OT: Microsoft specs out 'pay as you go' PC scheme

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OT: Microsoft specs out 'pay as you go' PC scheme

Postby T-Bone » Sun Jan 04, 2009 4:55 pm

I think M$ would feel a backlash like no other if they even attempted this... I think it would be a very slippery slope to give someone that much control over peoples computers, especially considering the personal records, finances and other things people have on their own PC's. I don't see this becoming a reality very soon, if at all...



Microsoft specs out 'pay as you go' PC scheme


Microsoft Corp. last week applied for a patent that spells out a "pay as you go" concept under which users would be charged for both the software they run and the computing horsepower they use.

According to the patent application filed last week with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, the "Metered Pay-As-You-Go Computing Experience" scheme would meter software use and access to specific computer hardware. Fees would be charged against a prepaid or billed account.

"The current business model for computer hardware and software relies on a user purchasing a computer with hardware and software that is suited to the most demanding applications that the user expects to encounter," said Microsoft in the application. "Therefore, a user may buy a multi-core processor with a significant amount of memory and advanced video support for gaming applications that are only used on the weekend, while the user's day-in, day-out activities may involve little more than word processing or web-browsing."

Microsoft's plan would instead monitor the machine to track things such as disk storage space, processor cores and memory used, then bill the user for what was consumed during a set period.

"A different business model may allow a more granular approach to hardware and software sales," Microsoft argued. "A computer may have individually metered hardware and software components that a user can select and activate based on current need. When the need is browsing, a low level of performance may be used, and when network-based interactive gaming is the need of the moment, the highest available performance may be made available to the user."

Fees would be lower for low-performance chores, such as writing e-mail or surfing the Internet, and higher for high-performance tasks.

For consumers, Microsoft said, the advantage of such a model would be a lower price at the outset for a powerful PC. Computer makers would gain the ability to standardize on higher-end systems, it added. But the company admitted that the overall cost to the user might be higher than for a standard PC purchase. "Although the cost of ownership over the life of the computer may be higher than that of a one-time purchase, the payments can be deferred and the user can extend the useful life of the computer beyond that of the one-time purchase machine," Microsoft contended.

Key to the concept is something Microsoft called a "security module," embedded either in the hardware or provided as software, that would meter the computer's usage. "To make this model successful, a mechanism must be in place that supports a highly secure method of adjusting performance coupled with a secure, auditable measurement and payment scheme to allow a variety of pre-paid and post-paid mechanisms for capturing and settling highly granular, infinitely adjustable, performance variations," the patent application said.

The security module would also lock the PC to a specific supplier, perhaps an ISP, much as a subsidized cell phone is locked to a specific mobile carrier for the life of a contract. "The metering agents and ... the security module allow an underwriter in the supply chain to confidently supply a computer at little or no upfront cost to a user or business, aware that their investment is protected and that the scalable performance capabilities generate revenue commensurate with actual performance level settings and usage," said Microsoft.

Pricing could be on an hourly rate, perhaps with different "bundles" priced according to the software offered and the hardware necessary to run that software. A bundle of productivity applications, for example, might include word processing and spreadsheet software that could

access two of three processor cores and a medium level of graphics performance for, say, $1 an hour.

A "gaming bundle," meanwhile, would make available all the PC's processor cores and 3-D graphics support for $1.25 an hour.

"Both users and suppliers benefit from this new business model," Microsoft claimed. "The user is able to migrate the performance level of the computer as needs change over time, while the supplier can develop a revenue stream business that may actually have higher value than the one-time purchase model currently practiced."
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Postby Ehwmatt » Sun Jan 04, 2009 5:01 pm

I hope this is an Onion article in disguise, wow.
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Postby T-Bone » Sun Jan 04, 2009 5:06 pm

It's real, but i'm almost 99% positive that it'll never fly. It gives M$ too much control.
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Postby Rip Rokken » Sun Jan 04, 2009 5:09 pm

I've been against much of what they have been doing for a few years now. None of it is geared toward the consumer -- it's all about twisting their arms to make them more dependent on M$. Everything from ridiculously long product keys, to Software Assurance, to Windows Genuine (dis)Advantage, to online apps, and now this crap? If they haven't learned a lesson from the Vista debacle, chances are they won't.

I'd love to be proven wrong though... Even Suckmantec caved in thanks to the terrible rep they'd earned, and trimmed a whopping 75% of the bloat out of their new version of NAV. I think when their bottom line suffers enough, they are forced to think about the consumer again. Micro$oft has just been notoriously slow to get around to this.
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Postby T-Bone » Sun Jan 04, 2009 5:35 pm

I know there's plenty of people out there that are anti____ for whatever reason, but when all the bullshit is set aside, M$ does make some pretty user-friendly products. Sure 80% of the computing world is M$ based, but if M$ was pure shite, it wouldn't be. As Rip kinda said, M$ has gotten so out of touch with what the consumer wants these days and has focused more on themselves. I'm very interested to see what the new Windows 7 OS will be like later this year if it manages to come out.
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Postby conversationpc » Mon Jan 05, 2009 1:13 am

Rip Rokken wrote:I'd love to be proven wrong though... Even Suckmantec caved in thanks to the terrible rep they'd earned, and trimmed a whopping 75% of the bloat out of their new version of NAV.


I've always really liked Symantec's corporate antivirus product but the consumer version has long been a problem. I've had to try to uninstall it on a few different occasions and had problems each time, resulting in hours spent manually deleting files, registry keys, etc. What a pain in the butt that was.
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