Microsoft is starting trials of pay-as-you-go PCs in underdeveloped nations as a way to give residents of those countries more access to low-cost computers.Microsoft will provide the prepaid PCs in retail outlets in Brazil, Mexico, Russia, India and China beginning this week, said Mike Wickstrand, director of product management for Microsoft’s market expansion group. These PCs will be built using a technology called FlexGo, developed by Microsoft and its partners. FlexGo is a combination of hardware and software that enables PCs to be sold and used on a pay-as-you-go basis, much like wireless phones, Wickstrand said. A user will buy a PC for about half the normal retail price and, in exchange, will be given a certain amount of time on the system. The computers have metering technology built in that tracks users’ time and alerts them when they are running low on time. As time begins to run out, the PC will shut down certain functionality, going into “reserve mode” so a user knows to buy more usage time. Users can buy this time over the Internet or through prepaid cards. If usage time runs out completely on a FlexGo PC, the technology locks the machine until a user buys a new card.The FlexGo PCs were inspired by the success of prepaid cellular phones in countries where people may not have credit cards or predictable income streams, Wickstrand said. In India alone, there were 5 million prepaid cell phones five years ago; today there are more than 90 million, and that number is growing every month, he said. Microsoft has been looking for new ways to sell Windows in emerging markets for some time now. Many see the company’s push in these markets as a way to stave off competition from inexpensive open-source technologies that threaten Windows revenue growth. Brazil will be the first country to sell the PCs. Microsoft had quietly tested FlexGo pay-as-you-go PCs in Brazil last year, selling them in a national retailer Magazine Luiza. The other countries will follow Brazil with rollouts in the next two months, Wickstrand said. The PCs, which will cost about the equivalent of US$300, will be available at various local retail outlets in each country. However, the PCs are technologically equivalent to a machine that would cost about $600 in the United States, Wickstrand said.“Customers pay a lower amount for the PC up front because they have to keep purchasing [usage time],” he said.Partners that have worked with Microsoft to design the FlexGo PCs in the current round of trials include Intel, Advanced Micro Devices, Infineon Technologies, Lenovo Group, Phoenix Technologies and Transmeta, Wickstrand said.Manufacturers building the FlexGo PCs are Lenovo in China and India, First International Computer in Brazil, Excimir D.M. in Russia and Avatar in Mexico. -Elizabeth Montalbano, IDG News Service This article is posted on our Microsoft Informer page. For more news on the Redmond, Wash.-based powerhouse, keep checking in.Check out our CIO News Alerts and Tech Informer pages for more updated news coverage. Related content brandpost Who’s paying your data integration tax? Reducing your data integration tax will get you one step closer to value—let’s start today. By Sandrine Ghosh Jun 05, 2023 4 mins Data Management feature 13 essential skills for accelerating digital transformation IT leaders too often find themselves behind on business-critical transformation efforts due to gaps in the technical, leadership, and business skills necessary to execute and drive change. By Stephanie Overby Jun 05, 2023 12 mins Digital Transformation IT Skills tip 3 things CIOs must do now to accurately hit net-zero targets More than a third of the world’s largest companies are making their net-zero targets public, yet nearly all will fail to hit them if they don’t double the pace of emissions reduction by 2030. This puts leading executives, CIOs in particul By Diana Bersohn and Mauricio Bermudez-Neubauer Jun 05, 2023 5 mins CIO Accenture Emerging Technology case study Merck Life Sciences banks on RPA to streamline regulatory compliance Automated bots assisted in compliance, thereby enabling the company to increase revenue and save precious human hours, freeing up staff for higher-level tasks. By Yashvendra Singh Jun 05, 2023 5 mins Digital Transformation Robotic Process Automation Podcasts Videos Resources Events SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER From our editors straight to your inbox Get started by entering your email address below. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe