Google -- Like Mozilla -- Sheds Off Some Microsoft Impact
- Dr. Roy Schestowitz
- 2009-09-04 20:07:36 UTC
- Modified: 2009-09-04 20:07:36 UTC
Summary: Lee Kai-Fu from Google leaves the company, just like Mark Lucovsky (both of whom came from Microsoft's management)
Last year we wrote about
how Mozilla lost the influence of Microsoft and this morning we wrote about
how Telstra has gained Microsoft influence. It is a fact of life that people move between places, but not every company
engages in what it calls "Jihad" and uses
what it calls the "insider friend, 'the Fox'."
It has been abundantly clear for a while -- also based on input from our informants -- that Google was partly influenced by Microsoft employees whom it hired
*. There are (or were) some very major ones among them. The good news is that
one of them is now leaving.
Lee Kai-Fu, who joined from Microsoft in 2004, will step down as president of Google in greater China in September, the company said.
When he joined, Microsoft sued Google and Mr Lee, claiming he had violated an agreement that prohibited him from working for a rival for one year.
Mark Lucovsky, the man who led Steve Ballmer to throwing a chair when he abandoned Microsoft for Google, has also left Google, but he is now with the
same group of former Microsoft employees that manage VMware (at least 4 of them). They
messed up the company, but it's good for their former employer. VMware is
no longer serious enough about Linux.
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* Microsoft software/API like DirectX and ActiveX was sometimes chosen, which left GNU/Linux users in the dark. A lot of software was also Windows-only.
Comments
Yuhong Bao
2009-09-05 16:50:30