News
[PSUs]| Tuesday 1st May 2007 |
While Apple may turn a profit on the highly-anticipated device, Ballmer indicated that he believed its sales would be conservative. 'It's a $500 subsidized item,' he said. 'They may make a lot of money.
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However, he was more forgiving when talking about Apple's domination of the market for digital music downloads. Crediting Jobs with spotting a trend before it fully developed, he acknowledged that Apple 'did a nice job'.
He then positioned the Zune in a very different market to the iPod. 'I'll bet our ads will be less edgy,' he said. 'But my 85-year-old uncle probably will never own an iPod, and I hope we'll get him to own a Zune.'
The full interview, in which Ballmer talks about life at the top of the world's largest software development house, can be found on USA Today.
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