12.23
I read this interesting article over on the Washington Post about Microsoft’s dwindling market share. It was one of those articles that was like reading yesterday’s news; everything has been apparent to me since Google went public with their saying “Do No Evil.”
The most interesting part is on the second page. Let me drop a little quote here:
Yet early last month, Microsoft founder, chairman and chief software architect Bill Gates issued one of his periodic calls to arms to his troops, warning them that the industry and their company were at a pivotal, “sea-change” moment:
Microsoft’s software must operate “live” and online, Gates announced, to engage users in today’s always-connected world. Gates and the company’s chief technology officer, Raymond Ozzie, outlined how the coming versions of Windows and its Office suite would incorporate online components such as instant messaging, mobile telephony and search.
Sigh, it’s as if they are incapable of reading the writing on the wall! Here’s a clue Mr-Multimillionaire-CTO-Ozzie: the world doesn’t want your software installed on their computer! It should be clear through Google Maps, Google Gmail, and the many more web services (I hate that term) encompassed in what is known as Web 2.0 (I hate this term even more) that people want your software ONLINE! They don’t want it to incorporate instant messaging, they want a fully qualified instant messager that they do not need to install! They want a word processor that does not install and bloat the crap out of their machine all the while spreading viruses. They want a browser/Ajax based spreadsheet. They’ve clearly wanted an email client, which makes a much better client than Outlook (specifically, its more difficult to spread viruses by just reading an email with webmail).
They missed the boat on the TiVO; they missed the boat on the instant messenger; they missed the boat on the video game market; they missed the boat on the mp3 revolution; they even missed the boat on the mp3 player market even after missing the mp3 revolution. What the hell does their CTO do all day?! Perhaps he should spend less time in meetings and more time watching the market. How the hell can you screw up so many products in so many areas in such a short time span?!