I hope all of you get a chance to see the new Mac commercial. Not the news report one, but the one where PC is spouting that Windows 7 will have none of the problems Windows Vista had. It’s utterly hilarious. Not only because it points out the decades of fraud committed by Microsoft with “I think I’ve heard that before”, but because it is one of the few times you will hear Microsoft use the Vista name going forward.
Every American citizen should take a good look at Vista. This is what happens when you let your IT work be done almost entirely be an off-shore labor force. It is a shining testament to the skill level found in the $10/day labor market. Many of you reading the news reports and blogs of US IT workers may have thought it only sour grapes (as Gartner and others tried to make it sound) mainly because you had no frame of reference for how bad things were. Yes, there were companies getting de-listed by the SEC for covering up off-shore project failures, then being sent through multi-year audits and finally reaching settlements, but that always sounded more like an Enron thing to you than criminal fraud related to IT.
Vista has changed all of that. It has failed so spectacularly that Microsoft has even dropped the Vista name. Admittedly, Microsoft has some products which dug massive craters in the IT landscape when they arrived. Few of them fail so spectacularly that Microsoft wipes their name from marketing and memory. How many of you remember that “Microsoft Bob” product which needed a 4Ghz box to run but the current pride of the line was a 66Mhz 486? Bob didn’t completely go away though…Microsoft doesn’t completely throw out a bad idea. Bob got renamed “Clippy” and was the annoying resource eating “help agent” in the next release of Microsoft Office.
How many of you remember Microsoft Money? Now here was a product which was Microsoft’s standard method of operation. It sucked. There was no other way to describe it. Even after Microsoft got the Justice Department to let slide the fact they were stamping “ Operating System” on Windows 3.x boxes when it wasn’t an OS, nor was it even close to an OS, they could not get the Justice Department and the FTC to swallow letting Microsoft “give” Microsoft Money to Novell while Microsoft put out a bid to acquire Quicken. Nope, the Government stopped them cold. You see, lawyers may barely be able to find the power switch on that laptop they were issued and have absolutely no clue about was does and doesn’t legally constitute an operating system, but they do understand when a product which is supposed to manage their checkbook and brokerage account can’t get either to match the statements. You see, not only was Quicken entrenched, it didn’t use any Microsoft products during its development at the time, so, Microsoft tried to come into an existing market and completely re-write the rules…Accountants, they love computers, but they hate change…in fact they have rules about change and a lot of those rules have been written into laws passed by various levels of government.
Microsoft refused to admit their product sucked in ways the English language simply couldn’t adequately describe. They pumped huge sums of money into the marketing trying to get new users. Nothing could hide the fact the product sucked. On June 10, 2009, Microsoft announced it would discontinue sales on June 30, 2009.
The same stubbornness has had Microsoft pushing that pathetic thing called Windows. It never really worked. It has always had security holes which were roughly the size of the Grand Canyon, but they paid the Gartner Group tons of money to market it and several CEOs from other companies owned a lot of Microsoft Stock, so corporate America started to standardize on it. Then the fee increases, then Vista, then various government bodies started demanding OpenDocument format and MS Office didn’t support that. Now, corporate America is moving the desktop to Linux and home users are buying Mac products.
Btw, Windows 8 won’t have any of the problems Windows 7 does.
November 8, 2009 at 2:40 pm
I’m no big fan of either Windows or Mac. I used to have a 68k-based Mac but then Apple abandoned its customers by jumping to PowerPC-based Macs (sure you could take you legacy apps with you and run them in emulation mode but that was real slow and temporary). Then Apple pulled the same stunt again when they jumped to x86-64. How come no one ever remembers this? Getting back to Windows-7, many people who have used it claim it is nothing more than a service pack for Windows-Vista. So Microsoft has developed the ultimate scam, making customers pay for updates.