http://www.financialcryptography.com/mt/archives/000219.html

[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

... to break the conundrum Ballmer finds himself
in where the road forks towards (1) fix the security
problem but lose backward compatibility, or (2) keep
the backward compatibility but never fix the problem.

I think the recent decision by Microsoft to not upgrade browsers indicates that they are plumbing for your choice (1). Backwards compatibility takes a back seat. I wrote more about it here:

http://www.financialcryptography.com/mt/archives/000219.html

His Board would prefer (2), the annuity of locked-in
users, but it forces a bet that software liability
never happens.  Fixing the problem, for which the
calls grow more strident daily, puts the desktop
platform into play even more than it is now as
it asks the users (who, having lost compatibility,
thus have nothing to lose) to marry Redmond a
second time.  A VM-cures-all strategy is then
an attempt to avoid having to choose between (1)
and (2) by breaking backward compatibility for
new things but bridging the old things with a
magic box that both preserves the annuity revenue
stream from locked-in users while it keeps the
liability bar at bay.

I have two questions: Does he have a board? I never heard of anyone but Bill Gates telling Ballmer what to do. Just curious!

Secondly, is a VM strategy likely to work?  Assuming
that Microsoft can make it work nicely, it also opens
the door for other OSs to be added into the mix, something
that Microsoft wouldn't be that keen to promote.

(I don't disagree with your comments, though!)

iang

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