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http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/1/12266.html

Wenn die zitierten Stellen der Wirklichkeit entsprechen, hat Microdingens
im Moment entweder ziemliche Kopfschmerzen, oder Steve vergie�t einfach nur
Krokodilstr�nen.

quote {
        MS' Ballmer: Linux is communism
        By: Graham Lea
        Posted: 31/07/2000 at 11:09 GMT

        Steve Ballmer was the only person to raise the issue of
        Linux when he wrapped up
        Microsoft's annual financial analysts meeting in Seattle,
        although he put Sun and
        Oracle ahead in terms of being stronger competitors. They
        of course are 'civilised'
        competitors - but the Linux crowd, in the world of Prez
        Steve, are communists. 

        Ballmer wanted "to emphasise the competitive threat, and
        in some senses the
        competitive opportunity, that Linux represents. Linux is
        a tough competitor. There's
        no company called Linux, there's barely a Linux road map.
        Yet Linux sort of springs
        organically from the earth. And it had, you know, the
        characteristics of communism
        that people love so very, very much about it. That is,
        it's free. [Outlook Express is
        free, and also sometimes lets strangers share your hard
        disk - is this anarchism? -
        Ed] And I'm not trying to make fun of it, because it's a
        real competitive issue. Today,
        I would say, we still don't see a lot of Linux
        competition in most quarters on the
        desktop, and we see a lot of Linux competition in some
        server markets. And we
        could either say, hey, Linux is going to roll over the
        world, but I don't see that
        happening. That's not what's going on right now." 

        Ballmer though Microsoft should "go back into some of the
        ISP markets and ASP
        markets where Linux has been historically strong and
        start to compete more
        successfully. Not on price, not on the free nature of our
        stuff, but as we get better
        development tools, as we make it easier for people to
        debug their software, as we
        have sort of a development approach that facilitates the
        applications that ISPs have
        been writing, I think we have a real opportunity to, if
        you will, push back into some
        of the markets that have been real Linux strongholds. But
        Linux has too, with its free
        price point, and the fact that it runs on the same
        hardware we do, so we have no
        hardware advantage versus Linux, which we do tend to have
        with some of our other
        competitors, it certainly is something very, very much on
        our radar screen." 

        The rather unprepared Ballmer was a little more sensitive
        to the concerns of the
        financial analysts, and had chosen "Growth" as his title
        because there was clear
        concern that Microsoft might be running out of steam and
        be unable to generate
        sufficient revenue to satisfy Wall Street in the coming
        years. His message was
        essentially that Microsoft was "working very, very hard;
        very, very hard on new
        products". He said he would not give any percentages for
        growth, and said that the
        only dispute would be about "how quickly it will all
        come". All he saw was "upside".
        As to whether Microsoft would meet its targets, he
        couldn't make any promises, "but
        there is certainly no downside risk in the consumer
        market. The amount of revenue
        that we may get all looks like upside to me versus where
        we are today. The same is
        largely true in small business." 

        There was a hint that Ballmer was not overjoyed at the
        .NET caper, since he
        confessed "I have never felt better and I've never felt
        more nervous about
        something despite that fact in my career at Microsoft.
        When we launched .NET,
        frankly, I was saying, will they like it? Will the dog
        buy this dog food? Will it make
        sense to people?" 

        Ballmer was asked the classic teaser question: what he
        would have done differently.
        His great desire had been to have Windows 2000 ready for
        business and
        consumers at the same time. Apparently, Microsoft's
        Japanese subsidiary didn't
        agree that Windows 2000 was just a business product and
        as a result of its
        promotional efforts, had midnight queues when it was
        released, with Sony
        pre-loading it on consumer machines. 

        So Steve wishes he'd launched Win2k at the consumers as
        well as at business. But
        does he really? Win2k came under some fire for its
        initial lack of drivers, and it's not
        stellar at running existing Windows games. So is Steve
        regretting first that Microsoft
        cancelled Neptune, and second that it didn't finish
        Neptune and make it truly
        wonderful, or is he simply viewing the past through
        rose-tinted glasses? 
}

-martin
-- 
0 and 1. Now what could be so hard about that?
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