Go Home, Bill
June 27, 2008 on 6:21 pm | In | Comments OffThis is the last week of full-time work at Microsoft for Bill Gates and given that I have written more than 40 columns about Microsoft over the years, it wouldn't make much sense for me to ignore this event. Yet that is almost what I did, which I believe is telling. It frankly didn't matter much to me that Bill was retiring. But then I figured longtime readers would expect a comment and perhaps there is some underlying theme here that IS worth 1,500 words. So rather than a fond or relieved farewell to BillG, I'd like to use this occasion to ask some deeper questions: "How relevant is Microsoft today?" and "Does the departure of Bill Gates really matter?"
A few months ago producers from The Money Programme on BBC-2 called me to arrange an interview for the TWO ENTIRE SHOWS they were preparing on Bill's retirement from Microsoft. No comparable calls came from the U.S. networks, which didn't surprise me because: 1) they wouldn't think so far in advance, and; 2) one executive's retirement -- even Bill Gates -- simply isn't worth that level of coverage. This is one area on which I am sure Bill and I agree, since he, too, is bemused by the hoopla.
But since the BBC called so long ago I've had plenty of time to think about the significance of this day, both to us and to them. I finally figured The Money Programme was interested because of vestigial class consciousness in British culture, and especially in British broadcasting. Bill Gates is viewed as a kind of industrial maharajah in some quarters, more so the further you get from the USA. In those parts people still think he makes a difference to Microsoft's success or failure. Clearly I disagree.
If we were to place the importance of Bill Gates in the history of both Microsoft and the personal computer industry he'd be up there with most anyone. I'm not here to claim that Bill's contributions weren't significant, because they were. At half a dozen points during the history of Microsoft Bill pushed or pulled in such a way to change the course of his company and the industry as a whole, there is no doubt of that. The question is whether he REMAINS as important, which he clearly doesn't or they wouldn't let him leave. If it would help Microsoft they'd prop up Bill like the body of Lenin in Red Square to motivate the troops and intimidate the competition. And he'd let them do that, too.
Bill had to go. I cover the reasons for this in some detail below, but like any executive position in a U.S. public company, he could remain only as long as his value was perceived as higher than the liabilities he presented.
One way of looking at this is that Bill is no longer needed by Microsoft. Raising kids you do your best to instill in them certain values that will continue to serve them well when you are gone. From that perspective, the time is probably long past when Bill could really force change on Microsoft. This is proved, I think, by the debacle of Windows Vista, which came in years late and WAY over budget, still not working very well and missing most of the ambitious features that were originally promised. Vista happened on Bill's watch with lots of folks like me pointing and criticizing for years before the OS finally shipped. If Bill had been able to do something about Vista, he would have. Nobody -- NOBODY -- likes shipping bad products. The simple fact is that there was little to nothing Bill or any one person at Microsoft could do to save Vista. Bill helped create the environment that inevitably led to Vista, but having done that he was unable to change that environment enough to avoid shipping a bad product.
Jim Allchin took the fall for Vista, but its poor performance was the result of the actions of many Microsoft executives over many years.
The last two executive actions on the part of Bill Gates that had singular effects on the future of Microsoft were: 1) his 1995 Think Week that resulted in Microsoft shifting course to flow with the "Internet Tidal Wave," ultimately destroying Netscape, and; 2) his 1988 decision to back Jeff Raikes' proposal to bundle most of Microsoft's productivity applications into what they called Microsoft Office, which effectively destroyed all Microsoft's competitors for shrink-wrapped applications. The first action was that of a strong chief executive operating at the very top of his game while the second was that of a major shareholder who was willing to accept lower earnings in the short term for the long-term success of his investment.
These were radical and dynamic positions to take that resulted in creating thousands of millionaires in the greatest peacetime transfer of wealth since OPEC. But they were also 13 and 20 years ago, respectively. If Gates took another Think Week and determined Microsoft's future lay in baked goods or virtualization, could he turn the entire company toward one or both of those product directions today? I don't think so.
No one person can control Microsoft today, which has been obvious to Gates for at least eight years, since that's how long ago he put Steve Ballmer in the CEO job. For at least eight years, then, these guys have known that their jobs are not so much to steer the Microsoft ship as to try and keep it from drifting onto the rocks. That's the way it is with huge and successful companies. At best you can trim the sails, because to come about (to significantly shift direction) is just too dangerous for the money machine.
This is not to say that Microsoft isn't still ambitious, but its ambitions are bounded by the company's own success. Starting any business that is perceived as having less than $1 billion in sales ought to make no sense at all for Microsoft unless NOT starting such a business might lead to the company's failure. That's certainly the case with MSN, for example, which is too small for Microsoft to bother with yet too important for Microsoft NOT to bother with. The only logical move for Microsoft, then, was to make the MSN business big enough to matter and the only way they could see to do that was by acquiring Yahoo, which explains this year's failed acquisition. Microsoft's failure to buy Yahoo doesn't change this scenario, either, so look for Microsoft to do something -- anything -- to grow that business, because they can't strategically afford to do the logical thing, which is to kill it.
To survive in the long term the way that General Electric has survived, Microsoft will have to keep reinventing itself, which necessarily requires a change of leadership and yet another reason for Gates to go. It's also a reason for Ballmer to go, by the way, and those who think he'll stay another 8-10 years are simply wrong. There hasn't yet emerged at Microsoft (or anywhere else) the right leader to take Microsoft to its next destination. Maybe they'll find that new leader in time, maybe not. In the meantime they'll try to stay in the top 1-2 positions in every market segment, but none are big enough (or dominant enough in terms of market share) to replace the mature businesses Microsoft has today. This is not good.
I see years of further financial success for Microsoft and ultimately some significant growth in the stock as Wall Street forgets Gates and forgives Ballmer and returns Redmond closer to its historic price-to-earnings ratios. In the long run (five years or more) the future of Microsoft is cloudy and troubled. But Wall Street doesn't care about five years from now. And for the next half decade Microsoft will be nothing but a huge money machine.
So the ultimate reason for Gates' retirement is to allow Microsoft shares to rise so he'll once more be the world's richest man and can devote even more money to improving the world through the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.
Gates and Microsoft -- and especially Microsoft shares -- have been suffering for a decade from a number of leadership transgressions that helped make Microsoft the huge company it is today but did so while breaking rules, breaking competitors, and ultimately breaking the law. What's sad is that it didn't have to happen this way. The question I would ask Bill Gates on his way out the door for the final time is: "If you had played fair and not abused your monopoly power would Microsoft be significantly smaller or less successful than it is today?"
I think the answer is "no," that Microsoft's bullying didn't really gain the company much in the long run and certainly hurt Gates' wealth, which is a number that has been very important to him over the years.
Gates might argue that he didn't feel he could take a chance on playing fair, which is a position you'd expect from someone who knows the value of luck in these things. I just think it is sad that Microsoft, having created a huge and very efficient system for recruiting the best and the brightest workers, never allowed those people a chance to really show what they were capable of.
So have a happy retirement, Bill. I hope you save the world and win that Nobel Peace Prize. And while you're at it, please throw a little money into SIDS research, eh?
Trust, Privacy and Applications
June 23, 2008 on 5:49 am | In Computer | Comments OffThere are some pretty cool new applications out there that I would like to try. The only problem is that I have some problems trusting them. Xoopit and Skyfire are two examples of this.
Xoopit is an extension to Gmail that lets you easily access and share your photos, videos and files that are in your Gmail account. The problem with this is that you have to give them your gmail username and password, in order for them to index the data.
Skyfire is a Windows Mobile web browser. This browser is supposed to deliver a PC based browsing experience that is supposed to be really fase. The problem that I have with this is in their implementation. Essentially the Skyfire browser is a VNC or RDP client. When you enter a web address in the "browser", it gets sent to their servers which fetch the html and renders web page, and then sends the rendered page to the "browser". When people enter a secure https url, they have the expectation that their data will be encrypted between their browser and the server on the other end. With Skyfire, the connection is encrypted between Skyfire's severs and the destination server. I don't know how the connection is encrypted between the "browser" and Skyfire's severs.
I am sure that both Xoopit and Skyfire are not going to do anything malicious with my data, but what if their servers are broken in too. For mail, I already am trusting Google with my data, adding another third party, adds another potential point of failure.
feedly
June 23, 2008 on 5:18 am | In Computer | Comments OffI saw this post that mentioned feedly. This looks like a interesting Firefox chrome application. feedly presents you a start page that summarizes your content from Google Reader. feedly also integrates with various social network sites to allow you to share content that you read.
I don't know if I will use feedly regularly for reading content, as Google Reader already has a good summary view. I do like, and will continue to use, the interface that feedly offers for subscribing to feeds. On one page, you can subscribe to and tag new feeds. Since feedly relys on Google Reader as the backend, all feeds subscribed to in feedly are actually subscribed to in Google Reader.
I am interested in what they do with the social aspect of feedly. It seems that feedly could enable other ways of sharing content, or discovering new content.
TVersity
June 23, 2008 on 4:53 am | In Computer | Comments OffAs I metioned before, I was looking for something to transcode my videos for playback on our XBox. It looks like TVersity is the best solution.
TVersity is an application that is an UPnP/DNLA server that will share your content with any compatible devices. In addtion to just sharing, it can transcode the content so it is playable on most devices.
The installation was a little tricky on Windows Home Server, as you have to RDP in to the server to install it as you would on a windows computer. Also, you have to configure it to run as a service. Also, I had to configure the Windows Home Server firewall to allow connections to TVserity.
Once it was installed, with the additional codecs, I was able to play most of my videos on my Xbox 360, even our home movies that are encoded in MP4. On the Xbox, the TVersity server appeared along side the builtin UPnP server, so you can use either to play your content.
Unfortunately, every time the TVersity server scans for new content (which it is configured to do daily), the services appears to stop running. I am sure that this bug will be fixed, or I can just reduce the number of directories that need to be scanned to only the videos.
WebGuide
June 23, 2008 on 4:07 am | In Computer | Comments OffI have been looking for a solution for streaming and transcoding videos to our Xbox from the Windows Home Server. I found WebGuide, and decided to try it out.
WebGuide is a plugin for Windows Home Server that lets you acess the content from your home server from the web. This is different than the file based access that comes with Windows Home Server. You can view thumbnails of photos. Also, you can stream music and video files from the server. WebGuide relies on external transcoders to make your content playable.
I installed WebGuide and the recommend other applications. The integration with Windows Home Server web pages is really nice. It appears as a link on the main page, and it can use the main Windows Home Server authentication.
Viewing photos worked very well. WebGuide exposes the folder structure as albums, and then shows thumbnails as you enter the "albums". You can also view various sizes of the photos. For music, it looks like it can deliver m3u files for playback in media players, or can play in the flash player. I wasn't able to get music or video to play with Firefox running on my laptop running Ubuntu. I don't know if this was because the transcoders weren't configured correctly or if the mplayer or flash plugins couldn't handle the streams.
I decided to uninstall WebGuide, as it doesn't offer a solution to playback the content on my Xbox and I don't really need another solution for playing my content from the web.
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