Microsoft's Current Situation: Like IBM in the '80s [View article]
You missed the point and confirmed both the author’s assertion and the culture comment posted above.
No one is saying that Apple will replace MSFT today. The point is that MSFT is putting all of its eggs in one basket and every attempt to diversify has met with failure because its approach is from a monopolistic skew.
No one can build from the top down. New markets are built from the bottom up. If MSFT can repeat its success story again, then and only then will it have a new monopoly.
The “we are the biggest and best” syndrome is what cut Big Blue down to size. The same is happening to MSFT. If I didn’t care about MSFT or ‘have a bone to pick with Microsoft’ I wouldn’t bother writing about it.
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You missed the point and confirmed both the author’s assertion and the culture comment posted above.
Jul 27 06:06 am
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All Comments by Saul Sterman »Microsoft's Current Situation: Like IBM in the '80s [View article]
No one is saying that Apple will replace MSFT today. The point is that MSFT is putting all of its eggs in one basket and every attempt to diversify has met with failure because its approach is from a monopolistic skew.
No one can build from the top down. New markets are built from the bottom up. If MSFT can repeat its success story again, then and only then will it have a new monopoly.
The “we are the biggest and best” syndrome is what cut Big Blue down to size. The same is happening to MSFT. If I didn’t care about MSFT or ‘have a bone to pick with Microsoft’ I wouldn’t bother writing about it.