I want the old Microsoft back. I want the old ambition back in Redmond. I want the swagger and bare-knuckled competitor. I want the boxer, not the befuddled giant desperate for its denture cream to shore up its bite.
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About The Open Road
Matt Asay brings a decade of in-the-trenches open-source business and legal experience to the Open Road, with an emphasis on emerging open-source business strategies and opportunities. Matt is general manager of the Americas division and vice president of business development at Alfresco, a company that develops open-source software for content management. He is a member of the CNET Blog Network and is not an employee of CNET. Disclosure.
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"Even SharePoint, which has been phenomenally successful financially, is little more than a lightweight portal "
and then you say:
"In my particular market - social computing/Enterprise Content Management and Collaboration - Microsoft is a worthy competitor, and I love it. "
You can't have it both ways.
It's also funny how one hand you open source boys complain to no end on the Microsoft Monopoly and how they don't play fair and then you try this spin of wanting the old Microsoft competition back.
At least you are transparent Matt.
I'm very transparent, to your point. Go back and read my last four years of posts on Microsoft. They're very consistent, and 100% back what I just wrote. So, thanks for commenting, but next time be sure to get some context before arguing against a straw man argument that bears little resemblance to my position.
At its very core, the problem seems to be that Microsoft has forgotten how to be disruptive...
And the old Charles Manson!
For the next 15 years, I used nothing but Microsoft Operating Systems. MS-DOS, Windows 3.0, 3.1, 95, 98, ME, and 2K. I knew that Microsoft wasn't selling me anything innovative or technically sophisticated or even particularly stable. I noticed that each successive OS became a little more bloated and demanded a little more hardware than its predecessors. But always, I appreciated the value that Microsoft represented. Only Microsoft let me use my own cheap (and chronically outdated and underpowered) hardware. Only Microsoft offered a solution I could afford. Only Microsoft cared enough to give a worthless soul like me access to the tools of the digital gods.
Then along came XP. It was kinda expensive. I couldn't install it on my home brew PCs without calling up Microsoft for permission. I couldn't transfer it to another computer without another call. I couldn't upgrade my motherboard without XP deciding I was a pirate who must be attempting to steal the property for which I had paid so much. I was offended, but I tried to understand.
Then I got internet access. That was amazing, but Windows didn't work so well on the internet. I had to install a firewall and virus software. That was even more expensive, plus I had to pay an annual fee to keep the virus definitions updated. Using Windows wasn't so cheap anymore. Despite the new defenses, somehow I still would occasionally get infected. I didn't think I did anything unusual or unprofessional or unsafe. But still problems would occur, albeit rarely. Microsoft assured me this was my own stupidity. I had failed my obligation to protect their fragile property from harm. I really should send them some more money, so they could help me protect their OS a bit better. I was slightly more offended, but still I tried to understand.
Then along came Vista. I didn't buy it, because I honestly couldn't afford it. I didn't have any hardware that could run it. Even if I could have afforded Vista and all new hardware and software, the logic of spending all that money without any added functionality escapes me. I was getting pretty annoyed with Microsoft.
Then I found ubuntu. Ubuntu was free. Ubuntu came with lots of software that was also free, and which even upgraded for free! Ubuntu could run on my tired old hardware. Ubuntu didn't ask me to pay an annual fee to update my virus definitions. It didn't ask me to pay extra for "Ubuntu Defender." It didn't care if I upgraded my motherboard or my video card. It didn't care if I installed it on one machine or hundreds. I didn't need to call anyone to get permission to experiment or play with ubuntu. Ubuntu reminds me of those days, more than twenty years ago, when I first discovered computers. It makes me feel like a kid again. Ubuntu makes me happy.
Goodbye, Microsoft.
- by drfrost June 19, 2008 11:11 AM PDT
- When the chihuahua bares it's teeth people are amused. When a pitbull bares it's teeth, they reach for a gun and the dog is put down. Microsoft didn't "lose" it's teeth. They've been painfully pulled over the last 2 decades. I, for one, remember how many smaller companies were destroyed by Microsoft and I have absolutely no desire to see them return.
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