R
RMZ
Guest
For Vista? abandon it and give us something that blows away the latest
Mac OS in terms of aesthetics, functionality and over all user
friendliness.
For their public image? Not a thing. It took years of back stabbing
corporate tactics and high profile, global anti-trust lawsuits to
destroy their public image. We're talking about a company that
historically has been fierce, unethical with competition even to the
point of breaking the law to push their products forward. But the good
side of Microsoft is a company that has always treated the end-users
(both corporate and domestic) like gold. While products aren't always
the best, they tend to be extreemly well supported and fairly well
designed.
Office 2007 and Visual Studio.NET 2008 are proof that Microsoft still
has talent. On the flip side of that coin you have extremely poor
products such as Windows Vista (all versions), Zune and Microsoft's
Mobile Platform. For all of which the competition is truly innovating
where Microsoft has become stagnant, tied down by: corporate
bureaucracy, linear thinking, and government regulation. It's almost
as if they are villain who's gotten away with theft all these years
and now they have been caught, tied down and are slowly receiving
their punishment for years of badness in the form of lost market
share. This is payback, it sucks, but Microsoft is big enough to take
their due and keep moving. That's what they should do and any attempt
to manipulate public perspective would be foolish and would do more
harm than good. Why? Because in the end consumers will remember how
Microsoft treated them and no how Microsoft treated their corporate
competition. Most consumers won't care about the later. But consumers
do care about inferior products, making their core products cutting
edge should be Microsoft's focus.
When it comes to OS products, I'm not a Mac or Linux loyalist and I
think Linux and Mac loyalist on the side lines cheering Microsoft
recent pains tend to be a bit delusional. Windows XP owns over 75% of
the market. Add in Microsoft's server OS products and Vista and the
competition has less than 10% market share. For the Mac to avoid the
problems Windows faces it must remain a bit elite and illusive, that
is it must remain a luxury product and as such it will cap at some
point below 20% for the same reason Lexus can't outsell Toyota you
won't find Mac's outselling Windows, ever. I'm not even going to talk
about Linux.
Microsoft doesn't need to try and clean up their image, we really
don't care. They just need to focus on building outstanding products
that blow their competition out of the water.
Mac OS in terms of aesthetics, functionality and over all user
friendliness.
For their public image? Not a thing. It took years of back stabbing
corporate tactics and high profile, global anti-trust lawsuits to
destroy their public image. We're talking about a company that
historically has been fierce, unethical with competition even to the
point of breaking the law to push their products forward. But the good
side of Microsoft is a company that has always treated the end-users
(both corporate and domestic) like gold. While products aren't always
the best, they tend to be extreemly well supported and fairly well
designed.
Office 2007 and Visual Studio.NET 2008 are proof that Microsoft still
has talent. On the flip side of that coin you have extremely poor
products such as Windows Vista (all versions), Zune and Microsoft's
Mobile Platform. For all of which the competition is truly innovating
where Microsoft has become stagnant, tied down by: corporate
bureaucracy, linear thinking, and government regulation. It's almost
as if they are villain who's gotten away with theft all these years
and now they have been caught, tied down and are slowly receiving
their punishment for years of badness in the form of lost market
share. This is payback, it sucks, but Microsoft is big enough to take
their due and keep moving. That's what they should do and any attempt
to manipulate public perspective would be foolish and would do more
harm than good. Why? Because in the end consumers will remember how
Microsoft treated them and no how Microsoft treated their corporate
competition. Most consumers won't care about the later. But consumers
do care about inferior products, making their core products cutting
edge should be Microsoft's focus.
When it comes to OS products, I'm not a Mac or Linux loyalist and I
think Linux and Mac loyalist on the side lines cheering Microsoft
recent pains tend to be a bit delusional. Windows XP owns over 75% of
the market. Add in Microsoft's server OS products and Vista and the
competition has less than 10% market share. For the Mac to avoid the
problems Windows faces it must remain a bit elite and illusive, that
is it must remain a luxury product and as such it will cap at some
point below 20% for the same reason Lexus can't outsell Toyota you
won't find Mac's outselling Windows, ever. I'm not even going to talk
about Linux.
Microsoft doesn't need to try and clean up their image, we really
don't care. They just need to focus on building outstanding products
that blow their competition out of the water.