Posted on 05/16/2011 12:44:04 PM PDT by Ernest_at_the_Beach
Google (NASDAQ:GOOG) just explained the business case for Chromebooks in a press briefing at I/O, and its crystal clear that theyre not a consumer product.
Rather, Google is going after Microsofts (NASDAQ:MSFT) heart the corporate IT department.
The pitch: Chromebooks are so much cheaper and easier to manage than PCs, it will free up the IT department to do other more interesting (and profit-centered) things.
According to Gartner, the cost of managing each Windows PC in an organization is between $3,000 and $5,000 a year. Thats how much it takes for an IT person to do things like push Windows and Office patches out every month, install and maintain antivirus software, answer helpdesk calls, and so on.
Google isnt claiming that Chromebooks will push these costs to zero, but Chrome OS business manager Rajen Sheth said that they could total cost of ownership in half.
The best example: today when a new employee starts, it can take several hours to image a new PC with all the right apps and get them set up on all the different accounts they need.
With a company thats already set up to use Chromebooks, all a new user has to do is sign on and hes up and running. All applications are delivered over the corporate network or the Web.
The IT manager from Jasons Deli, a chain of 230 restaurants, said that they gave a bunch of sales managers Chromebooks as part of a pilot program. Last month, the company had 70 trouble tickets from regular laptops. It had zero from Chromebooks.
But what about Office? What about specialized corporate apps that only run on Windows?
Those are taken care of through a deal with virtualization company Citrix (NASDAQ:CTXS).
(Excerpt) Read more at wallstcheatsheet.com ...
Good point.
thin-desk clients make a lot of sense in the corporate world — most business users just need a few applications and most of these run on the servers in any case. Using a thin-desk can cut costs by 2/3rds in the best cases. 30 years ago network connectivity wasn’t as reliable and quick as today, nor were business users (0 tech knowledge people) using computers for their day-to-day jobs.
At the server end of the market SUSE Linux and MS do rule.
I don't believe MS will die, but it will no longer be dominant -- neither will Apple or Google or IBM in their markets. Healthy competition is good.
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