The business to consumer argument is valid--we are, after all, buying machines that a company would buy for its employees. But the large vs. small production scale argument is debatable. Whenever I see a laptop used by a businessperson on a train, in an airport, at a hotel, etc. it is also always a Thinkpad. Which means that there must be thousands more being used by employees in those businesses. This seems to imply that IBM is able to crank these out in very high quantities. However, there is no evidence to support the argument that once Levino starts making them that they will suddenly "flood the market" with lower-quality cheapsters. Yes, they need to make a profit, but the corporate market (which is where IBM makes most of its profits) is still a far more limited market than the consumer market. To maintain customer loyalty to the Thinkpad brand, they will have to maintain the high product and service standards of the brand, otherwise, people will turn away from it...the only question at this point is: to what will they turn, since nothing out there even approaches TP quality....redsb3 wrote:And going to your local (insert store here) and comparing is like looking at Mercedes and Ford. There is no comparison as they are made for different markets. IBM has always been marketed as a BUSINESS machine while you are comparing it to a CONSUMER model. Some companies produce business models that are far superior to what they offer to the general public. As far as the service and support, yes it is good, but then that is what you are paying for. An extremely heavy premium IMO...
...They can only provide such support because they are still small. If they had reached the proportions of a Dell or HP/Compaq, then their service and support would have gone downhill like everybody else. And even with that heavy premium, they still sold it off because they weren't making enough of a profit. Pretty much tells me that you can expect a drop in quality and support as Levino begins to crank out and sell many more notebooks than IBM ever did. IBM got out from under it and Levino will have to step up production and sales to recoup their investment.
Jeff in Boston









