Microsoft CTO Jumps Ship
- Dr. Roy Schestowitz
- 2009-06-06 02:13:51 UTC
- Modified: 2009-06-06 02:13:51 UTC
Summary: XBox- and entertainment-oriented CTO leaves the company
NOT ONLY XBox directors are leaving their team, but many lower down the ranks too are abandoning XBox. After one very recent example comes yet another. Here is the press release about it and also a report from TechCrunch, which goes under the headline "IGT Poaches Microsoft’s Interactive Entertainment Business CTO Chris Satchell." Here are some details about his departed role:
While at Microsoft, Satchell was responsible for technical strategy and execution across the company's video gaming business including Xbox, Games for Windows, Xbox Live and Microsoft Game Studios as well as future platform incubations.
It was almost exactly a month ago that Microsoft's XBox strategy chief officially left the company in order to join Apple. Right now, to make matters worse, another strategy chief is leaving the very same unit, which operates at a loss (having already lost
billions of dollars over the years, especially where XBox is concerned).
As the company Satchell joins is likely to be targeting Windows
already, the risk of a
subverted agenda is not so great.
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Comments
Chips B Malroy
2009-06-06 06:21:08
Roy Schestowitz
2009-06-06 07:47:56
Windefender
2009-06-06 10:28:55
Risk: competitors with Linux based rich consoles and a DirectX replacement
1. Build and sell Xboxes 2. huge financial loss but gain of market share 3. ????
http://kotaku.com/263486/lawsuit-alleges-xbox-killed-baby
Roy Schestowitz
2009-06-06 10:37:30
Needs Sunlight
2009-06-06 14:54:58
Any progress the console made in the market was pure side effect. It looked like almost exclusively a testbed for DRMed systems on commodity hardware. A minor function would be to try to have an excuse to saturate the console adverting with M$ chaff and diffuse the focus on Wii and PS2/PS3.
Roy Schestowitz
2009-06-06 16:01:01
You would not expect Microsoft to accept responsibility and thus fuel class action lawsuits.
If you think that's bad, see how Microsoft reacts to the problem.