T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
2149.1 | Never heard of him | SMAUG::GARROD | Floating on a wooden DECk chair | Wed Oct 07 1992 00:40 | 1 |
| Who's Ken OlsOn?
|
2149.2 | but that was 16 years ago ! | STAR::ABBASI | life without the DECspell ? | Wed Oct 07 1992 02:02 | 28 |
| well, in 1977, one might understand it , i mean that was almost
16 years ago !, and in 1977, calculators where just 2-3 years old, and
some people even were still using those funny slide-ruler things to
do there calculations !.
like, how many peoples did have PC's in their homes any way in 1977?
may be Bill gate and few other weirdos like him, and that about it.
the first time i saw a PC was in 1982, it was an apple at a friend house
and all what we did with it is play Pac Man all the time
(remember the game? ):
+------+ +------+ +------+
/ O \ / O \ / O \
/ +--+ / +--+ / +--+
/ / .......... / / help ....... / / ..help
\ \ \ \ \ \
\ +--+ \ +--+ \ +--+
\ / \ / \ /
+------+ +------+ +------+
above is outline of the Pac Man game to help outline my point about
early PC's.
/nasser
|
2149.3 | | ULYSSE::WADE | | Wed Oct 07 1992 07:34 | 20 |
| Re .0
>> "There is no reason for any individual to have a computer in their
>> home." (Ken Olson, President, Digital Equipment, 1977)
>> Perhaps this also explains the underwhelming presence of DEC
>> in the current home computer market. :)
Perhaps Ken was a greater visionary than you think, already
in the late 70s perceiving the trend towards the Information
Utility?
People don't want computers (in their homes or elsewhere);
they want some information available in an appropriate form.
David Stone's favorite analogy for this is the electric drill
- "I don't need a drill, I need a HOLE! I buy a drill only
because no-one (yet) can sell me what I really need".
Jim
|
2149.4 | It will be done with tomorrow's technology | BONNET::BONNET::SIREN | | Wed Oct 07 1992 07:55 | 9 |
| re .3
But the home end of that utility will probably have remarkable
intelligence (in current mesures) and, if done for humans, different
(modular) choices of work load division between the home equipment and
the service.
--Ritva
|
2149.5 | | SCAACT::AINSLEY | Less than 150 kts. is TOO slow! | Wed Oct 07 1992 10:20 | 17 |
| re: .3
That's funny. I bought my drill because I wanted to be able to insert
and remove screws easily. I only occasionally want holes and most
powered screw drivers aren't very good at making holes, so I bought one
tool that can do both.
How does this relate to computers? Simple. People want tools that can
do more than one function well. I don't want a PC at home. I want
something that replaces the functionality of my stereo, my TV, (both
satellite and cable), my security system, my telephone, answering
machine/voice mail, controls my home environment, AND my computing
needs, that is voice controlled from anywhere, but I'll settle for a
remote control for local use and telephone line connections for remote
access, until voice is available.
Bob
|
2149.6 | | PIANST::JANZEN | Writing: a 6K-year tradition | Wed Oct 07 1992 11:37 | 2 |
| Computers are not a tool, they are a medium.
tom
|
2149.7 | its all in your eyes! | SGOUTL::BELDIN_R | D-Day: 82 days and counting | Wed Oct 07 1992 11:48 | 8 |
| Computers are not tools, nor are they a medium, they are devices.
Computer users decide to make them tools or to make them a medium or to
make them a menace or to ignore them completely.
Power to the people! :-)
Dick
|
2149.8 | on what a computer is to ordinary peoples | STAR::ABBASI | life without the DECspell ? | Wed Oct 07 1992 11:56 | 10 |
| computers will be most useful to people when they dont know that it is
a computer they are dealing with.
they should not even know it is a device or a medium or a tool or a hole,
they should use the thing and not think about what is it.
/nasser
|
2149.9 | | MTVIEW::SILK | | Wed Oct 07 1992 13:47 | 11 |
| I STILL don't know anybody who has a computer in his or her home
unless they are:
a) a computer nerd who uses it to log in and do work at home
b) a person who has a workplace in his or her home
Therefore, I don't know anyone who has a computer in his/her HOME.
It's in an office (which happens to be located in the home).
nina
|
2149.10 | | VERGA::WELLCOME | Trickled down upon long enough | Wed Oct 07 1992 14:42 | 14 |
| I can't personally see any real HOME use for a computer, either.
At least not yet. I hope I can keep my home life simple enough
not to require a computer.
All the talk about balancing checkbooks and keeping recipies on
file of a few years ago: why bother? I'm not going to entrust
my checkbook information to a computer that might eat the disk
or go south just when I need to pay the phone bill, and unless
one has a computer terminal on the kitchen counter, how can one
use stored recipies? Besides, who is going to bother to take the
time to type in the contents of a dozen cookbooks?
Keep the checkbook balance in the checkbook, put the cookbook on
the counter, and forget the computer.
I can see a home use for a word processor to write letters, perhaps...
but how many people write that many letters?
|
2149.11 | hey, watch those stones | MIMS::DUCAT_D | | Wed Oct 07 1992 14:48 | 22 |
| ahem. Careful what you say, I don't consider myself
a "computer nerd", but I have a 486sx at home. Yes,
I do log in occasionally when I'm sick or on the weekend to
keep up on my mail, but most of my work on it has
nothing to do with work.
a cross-section of my work. Windows Checkbook program,
personal budget in Microsoft Excel, Letters to various
people for various reasons, compuserve access, where
I keep in touch with my whole family all over the country,
Occasional diversions (games), I create a newsletter using
a windows publishing system for my church. Maintain a clipper
database for Church Singles mailing list and membership information.
Do some light programming in windows and Basic ffor applications
that I need, etc. Computers are a wonderful tool, if you
know how to use them to your advantage
a keyboard in front of you does not mean that you have to have taped
glasses and a pocket protector, slide rule, and other stereotypes.
Dan
|
2149.12 | forgot one thing | MIMS::DUCAT_D | | Wed Oct 07 1992 14:54 | 7 |
| Oh yea, and most recently, I use Lotus organizer to keep
track of my calendar, address book, to do lists, and anniversarys which
in turn prints out to day-timer forms. Therfore I have both a
electronic and paper version of my daytimer. Great way to keep
records.
|
2149.13 | Who'da thought | BSS::GROVER | The CIRCUIT_MAN | Wed Oct 07 1992 14:55 | 17 |
| RE: most past
Unfortunately, I find use for a computer at home, due to school. The
kids always have reports and such which teachers require typed. Also,
it helps a great deal keeping up with my hobby.... I am able to keep
track of hobby related stuff....
So.... if you have school aged kids, you will most likely end up with a
PC of some flavor or another.... Give it time.
I remember when calculaters weren't permissable in a classroom. Now, my
youngest son has the use of a "lap top", when in school...
Who knows what we will be seeing in another 15... who can figure.!
Later!
|
2149.14 | every one missed the most important use for a PC at home | STAR::ABBASI | life without the DECspell ? | Wed Oct 07 1992 15:36 | 9 |
|
plus if you have a PC at home , people who visit you think you must very
smart, just make sure you put the PC right in the middle of living
room, so they can see it, and start telling them all about the DOS
thing and about floppy disks, and things like that, they'll be so proud
and very impressed by you.
/nasser
|
2149.15 | Oh how PC | SMAUG::GARROD | Floating on a wooden DECk chair | Wed Oct 07 1992 19:00 | 1 |
|
|
2149.16 | Computers can be amusing, if nothing else ... | AUSTIN::UNLAND | Sic Biscuitus Disintegratum | Thu Oct 08 1992 00:49 | 9 |
| Considering a Nintendo box is a computer of sorts, there are lots more
home computers out there than you might imagine.
Seriously, my PC at home is much more of an entertainment tool than
anything else. I've paid much more for games and sound stuff than I
did for the PC itself.
Geoff
|
2149.17 | focus please.... | NECSC::ROODY | Do Defects save jobs? | Thu Oct 08 1992 10:00 | 15 |
| I think we have fallen into a trap here. Who cares what people do with
a machine at home; they buy them - thats whats important. Who are we
to say that a checkbook keeper, or recipe database, or pong game is
trivial? If there is a market for trivial home based systems, and we
can fill it profitably, perhaps better than the competition, then why
are we spending time looking down our nose at that market? Isn't this
how Sun gained so much elbow room in the desktop space?
What worries me more than anything else is our tendancy towards
"Dec-no-centricity" (tm). It still blinds us, especially in areas our
customers seem to be playing more and more, and, where we haven't been
players in the past.
Oh well, enuf is enuf.
|
2149.18 | | JANUS::BERENT | Anthony Berent | Thu Oct 08 1992 10:00 | 5 |
| re .9:
Do you know anybody with a CD player or video recorder in their
home who is not in either category. If so you know someone with a
computer in their home!
|
2149.19 | few people actually *need* a CD player at home | CVG::THOMPSON | Radical Centralist | Thu Oct 08 1992 10:05 | 5 |
| Not to many people need a PC at home. But than again lots of
people buy lots of things they don't need. What do people want
is probably a better question to ask than what do they need.
Alfred
|
2149.20 | | ICS::NELSONK | | Thu Oct 08 1992 11:39 | 4 |
| Re .19 -- Yes, but isn't it a central tenet of economics that
wants are virtually unlimited?
|
2149.21 | Want = Need to some | BSS::GROVER | The CIRCUIT_MAN | Thu Oct 08 1992 11:51 | 22 |
| "Necessity is the mother of invention"
NOT
Want is the mother of invention..??
BUT, in one persons' mind.... his want could/would be classified as a
need.
If someone wants something bad enough, he/she will justify it by
rationalizing it as a need..., a tool...., At that point, he/she can
justify the cost... etc....
As stated earlier, if wants and/or needs exist, Digital should make
efforts to offer solutions to those wants and/or needs, as long as
those needs relate to our product line.... and are legal.
|
2149.22 | On wants and needs | BOOKS::HAMILTON | All models are false; some are useful - Dr. G. Box | Thu Oct 08 1992 12:22 | 42 |
|
Part of the problem is that we (here in the oh-so-rational world
of Digital) lose sight of some important things. For example, I don't *need*
a CD player with carousel, but I have one. I never needed a
VCR (but I have two -- pressure from the kids, don't you know :-));
I don't need cable TV in both my living room and family room, and
I could do without the two bills, but I had it installed. I didn't
need to buy a CD-ROM for $600.00 to watch two minute clips of moving
and roaring elephants on a multi-media encyclopedia.
I somehow rationalized those purchases (through tortuous logic
as I recall), convinced my wife (who could do quite nicely without
being plugged into the information economy, to her credit), and
put them all on the VISA card, where I now spend an additional 16% or
so to pay for them.
Now, I am not stupid. I am actually reasonably well-read and educated.
So, we (Digital) need to be very careful about being so arrogrant as
to say, "people will never need <insert_your_favorite_electronic_toy>"
at home". I suspect, from visits to my friends' houses, that I am
not alone. One of my friends is a union ironworker. At home, he has
a 486/50 PC, with a video capture card and camera; he is busily putting
all the slides he has ever taken into .GIF format, making them
self-extracting, and was thinking about selling a service like that
to local real-estate companies; he is currently evaluating whether
Kodak already grabbed that niche with it's new product.
Markets are a varied patchwork of people, with different interests,
tastes, beliefs. We need to shake this apparent homogeneous image of our
customers and understand that they are as varied as ourselves and
the characters you see and hear about every day.
We need to figure out what people want and give it to them. We also
need to take risks, because some people don't know they want something
until it's available. One of the most interesting suggestions I've
seen in one of the notes conferences was trying to sell Alpha_AXP(tm)
to a game maker like Sega or Nintendo. Perphaps virtual reality
games (or pseudo-games) are a *huge* market. Perhaps not. The point
is, we'll never know if we don't try.
Glenn
|
2149.23 | Sorry, don't remember who came up with this one | LYCEUM::CURTIS | Dick "Aristotle" Curtis | Thu Oct 08 1992 14:11 | 3 |
| "Necessity can be a real mother."
-- seen in a novel maybe 15 years ago
|
2149.24 | relation of PC/home density and level of education ? | STAR::ABBASI | life without the DECspell ? | Thu Oct 08 1992 14:50 | 29 |
|
do people think also that the level of general education in society
reflect how much people need or use a PC in their homes?
I mean a population that relatively has lower level of education
would probably have less need to PC's , while one with a higher general
level of education (scientific and/or liberal) would have more need/use
for PC's.
to get a measure of this, let make up something, call it PC/HOME
density.
you find this by counting the number of home PC's in the country, and
divide this number by the size of the population, if this density is
closer to 1, then the population are very PC literate and the general
level of education is higher, if the density if near zero, it is the
other way round, if the density is greater than 1 (i.e. more home PC's
than there are people ), this means that the country is full of nerds.
it would be nice to see this PC/HOME density number distribution all
over the world, this would be very useful for marketing and sales
people to see where they should target their marketing at.
of course we can apply this density measure not just to countries, but also
to local communities at the state and local level.
Iam hope i did not say anything not PC by the above.
/nasser
|
2149.25 | A few facts that may help..... | CGHUB::DOLL | | Thu Oct 08 1992 15:48 | 8 |
| Slightly more than 50% of the current U.S. PC market is the consumer
sector. There must easily be in excess of 120-130,000,000 PCs
installed worlwide (Microsoft has sold more than 100,000,000 copies
of DOS). I leave the computation of the U.S. PC/home density based
on this to others more familiar with worldwide distribution and U.S.
population data.
Bill
|
2149.26 | | WLDBIL::KILGORE | Bill -- 227-4319 | Thu Oct 08 1992 16:48 | 6 |
|
Necessity is the mother of invention...
Want is the mother of capitalism.
|
2149.27 | | OOKALA::RWARRENFELTZ | | Fri Oct 09 1992 09:52 | 3 |
| Nasser:
Another good one...
|
2149.28 | What WAS there in 1977. | MARX::BAIRD | SIS - Stow, MA dtn 276-9711 | Mon Oct 12 1992 17:20 | 26 |
|
re: some early entries and the date "1977"
I noticed no one mentioned that by '77 there were quite a few examples
of Home Computers around. The original home 'package' - the MITS Altair
was already several years old and Southwest Technical had sold many to
computer hobby types. I had participated in a proposal to use a
variation of the Altair in a library application.
National Semi was putting out a steady steam of info sheets on their
computer chips and had funded a user group that had published info on
building your own computer. Several people used the info to go into
their own business of "I'll build it for you."
There were at least three PC releated mag's on the newstands that
catered to a very fast growing, from a sizeable base, number of home
computer builders, users and business types.
By 1977 the founder of BYTE had long been saying, if you wanted to get
rich, get into PCs. He had been proven right by 1977, let alone the
ensuing years.
So just in case you weren't there or forgot - PCs were alive and well
in 1977 and have been getting better ever since.
J.B.
|
2149.29 | How times have changed... | UPSAR::THOMAS | The Code Warrior | Mon Oct 12 1992 23:54 | 4 |
| Gee. Someone in my storage area I have a Processor Technoology Sol-20
with 48K/RAM and Northstart drives running CP/M dating from 1977.
During high school I used it to dial up at the amazingly fast speed of
300 baud (the ASR33s at school only did 110).
|
2149.30 | memories | SGOUTL::BELDIN_R | D-Day: 76 days and counting | Tue Oct 13 1992 09:14 | 8 |
| In 1977, I was enviously examining Apple II's and Visicalc every time I
got near a computer store. I was the only manager in Digital of Puerto
Rico who had ever used a computer even though we built them here. Even
the engineers didn't start using them until I broke the ice by getting
a bootleg account on the process test machines. Then they built up
workstations from cosmetically damaged equipment.
Dick
|
2149.31 | others have stumbled.... | SENIOR::HAMBURGER | Life is a Do_It_Yourself project! | Wed Oct 21 1992 14:21 | 15 |
|
> "There is no reason for any individual to have a computer in their
> home." (Ken Olson, President, Digital Equipment, 1977)
>Perhaps this also explains the underwhelming presence of DEC in the current
>home computer market. :)
I believe that in 1948 Mr. Watson, Sr, of IBM, stated that he could not
forsee the need for more than perhaps 5-6 computers in the whole world for
processing information. He continued to be the CEO of IBM for some time
after that faux paus (sp?).......
Foresight in this business is tough for many folks, not just KO....
Vic
|
2149.32 | OlSen... | NODEX::ADEY | Inherit the Window | Wed Oct 21 1992 14:31 | 5 |
| Would a moderator of this file please fix the spelling of Ken's last
name in the title of this topic (it's OlsEn)? Thanks.
Ken....
|
2149.33 | | METSYS::THOMPSON | | Wed Oct 21 1992 17:33 | 12 |
| re: Ken Olsen and PC's
Ken may have been wrong about PC's in the home but I understand he
was very much behind Digital's efforts in professional PC. I thought
that the PRO 350 was widely regarded as Ken's pet project, or was
that just rumour?
Our problem with PC's was not that Digital did not recognize the
importance of that market, indeed in 1984 they were supposed to
represent about 50% of total revenues [this was a 1983 forecast],
rather we never admitted that we had a failed strategy and took
the appropriate measures to correct it.
|