Apple did something very unusual Monday: It cut prices.
As part of its long-awaited notebook refresh, Apple dropped the price of three of the four models in its signature MacBook Air line by $100, representing cuts of between 6 percent and 8 percent.
[ InfoWorld's Galen Gruman says the new Retina MacBook Pro comes at a price few can afford -- but that should change over time. | Gruman also shows how Apple is moving beyond iOS and OS X. | Subscribe to InfoWorld's Consumerization of IT newsletter today. | Get expert advice about planning and implementing your BYOD strategy with InfoWorld's 42-page "Mobile and BYOD Deep Dive" PDF special report. ]
The new laptops, and prices, were announced at Apple's Worldwide Developers conference.
Apple rarely reduces prices on its Macs, and instead prefers to keep the dollar figure static while boosting performance and storage capacity with newer processors and graphics chipsets, more RAM and larger hard drives or SSDs (solid-state drives).
The last time Apple reduced prices of the Air was in October 2010, when the company introduced the first sub-$1,000 model, a $999 11-inch laptop with 2GB of memory and a 64GB SSD.
Before that, it's hard to track down an Apple price cut other than the mid-2009 6 percent to 28 percent discounts on all then-available MacBook Airs and MacBook Pros. That move, analysts said at the time, was the company's reaction to the crumbling economy and consumer unrest.
"For them to take $100 off, that's a pretty potent statement," said Frank Gillett, an analyst with Forrester Research, in a Monday interview. "They're cutting prices and improving the hardware. That means that there was enough room in the margin before to return some to customers. And it shows that they've recouped all the setup and tooling costs, so they can set prices more marginally."
That doesn't bode well for rivals, especially the OEMs (original equipment manufacturers) looking to cash in on the thin-and-light category with Windows-powered Ultrabooks, Intel's marketing label for MacBook Air competitors.
"Intel and Microsoft are working really hard to convince buyers that Windows 8 and laptops, as well as convertibles, can compete with the Air," said Gillett, referring to both features and price. "But the analyst reaction has been mixed so far. [Ultrabooks] remain to be proven."
More importantly, Gillett questioned whether Windows OEMs could create an Ultrabook comparable to the Air and undercut Apple's prices.







