• brucethemoose@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    It will never bounce back.

    The “plan” is to effectively kill the market for personal PCs. PCs won’t be gone, but with the bulk of the population buying phones, tablets, or thin clients, it becomes far more niche and kills its critical mass for platform development.

    It sounds tinfoil hat-ish yeah, but… well, explain 2026 to your 2011 self.

    • Ariselas@piefed.ca
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      3 days ago

      not tinfoil hat, once everything is strictly on the cloud, you’ll have no choice but to pay a monthly bill for everything.

    • [object Object]@lemmy.ca
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      3 days ago

      I foresee what happens is consumer level hardware just stops getting made, except devices like phones and tablets.

      Oh, you wanted DDR5? We stopped making that. Hyperscalers pay a 20x markup for the same wafers. You want a motherboard? Sorry, demand dried up and we don’t make them.

      You can rent our computers through GeForce Now and stream straight to your iPad though!

      • brucethemoose@lemmy.world
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        3 days ago

        Yeah, this is exactly what I meant, worded better.

        There needs to a critical mass of PC demand for us to get anything at all.

    • Ferrous@lemmy.ml
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      3 days ago

      Yup. Give it 50 years, and you’ll be subject to prosecution for owning >x FLOPS. First they take the Internet, and then they take compute. The strategy is starting to become clear.

    • neonchaos@piefed.social
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      3 days ago

      I think you’re 100% right. There just too much profit incentive on the table. With AI continuing to cash strap companies, the best way to cover some of that debt is by finding other revenue streams. Microsoft already has cost models in place for virtual machines, and dummy hardware specifically for accessing VMs in the cloud. Extrapolate that out as the more “affordable” option ($200 entry free for an HDMI dock with a WiFi card and 32MiB of onboard storage for credential storage) and it becomes very appealing to most people just on the convenience proposition. Then Microsoft data mines the info stored by users to sell for advertising, and suddenly Microsoft isn’t in debt, it’s profitable again.