On the face of it, Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer and Gordon Brown don't have much in common.
One is a plain speaking, unpretentious, horny-handed son of toil who, after what seemed like an eternity, took over the top job from his best friend – only to find himself in charge of a crumbling empire with no clear direction, declining popularity and endless media coverage of his smoother, more stylish rival. The other is the Prime Minister.
The comparison isn't as bizarre as it might seem. With the departure of Bill Gates, Ballmer has inherited a Microsoft whose position looks much less secure than it did in the Gates era. Despite massive spending on search, Microsoft's market share is dwarfed by Google. It's outflanked in entertainment and mobile computing by Apple, it's losing browser market share to Firefox, and Silverlight is barely scratching Adobe's Flash.
The 'Wow' marketing campaign for Vista has been replaced with the more desperate 'if you try it, you might not hate it' Mojave campaign, and mini-PCs – one of the few PC sectors that hasn't stagnated – are sticking with Windows XP. Even Office, Microsoft's cash cow, is under attack from free and open source rivals.
So has Ballmer inherited a poisoned chalice? Has Microsoft lost it? And if it has, can it find it again?
Cracks appearing
Microsoft is still making enormous sums of money, but cracks are appearing in its $16billion Windows business. The death of XP has been postponed several times – the current rash of ultra-small, ultra-cheap laptops don't have the horsepower to run Vista – and while Microsoft claims to have sold 180 million Vista licences, many of those licences are for machines running XP.
As Jane Bradburn of HP Australia told reporters in July, "From 30 June, we have no longer been able to ship a PC with an XP licence. However, what we have been able to do [is] to ship PCs with a Vista business licence but with XP pre- loaded. That is still the majority of business PCs we are selling today."
There's no compelling reason for users to upgrade: Vista requires more powerful hardware than XP, and it's been plagued by driver problems and incompatibilities. As a result, it's faced an avalanche of bad publicity – some of it deservedly so, as users found that their devices didn't work.
The bad publicity isn't helping enterprise adoption. According to Forrester analyst Ben Gray, "Desktop operations professionals tell Forrester that they see the value in standardising on Vista, but many are having a hard time convincing their CIOs that the move isn't a risky bet, given the mixed reaction it's received in the press and the speculation surrounding what to expect after Vista." Forrester reports that 8.8 per cent of enterprise customers have migrated to Vista; 87 per cent are still running XP.
The 'mixed reaction' has been a gift for Apple, whose 'Mac vs PC' campaign mocked Microsoft ruthlessly. The ads worked: according to BMO Capital Markets analyst Keith Bachman, "More than 50 per cent of customers buying Macs in Apple stores are first time buyers."
Fixing Vista
Microsoft doesn't normally acknowledge its competitors, but in July, Steve Ballmer used the A-word in a company-wide memo. "In the competition between PCs and Macs, we outsell Apple 30 to one," he wrote. "But there is no doubt that Apple is thriving."




Your comments (7) Click to add a new comment
dpt308
October 9th 2008
7. weezer, try plugging your ipod touch into a usb connector on a computer that does not have itunes installed. it will not charge. it will charge with an apple power adapter. my guess is that the power adapter has a chip in it that allows it to charge. my ipod touch does not charge in any one of my usb plugs.try it and let me know.
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weezer
October 6th 2008
6. Ah. Here's the answer...
http://forums.ilounge.com/archive/index.php/t-190166.html
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weezer
October 6th 2008
5. That's not true about charging an iPod. Otherwise how can I charge mine using just the adapter and a three-pin plug socket?
Maybe you used a low-power USB port by mistake?
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dpt308
October 6th 2008
4. unjustified is an understatement for the way Vista has been received. vista works just as good if not better than any of it's competitors. if the mac vs pc ad had been done by a pc vendor you bet apple would have something to say about those adds. apples closed environment is not good for anyone and the more popular they become the worse it will get. and you will not like it. apple ties it's software to it's hard ware. you cannot as far as I know use another operating system without having OSX installed. you cannot even use a standard usb port to charge an ipod unless itunes is installed. big brother needs to stay away. and now my zune works the same way. not good.....
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stewsofdoom
October 6th 2008
3. Vista's not too bad for home use - it's enterprise where it becomes a disaster. Unfortunately, that's a tidy chunk of potential sales.
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angrykeyboarder
October 5th 2008
2. Much of the bad publicity that Visa has gotten has been unjustified. There are zillions of us in the "silent majority" who love it and have had few, if any problems to speak of.
Regardless of the topic, the news media just gets too carried away.
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