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Steve Ballmer is a God

By | June 22, 2010, 10:22am PDT

Summary: Don’t worry - it’s a joke poked at those who see the demise of Microsoft at every turn. It ignores the financial realities along with the investment Microsoft has made in recent years.

…Steve Jobs is the Devil Incarnate.

I have so wanted to pen that headline for a long time but it wasn’t until I read Silicon Valley Insider’s The Odds Are Increasing That Microsoft’s Business Will Collapse followed by Kara Swisher’s slice and dice that I plucked up the courage to write it. I could equally have gone with Steve Jobs is a God, which half of Silicon Valley seems to believe, and that Steve Ballmer is the Devil Incarnate, with which the other half in the Valley might agree. Either way I am on to a home run.

As Kara Swisher so eloquently puts it:

Today, we get yet another from the Olympic champion of traffic-goosing headlines on blogs, Henry Blodget of Silicon Alley Insider, in what is quite a humdinger of a title [as above]

Yes sirree, that’s the name of the game - get those page views going. After all, why let the facts get in the way of a good headline that will keep advertisers happy at the bare page view metrics? But to be serious. Kara says:

Microsoft, as all tech companies do, needs to change and a lot faster than it has been; it has been trying mightily to do so in search and, recently, in mobile, where it is woefully far behind; its leadership under Ballmer, who took over from Co-founder Bill Gates, has been meh enough to keep its stock moribund.

But, by no means recently–even if there is a better CEO for Microsoft out there than Ballmer–have I found the company execs ignorant about the tougher issues or unwilling to consider changes needed.

I mostly agree with her sentiment. In recent times, Microsoft has invested billions in new data centers. Anyone bothered to wonder why? Here’s one reason:

It is an undisputed fact that Cloud Computing is going to profoundly change the way consumers and enterprises procure and use applications. That is the reason why Microsoft is investing billions of dollars in building ITS OWN state of the art data centers and dedicating tons of resources to build a portfolio of SaaS (Software as a Service) and PaaS(Platform as a Service) offerings. Microsoft SaaS offerings can be found at http://www.microsoft.com/bpos.

Microsoft PaaS offering is called Windows Azure- http://www.microsoft.com/WindowsAzure which is not just for Windows applicaitons. It is designed with portability and interoperability at its core; you can run Java, PHP, Python and other non-Microsoft applications in addition to applications built with Microsoft technologies. Windows Azure is architected to integrate well with the other clouds and on-premise systems through REST based web services and standards based security features.

In summary, at Microsoft we love the potential of cloud computing and its ability to industrialize IT forever!

The tech aficianados will likely pull that piece of unbridled self-pimping to shreds but let’s not dispute the fact Microsoft is investing in its future.

On the other hand, I still see instances where Microsoft’s idea of contributing to a topical blog is to offer a thinly veiled pitch. Who says the Thought Police at Redmond are dead and buried?

But to the broader topic, Kara correctly points out that it wasn’t until Apple had become ‘rotten’ and brought Jobs back that the company’s fortunes took off. IBM needed its own dance with the prospect of extinction before it turned itself around. My sense is that if - and I say if - Microsoft reaches that same point then it won’t simply fizzle away in the manner SAI believes. It will go the Apple/IBM way, reinvent itself and return in a new guise and much, much stronger.

In the meantime, it is the Google’s of this world that should be concerned. They have their own challenges in making the leap to tech’s financial superstardom. While it attempts to land those customers fed up with the cost lock that Exchange imposes, it can still only trickle out win stories. As I said in comments to another piece that talked about Google’s decision to dump Microsoft:

…there are shed loads of IE6 out there still, many have skipped Vista/IE7 which leaves deployment options for current releases. But…enterprise deployment is a slow moving animal, even in the most advanced businesses. It is for that reason you’re going to see MSFT selling bags of current Win OS/IE8 for years to come.

In all the fun of the tech circus let’s not forget there are many millions of customers and companies that have bet the farm on Microsoft, IBM, SAP, Oracle - you know - the usual suspects of so-called yesterday’s news grabbing companies. All things cloud may be the topic du jour but Microsoft is far from out of this game. Those who aspire to moving beyond smart headlines would do well to note.

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Topics

Dennis Howlett has been providing comment and analysis on enterprise software since 1991.

Disclosure

Dennis Howlett

Dennis Howlett is committed to maintaining the independent and opinionated stance that his writings are well known for and does not enter into contracts that would limit his freedom of expression in any way. However it is important in the interests of full disclosure to inform readers of those relationships so they can form their own judgment. This page therefore lists all Dennis Howlett’s current business relationships.

Dennis’s consulting arrangements occasionally bring him into direct or indirect business relationships with some of the companies about which he writes, and/or their competitors. Where such a relationship exists, it is disclosed at the end of any article that references the company concerned.

Dennis owns AccMan, an independently produced blog covering the professional services market, primarily focused on Europe. It is currently sponsored by selected TextLink Ads and named sponsors in the ‘Sponsored Content’ block.

He is a member of Enterprise Advocates, a loose association of consultants, and analysts who are concerned with the buyer side of the buy-sell enterprise relationship.

He is a paid contributor to IT Counts, a site dedicated to discussing technology issues as they related to ICAEW members. He also advises ICAEW on certain aspects of its member outreach programs.

He is an SAP Mentor and participates in SAP Mentor webinars. He has recently produced a guide for SAP resellers wishing to record customer videos. Other than as disclosed here, Dennis maintains no business relationship with SAP and is not financially rewarded for his role as a Mentor.

Dennis maintains relationships with a range of end user organizations and in all cases is subject to non-disclosure agreement. He has no current ‘paid for’ relationships with ITC vendors except as disclosed above although certain vendors comp travel and expenses claims. For the benefit of doubt, T&E reimbursement is a common practice among European based writers. It is often the only way we can attend important events. Even so it doesn’t impact our analysis of what vendors have to say. If you believe otherwise then feel free to ignore what is written here.

Except as mentioned above, Dennis has no other investments in any tech industry participants. This page last updated 23rd February, 2010.

Biography

Dennis Howlett

Dennis Howlett has been providing comment and analysis on enterprise software since 1991 in a variety of European trade and professional journals including CFO Magazine, The Economist and Information Week. Today, apart from being a full time blogger on innovation for professional services organisations, he is a founding member of Enterprise Irregulars and an investor in a European start-up. Prior to, Dennis was technology and tax partner in a British firm of Chartered Accountants for 10 years. Prior to that held various senior finance roles across a broad range of industries.

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RE: Steve Ballmer is a God
The Danger is Microsoft 7th Jul 2010
@i2fun@... uh...Apple is worth more than Microsoft. Marketshare does nothing if you have nothing people want! Loser!
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Those who see the demise of Microsoft at every turn, those who see Microsoft as having a direct link to God as the company can't possibly do wrong and finally those with a fully functional brain.
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RE: Steve Ballmer is a God
gtdworak 22nd Jun 2010
Steve Ballmer is nothing more then the luckiest dorm room assignment in history, that's how he met Gates. The man has no vision and has contributed nothing but ridicule and embarrassment upon Microsoft. How many CEO's have earned names like Monkey Boy or Sweat Hog? Why he hasn't been replaced is beyond me. Microsoft's Board of Directors are asleep at the switch. Microsoft is way past due for some fresh blood at it's helm. Their stock has been flat as a pancake for years, and they are now the second largest technology company in the world to a company they were once 20 times larger then. Ballmer should be ashamed, but I guess he's clueless trapped in his bubble and surrounded by sycophants.
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One does have to wonder.
shawkins 22nd Jun 2010
@gtdworak :
Ballmer certainly isn't giving the impression that he is a dynamic and/or visionary leader. Besides that..... the real God would not throw chairs.
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Well said
frabjous Updated - 23rd Jun 2010
@gtdworak (I can't imagine why anyone flagged your message, unless the truth REALLY hurts.)

No question that Microsoft isn't going away anytime soon, in spite of Ballmer's antics--and you'd think he could afford someone to remind him to take his meds. No question that Microsoft smells money in the cloud and is preparing to be a major presence--if only they can maintain their control pricing mentality. It will be interesting to see how they deal with some truly impressive competition, large and small, in that market space--I predict continued decline in market share but plenty of earnings at least for the next few years.

However, as you point out, the stock market has not been impressed for some time, while Apple has become the second most valued company, second only to Exxon-Mobil. Bloggers still like to create controversy by setting up Apple and Microsoft as direct competitors, but that is only true for small parts of their overall business.
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The Real Ones to Fear?
i2fun@... 24th Jun 2010
@gtdworak During all the Bill Gates years with pies in the face and 100's of "I don't recall"s in court Microsoft still commands an overwhelming lead in desktop installs. Least we forget that and at least Balmer isn't stupid enough to lock one mediocre, one size fits all computer to a one brand Desktop OS. That grew a whole 2% in last 5 years. One that incidentally, 20 yrs later, has actually still shrunk in market percentage. Because it was tied exclusively to their own hardware that just so happens to be the same hardware that everyone else uses. What's happened to them?

Oh well they were soundly beaten to pulp by Microsoft's Open Platform in the 90's. Now Apple has become the epitome of ARROGANCE and anti-competitive business practices. So what does Microsoft do?

Sit there and take it like a man (that Steve Jobs isn't)? NO!!! ....they say hey... all you "DEVELOPERS DEVELOPERS DEVELOPERS" out there in Candy Apple Land on one device, want to some MORE Money so you can be able to port all your Apps to our bright and shiny new Windows Phone 7 Market? We'll pay you to port your apps to our system. Throwing Apple's own ignorant selfish exclusivity smack dab..... right in Steve's belligerent iHitler Face!

Fascist mentalities have a nasty habit of going down, when faced with the whole world coming to dog pile on them! That's what's happening right now.

Rest in Peace..... Apple! ...you may have a few trinkets that your lame down ported OS-X can run on exclusively, but it can't seem to run on Intel's top i7 iMac! ....sometimes it won't even boot out of box..... and that's if... it doesn't have a broken screen out of box. So what does El Stevo do? Just keep quiet about it, maybe no one will notice we failed on this one! wink
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RE: Steve Ballmer is a God
The Danger is Microsoft 7th Jul 2010
@i2fun@... uh...Apple is worth more than Microsoft. Marketshare does nothing if you have nothing people want! Loser!
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Having spent time with Ballmer
No_Ax_to_Grind 22nd Jun 2010
I can say with zero doubt he is one of the smartest people I have ever met and his enthusiasm for Microsoft and new technologies is second to none.

As to reinventing itself, Microsoft has done it many times before, when it made economic sense to do it. Everyday users tend to forget who Mirosoft's customers are. 80% of the software they sell (boxed) is to business and business, kjust in case anyone hasn't been paying attention, does not jump on evry new band wagon that passes by. They, do it when it makes economic sense and Midrosoft tries to match their pace.

Folks, I've had this same discussion with MS bashers for two decades, nothing has changed and Micorosft isn't going to disappear or go broke or anything resembling it.
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@No_Ax_to_Grind
However they will not be where they are today as years pass. Things change and MS will as well. Since they are so big and have been bigger still in the past I see them remaining a strong presence but none the less shrinking in power and influence. To what degree I can not say. However there was once a time where IBM was the end all to be all of the business world and tech. IBM is still to this day an impressive name but nothing like it once was. MS I think will be much the same at one time it has like over 95 percent of the OS market now it has I think less than a full 90 percent. MS is not what it use to be. They have slipped a bit.

Pagan jim
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MS has two products...
Richard Flude 22nd Jun 2010
Windows and Office. Both products copied from others.

MS position in these markets was because of the PC clone smashing PC prices. The network effect built them into their market position.

Neither product was innovative, just knock-offs from competitors.

But the market today is not the 80-90s. MS relivance is being challenged.

Denis writes:
"let?s not dispute the fact Microsoft is investing in its future"

Investing is not the same as spending money. MS spends billions that produce next to nothing. USD8+ billion a year for windows and office updates.

When your CEO announces a new game controller as the biggest thing they'll be releasing this year from all that "investment" you should know you're in trouble.
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RE: Steve Ballmer is a God
windozefreak 24th Jun 2010
@James Quinn
James, they do change. They keep getting better and better.
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The smartest
banned from zdnet 22nd Jun 2010
@No_Ax_to_Grind
Imagine someone would tell you that monkey boy is the smartest guy he ever met ... What would you think of that person?
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Good question!
Nsaf 23rd Jun 2010
@banned from zdnet ..Smarter than you.
  • Flagged
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RE: Steve Ballmer is a God
ubiquitous one Updated - 23rd Jun 2010
@Nsaf
Nah nah na-nah nahhh...
Nah nah na-nah nahhh...
Nah nah na-nah nahhh...

:P
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RE: Steve Ballmer is a God
windozefreak 24th Jun 2010
@banned from zdnet
Monkey boy was conjured up by some wantabe street thug. Now how cool is that.
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RE: Steve Ballmer is a God
i2fun@... 24th Jun 2010
@banned from zdnet Well he's smart enough to offer to pay ahead of time for developers to port their Apps from iPhone! ....and word on the street is many are taking him up on it! lol..

Now I suppose Apple after banning Devs from porting from other platforms will ban porting from iPhone to other platforms which proves how really numb nutted they are!!! wink ....naturally this will all get laughed off as they rake in more cash on first Microsoft and then it'll be even simpler to port to linux.... and Then Android!!! ....as Apple's App's begin to fly away!!!
  • Flagged
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Interesting point.
Lester Young 22nd Jun 2010
@No_Ax_to_Grind For all the talk of Microsoft being slow on the draw, they still have to be careful not to outrun their customer base. OTOH, there have been times when Microsoft was in a position where they needed to exercise leadership and they fell short. They didn't really engage the rest of the ecosystem on the Trusted Computing Initiative as much as they might have. It took them years to move on standardizing APIs. So, yes, in that environment their customer base might become befuddled and slow-footed.
Golly, NAtG, he sure is doing a bang-up job of keeping his smartness a secret from the general public.
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Contributr
RE: Steve Ballmer is a God
dahowlett 22nd Jun 2010
@No_Ax_to_Grind - no disagreement here. I've met Steve once and other than applying ear plugs (he really does shout a lot), I sense a man with a real brain for business that should be admired.
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@Richard Flude
DaveN_MVP 23rd Jun 2010
Assuming one agrees that MS copied Windows and Office from others, what does that say about the others? How was MS able to capitalize so successfully on products whose original creators failed? I would characterize this not as copying products, but rather as developing concepts (original or otherwise) into successful products. And if Windows and Office lack innovation, why hasn't some young upstart company come in and blown MS away with their own marvel of innovation? If it's so easy, why is Microsoft the only company that has been able to do it?
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Agreed
naibeeru 23rd Jun 2010
@DaveN_MVP
That's a very good point. As always, and it's weird the way it seems to work, it's ok for Apple to take a "small" idea not going anywhere in particular and make it work (can anyone say iPod or iPad?), but not MS? I'm no MS apologist - they are a flawed company out to make money like every other company out there - but it's so very weird how Apple (especially), and Google less so, "get away" with things that people absolutely crucify MS over.
I wonder if it's because people in tech get so "vested" in their favourite company or piece of hardware, and as such feel very protective over their chosen position? Let's face it - there are many, many examples in non-tech industries where people have taken someone else's idea(s) that are either "failed" or just a very minor success, and thru marketing, engineering or some other form of "development" (even just re-packaging) have made a raging success of it it / them.
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RE: Steve Ballmer is a God
20kwfence 24th Jun 2010
@No_Ax_to_Grind Excellent point. That is also where I see that MS has the most to lose. Anyone dealing with volume licensing on 2008 server lately, especially if you have to call because of the invalid product key fiasco, knows MS isn't taking very good care of it's core market. I would rather see them consolidate and do a better job with their core products. I don't give a flip if they make a mobile OS or get into search, as long as they take care of the business products that keep them in the money.
there are legions of companies that have not been able to turn the tide in their favor.

The odds work strongly against Microsoft.
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Spot on
Richard Flude Updated - 22nd Jun 2010
Business is extremely challenging. Many more failures than there are successes.
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How wrong can one person be...
Cayble Updated - 23rd Jun 2010
@OS Reload
You say, " there are legions of companies that have not been able to turn the tide in their favor. The odds work strongly against Microsoft."

You are incorrect. In more then one way.

First off, the only odds against a company that is on the brink of failure are odds that are against a company that is, in fact on the brink of failure. I hate to disappoint you but not only is Microsoft not anything even close to entering the realm where a business can fail, Microsoft is in fact still one of the most successful and profitable companies on earth. Its clear that the people who like to claim MS is about to go under have missed that point.

Secondly, Windows is still the most popular OS in the world running the worlds computers at about a capacity of 90%+, and thats not even talking about the broad use of Office. Think for a moment as to how a company that is responsible for 90% of the worlds computer operating systems goes under?? Who would even let that happen never mind how? It could lead to global consequences that would be quite unpleasant to say the least.

Microsoft is at this time is not anything close to going under.

Further, just because most companies that are on the brink of collapse do collapse is hardly the way to predict the odds of any specific company going under. There are many factors to consider when trying to figure those kind of odds. It so happens that if Microsoft ever got into that kind of trouble you would still be dealing with a company that has 90% of the worlds OS market and that is just the kind of company that gets every restructuring break and refinancing break in the world. Nobody with a brain, even half a brain inside or outside of Microsoft is going to let Microsoft simply totter off the brink into collapse when there are always things that can be done to save this kind of company, and with very good reasons for doing everything possible to save it.

Do you know that when Intel first came out with the Conroe CPU, it was the first Intel chip to give AMD a run for its money in quite some time, but there were many AMD fanatics, many right here posting at ZDNet, who said Intel would be bankrupt by now because Conroe wouldn't cut it and Intel was going to go broke trying to beat AMD.

There were people out there who actually seemed to believe that. You can look it up. If we now have people saying MS is going to go broke right after releasing Windows 7 and Office 10...well, I hate to say it but thats the same kind of nonsense overzealous AMD fans were spewing way back when about Intel.

Why is so many people who prefer other OS's simply don't go along preferring their choice of OS without making themselves looking like idiots by making outlandish claims against Microsoft? Ive said it before and I am going to say it again, if Microsoft goes bankrupt most of us are probably going to have a lot more to worry about then who went bankrupt because the whole economy wold likely have to be shot to ribbons for that to happen. And I don't mean just a recession, I mean widespread economic meltdown.
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RE: Steve Ballmer is a God
Loverock Davidson 22nd Jun 2010
Those bloggers listed haven't a clue what they are talking about. Microsoft is constantly changing. Look at all the shifts in technology and you will see Microsoft is there. They invest a lot into their R&D departments for customers like me and you so we can have the best technological experience possible. It will be a long long time before Microsoft goes away.
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RE: Steve Ballmer is a God
dahowlett 22nd Jun 2010
@Loverock Davidson - you might know that, I might know that, but unfortunately the great unwashed in Silicon Valley have a different view based on miniscule market share but a lot of pizzazz. Guess where I'm betting?
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RE: Steve Ballmer is a God
gtdworak 22nd Jun 2010
@dahowlett
How'd you get your picture in your profile?
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RE: Steve Ballmer is a God
RedVeg 23rd Jun 2010
@Loverock Davidson
Actually MS takes what other people innovate and then run with it as is they did it. Obviously a good business strategy for them, but don't confuse that with the actual innovation which is where many smaller companies and at least 2 large companies (Google and Apple) excel.
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RE: Steve Ballmer is a God
tjatwood 23rd Jun 2010
@RedVeg
HAHAHAHAHA - Right! Apple does not Innovate - they also borrow and steal but have better marketing. Same with Google. There has been NO real innovation or revolution in technology - ONLY evolution.
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RE: Steve Ballmer is a God
ubiquitous one 23rd Jun 2010
@Lovey Dovey... do you have a widdle statue of him in your room?

:p
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Ray Ozzie maybe?
RedVeg 23rd Jun 2010
Steve Ballmer is definitely hurting MS with his complete lack of understanding of his business and his unwillingness to let people like Ray Ozzie, who actually know what they are doing, have more of a voice. But that said, MS is a long way from demise, or even weakness.
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RE: Steve Ballmer is a God
famebook 23rd Jun 2010
Maybe the whole brand of 'Microsoft', doesn't describe the company's future either? So new CEO and new brand required... exciting times...

Shame really; they just can't afford me... wink
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RE: Steve Ballmer is a God
hawks5999 23rd Jun 2010
@famebook oh God no. Every time MSFT tries to rebrand we end up with things like:
.Net (.net Server (no more), office .net (no more), passport.net (no more)
"Live" (live mail, live messenger, live mesh, live mess...)
"Kin" (now we are seeing Kinect and God only knows what the next Kin will be)

No Microsoft should just stick with Microsoft.
Microsoft is a huge corporation shackled by stodgy old men sitting on the board and stockholders who don't like change. This is true of most big corporations. The people who work there are given tasks which are consistent with the current direction in order to maintain a steady status. This is why most true innovation happens in smaller, more nimble companies and/or research institutions. If the smartest technical minds at Microsoft were given free-reign, Windows would have been replaced with something small, fast, and secure a decade ago. Instead, they are told to come up with ways to fix problems in the current product while making sure it is backward compatible with software from last century. Ballmer is just a puppet shackled to the whims of the narrow-minded board and stockholders. That fact is probably why Gates really left.
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RE: Steve Ballmer is a God
windozefreak 24th Jun 2010
@BillDem
I don't know? I imagin thats what their customers want. Could be?
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RE: Steve Ballmer is a God
TtfnJohn 23rd Jun 2010
Of course Microsoft, no matter how richly it might deserve it (Vista!) isn't going to die soon or, likely, ever.

And, no, Ballmer isn't a chair throwing God any more than Jobs is a God of any kind. Jobs did and does have a vision and has taken his company, at death's door when he came back one, along the line of that vision which began with the original Mac and continues down the line of great looking and good performing closed hardware and software base. Ballmer, as noted, gets to deal with shareholders and a board that isn't all that interested in risk while (for now) Jobs board let's him run in that direction.

Microsoft is simply not going to die any time soon simply because it's too entrenched and would really need to do something far worse than Vista for it's corporate core to abandon.

Under that kind of threat could Ballmer and Ozzie make the U turns that Apple and IBM made? Who knows?

This is not to say that any real innovation happens at large firms, it never has. The success is in adapting those innovations that work for Microsoft and doing it reasonably well.

Sure, the GM day could come. One day it will. That day hasn't arrived yet and it won't any time soon.

So, in spite of the mutual admiration society being formed by our favourite troll, Lovey, and Dennis (please don't feed the trolls!) Microsoft's decline will come, as so many large firms have, slowly at first and then accelerate. But it's not happening now.

In the meantime, can we all just get back to work using the products that bright people named Gates, Ozzie, Jobs, Torvalds and others have given us and do something as productive as they do?
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RE: Steve Ballmer is a God
fatman65535 23rd Jun 2010
Dennis,

Ballmer - a ```God```

What have you been smoking???

I need not say any more!!

I better get my cell and call 911, as I think I fell out of my chair from all of that laughter, and broke a hip.

At our Linux shop, photos of Ballmer and Gates are often used as dartboards. There is still a prize for the person who can put a dart inside a 1/4 inch circle drawn on each one's foreheads. Each one is worth $50. So far, no lucky `winners` yet.
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RE: Steve Ballmer is a God
ItsTheBottomLine 23rd Jun 2010
@bfilipiak@... And do you read at that "shop". Me thinks you missed the 1st paragraph...but I can see why you did.
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RE: Steve Ballmer is a God
fatman65535 23rd Jun 2010
@ItsTheBottomLine

We read all things IT, including amusement at the latest mis-steps of Microsoft (see - I even spelled it correctly - I had to over rule the spelling checker), Apple, and other corporate behemoths that appear to be completely clueless. (Like AT&T.)

AFAIAC, both Microsoft and Apple are `evil`, each in their own way.

Time for a `stress break`. Now, if you do not mind, I am going to put the headphones back on; and re-cue the Alicia Keys play list, and let the day wind down.
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Contributr
RE: Steve Ballmer is a God
dahowlett 23rd Jun 2010
@bfilipiak@... Did you see the sidebar where I said it is a joke?
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RE: Steve Ballmer is a God
fatman65535 23rd Jun 2010
@dahowlett

Now, that you pointed it out, I do see that. In my defense, the use of a light gray font against a white background, well, let me say, that I do not have much nice to say about the `genius` that came up with that `style`.
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RE: Steve Ballmer is a God
frabjous 23rd Jun 2010
@bfilipiak...Oh, good, it isn't just my tired old eyes struggling with the minimal contrast of faint font on white!
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Those who predict the death of MS is really pretty dense when it comes to business. They assume that if a company is not marketing the heck out of something on tv and billboards non stop or have killer consumer gadgets then it must be near death.

When IBM lost the os/2 war to windows everyone just assume IBM would die away. But they completely changed their business and was one of the very few who came out of the dot com bust almost unscathed. Do you see any IBM products in your home? Do you see IBM commercials? Yet they are very very profitable right now.

You equate MS's lack of a phone and stupid ipad as a failure and that they are going to die. How stupid is that? Ask yourself, how many MAC web servers are there out there and how much money do you think the web server buisiness brings in compare to ipad. MS just built 10 cloud datacenters at a cost of $5 billion. Where is apple's cloud strategy? By the time they start everybody else would have established their cloud presence. Don't you all think the cloud is pretty important at this point. No you wouldn't because its not a consumer product (now) and you don't know how it will be applied.

Win 7 is at 10% adoption that means there will be another 80% to go. Thats 2 years worth of huge revenue. You're not going to see MS die in your life time. Deal with it. Same thing I told my mac fanboy manager yesterday when he got a virus on his mac. In total denial that its a virus. I said call it whatever you want but your mac was compromised so deal with it.
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Good grief!
frabjous 23rd Jun 2010
@rengek
"You equate MS's lack of a phone and stupid ipad as a failure and that they are going to die." Neither phone nor iPad was mentioned in the article--what ARE you referring to?
"Where is apple's cloud strategy?" Why do you think Apple is even in that business, or needs to be?

You must be pretty secure in your job if you really talked like that to your manager--and no, the world does not call every piece of malware a virus, and no, he did not get a virus on his Mac--maybe a trojan if he foolishly let it in. Deal with it.
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No empire lasts forever
CJV2 Updated - 23rd Jun 2010
Some may last longer than others, but every empire eventually becomes too big for it's own good.

Microsoft will eventually crumble from within.

Eventually markets get tapped out. Competition gets leaner, faster, cheaper, and better.

Your stock becomes "blue chip", no longer attractive.

Etc. etc. etc.
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RE: Steve Ballmer is a God
kakman1@... 24th Jun 2010
1.)Monkeyboy and Fester are a Dan "Fake Steve Jobs" Lyons epithets - they don't adress Ballmers performance just his antics and appearance, and frankly, Ballmer embraces such clown stuff.
Microsoft had some stagnation but that happens when own 90% of the base. It still made scads of cash. Still, it is on a very gradual downward spiral. It can find itself in the same position as the old AT&T (before SBC snapped it up) or trim a lot of its fat and hire dynamic young forward looking executives and engineers. At best Ballmer has been a caretaker. Let him watch over GM, turn that puppy around. Micrsoft needs somebody like Sheryl Sandberg in there, someone who knows the diff between wheat and chaff, someone who makes bold forward choices, someone with vision and can achieve targets and goals.
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RE: Steve Ballmer is a God
docesam 24th Jun 2010
let me tell you why microsoft is likely to shrink :

microsoft started its domination of the OS market when they made windows ,at that time (during the 80s) PCs and MACs were very expensive devices but MAC were more expensive than pcs ,and because windows (as a visual environment) was so much easier than the DOS ,and was significantly cheaper than MAC : most people bought PCs with windows .

developers started making windows programs more than anything else . later microsoft locked developers in their windows OS by fancy windows-only stuff ( like windows API , fancy devlopment environments and prorietery changes to c++ ).

for more than 20 years now : microsoft succeeded in locking developers and users in windows - with the help of - solid backward compatibility with previous windows OSs which keeps users away from other OSs (or at least don't give users any desire to switch to other OSs).

nowadays , linux is more and more maturing as a desktop OS , and people are sick of micro$oft and they are starting to wish for a change to a free OS . Linux is almost ready for this to happen.

when windows goes down microsoft (at least micro$oft as seen today) will follow pretty quickly.

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