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View Full Version : Bill Gates' Legacy: Microsoft's Top 10 Flops



StyM
06-17-2006, 06:38 AM
full article here (http://www.microsoft-watch.com/article2/0,1995,1977870,00.asp?kc=MWRSS02129TX1K0000535)


1.Microsoft BOB (and son of BOB – Clippy): BOB, a product Microsoft released in 1995, was set to be the next-generation interface for Windows 3.1. BOB was Microsoft's first foray into making user interfaces more interactive and intuitive. (Clippy is the talking paperclip character that Microsoft users love to hate.) Interestingly, it was Bill Gates' wife, Melinda French Gates, who managed the BOB project.

2.Windows ME: Microsoft has rolled out a lot of versions of Windows since good old Windows 1.0 back in 1985. The most maligned of the bunch was Windows Millennium Edition, or Windows ME, which Microsoft introduced in 2000. ME was seen by many as a buggy upgrade with next-to-no compelling features. It was eclipsed rapidly by Windows XP, which Microsoft rolled out in 2001.

3.Tablet PC/Pen Computing/eBooks: While there is definitely a vociferous contingent of Tablet PC fans out there, the technology has been buggy and more expensive than expected. Many have been disappointed by the kinds of Tablet PC form factors -- including the new generation of Ultra-Mobile PCs (a k a "Origami") devices – that have made their way into the market. Microsoft recently decided to make Tablet PC functionality part of the base Windows Vista operating system, rather than to continue to champion it as a separate SKU.

4.SPOT watches: They're still big and dorky, even more than three years after the first Smart Personal Object Technology (SPOT) watch prototypes first hit the market. There still are no compelling apps or reasons to shell out hundreds of dollars for what are now known as "Smart watches."

5.Microsoft Money: If antitrust fears hadn't put the kibosh on Microsoft's plans to buy Intuit back in 1995, Microsoft might have been able to buy Quicken and turn its online banking product into a market leader. Instead, the Redmondians had to plod along with Microsoft Money, which seems to garner more wrath than praise from its users.

6.DOS 4.0: MS-DOS: No Microsoft look back can fail to mention the father of Windows, i.e., MS-DOS. Of all the QDOS (Quick and Dirty Operating System) derivatives, it seems to be the 4.0 release that Microsoft historians recall as the buggiest nightmare. Released in 1988, MS-DOS 4.0 was based on IBM's code base, not Microsoft, according to the virtual Wikipedia history books.

7.Microsoft TV: Microsoft has taken several stabs at making a go of the digital TV space, to no avail. Anyone else remember "Microsoft Tiger," the company's video-on-demand project launched back in the early 1990s? The company's not throwing in the towel on this one, by any means. In fact, Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer recently said he believed IPTV would become one of the key Microsoft stock and profit drivers in the not-too-distant future.

* Gates and Ballmer Calm the Microsoft Troops
* Will Microsoft Still Be Microsoft Without Bill Gates?
* Gates Out; Ozzie Becomes Chief Software Architect
* Is Microsoft Ready for Gates' Transition? (eWEEK)

8.MSNBC partnership/Microsoft as a content player: Microsoft's partnership with NBC was never a smooth one. In December 2005, Microsoft basically pulled back from its NBC relationship. But that isn't stopping Microsoft from continuing its long-standing quest to be a content provider in its own right. The company is in the midst of hiring bloggers, TV crew members and other media-savvy types to build something known as the "MSN Media Network."

9.Live Meeting web conferencing software: I'm still waiting to be bowled over by the need for presence and other "always on" technologies. Microsoft Watch readers know I am no fan of Live Meeting. But when asking others for input on this list, I wasn't the only one who thought Microsoft's Web conferencing product, based on technology it bought from PlaceWare, has been a disaster. Microsoft isn't folding its conferencing tent and going home, however; in fact, execs are promising the next versions of Live Meeting are going to be even bigger and more intrusive. Can't wait!

10.No Microsoft Linux!: Microsoft could have and should have done its own version of Linux. It could have bought a Linux distro vendor or just christened some branch of Windows (with some Unix-compatibility add-ons) as Microsoft Linux. By doing this, Microsoft could have thrown a real monkey wrench into Linux companies' plans. Instead, Microsoft continues to spend lots of money, time and attention fighting open-source software on a whole host of fronts. They should have joined the camp, rather than obsessing on beating them.

interesting..:rolleyes:

freecableguy
06-17-2006, 06:54 AM
and all of this is completely overshadowed by the fact that Bill Gates is the richest man in the world (or has that changed?). Anyway, why dwell on a few "flops"? Its hard to criticize success like this but somehow these writers find a way to point out the down side.

Bar81
06-17-2006, 07:02 AM
Nobody anywhere bats 1.000% I would say that although I dislike MS, this list is silly.

nn_step
06-17-2006, 07:07 AM
How the :banana::banana::banana::banana: did they miss DRM integration?

the
06-17-2006, 08:02 AM
and now that bill gates si stepping down from MS as lead programmer guy, what will everyone love to hate about ms now?

tdunks
06-17-2006, 08:18 AM
they will probably be much better without bill lmao

WeStSiDePLaYa
06-17-2006, 08:30 AM
and now that bill gates si stepping down from MS as lead programmer guy, what will everyone love to hate about ms now?


probably them raming DRM up our :banana::banana::banana::banana::banana::banana::b anana:s.

Mortal
06-17-2006, 08:42 AM
probably them raming DRM up our :banana::banana::banana::banana::banana::banana::b anana:s.

Ballmer. ;)

Delirious
06-17-2006, 08:48 AM
People who dont take risks are the ones who dont have flops, and theyre usually not the wealthy ones with billions of dollars.

Cobalt
06-17-2006, 09:20 AM
I don't see how anyone can critsize the richest most successful man in the world who is also the worlds biggest philanthropist. He provided the drive that has caused the widespread use of the PC. Maybe we'd still have PCs today without him, but it certainly happened a lot quicker because of MS.

Delirious
06-17-2006, 09:46 AM
I don't see how anyone can critsize the richest most successful man in the world who is also the worlds biggest philanthropist. He provided the drive that has caused the widespread use of the PC. Maybe we'd still have PCs today without him, but it certainly happened a lot quicker because of MS.

Wherever there is something good someone will come along to bash it, its just human nature.

Thorry
06-17-2006, 02:00 PM
Well this list is totally bogus....

Microsoft's biggest flop (for Microsoft itself, money wise, almost nobody knows about it). They actually tried to unfold the 'Internet in the sky' project, an ambitious project which involved the launching of 288 satellites in earth orbit to provide high speed internet (really high speed) all across the world.

The project actually did receive huge amounts of funding and was one of the biggest co-ventures ever. One satellite was actually launched but never used for what it was intended to be used. The project was cancelled in 2002, see also: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teledesic

Money wise, that is prolly Microsoft biggest flop.

As for Tablet PCs: Microsoft isn't the only one developing tablet PCs, the concept also is very sound. The technology just wasn't there to produce what they wanted to produce. Now we are seeing very powerfull, light and easy to use Tablet PCs (check out the Toshiba M400) so that's not a flop at all.

Also the biggest flop is prolly one nobody has seen ;)

Cobalt
06-17-2006, 02:37 PM
Tablet PCs (or at least the concept) is very popular with business people all over the world. Maybe it wasn't produced in the way that it was originally described but the concept of having a highly mobile PC lives on in the blackberry and plamtops.

Pinnacle
06-17-2006, 02:41 PM
Well this list is totally bogus....

Microsoft's biggest flop (for Microsoft itself, money wise, almost nobody knows about it). They actually tried to unfold the 'Internet in the sky' project, an ambitious project which involved the launching of 288 satellites in earth orbit to provide high speed internet (really high speed) all across the world.

The project actually did receive huge amounts of funding and was one of the biggest co-ventures ever. One satellite was actually launched but never used for what it was intended to be used. The project was cancelled in 2002, see also: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teledesic

Money wise, that is prolly Microsoft biggest flop.

As for Tablet PCs: Microsoft isn't the only one developing tablet PCs, the concept also is very sound. The technology just wasn't there to produce what they wanted to produce. Now we are seeing very powerfull, light and easy to use Tablet PCs (check out the Toshiba M400) so that's not a flop at all.

Also the biggest flop is prolly one nobody has seen ;)

WOW, good to know.

:toast: Thorry

OmegaMerc
06-17-2006, 03:20 PM
Windows: ME :mad: :slapass:

Mehmet_Ali
07-04-2006, 09:54 AM
Totally bogus :rolleyes:

Cobalt
07-04-2006, 10:46 AM
nice necro posting :rolleyes: