Microsoft's Biggest Enemy Now: Apple, Linux or Itself?

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March 9, 2009, 09:27 AM —  CIO.com — 

In a meeting with financial analysts last week, Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer laid out who he thinks are the biggest threats today to Windows on the client side. Surprisingly, Apple wasn't number one. It wasn't number two or three either.

Referring to a pie chart at the meeting that gauges threats to Windows, Ballmer said that Windows itself, both licensed and pirated, were the top two threats to Microsoft in the client OS space, followed by Linux, then Apple. Ballmer quipped: "Windows license, number one market share. Number two market share goes to Windows pirated, or unlicensed. That's a competitor that's tough to beat; they've got a good price and a heck of a product, but we're working on it."

Ballmer followed with a carefully-worded mockery of Apple's "point or more" market share growth over the past year. "A point of market share on a number that's about 300 million [number of PCs shipped worldwide in 2008] is interesting. It's an interesting amount of market share, while not necessarily being as dramatic as people would think."

"Number two market share goes to Windows pirated, or unlicensed. That's a competitor that's tough to beat; they've got a good price and a heck of a product." Steve Ballmer, Microsoft CEO, quipping about how Microsoft has to compete with itself.

Though Linux's 0.88 percent OS market share hardly qualifies as a threat, Linux does compete with Microsoft in more areas than Apple and it is much cheaper. "Cheap" takes on an appealing sound in an economic recession.

Clearly, Apple has been hit by the economic downturn in the past two months. It has seen dips in Mac sales and market share, and even announced a small round of layoffs Wednesday.

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Comments

re: no financial backing?

Roger Kay says that Linux has no big financial backers? Last I heard, Google, Sun, IBM and Intel were backers of Linux. Google alone uses Linux on all its servers. IBM and Intel are working on their own flavors. Kay looks at it as being fragmented. Smart people see it as offering a variety of options and flavors, all on top of a stable and secure kernel. Microsoft can never offer that in Windows.
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Either way you look at it Microsoft Data Center management did not follow standards or best practices in this failure. In which case it makes me wonder more about the outsourcing of corporate data much less personal data.
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