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February 5, 2007

The Best Post on Microsoft This Year

Roger Ehrenberg has up the best post you have read on Microsoft this year. He cuts through the crap on Vista, being appropriately cutting about its supposed merits, as well as about BillG's inability to sell them. Meanwhile he puts the launch in context, with quotes, appropriate skepticism about analysts, and some history and a soucon of spot-on phrasing.

Okay, stop reading my precis and go read Roger. Now. Not gone yet? Fine, here's his conclusion:
We may be witnessing an historic changing of the guard, which takes place in every generation. Remember IBM? They were invincible. How could they be beat? By a couple of geeks in a dorm room, that's how. Microsoft rises. And then another snot-nosed kid with a great idea and a dorm room made it happen in the box business, enter Dell. Then others got wise and squeezed their efficiency-based margins to nothing. Apple rose like a phoenix, crashed and rose once again, by virtue of innovation and a customer-centric ethos. Sony was like IBM. Now they've been bloodied by the customer-centric and community-oriented Nintendo. And now there's Google, the poster-child for the democratization of the Internet and the ever-flattening, increasingly frictionless world. When put in this context Microsoft just seems so big and slow and old, hidebound by 30 years of culture and organizational silos that seem impregnable. And it appears that Vista - the product, the PR, the marketing approach - is the result of such an organization. At times brilliant, very heavy, complicated and expensive. This is not a product for today. This is a product for an era when the desktop ruled. And that era is long gone.  
Now go!

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Comments

Color me unimpressed with the piece. "Billg doesn't look good on Comedy Central"? Like it even matters. "Steve Jobs is a rock star"? Okay that puts it into perspective for me. Another fanboy rant. Unless someone talks about, say, enterprise agreements or OEM SKUs or WW penetration rates of PCs then you don't have a clue how Windows makes money. Try again.

"Unless someone talks about, say, enterprise agreements or OEM SKUs or WW penetration rates of PCs then you don't have a clue how Windows makes money."

In other words, consumer trends don't matter. IT managers don't matter. Market sentiment doesn't matter. System performance (or lack thereof) doesn't matter. None of you fools understand. You are in Microsoft's almighty grip... no matter what... for all eternity! Muhahaha!

What trends are you referring to? What manager survey are you referring to? What sentiment are you referring to? What lack of system performance are you referring to? ..... ad nauseum.

No it doesn't matter. Especially when you have no data. No data means exactly that... nothing.