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July 31, 2007 10:47 AM PDT

The Microsoft albatross

by Don Reisinger

Speaking in front of a group of financial analysts Thursday, Steve Ballmer, Chief Executive of Microsoft, explained that his company needs to stay focused on moving away from the desktop and focus on Web services and consumer devices. But what Ballmer did not come out and finally admit is the very products keeping Microsoft afloat are quickly becoming its albatross.

Windows and Office are the sole reasons why Microsoft has enjoyed such success over the past decade. Without Windows, the company could not have moved into all of the markets it currently maintains products in. Without Office, the company would never have been such a major player in the workplace.

While Microsoft understands that there is need for change, there doesn't seem to be any urgency on the part of the company to do so. Windows will not be around forever and as I've pointed out elsewhere, it won't last as the chosen "desktop" for the future--that belongs to the Internet. But right now Microsoft is in cruise control and the company is resting on its laurels.

As Ballmer pointed out, "Great things don't happen overnight. Most successes require long-term investment and innovation...and that's our perspective."

Sounds like a cop-out to me. Sure, great things don't happen overnight, but surely they happen within a year or so. Just look at YouTube, the Internet and even Windows. But Ballmer spoke to analysts with a pie-in-the-sky idea for 10 years down the road. In a decade, his company will be a shadow of itself if it doesn't change.

Microsoft needs to abandon Windows after creating one more operating system.

Windows, while still wildly popular and a reliable workhorse the majority of the time, is outdated and in definite need of overhauling. And while I compliment Microsoft on trying its best to change Windows with the release of Vista, it's too late. Almost everyone can see where the industry is headed and yet Ballmer and the rest of the Microsoft executives continue to harp on the next release of its albatross. Cruise control may have worked for the company for the past decade, but kicking it into high gear is its only salvation.

I often find it amusing when people believe that just because a company is big and powerful today, it will be so in 10 years. If the new CEO of Microsoft is speaking to analysts in ten years as the leader of the industry, the person will not be discussing a vision for Internet services in the future or the new GUI on Windows 2017, the CEO will be discussing the unique services Microsoft provides that don't revolve around the desktop.

And while I know Microsoft will never abandon its money-maker--the product that allows it to carry zero debt and maintain a stranglehold on an entire industry--it may not want to stay complacent forever. So instead of worrying about product development for the next 10 years, maybe the company should start coming up with ideas right now.

Here's a road map the company should follow for the next 10 years:

Release a new version of Windows by 2012. Sure, it may not be the best move, but in five years the company will still be the leader in the software business and it will need all of the revenue the product will generate. Even better, this release will buy it some time for its new vision.

Start releasing unique Web applications by 2010. It takes time to develop strong Web applications and Internet speeds aren't at a suitable level to make any kind of online Office program feasible. That said, Microsoft should shoot for an online Office by 2010. From there, the company can easily keep tabs on piracy and maintain significant control over its use.

Get out of the desktop software business by 2017. As if I haven't belabored the point enough, Microsoft is a victim of its own success. The writing is on the wall and desktop applications are on the way out. Microsoft needs to move to the Internet and find applications like an online Office or maybe even an online Windows that will allow it to maintain its stranglehold on the software business without sacrificing its main selling point.

Bill Gates didn't become one of the richest men in the world by creating a better version of a product that was in its maturing stage of development. Instead, he seized on the opportunity to create a product that the market demanded. Microsoft must do that again.

But if the company decides to abandon the road map its CEO laid out, it will surely meet an unhappy consumer base.

Don Reisinger is a technology columnist who has written about everything from HDTVs to computers to Flowbee Haircut Systems. Don is a member of the CNET Blog Network, and posts at The Digital Home. He is not an employee of CNET. Disclosure.

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Abandoning Windows
by MarioB101 August 9, 2007 11:01 AM PDT
I just find this idea of abadoning windows to be ridiculous. People are using their desktops for more things than ever. They using email, they're using the internet, they're making movies, downloading movies to their computers, ripping music, they have massive photo albums full of pictures from their brand new 10 megapixel digital cameras. Windows is important b/c you'll need a way to access and use all that data. It's so much easier and much more powerful to manage all of that from your own computer than to try and do it over the internet. I don't care what kind of connection you have, trying to edit a picture online would be painful. Just look at some of the email applications that have been developed. Office is so much richer and much more convenient that the net based version. The desktop version is just a much better all around product. Having a desktop computer and windows to access it makes life much much easier.

There's a place for windows and internet applications in this world. But to say they need to abandon windows is just not realistic or an absolutely atrocious idea for them and their shareholders.
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About The Digital Home

Don Reisinger is a technology columnist who has covered everything from HDTVs to computers to Flowbee Haircut Systems. Besides his work with CNET, Don's work has been featured in a variety of other publications including PC World and a host of Ziff-Davis publications.

Don writes product reviews for InformationWeek and is a regular contributor to Processor Magazine. You can visit his personal site at DonReisinger.com or if you would like to email Don with questions or comments, drop him a line at CNETDigitalHome@gmail.com. He is a member of the CNET Blog Network and is not an employee of CNET. Disclosure.

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