Microsoft Scares Away Customers With Misguided, Short-term Strategy of Extortion
- Dr. Roy Schestowitz
- 2014-06-18 16:35:38 UTC
- Modified: 2014-06-18 16:36:54 UTC
Harvesting by force
Summary: Microsoft is trying to bribe the defectors and squeeze the existing clients in order to stay relevant in today's Linux-dominated world
Microsoft is trying to impose its will on companies. Sometimes Microsoft extorts, blackmails, or bribes companies. Having taken control of some of Dell, the company's gaming division (in a sense), despite its promises to GNU/Linux [1], leans towards Windows again. This is the type of attack we saw in the case of Nokia. This is not sustainable because it requires either buying the partners (sometimes potential competitors) or bribing them. It is a desperate attempt to remain relevant using big spendings; as we saw in the case of Nokia, this is bound to fail. One cannot just buy one's way out of trouble when the products are fundamentally flawed.
According to
Carlo Piana, the man who fought Microsoft in Europe while Microsoft bribed Novell to drop out of his antitrust case,
there is another short-term and shortsighted strategy from Microsoft. "Microsoft is becoming annoying with its audits to clients," he writes, "insisting on charging six-figures clients for menial inconsistencies. From what I hear, they are carpet-bombing with audits, which is not a brilliant marketing move, methinks."
Citing
Microsoft's relationship with the NSA Will Hill
asks himself:
Why might they be doing that? Thanks to Snowden, people are dumping NSA spyware like Windows, so revenue must be down. Microsoft is acting like their OS is going out of style because it is.
Well, this sure is a way to alienate customers, maybe even partners like Alienware. Windows PCs are no longer selling. Android and other Linux-based platform are the present and future. Some newer reports (cited in our daily links) already insinuate that Alienware is turning back again to GNU/Linux. We may revisit this at a later stage when Alienware makes it official.
Later this week we are going to publish an extensive post about China's action against Microsoft's patent extortion.
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Related/contextual items from the news:
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While I can understand the financial difficulties inherent in waiting for a final release of SteamOS, I'm not sure that this is such a great idea on Alienware's part. Is there really a market for this kind of device based on Windows? It seems to me that SteamOS was the big attraction for users who might buy a Steam Machine. I can't really see the appeal of a Windows-based Steam Machine.