not OSX. Darwin doesn't matter, no-one runs Darwin on their Apple hardware. OSX is not open source. Will people please stop repeating this over and over again?
Windows is not open source. The point is that Windows hardware is open. The point is that the combination of OSX and Apple hardware are linked, and
Re:Apple is a lock in company (Score:1)