• vote
    1
    0 starscraighal | Shared With: Everyone - Nov 10 2007 | news, microsoft
    Feel like a beer? Let's stop off at Microsoft

    Oh, I guess E&D is special and they get the cool new buildings. Huh. ;-)

    Quoted: Microsoft Corp. plans to develop an upscale campus for its Entertainment and Devices Division, including its Xbox business, on a large swath of land on the western half of its Redmond headquarters. It might even have its own bar.

    Wow. And how much revenue will it take to fund all these new employees? What is the employee-addition-to-revenue-ratio?

    Quoted: Overall, Microsoft said last year that it would spend $1 billion to add 14 buildings and 3.1 million square feet of office space to the campus over three years -- trying to keep up with its relatively steady rate of hiring

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  • vote
    1
    0 starscraighal | Shared With: Everyone - 20 days ago | microsoft, news

    Unpredictable Dvorak. Another fun Microsoft bashing article. The accusation that "Microsoft is just lazy, careless, and not at all detail-oriented anymore" is a sign that he's just not paying attention.

    Quoted: For all of the fanfare surrounding the new OS, Win 7 is really just a Vista martini. The operating system may have two olives instead of one this time out, but it's still made with the same cheap Microsoft vodka.

    Quoted: Steve Jobs was right about Microsoft years ago when he accused the company of collectively having no taste. But now I'm not so sure. There are flashes of brilliance and good taste all over the company, but Microsoft is just lazy, careless, and not at all detail-oriented anymore. There are also indications that the employees all play a zero-sum game, hoping the guy in the next cubicle fails. This is a flaw that crept into the company long before Gates's exit.

    I'm offended by that. But, ok, I'll give him the part about PR and Advertising...

    Quoted: Where is the "wow?" Where is the tour-de-force? It's not going to happen with this marketing team calling the shots, so we have to assume that no matter how good or bad Windows 7 might be (it's good, but not really better than Vista SP2), the company doesn't understand the value of using better vodka.

    Better Vodka? WTF? Why is this guy comparing the DNA of one of the world's most successful and innovative companies to alcohol? What an chump. Maybe Dvorak had a few too many before he wrote this article.

  • vote
    1
    0 starscraighal | Shared With: Everyone - Feb 24 2009 | microsoft, yahoo!, news

    Oops. Not the kind of PR MSFT needs..

    SAN FRANCISCO (AFP) - Microsoft on Monday said it goofed in trying to get back money it overpaid departing employees in severance packages and sent word to the former workers to keep the cash.

    The US software giant said that last week it told 25 recently-departed employees they had accidentally been paid too much in severance and that the overages should be returned to the company.

    "This was a mistake on our part," a Microsoft spokesman said Monday in response to an AFP inquiry.

    "We should have handled this situation in a more thoughtful manner. We are reaching out to those impacted to relay that we will not seek any payment from those individuals."

  • vote
    1
    0 starscraighal | Shared With: Everyone - Oct 14 2008 | news, Microsoft, windows, apple
    Microsoft: Mac buyers pay Apple tax

    Interesting comments and perspective from Brad Brooks. I like the "i" way vs. the "you" way juxtaposition. Windows "without walls" is an effective campaign against the walled garden Apple offers. Still, it's hard to compete in certain scenarios with the elegant, reliable and deterministic Apple experience.

    Quoted: Ahead of what many expect to be the introduction of cheaper Macs, a top Windows exec says Apple users pay hidden costs.

    Quoted: There really is a tax around there for people that are evaluating their choices going into this holiday season and going forward. There's a choice tax that we talked about, which is, hey, you want to buy a machine that's other than black, white, or silver, and if you want to get it in multiple different configurations or price points, you're going to be paying a tax if you go the Apple way.

  • vote
    3
    0 starscraighal | Shared With: Everyone - Sep 22 2008 | microsoft, apple, news

    This guy is an idtiot. Apparently he missed the whole idea that "PC" means "personal connection". So yeah Dvorak, these people don't really think they are pieces of plastic with chips and circuitry.

    Quoted: These dingbat Microsoft ads kind of miss the point. The people don't symbolize anything. They say who they are and that they are a PC, which makes no sense whatsoever because they are not PCs. They are people. They use a PC, but they are NOT a PC, unless they are mentally deranged.

  • vote
    2
    0 starscraighal | Shared With: Everyone - Sep 15 2008 | microsoft, business, news

    Here is a pretty positive take on the latest Microsoft ad starring Gates and Seinfeld...

    Quoted: The second installment of Microsoft's Seinfeld campaign launched Thursday night during the reality TV series Big Brother. Like the first commercial in the $300 million campaign staring the well-known comedian Jerry Seinfeld, the spot didn't discuss Windows.

    Quoted: While some are still confused, others are giving Gates two thumbs up. Dave Racine of MindSpike Design loved the new spots. He called them offbeat and irreverently fresh as Gates and Seinfeld are obviously "connecting" with real people.

    Quoted: "Finally, a commercial that actually entertains me -- and keeps me engaged for longer than a blip. The weirdness about it is what is compelling, along with the talent of Seinfeld and the unexpectedly good acting of Gates," said McVey, president of S3. "Happy to see someone doing something different and effective in the TV ad-spot world."

    Quoted: The commercials give Microsoft and Bill Gates humor and some personality, according to Jason Mudd of Axia. The past public perception was of Microsoft as a cutthroat company seeking to destroy or buy out any competition, he noted, but business executives are talking positively about the commercial, and that's what Microsoft wants.

  • vote
    2
    0 starscraighal | Shared With: Everyone - Apr 13 2008 | windows, microsoft, news

    I wouldn't say 'Annoying' users is what MS is trying to do. It's not something they can afford.

    Quoted: According to Microsoft, the more annoyed you are, the more pressure is on developers to clean up their act... More cynical observers will note that this is a longstanding Microsoft business strategy. But in this case, believe it or not, it actually makes some sense.

    Quoted: Microsoft is onto a whole new paradigm here: modifying user behavior via reverse psychology. By making users click "OK" in a bunch of security dialogs, Microsoft is actually discouraging them from continuing... Of course, so far this strategy has only met with limited success. Many users have preferred to disable UAC, rather than participate in Microsoft's social-engineering experiment. But isn't it nice to know that the good folks in Redmond are thinking outside the box?

  • vote
    2
    0 starscraighal | Shared With: Everyone - Nov 08 2007 | itunes, Microsoft, news

    Ugh. Too bad it's coming out to unfavorable reviews... though I'll say the concept itself sounds too complicated.

    Quoted: Your idea of a "server" may well be one of those big computers managed by your company's tech department. To Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates, servers represent something more: products for the home he says will "make it much easier for people to connect to their digital content and share experiences with friends and family, no matter where they are".

    Quoted: If your experience with the first of these Windows Home Servers is as exasperating as mine, you may wish your employer's PC help desk were at your beck and call. The $750 Hewlett-Packard (HPQ) MediaSmart Server I've been testing is too pricey and complicated for all but tech-savvy consumers. I hit snags with everything from remote computing to password management

  • vote
    1
    0 starscraighal | Shared With: Everyone - Oct 26 2007 | news, microsoft
    Microsoft earns raves from Wall Street; sees shares at $40

    Haven't seen anything like this in a long time.

    Quoted: Long seen as a doddering giant, Microsoft Corp. saw renewed enthusiasm from Wall Street Friday when the software maker's stock soared a nearly unheard of 10% following its latest quarterly report.

    Quoted: Underpinning our confidence is our belief Microsoft is in only the early innings of a major product upgrade cycle," Thill wrote. "Cutting across multiple segments of Microsoft's product line, we believe this upgrade cycle will last well into 2009.

  • vote
    5
    0 starscraighal | Shared With: Everyone - Oct 26 2007 | microsoft, news

    Wow.

    Quoted: Michael Wallent a general manager at Microsoft will return to work in January as Megan Wallent He came out to colleagues as transgender last month first in person...