Microsoft needs to appreciate design. Web design, hardware design and UI design.
Microsoft needs innovation rather than imitation.
Microsoft needs to be introduced to the web, they don't get the web at all - they're software engineers, its fully ok to not get it -- make some acquisitons and really embrace the web.
The previous installments in this 'series' were so far off the mark that I can't even honestly say I'm disappointed by this one.
I fully agree with the third point you are making here, microsoft - even today - does not get the web, even though plenty of people are using microsoft products to access the web.
They did buy hotmail, which was at the time quite ahead of the game, but then they fell by the wayside and when google launched gmail I think it was more or less game over for hotmail, integrating it into msn has only further degraded it (msn being mostly synonymous with failure).
I think - and at some level I hope - that the web is the end of microsoft, I'd be even happier if the web would be the end of large corporations being in control of critical components of our lives but I think we're still an iteration or two (and maybe one full fledged disaster) away from that.
Office for Mac (does Microsoft really need to sell Mac software?)
Huh? Why would they give up on the Mac version of their extremely profitable software line?
That'd give one heck of a boost to OpenOffice and iWork. I would think they'd sell it at a loss just to prevent that. (But, again, I'd be really surprised if it isn't really profitable)
8 comments
[ 898 ms ] story [ 311 ms ] threadMicrosoft needs to appreciate design. Web design, hardware design and UI design.
Microsoft needs innovation rather than imitation.
Microsoft needs to be introduced to the web, they don't get the web at all - they're software engineers, its fully ok to not get it -- make some acquisitons and really embrace the web.
I fully agree with the third point you are making here, microsoft - even today - does not get the web, even though plenty of people are using microsoft products to access the web.
They did buy hotmail, which was at the time quite ahead of the game, but then they fell by the wayside and when google launched gmail I think it was more or less game over for hotmail, integrating it into msn has only further degraded it (msn being mostly synonymous with failure).
I think - and at some level I hope - that the web is the end of microsoft, I'd be even happier if the web would be the end of large corporations being in control of critical components of our lives but I think we're still an iteration or two (and maybe one full fledged disaster) away from that.
Fire Ballmer!
Huh? Why would they give up on the Mac version of their extremely profitable software line? That'd give one heck of a boost to OpenOffice and iWork. I would think they'd sell it at a loss just to prevent that. (But, again, I'd be really surprised if it isn't really profitable)
However, I agree about office for mac. I'm pretty sure it is a money sink and is clearly broken anyway.