[comp.sys.mac] comparing NeXT vs Mac on slow sales rampup

yost@esquire.UUCP (David A. Yost) (04/07/90)

When you mention how slow the NeXT has been to
catch on, often someone will say, yeah, but the
Mac took a while to catch on, too.

I was just cleaning out my files tonight, and I came
across some interesting numbers given to me a while
back by MacWeek's market research department.

Macintoshes shipped:

   1984  259,000
   1985  231,000
   1986  354,000
   1987  526,000

(anyone have 1988 and 1989 figures?)

All rumor I have heard puts NeXT's shipments at
between 10,000 and 15,000 in the first, what has it been,
9 months now?

 --dave yost
   yost@dpw.com or uunet!esquire!yost
   Please ignore the From or Reply-To fields above, if different.

barry@mesquite.math.ucla.edu (Barry Merriman) (04/07/90)

In article <1919@esquire.UUCP> yost@esquire.UUCP (David A. Yost) writes:
>Macintoshes shipped:
>   1984  259,000
>   1985  231,000
>   1986  354,000
>   1987  526,000
 
But you should really compare NeXTs and MacII**s---the NeXT
is infinitely more machine than a plain Mac. The fact is, most users
that do just fine with their 286 IBM clones will never need
the power of a NeXT, and sales will not rival those of personal
computers until (if ever) the price drops by a factor of 2--3.

Barry Merriman

evenson@cis.udel.edu (04/11/90)

	According to the latest UNIX world, in the "News Brief" section, NeXT
has been moving only "hundreds of boxes" a month, and calls this "slow".

		Mark Evenson