WINDOWS and Surface are two old brands (the latter is being reused), but they cannot on their own guarantee the survival of a monopoly. Vista 8 is missing the boat and the Windows franchise gradually dies. Microsoft is unable to become a hardware company and now come the lawsuits we expected, starting with Sokolowski:
Andrew Sokolowski, a lawyer in Los Angeles, claims that he bought a Surface with 32 gigabytes of storage last week. But he quickly ran out of space after loading it with music and Microsoft Word documents. He discovered that a significant portion of the 32 GB storage space was being used by the operating system and pre-installed apps such as Word and Excel. Only 16 GB was available for him to use.
Microsoft's Surface tablet allocates almost 50% of the storage for itself thus leaving a user with 16GB on a 32GB tablet. Microsoft said in a statement. "Customers understand the operating system and pre-installed applications reside on the device’s internal storage thereby reducing the total free space."
That sounds like an extremely poor operating system which has such a huge overhead.
My 16GB Google Nexus 7 tablet offers me more than 13GB of storage allocating less than 2.8 GB for the system, same is the case with other Android devices. The way Microsoft's mobile OS reserves lion's share of storage to itself is outrageous and shows how inferior the OS is when compared with Android.
Microsoft is in deep trouble, their two main product lines are failing, and the blame game is intensifying. Steve Sinofsky gets the blame this time for the failure of Windows 8, but the real problem is the patterns that are so clearly illustrated by these actions. Microsoft is largely irrelevant to computing of late, the only markets they still play in are evaporating with stunning rapidity. Their long history of circling the wagons tighter and tighter works decently as long as there is not a credible alternative, and that strategy has been the entirety of the Microsoft playbook for so long that there is nothing else now. It works, and as the walls grow higher, customer enmity builds while the value of an alternative grows. This cycle repeats as long as there is no alternative. If there is, everything unravels with frightening rapidity. A company that plays this game for too long becomes set in their ways, and any chance of real change simply becomes impossible. Microsoft is there, and has been for a long long time. Their product lines have stagnated, creating customer lock in is prioritized over creating customer value, and the supply chain is controlled by an iron fisted monopoly. Any attempt at innovation with a Windows PC has been shut out for over a decade, woe betide anyone who tried to buck that trend. The history books are littered with the corpses of companies that tried to make change the ‘Windows experience’. Microsoft’s displeasure is swift and fatal to those that try. Or at least it was.
Congratulations on leaving Microsoft. Unless you have bills to pay, you won’t regret it. I left at the end of 2004, and have since studied a vast and amazing — but still flawed – world of computing out there.
For example, I discovered that we should already have cars that (optionally) drive us around and computers that talk to us. Linux on the desktop is powerful and rich but failing because of several strategic mistakes. Google claims to be a friend of Linux and free software, but most of their interesting AI code is locked up. Programming should be a part of basic math literacy for every child. The biotechnology world is proprietary like Microsoft, which is stunting progress in new medicines.
Thanks, VMware. In Microsoft's case it turned out that nothing was using that value and it could be replaced without breaking things.
--Bill Gates
Comments
NotZed
2012-11-15 23:51:58
Jesus, if you have to 'shoe-horn' an os into a machine with G's of CPU, G's of GPU, and G's of memory/storage/bandwidth: you're just not doing it right. These machines have plenty of performance for the mundane task of drawing text and a few animations that makes a 'desktop'. All the wishful thinking about the fat, heavy, and hot x86 version wont make their work all that much easier either. And for the money they'll be asking, you'd be better off with a 12-13" optical-diskless laptop (thinkpad/vaio type thing) which is about the smallest usable screen I'd want to use for real work anyway, and is just as portable if not more so (because of the robustness).
Having two copies of IE and all the different control panels really sums up the microsoft windows experience since 95, and it just shows the whole organisation is rotten to the core and can't work together properly.
I think android's approach of targeting now several-year-old-hardware is already biting them a bit, api's keep getting deprecated and new hacks come along to replace them (with poor documentation to boot), since most of the original assumptions no longer hold. It's a fine appliance OS, but smart-phone hardware is well beyond appliance hardware already and only continuing to improve in leaps and bounds.