It’s a valid business strategy to kick your low-paying customers to the curb and focus on the big spenders. Did the same with my little PC business back in the day. The small fry cost shitloads to support and are generally more bitchy.
But HOLY shit did Broadcom kick 'em down. I’ve never seen such an in-your-face business move to squeeze the cash cow as hard as possible, tank the company, grab the money and run.
People can say, and have been from day-1, “I’ll never use their shit again!” That’s fine with Broadcom, it’s literally their plan.
MNByChoice@midwest.social 2 months ago
Surely no competitors will grow in the small and medium business market to eventually be a competitor…
fishpen0@lemmy.world 2 months ago
Broadcom knows they bought a dying platform. Their strategy is to isolate the customers incapable of ever migrating and charge them as close to near bankruptcy as possible. They’ll get their initial return on investment in under 5 years and then eventually just let VMware die because new businesses that are still nimble all moved to other platforms anyway. They’ll hit Lotto tickets with a few whales and keep 5-10 devs on to patch stuff for those whales and print 100-1000x return on costs in perpetuity.
MNByChoice@midwest.social 2 months ago
That is … bleak.
I suspect you are correct.
RemindMe in 5 years
#I know that doesn’t work here
AtariDump@lemmy.world 2 months ago
(And that god that bot doesn’t work here)
turtle@lemm.ee 2 months ago
I think I’ve seen people using this on Lemmy, but I’m not sure if it works: fedi.tips/is-there-a-reminder-bot-for-mastodon-an…
Cocodapuf@lemmy.world 2 months ago
Capitalism is the woooooorst…