PC Sales Strong In Stores
An anonymous reader writes "Notebooks and Desktops are both staying strong in brick-and-mortar sales, according to C|Net. While laptops have mostly fueled the market these last few years, Desktops actually had a little bit of a comeback." From the article: "The first quarter is always a bit slower than the fourth, when holiday shoppers often drive PC and chip companies to their strongest results of the year. This year, the drop from fourth quarter to first was a little more pronounced, echoing Intel's warning in March that earnings would fall short of expectations. But when compared with the first quarter of last year, PC shipments were up 28 percent, versus growth of 19.4 percent recorded during last year's first quarter."
*** A tumbleweed blows by ***
Change your name to Homer Junior! Your friends can call you Hoju
Honestly, I don't think it'll have any impact at all. Why? Because hardly anyone cares about Vista.
Those who run corporate IT departments have no interest at all in a new OS, not while their various lockdown tools won't work on it. Consumers, by and large, don't give a damn because a) most don't understand what an operating system is and b) most haven't heard of Vista.
Microsoft has yet to start a real advertising blitz for Vista- though if they did, you'd probably see a decline in PC sales.
This whole article is really just a big nothing- people are still buying computers! The specs on these computers are better! The status quo has not changed very much!
"Database maintenance is currently taking place. Some items such as comment posting and moderation are currently unavailable." was the message for most of the afternoon (PDT).
Ant(Dude) @ Quality Foraged Links (AQFL.net) & The Ant Farm (antfarm.ma.cx / antfarm.home.dhs.org).
It is ironic that the architectural faults in MS Windows may be good for the bottom line of computer manufacturers and of MS itself.
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Frustration is not being able to complain about unannounced database maintenance.