The 鈥渆lectronic superhighway鈥 was the subject of so much mid-nineties hype
that the idea of telephony, TV and the Internet 鈥渃onverging鈥 to create a super
do-everything network became a given. Anyone who didn鈥檛 believe that convergence
was imminent just wasn鈥檛 cool鈥攄efinitely a cappuccino short of a
cybercaf茅. But pretty soon, telecoms and cable TV firms began to realise
that, strangely, e-hype alone was not adding to their revenues. Distracted by
outlandish movies-on-demand trials, for which the technology was far from ready,
many bailed out of such projects.
Having learnt the lessons of rushing headlong into ill-thought-out schemes,
Net-related projects are now utterly sensible鈥ot. The current vogue for
making everything 鈥渇ree鈥 is now being taken to extremes. It started quietly
enough with ad-supported Web-based e-mail such as www.hotmail.com, and has
progressed to free Internet providers such as www.screaming.net and
www.freeserve.co.uk. These services, of course, cost you something鈥攅ven if
it鈥檚 well hidden.
Now, just as Internet stocks are beginning to look green around the gills
on Wall Street, comes an idea that will attempt to turn the economics of home
computing, let alone Net access, on its head. Cheap and non-upgradable PCs, past
their sell-by date, are already being thrown in with some free Net access
services, but a new company in the US wants to give away a very decent computer
indeed: the Apple iMac. FreeMac.com at (you鈥檝e guessed it) www.freemac.com wants
to give away a million iMacs, worth a cool $1200 apiece. In return, users
in the US (the only place the offer is available) must sign up to a
$20-a-month ISP deal for three years and鈥攑resumably鈥攕pend,
spend, spend using the built-in, credit-card-ready home-shopping software.
FreeMac.com is seeking investors and e-commerce partners鈥攂ut one thing鈥檚
certain. If this scheme succeeds, it could kill one of the Web鈥檚 biggest
e-commerce successes: buying computers online. Why buy them if they鈥檙e being
given away?
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