Year: 2010

  • Perspective: The Challenges Facing Microsoft

    December 2004 marked the date that I ‘threw in the towel’ on using Microsoft as my computing platform. Since that date I have been pushing more and more people towards being Apple converts, and criticizing a company that I – that we – once loved.

    Now before I get into the why and how and future of Microsoft; it is crucial to note my bias. I own Microsoft stock, I have owned stock since around 1999, right before the bubble. I don’t own a lot, and I really don’t play the stock market. Anybody who knows me personally would tell you that I am the last person in the world they think owns Microsoft stock, but in 1999 it was the thing to do. That being said let’s get on with this…

    Microsoft is at a crucial apex right now, they may be passed by Apple in market cap, and they need strong sales from the newest version of Office, and Windows 7 to keep their stock from slipping. After being a staple of the mobile phone industry, they currently offer nothing that competes with the triumvirate of Google, Apple, RIM. The Xbox can’t and won’t support them financially, people are moving small server setups to cloud owned by Linux based systems. A storm is brewing over Redmond, and their CEO Steve Ballmer knows it.

    This is nothing that has not been said a million times over – and it will keep being said until the mighty Microsoft roars again. I have been fortunate to grow up with a computer for most of my life, and have lived in the shadow of Microsoft here in Washington State. As such I have a few ideas of what Microsoft needs to do to right the ship and make themselves relevant once again.

    One

    It is time to scale back Microsoft, they are a huge bureaucracy and this is not a business model that leads to the innovation that they desperately need. I am not advocating massive lay offs and down sizing, the beast needs to be broken up. Microsoft should create teams and groups that work on just one thing. Don’t allow in-fighting, give these teams the power to push their product all the way to release.

    Let’s take the office team, I would break it up by the core products: Word, Excel, PowerPoint, etc.. Give these teams the ability to completely rework the app, from the ground up. There should always be design consistency, but the design needs to be flexible enough that it is similar, but specific to each application.

    The ‘ribbon’ toolbar that Microsoft introduced in the latest version of Office is great for new users, who don’t know how to find commands, but terrible for existing users. Clearly there is a better way, and Microsoft needs to give their designers the leeway to find the better way.

    Two

    Microsoft, now more than ever, needs to define what they do, and what business they are in. Right now, as an outsider looking in at the company, it would seem that Microsoft sells Windows and everything Windows, with a side of Office. They are branding everything they do with the “Windows” moniker. This is a poor approach and they need to look like a well diversified, a non-monopoly, in order to gain back the trust and support of their users.

    Microsoft needs to allow their software to have its own brand, it’s all being made by Microsoft but it is all different. Imagine if Apple followed in Microsoft’s naming scheme: the Mac iPod, Mac iPhone, Mac iPad, Mac iTunes, what a terrible thing that would be. Office, Phone OSes, Xbox are all strong enough to stand on their own if you let them.

    Basically: stop calling everything “Windows XYZ”. Stop now.

    Three

    Innovate, innovate, innovate. The entire tech community was delighted to see the Courier concept, only for Microsoft to kill it off later on, stating it was just a concept. I thought the same thing about the Microsoft Surface with its smaller market size for the $10,000 computing coffee table. However Microsoft actually made the Surface, though I have yet to see one in person and as such am still skeptical about the Surface’s existence.

    Right now, no one can imagine Microsoft being the first to market with something like the iPad, that is a huge problem for Microsoft. People should be looking towards Microsoft wondering how they are going to change computing next, instead of looking towards them wondering what they will copy next.

    Microsoft does not and should not get into the hardware business, they should however push their hardware vendors to be better. The best way to do that is to continue making cool concepts providing the software for them, thus allowing the hardware manufacturers to make great devices that support this software. All this is pretty basic, yet we are not seeing it done (by Microsoft).

    Four

    Pull your head out of the sand, and show some respect.

    Everyone knows and expects Apple and Microsoft to trade jabs with one another, they are for the most part playful – on Apples part. Apple knows that it needs Microsoft’s Office suite to stay viable in business settings (though it is needed less and less each quarter), Microsoft however does not need Apple to stay in business. This has lead to a lot of nasty jabs from Microsoft’s CEO Steve Ballmer.

    Ballmer has stated his hatred for the iPhone on more than one occasion. They were not said in a nice competitive tone, but with disdain.

    It would seem Microsoft spends more time mocking what Apple does, then they do, well, doing anything.

    Time to pull your head out of the sand Ballmer, stop criticizing Apple and start being better than them, you say you can be, now it is time to prove it.

    Shut up or put up.

    Last

    Microsoft needs a visionary, they need their own Steve Jobs. Bill Gates used to be that visionary for the company, now he has moved on to charitable causes and Microsoft is left without that visionary. Ballmer is not this person – he is not the guy to lead the company forward. He is the guy to keep the company treading water (hopefully).

    I don’t know who Microsoft should find to give them a new vision, perhaps it is not just one person, perhaps is it is a group of people. Whatever it may be, one thing is clear, that Microsoft needs to find a new visionary (or visionaries) soon.

  • Data Access, Data Ownership, and Sharecropping

    Kellan Elliot-McCrea:

    With Flickr you can get out, via the API, every single piece of information you put into the system.

    Every photo, in every size, plus the completely untouched original. (which we store for you indefinitely, whether or not you pay us) Every tag, every comment, every note, every people tag, every fave. Also your stats, view counts, and referers.

    Not the most recent N, not a subset of the data. All of it.

    It’s your data, and you’ve granted us a limited license to use it.

    Yep, this is why I love Flickr.

    [via Daring Fireball]

  • A Data Center Power Supply That Moos

    Ashlee Vance:

    According to H.P.’s calculations, 10,000 cows could fuel a one-megawatt data center, which would be the equivalent of a small computing center used by a bank. Mr. Kanellos has tracked both the data center and green technology industries and agreed that there was some convenient overlap. Computing equipment produces a lot of heat as a waste product, and the systems needed to create biogas require heat. So, there is a virtuous cycle of sorts possible.

  • Twitter for iPhone Released (formerly Tweetie)

    Some new features, and you can now use the app without being signed in. You can also sign up in the app.

    [Updated: 5/19/10 at 11:12 AM]: How annoying is that you have to re-enter your accounts? Besides that the new search screen is a great addition.

  • ASUS Working on Netbook Using Plug-in Phone

    James Kendrick:

    The company that kicked off the netbook craze is reported to be working on a netbook that uses a phone plugged into the device for connectivity. ASUS is looking at the modular phone system by Modu to provide connectivity on an as-needed basis by popping the phone into a slot designed for that purpose. This method would allow owners to have mobile connectivity with a single data plan on the phone.

    I think this is a very poor solution, but perhaps the only one we will get in the U.S., whereas in Spain it was announced that their leading mobile carrier will let you share your iPhone data plan with your iPad – no extra cost.

  • Check.in – One Checkin to Rule Them All

    Now open to all, full iPhone/iPad support. I have been waiting to test this for a while.

  • P&G opens online product store

    Dan Sewell:

    P&G insists the venture’s main goal is to learn more about online shopping, and not to compete with stores and online retailers that also sell its products. P&G says it will share the “learning lab” information it gathers.

    Very interesting, the store has all the products you would expect. I highly doubt this is so much a ‘learning lab’ as it is more of a “get your act together” warning to P&G’s retailers.

    Check out the P&G eStore here.

  • Another Apple Leak: iPod Touch with 2-Megapixel Camera

    I understand how the new iPhones get leaked, Apple has to test them all over the place to make sure the cellular antennas are working correctly. However why they would need to test an Pod touch outside of Apple HQ is beyond me. I am not saying this iPod is BS, but I don’t think it is a new model, so much as it is an older prototype.

    I may eat my words later, but I would guess this is not an upcoming model, so much as it was a proof of concept.

  • Hands-On With the First 4G Phone

    This thing is big, and why do you need HDMI on a phone? The kickstand is very clever though, however unsightly it may be.

  • Should Adobe Offer Flash on iPhones with Jailbreak?

    Charles Arthur:

    Because – as @poorlyrendered points out – there is a way for Adobe to show that Apple is wrong, completely wrong, and that Adobe is right, completely right, about how Flash will run so well on the iPhone. Assuming it will.

    It’s this: write a version of Flash Player and offer it to owners of jailbroken iPhones.

    I saw they should do it, show us how good it is.

  • New Addition to Gmail Could Make it the Most Annoying Service on the Net

    Marshall Kirkpatrick:

    AwayFind lets you mark certain contacts or message topics as ‘Urgent’ and then alerts you via phone, SMS or IM when relevant messages arrive.

    That sounds horrid.

  • Google buys Norwegian audio-video tech provider

    Reuters:

    GIPS enables service providers, developers and hardware manufacturers to reduce network impairments such as delay, jitter and echo in real-time audio and video applications.

    Here’s hoping Google can get rid of the YouTube “pause” when playing back video.

  • Second Thoughts About the Autopilot

    Christine Negroni:

    Finding the balance between too much technology and too little is crucial, according to William B. Rouse, an engineering and computing professor at the Georgia Institute of Technology. “Complacency is an issue, but designing the interaction between human and technical so the human has the right level of judgment when you need them is a design task in itself,” Mr. Rouse said. “When the person has no role in the task, there’s a much greater risk of complacency.”

  • Hotmail to Get a Refresh

    Looks like a much needed update. Though one thing that popped out to me is that Yahoo is the largest email provider, yet I can only name one person I know with a Yahoo account and another with a Hotmail account. Everybody else is on Gmail.

    See my disclosure on Microsoft.

  • Kindle for Android

    Pretty sweet that it gets a built in Kindle store, unlike the iPhone version.

    [Updated: 5/20/10 at 2:58 PM]Apparently there is no built in store, works just like on the iPhone. See this video walkthrough for more info.

  • How Close Are We to Real Nanotechnology?

    This article saddens me because a) they don’t give a clear date when Star Trek food replicators will be availible and b) it doesn’t sound like I will see them in my lifetime.

    [via Justin Blanton]

  • Visa Credit Card iPhone Case

    Charlie Sorrel:

    The idea of schemes like In2Pay is to free you from carrying a wallet, allowing you to do everything with your cellphone. But this implementation, which requires carrying a cellphone case, is not much different from just taping your credit card to the back of your phone. (Or slipping it into a credit card-holding iPhone cover.)

    I was thinking the same thing. Also:

    It also requires a compatible card reader. What, the neighborhood restaurant doesn’t accept contactless payments? Sorry, there are only 100,000 merchants in the U.S. that have NFC payment readers, compared to millions that accept old-style credit cards.

    I used to frequent Jack In The Box all the time, in this area they have the card reader things installed in the drive-thrus, and I happen to have an American Express card with one of these chips. I tried it once, just to see, it didn’t work. Subsequently Jack In The Box doesn’t even bother to use these card readers anymore. This is going to need more merchants before anybody cares to use it.

  • iPhone is Old Hat Technology?

    Jessica Mintz:

    Other phones have higher-resolution cameras and can shoot high-definition video. The processor seems faster in new phones such as the Droid Incredible. A more energy-efficient touch-screen technology is eclipsing the one used in the iPhone screen. And competitors are matching features that once set the iPhone apart, including its slim shape and its store with thousands of applications and games.

    “This thing is not state of the art,” says ABI Research analyst Michael Morgan.

    How long will it take journalists to recognize that processor speed doesn’t matter. And matching the look of an iPhone, and it’s App store is hardly the same as matching the iPhone’s features. I could make my own App store, but nobody would buy anything from it – cause nobody wants to develop for it. Still would that mean I have matched the iPhone’s features. The App store is not a feature, the hundreds of thousands of apps in the store, that is the feature.

    And I can’t let this bit go either:

    Carolina Milanesi, who lives in Britain and analyzes the mobile market for Gartner, has tried to switch away from the iPhone but gets hung up on something every time. She spent 20 minutes trying to set up e-mail on an Android phone, only to fail. The iPhone is so simple her 2 1/2-year-old daughter can operate her spelling and animal-noises apps herself.

    The iPhone isn’t as flexible as some others, and Milanesi bristled at things Apple wouldn’t let her do, such as set custom tones for incoming text messages, a common tweak in Europe.

    “But then you kind of get used to it, and you don’t miss it,” she says. “You kind of think that that’s for your own good.”

    Wow, so Android is better, but it is hard to setup email? And she wants custom text message tones, but then she doesn’t really care all that much in the end. This all sounds like grasping at straws.