
Microsoft has been spending alot of money on R&D in the past 3 years and this is usually not to waste. I am personally interested in a complete ecosystem where my phone laptop and tablet run the same thing and can talk to each other seamlessly. Apple has managed to do this but the premium on their devices is not attractive to me. Microsoft are the best placed to build the same especially if they can get the price right. The laptops I see from Intel where the screen is a tablet that detaches from the rest of the hardware is a killer product for me. The rest of the body can hold the hefty inards that I need for work while the tablet can be used for leisurely browsing or media consumption. I believe they can hit a pricepoint close to a macbook pro if they work out logistics right. Mobile is all well and good though I think it is just the newest shiny thing. It has increased penetration of info tech but is not a replacement to a solid machine that can crunch data. On Tue, Aug 27, 2013 at 8:35 AM, Joram Mwinamo <joram.mwinamo@gmail.com>wrote:
My take on Steve Balmer
He was not paranoid enough. He thrived too much on their previous success of Microsoft. He scoffed at apple when they went ipod, he scoffed at Google saying all they knew is search. He assumed, the PC was here to stay
Today most people do computing on non MS products. You read right, MOST. Because most computing is no longer word processing, database management etc plus there is countless cloud based solutions for all the above. Nowadays , computing is social media and mobile based. samsung and apple and google have increasingly locked MS out of the above ( although they earn royalties from patented technologies that all the above use)
They need a game changer, and it cannot be on incremental innovations and improvements technology. Google is working on smart cars, google glass, they are making big bets. Apple is always secretive on what they are working on. Samsung is conquering our lives from tvs to fridges to all sorts of devices.
Microsoft isnt going anywhere soon, but if they do not create urgency to start changing the game, they will slowly fade away ,their competitors are not sleeping
On Sun, Aug 25, 2013 at 9:08 PM, William Muriithi < william.muriithi@gmail.com> wrote:
Why is it that when a company grows big and becomes successful, it becomes a hindrance to its future success? Seems it is very difficult for companies to avoid this curse in IT.
http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Innovator's_Dilemma
Check examples of disruptive technology here
http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Disruptive_innovation
Muriithi
On Sunday, 25 August 2013, Martin Akolo Chiteri wrote:
Some people think that this is a move which came ten years too late < http://www.wired.com/business/2013/08/steve-ballmer-steps-down/ >
Martin. ______________________________________
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