Latch -
I've been coming to this site for over a decade and honestly, I can't say I've ever agreed with most of what you write about Microsoft or its products. I've worked as a PM for Microsoft for a long time. That on the table, I look at things very objectively and am very blunt and open about where we are weak and failing. (Pre-Ballmer era Microsoft thought process.)
In this case, I agree entirely with what you wrote.
There's a lot of truth in what Microsoft writes about iPad and its enterprise capability but frankly, who cares? The device is not and was not intended for that market, even if it is making headway there, period. Microsoft has yet to grasp that when someone picks up an iPad or a Droid X, they don't ask things like: "Can this device be updated centrally using a WSUS infrastructure?", "Does it still support the CDO DLL for Exchange or do I have to rely on web services to route my free/busy information?", "Does the kernel support spin-lock dispatching of child partition threads or only those in the parent?". Good heavens.
In this case, Microsoft has long missed the boat on the tablet wave, even though we're essentially the "father" of the technology. The "Real Soon Now" trademark is sadly and simply, too true. In this market and in mobile.
This whole line of "rich" this and "innovative" that is pathetic. Ballmer needs to go, plain and simple. The execution in these markets that Microsoft cannot afford to be left behind in has been atrocious at best. He more than anyone else has caused Microsoft to become what it has in many areas: a lumbering, clueless, irrelevant giant.
I certainly don't believe this to be the case with many of our products and the markets within which they participate but tablet computing and mobile are abominations.
Spot on you are, this is right out of the Ballmer playbook.
This post was edited by RedmondAnonymous on Tuesday, January 25, 2011 at 17:26.
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