![Sony executive- Mike abary](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjmpzvhLRIrT9yYNwROZIiSjUHGaQE7dHsrScIWqmkxTujdAH5Jk27wDCAyxZTUSCUxuqDrQJW5Bsqcj2uLH9HEoe8NvLsv3SJkYvmbw3YiOrTFwJzxeRqJ0Kd9Wn0juLd7hrKV6UTkwN0/s400/Sony-mike-abary.jpg)
We know there are a lot of Eee fans in the house, but the man makes sense. Sony isn't trashing ultra-cheap machines so much as recognizing that it's hard to push things forward when your primary objective becomes making the very cheapest possible machine you can (and not very best). Innovation is hard enough to subsidize, but when your already thin margins flatten even further in trying to sell ultra-cheap machines, it's easy to see the economics working against tech companies. (Asus has less to worry about here because its primary business is making PCs for other companies.) Of course, the reality is that ultra-cheap machines probably won't soon envelop the lion's share of computer sales and threaten what most think of as "real" PCs, so we probably don't have to worry about the industry bottoming out because of the Eee. False advertising and abusive trialware, however, are different stories entirely.
Via- [http://www.engadget.com/2008/02/27/sony-exec-sees-eee-like-pcs-as-having-potentially-negative-impac/]
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