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Microsoft Is Readying a Consumer Microsoft 365 Subscription Bundle (zdnet.com)

Microsoft is working on a new "Microsoft 365 Consumer" bundle that "will be the consumer-focused complement to Microsoft's existing Microsoft 365 subscription bundle for business users," reports ZDNet. From the report: A couple of recent Microsoft job postings mention the consumer subscription bundle, which Microsoft has yet to announce publicly. One job posting for a Product Manager for the "M365 Consumer Subscription" notes: "The Subscription Product Marketing team is a new team being created to build and scale the Microsoft 365 Consumer Subscription." The job description says the product manager for this service will help "identify, build, position and market a great new Microsoft 365 Consumer Subscription."

The job post notes that the team behind Microsoft 365 Consumer oversees the Windows platform, the Microsoft Surface device portfolio, Office 365 consumer plans, Skype, Cortana, Bing search, as well as the Microsoft Education team. If I were betting on what Microsoft 365 Consumer might include, I'd think some variant of Windows 10, Office 365 Home, Skype, Cortana, Bing, Outlook Mobile, Microsoft To-Do and maybe MSN apps and services could figure into the picture. Maybe this subscription will be tied to Surface devices only? Maybe a monthly leasing fee for Surfaces will be part of the bundle itself?

7 of 92 comments (clear)

  1. End of personal computing by 110010001000 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Corporations REALLY want to move everyone to a monthly rental model in order to satisfy their CFOs need for predictable quarterly income. This is really the end of personal computing since it will all be tied to the cloud and the Internet. Eventually ISPs will require your device to be one of the approved rental model systems in order to connect to the Internet at all.

    1. Re:End of personal computing by ctilsie242 · · Score: 3, Informative

      This is already happening. Look at your DOCSIS modem. For most ISPs, it has to be on an approved list, and they flash their firmware onto the device, even if is owned by you. I wouldn't be surprised to see "AV" software forced into all Internet connected devices, which scanned for pirated stuff and unlicensed movies, under the guide of "anti-terrorism".

      The thing about the business love affair for monthly stuff is twofold:

      1: Shareholders will sue if stuff gets charged off for other expenses, so companies have to minimize CAPEX costs (payroll, equipment, etc), and move to OPEX, so they can keep the same numbers as the previous quarter. Moving to the cloud means that they don't have to worry about having to buy new stuff every 3-5 years and lose profits. Even if a company does a "forklift", which costs them almost an order of magnitude more, because it is a monthly cost, and the trendy thing, they get a free pass. Plus, it allows for people (rackers/stackers, OS/Ops people, etc.) to be laid off, making them look better on Wall Street.

      2: Businesses who sell stuff love monthly subscriptions. Companies highly feared lock-in with mainframes, but they are embracing a technology where they -have- to pay no matter what, or else they don't run. To boot, there is no real way to effectively port in or out of the cloud without major internal redesigns, and those can be impossible.

      The good thing is that this has been moving people to open source software. For example, password programs like 1Password and mSecure require monthly commitments, whether or not you use their cloud offering, when in previous versions, you just bought the app and stored the databases yourself. Now, people move to KeePass and other F/OSS software, just because they are tired of the greed involved. Some companies even run completely on Linux now, desktop, directory, and all. When some company demands a SAM audit for a Microsoft true-up, they can laugh in the person's face, since nothing MS goes in the door, and machines are sent from the factory with no OS on them.

  2. Fuck this idea... by b0s0z0ku · · Score: 4, Insightful

    'guess I'll be sticking with Windows 7 or some variant of Linux indefinitely if M$ wants to ram a monthly subscription to Win 10 down my raw gullet.

  3. Short-term gain for long-term losses. by Gravis+Zero · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Computer users a cheap, really fucking cheap. There will always be a class of people who will go with rent-seeking ideas like this but it will be short lived. The majority of people will switch to something free (may be pirated MS Office or LibreOffice) because money is money. They are going to end up cutting ties with most users to profit from the few that go along with it. The few that go along is an eroding base because MS Office will soon no longer be the dominate office suite that everyone knows.

    The only way this works is if the product is free for the user and they subject you to ads and steal your personal info even more and even then you have to compete with google's office suite.

    --
    Anons need not reply. Questions end with a question mark.
  4. Windows SAS by sdinfoserv · · Score: 3, Informative

    There you have it, the official announcement that Windows will be a subscription. Something Microsoft has been trying to accomplish since XP. Don't pay your annual MS tithe and you're the proud owner of a $1200 brick. I just bough a Surface Go to test for the office. Get the one with a big enough drive to support updates (because the 64Gb model runs out of drive space after you patch for a year), add a keyboard, mouse and pen (all extra) plus extended 2yr warrant and it is $1200.

  5. Re:Coming Soon, HWAaS by Rick+Schumann · · Score: 4, Informative

    Buddy, do you not realize that this goes far beyond Microsoft or computing devices in general? The Rich want everyone to rent or lease everything and own nothing of value. Look for this, you'll see that it's true. Basically another form of feudalism. Discourage and/or prevent average people from owning anything with any real value by placing barriers in their way. When everything is leased or rented, those things can be taken away with little or no notice, and when you're poor, substantial legal representation is out of your reach financially, so you can't fight it. When you can't, for instance, own your own home, you can't build equity in it as you pay off the loan, therefore you can't borrow against that equity, so you're stuck with just your income. The credit rating system is rigged also, so your ability to borrow money is limited. This and other things are what are destorying the middle class in the U.S., leaving a vacuum in it's place, so there's only 'The Poor' and 'The Rich', with no way to cross that gulf because no middle class. Also note how hideously expensive it is to get a college degree, and it's getting harder and harder to get student loans, and even if you can you're struggling to pay them off for years and years -- assuming that is your degree is even worth anything in todays' workplace, which all too often it isn't.

  6. Too many montly bills already. by jellomizer · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Subscriptions actually make more sense for businesses. Automatic updates, lower upfront cost to allow more liquidity towards purchases more directly needed for the business,The ability to cancel services when the product isn't needed...

    For Home use though, it is just a suck on our income, with an other monthly bill to make sure you have money in your bank account to pay for. And for a product you may not be using all the time. I would much rather buy a copy of office for a few hundred bucks and let it become a few years out of date, where if my income gets tight I can still have the product at hand.

    Luckally LibreOffice is good enough for my home use. And my works Office account allows me to have a copy on my PC as well.
    However what I really miss is Photoshop, I really can't justify paying that much for Adobe Subscription for software that is on my PC

    --
    If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.