Home | Forums | Mark forums read | Search | FAQ | Login

Advanced search
Hot Topics
Buraku hot topic Debito reinvents himself as a Uyoku movie star!
Buraku hot topic Steven Seagal? Who's that?
Buraku hot topic Best Official Japan Souvenirs
Buraku hot topic Multiculturalism on the rise?
Buraku hot topic As if gaijin men didn't have a bad enough reputation...
Buraku hot topic Swapping Tokyo For Greenland
Buraku hot topic
Buraku hot topic Dutch wives for sale
Buraku hot topic Live Action "Akira" Update
Buraku hot topic Iran, DPRK, Nuke em, Like Japan
Change font size
  • fuckedgaijin ‹ General ‹ Tokyo Tech

Sun To Sell Office Suite At Retail In Japan

News, shopping tips and discussion of all things tech: electronics, gadgets, cell phones, digital cameras, cars, bikes, rockets, robots, toilets, HDTV, DV, DVD, but NO P2P.
Post a reply
8 posts • Page 1 of 1

Sun To Sell Office Suite At Retail In Japan

Postby Steve Bildermann » Mon Jan 19, 2004 6:51 am

Beginning Feb. 5, SourceNext Corp., a Japanese distributor, will begin offering the StarSuite – the name given to the Japanese version of StarOffice – for 1,980 yen, or less than twenty dollars. It marks the first that either StarOffice or StarSuite products have been offered on an annual subscription basis by a retailer, Sun said.

http://www.extremetech.com/article2/0,3973,1439311,00.asp?kc=ETRSS02129TX1K0000532

:arrow: Star Office information

Image
Great Janet Jackson Breast crash 04 - Survived - check
Great Bandwidth crash 05 - Survived - check
Electric shock treatment 2005-2009 - Survived - check
User avatar
Steve Bildermann
 
Posts: 2023
Joined: Fri May 10, 2002 10:08 am
Location: Nagoya
  • Website
Top

Postby Cubed » Mon Jan 19, 2004 7:45 am

I've been worried about Sun's business model for a while. Java is good, but it's not making any money. Neither is Solaris for all but a few hardcore UNIX devotees running SPARCS.

OpenOffice.org is the free (dev) version of StarOffice. This will not be a moneyspinner either.
Cubed
Maezumo
 
Posts: 310
Joined: Fri Sep 26, 2003 6:04 am
Location: On Odaiba's artificial beach, sunbathing in the dying twilight
Top

Postby cstaylor » Mon Jan 19, 2004 8:56 am

Worry more about your own bread-and-butter, Microsoft, who just had their first flat quarter. Guess batsu-box and their overpriced Office suite isn't cutting the mustard anymore. :lol:
User avatar
cstaylor
 
Posts: 6383
Joined: Mon Apr 29, 2002 2:07 am
Location: Yokohama, Japan
  • Website
Top

Postby moog » Mon Jan 19, 2004 11:28 am

cstaylor wrote:Worry more about your own bread-and-butter, Microsoft, who just had their first flat quarter. Guess batsu-box and their overpriced Office suite isn't cutting the mustard anymore. :lol:


um, what flat quarter are you talking about? :?:

MS doesn't announce earnings until the 22nd. if you're referring to last quarter, it sure wasn't flat.

"Microsoft reported fiscal first-quarter net income of $2.6 billion, or 24 cents a share, compared with $2 billion, or 19 cents a share, in the same quarter last year. Revenue rose 6% to $8.2 billion from $7.8 billion a year ago."
User avatar
moog
Maezumo
 
Posts: 23
Joined: Fri Dec 12, 2003 6:35 pm
  • ICQ
Top

This one

Postby cstaylor » Mon Jan 19, 2004 12:05 pm

How it does this is no trick. It has profit margins on its two major products of over eighty per cent. The rest of the products, from handhelds to MSN and the Xbox are all horrific money losers. Its finances are so opaque and badly presented, that it can shuffle money around from one part of the company to another without anyone noticing. Make too much money one quarter? Stash it in the closet labeled investments, or write off some losses. Not making the numbers? Cash in some assets and make a 'profit'.

Overall, it has been able to show a smooth earnings curve, and surprise on the upside every time it reports a quarter. Monopolies and almost no cost to make your physical product other than R&D has its advantages.
User avatar
cstaylor
 
Posts: 6383
Joined: Mon Apr 29, 2002 2:07 am
Location: Yokohama, Japan
  • Website
Top

Postby moog » Mon Jan 19, 2004 12:29 pm

"Of note for Microsoft: robust back-to-school PC sales; a 51% spike in MSN ad sales, helping the Internet service post its first operating profit; and strong Xbox sales.

The inquirer is a radical MS hater site that has little or no credibility. If their 'robbing-peter-to-pay-paul' theory had any truth to it, MS couldn't possibly continue to grow their cash reserves at the rate in which they do (nearly $60B cash now). They and the rest of their ilk can't stand the idea that MS is successful, that's all.

But we digress from the orginal topic ...
User avatar
moog
Maezumo
 
Posts: 23
Joined: Fri Dec 12, 2003 6:35 pm
  • ICQ
Top

Postby cstaylor » Mon Jan 19, 2004 1:08 pm

OpenOffice is pretty good. We're testing it in our IT group before we roll it out to the rest of the company, but it's a good savings. The biggest problem we ran into so far is that it doesn't support Microsoft's Active Directory software publishing method (so the machines will have it installed automatically).
User avatar
cstaylor
 
Posts: 6383
Joined: Mon Apr 29, 2002 2:07 am
Location: Yokohama, Japan
  • Website
Top

guddo, guddo

Postby omae mona » Mon Jan 19, 2004 8:31 pm

I haven't had the need to use anything but OpenOffice.org for about 2 years now. The only exceptions are cases where I needed macro compatibility with Excel. Other than that, I've been happily exchanging documents with my Microsoft-saddled colleagues.
User avatar
omae mona
 
Posts: 3184
Joined: Mon Aug 18, 2003 12:08 pm
Top


Post a reply
8 posts • Page 1 of 1

Return to Tokyo Tech

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 3 guests

  • Board index
  • The team • Delete all board cookies • All times are UTC + 9 hours
Powered by phpBB® Forum Software © phpBB Group