Linked by Eugenia Loli on Thu 13th Nov 2003 05:37 UTC
Talk, Rumors, X Versus Y "So anybody who thinks they want to be in the intellectual property innovation business needs to ask, 'How do I differentiate myself from this [open source] thing?' It has to be through innovative work and through integrated innovation. The non-commercial world doesn't move that fast. Linux is a clone of UNIX. Linux hasn't blazed the trail, new approaches to security, new approaches to program development. Even program development in the UNIX world, the sort of trail-blazing, is quite broadly being done by BEA and IBM and Sun and the Java crowd. [...] But at the end of the day, it's about innovation. It's about competing. And it's about building up enough of innovative intellectual property to have a good business." Ballmer told Always-On.
Order by: Score:
Utter Bunk
by PC Gremlin on Thu 13th Nov 2003 05:47 UTC

This couldn't be farther from the truth. Microsoft doesn't innovate, Linux is the pinacle of innovation. Sure it has some catching up to do, but don't all relatively young projects?

Look where it counts, Ballmer.

What innovation has Linux done?
by hms on Thu 13th Nov 2003 05:51 UTC

What innovation has linux done?

true
by Clay Peters on Thu 13th Nov 2003 05:55 UTC

Ballmer is right. "BEA and IBM and Sun and the Java crowd" and Microsoft do indeed come up with more innovation. Open source is not as focused and wastes too much effort creating different products for similar purposes.

Ha, Ha. Just kidding
by PC Gremlin on Thu 13th Nov 2003 05:57 UTC

haha, fooled you. Linux doesn't innovate. It's just a copy of unix.

Open Source Innovation
by Mark Wilson on Thu 13th Nov 2003 06:00 UTC

Apache and its progeny, for example. IIS has been a lagging follower in this field from the beginning (in addition to being notoriously insecure in its various incarnations).

Regards,

Mark Wilson

by PantherPPC on Thu 13th Nov 2003 06:00 UTC

"Linux is a clone of UNIX."

Yeah, because Windows is sooo original. Lol.

@hms
by Rayiner Hashem on Thu 13th Nov 2003 06:05 UTC

The major innovation of OSS is the development model. OSS software's distributed development model is so innovative, it has necessitated brand-new version control mechanisms like arch and bitkeeper.

Beyond that, its largely a matter of providing good implementations of existing ideas. No big company really innovates --- even all the fancy vector-graphics stuff you see in OS X and Longhorn has been done at least twice before (NeWS, NeXT). All the new language features in C# have been done (and better) in academic languages. The new longhorn shell is just a take-off on existing projects like scsh (the scheme shell). Its all been done before. Established companies cannot afford to make major innovations. Its too dangerous. Instead, the best they can do is provide good implementations of existing ideas, and maybe make incremental improvements along the way.

PS> Related to its distribution methodology --- the whole "package repository" model is pretty damn original. All your software available from one place, from a single UI? Now *that's* innovation!

Linux doesn't innovate
by Kilian on Thu 13th Nov 2003 06:05 UTC

True. But neither does Windows.

So, there.

Misunderstandings...
by Anonymous on Thu 13th Nov 2003 06:07 UTC

FOSS != non-commercial software. Steve knows this difference I am sure, but maintains it. I am certain that a lot of FOSS developers would be more than happy to make cash - hence Ximian (now owned by Novell), Novell, RedHat etc, and the proliferation of Linux distro companies ("stop reinventing the wheel" etc).

"new approaches to program development.": Like it or not, FOSS does have an innovative method of software development, even if it has been done for longer than MS has been alive as a company (think: sendmail or its predecessor delivermail by Eric Allman).

"but on total cost-of-ownership through innovation.": How does "innovation" reduce TCO? It's a bad argument a bit like selling snake oil: "Buy this, it's innovative which means lots of TCO goodness!"

"There is a hardcore community of people who don't have a positive attitude towards Microsoft.": Actually, I would say a large part of the worlds community feel that way after the last summer of worms, viruses and patches that don't work, reboots, downtime, new licensing schemes, forced upgrades, vendor lock-in and so on. People are tired of having to be puppets whose strings are yanked at will by a large company that is very rich already.

"In the last year, at least by our own research, we've seen .NET pass Java in terms of new development projects and usage.": I really do not see this. .NET is popular, no doubt, but Java has had so much mindshare and investment over the last few years that I cannot see .NET having overtaken it so quickly. I'm prepared to stand corrected IF (and only if) I can see some convincing research.

"The real competition in our business will be won and lost by who's doing what kind of innovative work for their customers": and there was me thinking it was more about ROI. Innovation might be fine, but as an end in itself it is facile. Innovation needs to be good for the customer, not just as its own argument. Take Microsoft Bob - something that is often thought of as MS innovation: how on earth did that *ever* benefit any business? According the Steve's argument, it is a good thing of itself, and any business should welcome it, regardless of the damage it does because it's "innovative".

Innovation is fine, but it has its place: Most businesses just want stuff that works, software that can be run and left running with no fuss or nonsense. Something that people feel they can trust, not cutting edge, "hey, we've got something that means you have to rettrain your staff! AGAIN! But you'll love the sexy graphics on it, so sign up! And don't worry if it breaks or knackers your systems because it's a security nightmare - it's innovative!"

I liked the "McNamee: And turn it into BS, is that what?" bit. Made me laugh!

So irritating
by Rayiner Hashem on Thu 13th Nov 2003 06:09 UTC

The most irritating thing about this innovation bullshit is that the majority of users have no idea about the real source of this innovation. They've never heard of NeWS or NeXT, so they think that Microsoft has made this great new technology. Even a lot of supposedly techy people fall prey to this marketing bullshit.

sorry steve ballmore -- stealing doesn't count as innovating
by Anonymous on Thu 13th Nov 2003 06:11 UTC

Microsoft has stolen far more intellectual property than they've ever "innovated".

Microsoft is in court nearly continuously because of their penchant for thieving the IP of other companies.

Sooner or later this is going to catch up to Microsoft.

Re: PantherPPC
by John Blink on Thu 13th Nov 2003 06:11 UTC

Well it looks a lot different than its origins.

---------
Linux is the best damn clone that I have seen.

Man what were they thinking with freetype and xft, they must stop this, it must be a clone. They must stop all the new X extension, it must be a clone. They must stop KDE/GNOME development. They must stop rewriting code in the kernel.

Why does Ballmer think this clone was created, to destroy MS, I don't think so, it is to provide a free UNIX alternative, simple as that.

I just wish programs launch quicker on sub 500Mhz machines.

Quotes
by Anikan on Thu 13th Nov 2003 06:11 UTC

Two quotes from Ballmer.

"I look at Linux and see a competitor, and I think we can offer better value than that competitor as long as we're pushing the innovation front, because the competitor is not innovating."

"We can beat it on security if we're willing to innovate."

Seems like he is accusing linux of not being innovative and then admiting that MS themselves aren't innovative.

There you have it...
by moreofthesame on Thu 13th Nov 2003 06:14 UTC

So Microsoft is in the "intellectual property innovation business?" Well perhaps that explains their products.

"The non-commercial world doesn't move that fast," except for Apache which is kicking IIS from one end of the internet to the other.

"We can beat it(Linux) on security if we're willing to innovate." So innovate is now defined as FUDDING a product out of the market (http://www.infoworld.com/article/03/11/11/HNmsassault_1.html)?

I wonder who Ballmer expects will fall for this prattle? Certainly not anyone in Europe or Asia.

Open source innovations:
by Anonymous on Thu 13th Nov 2003 06:14 UTC

Okay:

delivermail (followed by sendmail) which allowed people to send email across different networks. Arguably one of the main driving forces behind the internet (as opposed to a series of unconnected LAN's).

Mosaic: the first graphical web browser

The NCSA server (upon which Apache was based). The granddaddy of them all (or was it?)

GCC: said to have been the first truly cross platform C++ compiler

To those who say Linux sucks because it doesn't innovate (please note that Ballmer was talking about open source, not Linux in particular: it shows where your biases are). Why are you slagging off a phenomena that forces proprietary companies to a) improve their software quality, and b) lower their prices? It gives the consumer a better deal and if you don't want to play, you can mess around with the FOSS versions as long as you feel they don't "suck" enough (but remember a lot of FOSS is still under development - I don't expect the recent alpha Longhorn release to be perfect because it's still under development, so why should FOSS have to be better?).

LOL OMG
by Stupid_MS on Thu 13th Nov 2003 06:19 UTC

If linux isnt:
-a threat
-innovative
-secure
-stable
-cheap
-etc

Why is MS spending so much time bashing it?

v RE: LOL OMG
by Anonymous on Thu 13th Nov 2003 06:22 UTC
Well
by Spark on Thu 13th Nov 2003 06:35 UTC

It's just like John Carmack says. :p id Software can't innovate because they are set to do 3D shooters. That's what people expect from them and that's what all their artists and coders can do best. So he is expecting innovative games to come from smaller, independent vendors and the same is true for other software.
Neither Microsoft nor Apple nor "Linux" are a source of huge software innovation (maybe Apple a bit more). They don't experiment much and take the elements that work well and combine them into one well working product. Most innovative software comes from small companies which then get buyed or the software licensed. The same is happening in the Open Source world. Yes, mainstream Linux isn't innovative. It's mostly just another Windows clone or a Mac clone or a Unix clone, however you look at it. But there are a plethora of projects that are NOT in the mainstream, which ARE innovative. Sometimes ideas of those projects get incorporated into the mainstream, most often not. The big projects don't really take much risks, the small projects do. That's how it should be and Free Software makes it very very easy because all the code is there to look at and everything can be merged without buying, licensing or re-inventing the wheel.

...
by Anonymous on Thu 13th Nov 2003 06:38 UTC

Linux has been the platform for a lot of development to take place, and they have created two desktop environments and their own open source GUI library (GTK+). The Linux kernel is a huge development and innovation, it's what drives the open source community.

A vendor creates a market around an idea and they compete using their resources. Microsoft has huge resources and it often does not innovate but instead it is opportunistic. As soon as it sees a successful idea being implemented, than it takes, steals, or murders, for control of that idea that Balmer calls innovation.

It's the open source projects job to promote the ideas but not to form a market out of them. That is the genre of a vendor, especially vendors who want to build their business and product line based on the Linux platform. At this time the Linux vendors are saying that they need more and better infrastructure, more development to take place, and more participation.

To think of a monopoly as innovating the IT industry is dangerous. The monopoly is using it's resources in order to maintain control of the market, to prevent competition to succeed based on their innovation ...although even when Microsoft implements an idea it is unique because the ideas incorporate a strategy "such as integration". Right now Microsoft is searching for more ideas to hijack, and as soon as one of them looks like it might be successful, it will be swallowed up. If Linux went belly up and IBM and SUN follwed than Microsoft would be dissolved, and Microsoft can also be come dissolved if they try to influence horizontal industries using their monopoly power.

What Linux should do is to develop tools that make working with the source code more productive. If Linux concentrates on the source code than Microsoft can not be an opportunist because they are closed source, their goal is to control the factors of production.

microsoft sucks on innovation field
by kc on Thu 13th Nov 2003 06:47 UTC

In the 1995 when MS released Win 95 it barely copied ideas from other OSes like the one running on Amiga.
Back then Linux was close to nothing when it comes to graphical UI. Today -- 8 years later -- XP is just Win 95 with face-lifting. And Linux has easily managed to catch up with that. I am talking about graphical UIs. On all other fields Microsoft did not really invent any thing that would be worth mentioning. For example IE (based on mosaic) was just an answer to Netscape Navigator. Sure IE got better than NN. But look how much money was thrown at it (straight from MS customers wallets) !

The only true Innovator in the Field is IBM
by Ronald on Thu 13th Nov 2003 06:54 UTC

and Apple follows to make it successful (like videoconferencing and mp3 players)

IBM has invented almost everything you use in a computer. Remote Desktop in Windows is IBM. Samba/CIFS is IBM. I was amazed to find how much of IBM is everywhere.

http://www.macboy.com/cartoons/ballmer/ and
http://www-3.ibm.com/e-business/doc/content/lp/prodigy.html?P_Site=...
:D

RE: microsoft sucks on innovation field
by thrift on Thu 13th Nov 2003 06:57 UTC

>>Sure IE got better than NN. But look how much money was thrown at it (straight from MS customers wallets) !

IE being better that netscape or other projects based on it's codebase is extremely arguable, and mostly arguable in the innovation department. Hey MS, you getting around to that tabbed browsing yet? popup blocking? download manager? Oh you're innovating that up right now? Thought so.

Longhorn stole XAML's concept from glade ... :)
by seraph on Thu 13th Nov 2003 06:58 UTC

I was shocked that the Longhorn community called this innovation ... seeing as how libglade and glade has been around for eons. Just ONE example.

repackaging is NOT innovation. WinFS isn't innovation. It's implementation. that's all.

windows preys on the fact that the average Windows user has never seen these things before. they just reimplement, and its innovation ON the win32 FOR the win32.

v Mr Ballmer
by killmo on Thu 13th Nov 2003 06:59 UTC

Microsoft Sued Over Plug-In Infringement
http://www.internetnews.com/bus-news/article.php/3_63491

Microsoft sued over Web movie technology
http://www.kentucky.com/mld/kentucky/entertainment/movies/6889740.h...

Microsoft Sued For Copyright Infringement
http://www.betanews.com/article.php3?sid=988398494

I could go on but the hypocrisy is just too overwhelming IHMO.

Blaah
by Aki on Thu 13th Nov 2003 07:20 UTC

Linux, like other OSS implementations, is designed and implemented by ANYBODY willing to make free software. This means, ANYBODY, and this ANYBODY is people from all over the world, from different cultural backgrounds, with different education, from innumerable companies and from every country in the world.

Saying that Linux, or OSS, is not innovative, means that Human Race is not innovative. Ballmer really has no idea what he actually uttered, or he just wants to spread ill will.

NOT INOVATIVE
by Dan on Thu 13th Nov 2003 07:27 UTC

He is starting to sound like a SUN executive!

Linux is a lot like PC hardware was a few years back. It was different because it was developed by many different vendors. Remember how BAD PC hardware used to be. IRQ conflicts et cetra. Over time it won out beause of the huge amount of R&D. Apple lost because of the hardware model. MS has been able to sit on top of this PC hardware. It was the open hardware model that led to MS success.

Linux (BSD, OSX) might win out for the same reasons. We have a open hardware model now joined with an open software model. It may not be the best, or integrated well but over time it might just win out.

It really is MS verses the *NIX world. They are in the position that Apple has had with their hardware. Even if Windows were superior, it might loose out anyway.

MS spends a lot effort to fight software pirates - those $1 winxp, office CDs at Asian street corners. Why ?

Innovative doesn't have to be something original, it could also means something better or more valuable than the original.

Ford Model T wasn't the first automobile, however, it is the first that ordinary people could afford and operate without too much of tweaking.

The same could be said for the following:
(They may not be originated from MS, but the monopoly at least offered the platform that let these things reached 97%, if not 100%, of PC desktops)

True Type fonts - an Apple original and made popular by win31?
PnP, PCI database - Win95 ?
Winmodem, GDI printer - win31/win95
Unicode - practical applications, IE3, Win2k/winxp

Without Windows, guys would probably tweak VT100 escape sequences on a $1500 PC runing *nix in an xterm or piping PCL to a $1000 LaserJet generated by Ghostscript.









Well...
by Anonymous on Thu 13th Nov 2003 07:42 UTC

I think Ballmer is right but he is probably the last person in the world that should say this.

<<<Without Windows, guys would probably tweak VT100 escape sequences on a $1500 PC runing *nix in an xterm or piping PCL to a $1000 LaserJet generated by Ghostscript.>>>

Nope. We'd all be running Apple and Commodore computers. Don't be so dramatic.

Windows innovation makes them slow
by Adriaan Putter on Thu 13th Nov 2003 07:45 UTC

Yeah, Microsoft does do some stuff to make it innovative, take .NET for example, much better to code with that old stuff. But they do it cost of speed and performance, to run .NET you have to have a better machine. And Microsoft always goes about that their new release is faster, but also you need a better and faster PC to run their OS.

My 2c

innovative desktop - with win31 style file dialog
by Anonymous on Thu 13th Nov 2003 07:51 UTC

and looks bad without IE font pack

Re: We'd all be running Apple and Commodore computers
by Anonymous on Thu 13th Nov 2003 07:55 UTC

except they all cost much higher than a low end WinTel

Humorous..
by CooCooCaChoo on Thu 13th Nov 2003 07:58 UTC

Just before I go on, how is Linux a clone of UNIX? what UNIX is it Linux trying to clone? as far as I see, the only thing GNU/Linux are doing is implementing the freely available standards that exist; UNIX 98, POSIX, Unicode, C99, ANSI C++ and so forth. How is that any different to Microsoft implementing (and very poorly at that) the POSIX api on Windows?

This is your typical technology CEO, all spin and no reality. All "innovation" and no reality check. The reality is, customers don't care about innovation, what they care about is software that targets their requires, that solves their problems. Microsoft is doing what the dot coms did, try and create a demand for something to solve a problem that doesn't exist.

Microsoft is yet another company who just doesn't get it and unfortunately there is a legion of clueless CEO's running behind them deciding that they would rather waste shareholders funds on overhyped technologies rather than taking the prudent measure by look at their problem and actually looking at what is out there.

The one question I wanted to know why it wasn't asked is, "If one decides to use .NET over Java, aren't they essentially locking themselves into the Windows platform? wouldn't that give you the upper hand in terms of future license negotiations?". That is the problem with these technology people, not willing to ask the hard hitting questions and instead, hide behind a vail "giddiness".

The fact remains, Microsoft doesn't know how to attach it. Microsoft is a pure software company, however, SUN is realising that their strength is the ability to leverage their software, hardware and services assets to deliver and end to end solution, same situation for IBM. Microsoft will have to make a decision to where they will go from here. Will they lower their prices? buy out a hardware company and become a hybrid but risk a back lash from either the DOJ or a close partner? expand their services wing and end up isolating their partners?

Microsoft is in a much worst position than they make out today. They may think that they can continue to grow but in the future, people will be asking for a complete package which can be integrated into their existing infrastructure without the huge overheads that exist today. Microsoft doesn't get it, people don't want to worry about the details, they just want things to get working out of the box, that is where the growth area is; the holistic approach not the smorgasbord approach we see today.

Re: We'd all be running Apple and Commodore computers
by Anonymous on Thu 13th Nov 2003 08:02 UTC

Actually we'd still run on open platforms thanks to the guys at IBM but we'd be using BeOS or some other OS instead. It's sad to see that people think they actually need MS. The fact is that MS needs it's costumer base more so then the customer needs them. If MS were to drop off the face of the earth tomorrow taking along it's product line with it I am sure others would quickly step up to fill the void. Would it take a some time to fill that void ? Yes but it would be filled none the less by other software and OS companies running on top of Linux, BeOS, etc...

we all benefit ...
by xmp on Thu 13th Nov 2003 08:04 UTC

All truth passes through three stages: first, it is ridiculed. Second, it is violently opposed. Last, it is accepted as being self-evident. (Schopenhaeur)

I have no idea what it will be like when the dust settles. But it's certainly better for the average end consumer of software / OS when there's this much competition (unix, linux, freebsd, osx, xp, etc).

Re: article
by Sarah M. on Thu 13th Nov 2003 08:10 UTC

I think the article was pretty good, I understand his viewpoints and agree with most of them. At least MS has applications, functionality and has a road map for the future. On the other hand linux is trying to copy Windows and not doing a very good job. If you don't like Windows then run something else, simple as that....

Innovating?
by Rudo on Thu 13th Nov 2003 08:10 UTC

Say, is Enlightenment innovating? I for one think so, but a lot of people have rather weird ideas of how to use "innovating". Might be the language barrier.

Innovate
by Johan on Thu 13th Nov 2003 08:21 UTC

I woulkd like to see Microsoft inovate some compatability between Linux and there products.

Like DNS, IPSEC, When creating a visio drawing save it as a html and want to use it with apache and then really show me my drawing.... instead off nothing that sort of stuff.

can't we just get along with each other.....

Why is it that my non innovating stuf all works well with each other *BSD, UNIX, Linux like vpn and so on, but my Microsoft product's do not.

Why do i need to do a Regedit on Win XP (Sign or Seal) to use XP with Samba, is that innovating or just make products as hard as possible to coorperate.

Please Mr Ballmer work on that, use the standards do not misuse them!

Re: we all benefit ...
by Anonymous on Thu 13th Nov 2003 08:31 UTC

"But it's certainly better for the average end consumer of software / OS when there's this much competition (unix, linux, freebsd, osx, xp, etc)."

It is true - but OSS could do a better job than its current state - two desktops, multiple API for sound, printing, etc. That was the reason why Unix couldn't stand a fight on desktop a decade ago.

The idea that everyone could contribute to an OSS project simply doesn't fly in real world - image 1 million willing and able guys try to improve say XFree86, the situation would simply lead to an unmanageable chaos.

innovation really?
by andre on Thu 13th Nov 2003 08:38 UTC

i think Steve Ballmer is trying to create the impression that Microsoft, because it "innovates," is cool. Sort of like what Apple and the Mac fans used before as the cool factor compared to the DOS/Windows of the early 90s.

the question here is: does Microsoft really innovate? they're just rehashing old ideas and packaging them up as new ;)

besides, what does being "cool" get you anyway?

flame bait story
by evermuse on Thu 13th Nov 2003 08:52 UTC

this is the least inovative story ive seen on here
3 thumbs down
a slag fest is not a story

Examples of innovation
by mendred on Thu 13th Nov 2003 08:53 UTC

Off hand i can think of these examples

Enlightenment,
Fresco's windowing system (all that rotating windows and stuff with vector graphics Heck isn't longhorn copying these ?)
Mozilla's tab browsing (unless some other browser had it first if i am mistaken sorry )
Mozilla mail with inbuilt bayesian filtering

Someone please correct me if there were other technologies that had the above features.

Besides OSS seems to have one thing MS never has reliability


v shut up,
by pennbruder on Thu 13th Nov 2003 09:01 UTC

Steve Ballmer is in a flat spin at some horrendous velocity, and can no longer distinguish between his rectum and his nasoropharyngeal cavity.

One thing I learnt while digging through a pile of stuff a few years ago on human and dinosaur evolution, is that in nature, there may be several different versions of how to do a particular task, in the form of dentition, say.

Then there'll come a change in its surroundings, environment, whatever, and something will disappear that justified that feature, and the creatures with those features will quietly die out. Eg, Anthropithecus Boisei with its huge jaws for grinding plant material.

I see the same thing going on in the Free/Libre Open Source Software community. You have kde and GNOME, both competitors in the desktop environment. To get ahead, either one has to have more and better features, more stability, etc, than the other one. But they are so evenly matched at this stage, that they move forward in lockstep.

The Microsoft Windows monolith, on the other hand, eradicates competitors, thus wiping out the incentive to innovate. It's not part of an ecosystem, however much it may try to say it is - it is more of an ecological disaster - and the speed at which ILoveYou, soBig, and Blaster moved, is perfectly understandable to anyone who's taken the time to understand natural disease patterns.

As I said above, Steve Ballmer is in a flat spin, and he can't help it if he's talking BS - he can no longer tell the difference - at the speed he's spinning - between his nether portions and his face.

linux biggest innovation
by Anonymous on Thu 13th Nov 2003 09:24 UTC

is that it doesnt need a marketing department to survive. it doesnt need one company either. everyone can get the source and use it. so theoretically its product life cycle is tenfold larger than the one of windows.

innovation is a buzzword when microsoft uses it. fact is they steal something from apple, rename it (musicstore for example) and hire some slaves to throw out press releases for some pretty ms-centric magazines so they can claim innovation.

they just want to hide the fact that their server products are far inferior to the flexibility and power of open source software.

Re: flame bait story
by Anonymous on Thu 13th Nov 2003 09:28 UTC

#2

i totally agree.

I agree
by Anonymous on Thu 13th Nov 2003 09:30 UTC

Linux doesn't innovate it clones and clones and clones.

This doesn't count for all open source stuff though and like someone mentioned, Apache is a perfect example, but Apache hardly has anything to do with Linux, that's just what some advocates wants to say to make things look good.

Linux is and will allways be a couple of steps behind...

so who cares what ballmer spits out?
by Anonymous on Thu 13th Nov 2003 09:35 UTC

its ballmers job to spread fud about linux - so who cares?
i'll use linux for now and ever. if for some people its not good enough. well use windows. use innovative drm technologies. use innovative product activations. please go and stay in your world of consumer software, ie6 worms and trojaned binaries.

but one thing you see on osnews. obviously so many people are _dependant_ from windows based software that they dont dare to say anything bad about it.

btw. microsoft stole the taskbar grouping in 2000/xp from whom? wasnt it kde?

Innovation
by Frank Costanza on Thu 13th Nov 2003 09:38 UTC

KDE looks like Windows. Evolution is a clone of MS Outlook. gconf-editor is a lot like regedit.

Who was the innovative one again?

RE: so who cares what ballmer spits out?
by Ronald on Thu 13th Nov 2003 09:38 UTC

btw. microsoft stole the taskbar grouping in 2000/xp from whom? wasnt it kde?

It was from BeOS. ;)

@Frank
by andre on Thu 13th Nov 2003 09:41 UTC

the reason why those open source software "ape" their MS counterparts is because they try to bridge the gap from someone coming from Windows to open source software. so that one person who is adjusting from the former system to the new (open source) system won't have much trouble navigating the thing.

RE: Quotes
by Anonymous on Thu 13th Nov 2003 10:12 UTC

Well it seems to me that he is first accusing linux of not being innovative, then admitting that MS themselves do not innovate and imply that linux innovates!

RE: Without Windows...
by Rich Steiner on Thu 13th Nov 2003 10:46 UTC

Without Windows, I'd probably be happily running OS/2 on my home desktop and using Linux as a server.

Oh wait ... That's what I'm doing! :-)

Windows didn't make the Intel platform popular, and it wasn't the only software platform that could have made the x86 user friendly. PC/GEOS, GEM, DV/X, OS/2, and others could have done the same thing.

The influence Microsoft's products have had is largely due to their overwhelming marketshare, not due to any "innovative" features present in those products.

How sad!
by dpi on Thu 13th Nov 2003 10:59 UTC

First you borrow a TCP/IP stack which is possible because of the BSDL, then years later you use terms like ''Linux'' (which is simply only a kernel) and ''open-source'' (which is a lot more than GPLed software, Free Software, and even includes BSDL which you DO NOT hate because you can use it). Where's the nuance?

How the hell can a company who can't stand 1 bit of competition, and kill off competition (i take it examples aren't needed? BeOS, Google, RAV Antivirus, VirtualPC and more on the Office and Graphics market), claim such in a believable manner. Extend & Embrace, killing standards, Microsoft does it.

Read here about what Microsoft has really ''innovated'':
http://www.nimh.org/microsoft/
[Answer: nothing]
See also the URL it links to ''Why i hate Microsoft'' it contains a long, and acaict a quite accurate analysis on Microsoft. Or, you can see the Halloween documents:
http://opensource.org/halloween/


"Mozilla's tab browsing (unless some other browser had it first if i am mistaken sorry )"

Opera had something similair earlier, it's called MDI. However, it is not the very same as tabbed browsing. I agree Enlightenment is innovative. I'd argue WINE is innovative too. The GPL is imo innovative too as license and Free software/Open source as movement. Overal it's a hard discussion because just naming something isn't an argument...

He's just a troll. If one would post this on a serious forum, it would be modded down. Now go away, troll.

Careful Mr. Ballmer....
by Christoph Henrici on Thu 13th Nov 2003 10:59 UTC

I sincerely hope that Mr. Ballmer does'nt believe what he is saying, otherwise the desktop monopolist and desperately aspairering _to be what ever else there is monopolist_, is suffering serious reality distortion. But on the other hand, Microsoft has a tremendous responsibility, because of it's market domination, so if he does'nt believe in what is saying, he's just simply manipulating or better misuing Microsofts power .... (...again....) ... is this legal?

Microsoft has not innovated much, but mostly ripped off of innovations of others and (mis) used their power to bully the innovators out of the market:

GUI - the innovators where everywhere else, but not in Microsoft.
OS - the micro kernel technologie was invented and explored elsewere.
Also the micro kernal technologie leveraged off experience of other OS approaches. Also: Large parts of the OS code seem to be cloning VMS.
Security - again the innovations where elsewhere: Unix, Java and prominently opensource with for example OpenBSD etc.
Communication: LAN, RLA others where first. Microsoft even almost _forgot_ about TCP/IP, come late and made it then strategic, after their properietary approach failed.
Internet: Maybe the _opensource_ innovention. Here Microsoft was terribly late. The innvoators on the client side, where all open source: mosaic, netscape etc. The innovators on the server side where also many opensource: webservers, dns etc. Eventually Microsoft woke up in a shock realizing the world is passing by, scrambled and muscled all others out.
Scripting: Ripp-off of long years of experience of the so much _hated_ unix (Shell, perl etc.). Now do you think their shell scripting is innovative?
Languages: All Microsofts languages (VB, C# ) leverage from the experience of others . In case of C# = Java + C++ plus the experience of the community.
IDE's: Here again before Microsoft even thought it necessary to be _nice_ to the developers, there were great development enviroments out there. Delphi ( - the guy switched sides), NextStep etc. etc. Even now real innovation in this area is not coming from Microsoft, but from opensource with the ECLIPSE Project.
OO Frameworks: Microsoft even riddled OO not long ago (Gates et al) and now it is the strategic thing of Longhorn. Longhorn is mostly leverageing on experience, which has been made by other long long ago. There are alot of different OO Frameworks and Libraries, some very prominent examples are open source, for example a lesser kwown: ACE. The OO Communcation has always been a very open and communicative community. The innovation, knowlegde and experience again has been made elsewhere , not in Microsoft.
Component Technologie: Mostly the same as above. Component mostly grew out of experience with OO Frameworks and the DLL technology.
Standards: Software innovation lives and leverages from standards, for most examples: HTML, XML etc. Again here Microsoft has'nt contributed much, except some
Software: Word processors, Desktop Databases, Application Suites all has been innovated elsewhere
etc. etc.

So i really have to ask Mr. Ballmer again, what are you talking about? am i to take you serious?

But that is not the point, what really matters:
Innovation is only possible were there is choice. Is Mr. Ballmer advocating choice? .
Also real innovation comes mostly not from commercial companies, but from the sharing of knowlegde and leveraging off shared experience. One of the great way's to do this is and has always been is opening up your source code.....

I didn't care enough to actually waste my time reading all of Ballmer's BS, but the last few sentances caught my attention...

1) But at the end of the day, it's about innovation.
2) It's about competing.
3) And it's about building up enough of innovative intellectual property to have a good business.

A1) What's about innovation? This is such a vague sentance. Define innovation. Define "what".
A2) IIRC Linux was not created in order to compete with anything or anyone. It was created as a student project in OS coding and design. Somehow, this student project needs to compete??? It was created in an academic/hobby setting and will never die because people always want to continue using it in that setting, whether or not it is used by the rest of the planet on the desktop. OK, always is pretty strong, but its going to last just as long as any other system, if not longer.
A3) Again, Linux wasn't created with business in mind. Whatever "it" is, why must "it" be about innovating for the sake of business. This is typical capitalist hogwash. Why not innovate for the sake of humanity? Whatever innovations OSS makes are true contributions to the good of humanity. Whatever innovations closed source software makes are only shells of contributions to humanity because they lack substance and are only defined by an idea. This may not always be a big deal, such as user interface innovations (tabbed browsing). But innovations in system internals are lost to humanity if they are wrapped up in closed source software such that not everyone can learn from them.

Just en example
by Marco Radossevich on Thu 13th Nov 2003 11:02 UTC

We can backup DVDs (the DeCSS author was trying to build a Linux DVD player).

Aggregation<>reliability=M$
by Donny_S on Thu 13th Nov 2003 11:09 UTC

All cars have 4 wheels, some are reliable, some aren't, it isn't always a question if innovation. M$ is basically an aggregator of ideas bought or borrowed from somewhere else. M$ most important strategic advantage is in their ability to take over hardware functions with software thus lowering hardware system costs, while at the same time pushing Moore's law forward. This is the area where linux will most likely lose out in the end. In the mean time, it seems that alot of people want to get the internet thing going, and don't want to wait around for a bunch of Ivy League Thomas Edison (FUD Tesla) types to get their collective acts together.

.:.
by HAL on Thu 13th Nov 2003 11:10 UTC

Yeah, the GNU HURD is innovating constantly for how many years now? As far as Linux goes, it's at best evolution but not revolution.

Some other innovations
by dpi on Thu 13th Nov 2003 11:16 UTC

Innovation is actually a very subjective definition.

PaX contains some true innovations. I think the OpenBSD team has done quite a few innovations on the security side, like in OpenSSH (not SSH itself), but W^X was later than PaX (though they're not the very same). NetBSD: runs on how many? 40+ platforms?

What about MPlayer? It plays about all known codecs in one program.

Re: thrift (IP: ---.pitt.east.verizon.net)
by drsmithy on Thu 13th Nov 2003 11:25 UTC

IE being better that netscape or other projects based on it's codebase is extremely arguable, and mostly arguable in the innovation department. Hey MS, you getting around to that tabbed browsing yet? popup blocking? download manager? Oh you're innovating that up right now? Thought so.
<p>You seem to be forgetting the 3-odd year gap in between IE beating Netscape and *Mozilla* then becoming better than IE. Netscape != Mozilla.
<p>IE for MacOS had a download manager as well. Personally, I hate the things.

Unix
by Ulrich Hobelmann on Thu 13th Nov 2003 11:45 UTC

Right. Linux doesn't innovate, but clones Unix.
It also tries to improve performance, scalability and stability as compared to other Unices.
Anyway, cloning Unix is much better than writing a mediocre OS like Windows, cf. ESR: The Art of Unix Programming, or just take a look at the Windows and Unix APIs.
And improving an OS that hasn't yet met an equal enemy (technically) in 30 years sounds really great to me.
Marketing is something else, and has nothing to do with "innovation".

v Innovation
by hgm on Thu 13th Nov 2003 12:06 UTC
@Mark Wilson, re: Apache
by Andrew D on Thu 13th Nov 2003 12:17 UTC

"Apache and its progeny, for example. IIS has been a lagging follower in this field from the beginning (in addition to being notoriously insecure in its various incarnations)."

Very true. I was at a seminar/presentation thing about .NET before it came out and the man from MS said that they were taking some of the ideas from Apache (forking child processes and killing parents periodically to prevent memory bloat being the one that sticks in my mind) into IIS.

To the topic in general, I agree that by and large innovation (at a technical level) is not done by Microsoft (they buy ideas in) or Linux (it tries to reimplement freely, openly and in a better more accountable way with some implementation improvement) but really happens by the smaller commercial players. Or the less retail focused players. We're all using WIMP GUIs thanks for Xerox PARC for instance. Not Microsoft or Apple (even though Apple created the first retail implementation of the idea).

Now if you want to talk of innovative business practices you can't get much more innovative than the GPL. Microsoft don't really have "innovative" there either for my mind. That doesn't mean that MS isn't a fabulous marketing organisation. I believe they have the best and most aggressive salesmen on the planet (look at the product they're selling and have successfully sold for years...) but that's about it.

that's just wonderful...so let me for a second entertain the idea
by Anonymous on Thu 13th Nov 2003 12:21 UTC

that's just wonderful...so let me for a second entertain the idea that microsoft is innovative.

let's say it's true.

now what? they are also the predominant player. you can't swing a dead cat with out hitting someone who's not already peddling their wares or providing support for existing installations.

what does that mean for me, as an entrepreneur?

there are 1000 micromonkeys along side of me trying to resell or service the same shit.

your hourly tends to take a horrible dive in that environment.

i'll leave it to the other 999 (and growing exponentially).

enjoy.

hmmmm....
by bagdadbob on Thu 13th Nov 2003 12:23 UTC

As many linux distributors would say - "it is more important to release a stable version of linux, than a bleeding edge version".

As Microsoft focuses on "innovation" only, it is easy to see how this philosophy opens the door for the vulernabilities and instabilities that are so common place now that everyone yawns when they here the new one.

hmmmm....
by bagdadbob on Thu 13th Nov 2003 12:25 UTC

Open source is so non-innovative that Microsoft incoporated OpenBSD's code into their new Unix Services product for Windows that is supposed to help Unix administators with their migration to Windows...

v There's no innovation left really.
by Luke A. Guest on Thu 13th Nov 2003 12:59 UTC
@Ballmer
by Macuser on Thu 13th Nov 2003 13:01 UTC

Yeah, whatever monkey-boy....

Exactly
by Luke A. Guest on Thu 13th Nov 2003 13:09 UTC

"The most irritating thing about this innovation bullshit is that the majority of users have no idea about the real source of this innovation. They've never heard of NeWS or NeXT, so they think that Microsoft has made this great new technology. Even a lot of supposedly techy people fall prey to this marketing bullshit."

The people who get conned by that Longhorn crap are never going to know that that dodgy filesystem is a really shit implementation of orthogonal persistence. BeOS had a database inside their FS, it just wasn't SQL. Tunes, Choices, Spring, Apertos, etc. all had REAL orthogonal persistence that worked (no database here either).

People need to know about these things, but they never will because M$ will just say "hey, look at this cool new invention we created!" the consumers will say "oooh" and then M$ will whack a software patent on it.

Luke.

Pointing fingers
by Steven on Thu 13th Nov 2003 13:14 UTC

It's rather funny to see Ballmer pointing fingers toward Linux developers. If memory serves me well, Microsoft has been found guilty on numerous occasions of <cough> stealing other people intellectual property. They are so respectfull of the law that when ordered to pay, they stall the judiciary process, hoping the plaintiff will either die (Kendall) or go broke. Next time, drug dealers are going to call us names.

XEROX innovated, everyone else imitated
by solid on Thu 13th Nov 2003 13:24 UTC

xerox created the mouse driven gui
apple stole it
ms stole from apple
linux/bsd/etc are bad ms clones

apple innovates innovatates hardware enclosures
ms innovates nothing
linux innovates nothing

that's the way it is, like it or not

Windows and Linux aren't competitor
by Anonymous on Thu 13th Nov 2003 13:25 UTC

Linux = education, research, hobbists, dedicated servers, embedded.
Windows = Get my work done.


welovethemicrosoftinformationminister.com
by Archie on Thu 13th Nov 2003 13:36 UTC

McNamee: But most folks developing systems that live outside a firewall still chooses J2EE instead of .NET, .NET is only suitable for light client/server models. How do you respond to that?

Ballmer: Doesn't resonate with anything I've seen in the marketplace. They're not even within 100 miles of Redmond. They are not in any place. The J2EE camp hold no place in the distributed systems market. This is an illusion ... they are trying to sell to the others an illusion."

McNamee: Pepole are choosing J2EE instead of .NET just because .NET is a MS-platform.

Ballmer: I actually don't find that. In our research and with customers, that's not mostly what I see. Actually, the J2EE camp is committing suicide outside the walls of Redmond right now.

RE:
by Nick on Thu 13th Nov 2003 13:36 UTC

It really hurts when it hits so close to home. I have been saying the same thing for years, people are always saying Microsoft doesn't innovate and if I take that to be true, it means Linux always following right behind Microsoft's trends doesn't innovate either.

Re: We'd all be running Apple and Commodore computers
by Anonymous on Thu 13th Nov 2003 13:37 UTC

By Anonymous (IP: ---.dsl.irvnca.pacbell.net) - Posted on 2003-11-13 07:55:36
except they all cost much higher than a low end WinTel

Idiotic. Amiga hardware was faster, cheaper, and more powerful than the PCs of the time, so it stands to reason they'd have at least kept up, if not continued the trend.

Oh, and have you ever paid for a Windows license? Shoots any argument about cost comparisons down right there.

Moron.

Where Linux innovates
by Anonymous on Thu 13th Nov 2003 13:46 UTC

is that it lets you actually take control of your system, rather than locking you in to what the OS manufacturer wants you to do. It also doesn't restrict where and how many times you can install it, or what features you want on or off, or what "bundled" products you want to use with it.

Oh, and it also innovates by not breaking all your stuff every year so that you have to upgrade.

As for it ripping off Windows, well, as people with intellectual capabilities beyond a fruit fly have already pointed out, Xerox Parc created all that, and they just stole it (though they really stole it second-hand, stealing it from Apple instead).

The windowing environment is the de facto standard now, so everybody who wants to compete in the consumer OS marketspace has to have one. And of course Linux is appropriating current elements because they want people to have an easier time transistioning to it.

But never you fear. The innovations continue under the hood, and once enough people are weaned off the Windows habit, you'll see some real innovation on the Linux front end too.

yeah, yeah... keep on fighting
by Luis Carlos on Thu 13th Nov 2003 13:47 UTC

This ongoing fight is very boring... who is wrong, who is right, who is innovative, who is not...

Stop talking and try to innovate for yourselves. Who cares if MS or Linux is innovative... what really matters to all of us is to get the best product at the best price.

That's It.

"xerox created the mouse driven gui"
Yeah, and...

"apple stole it"
Apple saw it, paid money to use it, and brought it to the public

"ms stole from apple"
and?

"linux/bsd/etc are bad ms clones"
- Linux, very adequate Unix variation that no one has created a 'blow me outta my seat" GUI
- BSD et al are the UNIX answer to the Linux alternative

"apple innovates innovatates hardware enclosures"
yes and no... their Industrial Design and RUI (Real User Interface) mostly are innovative (check out iPod). Apple does recognize other sources of innovation. If they (Stevie) are convinced that the Apple User will benefit, they implement it in the OS. Not all decisions can be amicable with all...

"ms innovates nothing"
Well, they're driven by a business model to encompass all... I guess, sorta like the Borg... and since we're all ripping them off, not giving them all the money they so richly deserve for repackaging et al... They're using that dmmn Activation stuff... ('nother topic, sorry)

"linux innovates nothing"
Linux has pushed the envelope for all the OSs... This is a good, positive motion innovation. Without the push from Linux, OS X (mac) would not be where it is... the proper UI for a *nix. Yup, all those Linux distros can't seem to get what apple has done... Hey, that's okay... it raises the bar for Linux...

Oh, what a wonderful world it would be if we just all used OS X & Linux...

Jb
(sorry, I am a bit of a Mac Zealot). I do work in Win & Mac OS environs... and soon I will attempt to install a distro of Linux on an ol'Pentium150 to learn a bit. I know curiousity killed the cat, but I do prefer dogs.

"xerox created the mouse driven gui"
Yeah, and...

"apple stole it"
Apple saw it, paid money to use it, and brought it to the public

"ms stole from apple"
and?

"linux/bsd/etc are bad ms clones"
- Linux, very adequate Unix variation that no one has created a 'blow me outta my seat" GUI
- BSD et al are the UNIX answer to the Linux alternative

"apple innovates innovatates hardware enclosures"
yes and no... their Industrial Design and RUI (Real User Interface) mostly are innovative (check out iPod). Apple does recognize other sources of innovation. If they (Stevie) are convinced that the Apple User will benefit, they implement it in the OS. Not all decisions can be amicable with all...

"ms innovates nothing"
Well, they're driven by a business model to encompass all... I guess, sorta like the Borg... and since we're all ripping them off, not giving them all the money they so richly deserve for repackaging et al... They're using that dmmn Activation stuff... ('nother topic, sorry)

"linux innovates nothing"
Linux has pushed the envelope for all the OSs... This is a good, positive motion innovation. Without the push from Linux, OS X (mac) would not be where it is... the proper UI for a *nix. Yup, all those Linux distros can't seem to get what apple has done... Hey, that's okay... it raises the bar for Linux...

Oh, what a wonderful world it would be if we just all used OS X & Linux...

Jb
(sorry, I am a bit of a Mac Zealot). I do work in Win & Mac OS environs... and soon I will attempt to install a distro of Linux on an ol'Pentium150 to learn a bit. I know curiousity killed the cat, but I do prefer dogs.

Why do I not believe him
by Jason on Thu 13th Nov 2003 14:00 UTC

Ballmer says:
"There is a hardcore community of people who don't have a positive attitude towards Microsoft. It's a very small community—vocal, but very small."

For some reason I just don't believe it is all that small. After all they are in major antitrust suits (several) and companies as well as individuals are seriously considering competing products.

It's true Linux isn't innovative
by Anonymous on Thu 13th Nov 2003 14:05 UTC

Yes it's true Linux isn't innovative, but it doesn't try to be. Microsoft says that their doing all this innovation, when they really aren't.

lack of innovation will kill MS
by ryan on Thu 13th Nov 2003 14:09 UTC

ms does not innovate and neither do any big companies, as much has been mentioned.

large corporations bring up memories of a an x-files episode. Its the one where moulder and scully go down south to investigate murders that end up being committed by a family that is deformed from generations of inbreeding.

In a similar fashion large corporations will/have become "inbred" so to speak without introducing new material into their proverbial gene pool. Acquisitions is the popular to do so. the problem with MS is that they have killed off so many company's that the gene pool is pretty limited these days and that (along with a refusal to accept risk and OSS) will eventually kill MS along with a lot of other big companies (maybe intel, nokia, ericsson, etc.).

Re: CooCooCaChoo (IP: ---.a.001.cba.iprimus.net.au)
by drsmithy on Thu 13th Nov 2003 14:13 UTC

Just before I go on, how is Linux a clone of UNIX?

Say what ? How is Linux *not* a clone of unix ?

what UNIX is it Linux trying to clone?

Mostly System V (the heathens). Although they also give a nod to BSD.

As far as I see, the only thing GNU/Linux are doing is implementing the freely available standards that exist; UNIX 98, POSIX, Unicode, C99, ANSI C++ and so forth.

With the *objective* of creating a Free unix clone. That's the major drive behind Linux development - a non-proprietry unix.

How is that any different to Microsoft implementing (and very poorly at that) the POSIX api on Windows?

Because the linux community is labouring to implement those standard with the objective of creating a unix clone. Microsoft threw in POSIX solely as a compatibility lure to get people *away* from unix.

Re: Ulrich Hobelmann (IP: ---.hrz.uni-oldenburg.de)
by drsmithy on Thu 13th Nov 2003 14:19 UTC

And improving an OS that hasn't yet met an equal enemy (technically) in 30 years sounds really great to me.

Unix has met it's technical match numerous times. There's no shortage of OSes that are _technically_ superior to unix. Technical merits are far from the only (or even main) thing that determines success.

Innovation...
by RBén on Thu 13th Nov 2003 14:29 UTC

I see the point of Ballmer when he talks about lack of innovation of open source movement. The main programs that anyone use from linux (are clones or parts of another operating systems)

That linux is not a linux clone? it isn't, but the main gnu core (GNU not Unix) it is. Just use CLI and tell me if ps, tar, ls, cp, the scripting, X, are not 'direct clones of unix'.

want to see the difference: just type ps, tar, gzip or ls in solaris, aix, sco and linux, and what do you see?

practically the same.

But in linux is better.

But that is about usability, because the open source movement actually do some innovation: apache, emacs (in this time), tabbed browsing. The problem is that most innovation is not used from people part because people always try to do the things of the same way and part because innovation is not always usable by everyone. Just see things like 3dwm.

That is innovation. And that is open source, but nobody uses , and I don't like it too much by the way...

Ballmer Sez
by KottonmouthKing on Thu 13th Nov 2003 14:29 UTC

Once an article starts off like that, is there really any reason to go on reading? Does he ever say anything of value, anything that's not FUD or ridiculous PR? I mean, at least Gates knows something about computers, has actually written a program (way back in the day). What has Steve ever done? Does the guy even know how a PC works?

my .02
by mumic on Thu 13th Nov 2003 14:34 UTC

Microsoft needs a better "point person" - someone infinitely more cuddly and can stay "on message." To Linux heads - the future is very bright with Ballmer spouting off such nonsense. In most places Linux is a tiny blip on the radar sceen, until Ballmer puts his foot into his mouth up to his knee. Then the blip grows bigger with people thinking "wonder what the big deal is with the Linux thing".

Not innovating huh, Ballmer? Since Windows itself was stolen from Apple with a legal maneuver you might think twice about throwing around accusations.

Note to Billy G: the former Iraqi Information Minister is free and can definitely stay on message with a calm tone. Maybe the new "point person" you're looking for?

Gotta Agree with him
by Daniel on Thu 13th Nov 2003 14:35 UTC

Look, I don't have the greatest liking for Mr. Ballmer, like Gates, he's an arrogant dork. But at the same time he's right about linux, and has really hit the nail on the head. I look at Linux and I see nothing but a struggle to keep up with technology, constant infighting on the smallest things, and more than anything else, a desire to be as "great" as its big brother. The result -- a system that, besides a few modern day ideas, is a replica of technology from 30 years ago.

I saw mention of KDE/Gnome being innovative, but at the end of the day, they too are in the same struggle as linux, not trying to innovate, but simply providing similiar functionality to Windows, however no where near as polished. (Quiet, you know its true.)

New ground is where you have to go, an earlier post suggested that big companies don't innovate, because it's too risky. This is an instant strength of the current development methods of Linux, however it continues to struggle with its ideologies, its competition, and what seems to be the golden egg -- the ability to be on the desktop.

Linux needs to shape up and realise reinventing the wheel is a pointless endeavour.

Innovation does not lead to automatic success
by shunkawitco on Thu 13th Nov 2003 14:39 UTC

Really innovative systems often fail.
I am sure we can all think of more innovative organisations than Microsoft who have either failed, never caught on or run with tiny market shares.
The Apple NEWTON for example was ahead of its time.

Linux=Elvis?
by justo on Thu 13th Nov 2003 14:45 UTC

Everytime I see one of these threads, I just have to laugh. The linux fanboys get like diehard Elvis fans="Elvis is alive!"

Get real. The fact is, for better or worse, all open source OSes and software are based on a IBM/Windows paradigm. go to sourceforge/freshmeat, and what do you see:

"This project intends to be an open source version of (insert your favorite closed source program here)"

That's not exactly innovation, at least, the definition according to Websters. Recreating windows programs or porting unix tools to linux is simply copying, nothing more, nothing less. It may be an admirable effort, but on the face of it, Ballmer is right.

True, there are some outposts of innovation in OSS, such as apache, but, (and I love to say this), Apache is not Linux! It may run on the linux kernel, but it runs on 2000/XP as well. For every Apache, there are thousands of copies of something else.

I would say that as much as Apache is innovative, what about directx? True, Microsoft has a history of taking other people's ideas, and using them for their own "innovations", but you can't tell me that directx hasn't changed gaming. Isn't that innovation?



He has a point
by Bram on Thu 13th Nov 2003 14:49 UTC

In my rather humble opinion Mr. Balmer has a point. Say all you want, but he's quite correct.
I'm not saying the lack of innovation sucks or anything, I'm just saying that he has a point.
Of course the same could be said about microsoft, who've been copy/pasting ever since they were founded. Oh wait, the copy/paste *WAS* copy/pasted from someone else's hard work. And oh wait, microsoft has of course been extremel innovative .. which is why after nearly 20 years their OS's *STILL* can't match the performance nor stability of the so-often-cloned UNIX. But wait .. surely their Internet Explorer was entirely their idea. Oh wait, netscape. Well then SURELY they came up with the TCP/IP idea .. which is why they copy/pasted it from BSD surely.

Need I go on?

innovation
by bagdadbob on Thu 13th Nov 2003 14:57 UTC

So anybody who thinks they want to be in the intellectual property innovation business needs to ask, 'How do I differentiate myself from this [open source] thing?'

Do they really? Anyone who has followed the 3D accelerated graphic card revolution knows that 3DFx was the real innovator. When they wrote their OpenGL driver for Windows, did they modified Mesa [open source]. What was the downfall of 3DFx? The attempt to protect their intellectual property that led to their downfall.

The non-commercial world doesn't move that fast.

He must be dizzy from the high speed roll outs of Microsoft products.

Linux is a clone of UNIX.

Cloning means to make a copy of. Linux is not a copy of UNIX.

Linux hasn't blazed the trail, new approaches to security, new approaches to program development.

If it ain't broke...

Even program development in the UNIX world, the sort of trail-blazing, is quite broadly being done by BEA and IBM and Sun and the Java crowd.

Funny, I thought that these companies were also developing the trail-blazing systems for the Windows world as well!

But at the end of the day, it's about innovation.

Right on brother! To hell with stability or useability!

It's about competing.

Against whom? Your customers? Surely, not those trail-blazing system developers who are developing for your system. You don't mean against, gulp, everyone so that you have replicated all other "competitors" systems into your "operating system"? Why, dear me, isn't that the definition of monopoly?

And it's about building up enough of innovative intellectual property to have a good business.

Why, I guess it is about monopolization and protecting it!

Congratulations
by Rayiner Hashem on Thu 13th Nov 2003 15:01 UTC

"The idea that everyone could contribute to an OSS project simply doesn't fly in real world - image 1 million willing and able guys try to improve say XFree86, the situation would simply lead to an unmanageable chaos."
>>>>>>>>>>>
You have just discovered exactly *why* there must be two desktops, numerous filesystems, etc, on an open platform. Also, you've discovered an important economic principle (diseconomics of scale) that explains exactly why the whole "many similar companies competing" paradigm is so efficient. Competition is the natural order of things --- it only seems suprising because how unnatural the software industry is today.

DirectX...
by Kindaian on Thu 13th Nov 2003 15:03 UTC

Isn't a Microsoft innovation... It was "invented" in a company that Microsoft brought...

That happened with almost all the "innovations" of Microsoft... They either brought the tech (as with the SGI patents, now MS patents), brought the company that owned the tech (as it happend with Direct X) or just copied (with the TCP/IP Stack)...

The quantity of "innovation" that is atributed directly and as first-commer from the MS ranks is very thin indeed. There is a site somewhere that lists all the tech that MS states as "innovative" that isnt theirs... i wish i could remember it's URL...

Cheers,
Kind

I have no love for MS, but a lot of these incidents are companies/individuals cashing in on a totally broken US patent system.

Of course there are a few legitimate cases where MS did actually make agreements with companies, suddenly break off the relationship and then somehow a few months/years down the road the technology just "appeared" in the MS products.

MS innovated...their innovation was in realizing that they could make money by circumventing the technology folks and selling directly to the PHB's.

Microsoft Research
by A.K.H. on Thu 13th Nov 2003 15:09 UTC


Microsoft does innovate:

http://research.microsoft.com/

I don't see Linux people giving any money for academic development. I've seen IBM and even Apple try and help out academics with donations, but Linux people just try and claim all academic research as their own, which it *isn't*.

There may be small areas of innovation in *open source*, but most open source stuff is not innovative at all. And Linux, the kernel, is most certainly not innovative.

innovation #2
by bagdadbob on Thu 13th Nov 2003 15:13 UTC

Question to Mr Ballmer: how innovative is NTOSKRNL.EXE and HAL.DLL? After all, that is a direct comparison to Linux.

Otherwise, you would need to compare Windows XP Profession to Red Hat Enterprise Linux WS. Or Windows 2000 Server to SUSE LINUX Server 8. In otherwords, you need to compare product bundles.

For that matter, the Linux kernel is such a small part of the total bundled package, that you may as well start comparing similar packages with different kernels, such as FreeBSD, OpenBSD, or ***gasp***, Mac OS X.

But then that would be logical, and FUD disappears in the prescence of logic.

RE:
by nick on Thu 13th Nov 2003 15:17 UTC

When MS buys a company and incorporates their innovations into their product and mass markets it, that is innovation. Who cares if Microsoft invented it, they were able to bring it to market when no other major company could. (However, ripping off innovations of say Apple, is not innovation, it's stealing. But stealing is okay in the software world)

The Real Innovation
by lite on Thu 13th Nov 2003 15:22 UTC

The real innovation is, as others before me have alluded, is to produce what should be a high quality commodity (no an oxymoron if you have any self-respect) at commodity prices. THAT is the innovation.

Definition
by Matthew24 on Thu 13th Nov 2003 15:36 UTC

MS def. of innovation according to MS: kill all open software standards. MS: no thanks.

Lock Balmer up
by StarCoder on Thu 13th Nov 2003 15:40 UTC

Really, this guy should not be allowed to open his mouth.

- Linux was first with 64 bit file support
- linux has added better thread suport.
- Linux was first to support 64 bit AMD Processors.

The real disappointment is the Microsoft kissup's writing in to this forum. So Uninformed. You programmers lead sheltered lives by only following Microsoft. You're last on the list when it comes to new ideas in Computer science.
You don't even know what you don't know.

INNOVATION
by grapegraphics on Thu 13th Nov 2003 15:44 UTC

innovation
In`no*va"tion, n. [L. innovatio; cf. F. innovation.] 1. The act of innovating; introduction of something new, in customs, rites, etc. --Dryden.

2. A change effected by innovating; a change in customs; something new, and contrary to established customs, manners, or rites. --Bacon.

The love of things ancient doth argue stayedness, but levity and want of experience maketh apt unto innovations. --Hooker.

3. (Bot.) A newly formed shoot, or the annually produced addition to the stems of many mosses.

Source: Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary, © 1996, 1998 MICRA, Inc.

QUESTION: When has microsoft implemented something that no one has done before? or... how they do it differently? Not many people are 'truely' innovative... some come close, and some are more obvious than others... Hmmm as in Expose on OS X... after actually using it I figure many coders are sayin' 'why didn't I do that.' Oh, and I'm sure there's someone out there that thought of that idea many moons ago.

Innovation == unique features
by d advocate on Thu 13th Nov 2003 15:53 UTC

At work I'm forced to use MS. At home I use OSS.

At work I miss Tabbed Browsing, Multiple Desktops, Pkg_add, Make Install, and "minimizing windows to the titlebar". At home I miss nothing.

At work licensing and update/reboots are annoying. At home only my ISP is annoying (and it uses MS.)

Perhaps the MS kernel is more innovative than the Linux kernel, I wouldn't know. The only thing innovative I see in MS is their market spin.

RE: Innovation == unique features
by Anonymous on Thu 13th Nov 2003 16:03 UTC

"At work I miss Tabbed Browsing, Multiple Desktops, Pkg_add, Make Install, and "minimizing windows to the titlebar". At home I miss nothing."

Use Mozilla, Firebird or Opera if you want tabbed browsing in Windows. I am also having multiple (4) virtual desktops open on my Windows XP box right now. You can either use the multiple desktop utility from Microsoft that comes with the Powertools package (and sucks) or you can use the nView Desktop feature (which rocks) of the latest NVIDIA drivers for Windows.

RE: At home I miss nothing.
by Anonymous on Thu 13th Nov 2003 16:06 UTC

"At work I'm forced to use MS. At home I use OSS."
When I use OSS, I miss:

Adobe Photoshop
Microsoft Office XP
Diablo 2: LOD
GTA and GTA: Vice City
Warcraft 3
NFS: Hot Pursuit 2

and god-knows-how-much-more stuff

O brother...
by Captain Nudypants on Thu 13th Nov 2003 16:12 UTC

Who cares if <enter favorite OS here> is innovative or not? I'm not going to pay for / donate to an OS just because it's innovative. What I care about is: 1) does it work 2) can I use it.



--sig plagiarized from some employee of M$--

If I can't fix it, it ain't broke.

RE: Innovation == unique features
by bagdadbob on Thu 13th Nov 2003 16:21 UTC

Anonymous says:
Use Mozilla, Firebird or Opera if you want tabbed browsing in Windows. ... you can use the nView Desktop feature (which rocks) of the latest NVIDIA drivers for Windows.

Ballmer says:
Even program development in the UNIX world, the sort of trail-blazing, is quite broadly being done by BEA and IBM and Sun and the Java crowd.

Therefore:
To paraphrase: Even programming development in the Windows Browser world, the sort of trail-blazing, is quite broadly being done by the Mozilla and Opera crowd.

ROTFLMAO!
by Shane on Thu 13th Nov 2003 16:23 UTC

someone at MS should innovate a dictionary program so the MS CEOs can look "innovate" up see what it means.

"you keep using that word, i don't think it means what you think it means."

Re: StarCoder (IP: ---.atsva.com)
by drsmithy on Thu 13th Nov 2003 16:27 UTC

Linux was first with 64 bit file support

NTFS had this over a decade ago.

linux has added better thread suport.

"Better" than what ?

Linux was first to support 64 bit AMD Processors.

But NT was available on more platforms first.

@Anonymous (IP: ---.ofw.fi)
by Great Cthulhu on Thu 13th Nov 2003 16:30 UTC

When I use OSS, I miss:

Adobe Photoshop
Microsoft Office XP
Diablo 2: LOD
GTA and GTA: Vice City
Warcraft 3
NFS: Hot Pursuit 2


You do know that all of these - save for Need for Speed - can be run on Linux, right? I myself have Photoshop and Warcraft III installed on my Linux system (I'm decided against buying Office XP, using Office 2000 instead, but Office XP is supported as well by Crossover Office).

Innovation
by Anonymous on Thu 13th Nov 2003 16:44 UTC

Windows is, as a whole, not innovative. Neither is MacOS. Neither is Linux. Most software is a clone of something else; possibly with a few innovative features, but usually not even that.
There are innovative apps available for every major platform Many innovations get miscredited to whatever popular platform they first become widely known on.
That said, Linux does have some pretty cool features; I do not know for sure whether, say, SELinux is innovative, or how much credit on things like gcc's propolice and stack protection are actually from linux or a unix-like OS originally, but I would say that it's possible to lock down security and thwart buffer overflows far more effectively on Unix-like operating systems than on Windows at the present.
X11 is old; it's still a pretty nice system. Modular design and small tools are old; I'm not sure how many -decades- ago they were innovated, but they're still useful.
I'd rather use Linux than something "innovative" just because it's innovative; if it has a feature or design I really like, great, but innovation produces at least as many awful things as great ones.

Short history of microsoft
by Tyr on Thu 13th Nov 2003 16:46 UTC

started out making basic & cobol compilers
nothing innovative about that
then moved into os with dos by buying qdos which was cp/m like
nothing innovative about that
developped windows 1 through 3 which 'borrowed' heavily from gem & apple
nothing innovative about that
Win95 arrives after os/2
nothing innovative about that

You could argue about winNT which is loosely based on vms, but even id NT were REALLY innovative what about all the years before ?

The real inovator
by Anonymous on Thu 13th Nov 2003 16:46 UTC

Apple is the pinacle of inovation. At least from the end user perspective.

RE: @Anonymous (IP: ---.ofw.fi)
by Anonymous on Thu 13th Nov 2003 17:05 UTC

You do know that all of these - save for Need for Speed - can be run on Linux, right? I myself have Photoshop and Warcraft III installed on my Linux system (I'm decided against buying Office XP, using Office 2000 instead, but Office XP is supported as well by Crossover Office).

Don't even get me STARTED on the horror that is Wine.

Linux or something else
by Scorched Earth on Thu 13th Nov 2003 17:09 UTC

Mr. Ballmer can point out Linux all he wants but Linux may not be the OS that takes customers away from Windows.

BSDs and Linux were designed to take advantage of small computers. Before those two OSes, you could only run Unix on big machines. Linux is a clone in that it was created to follow the published Unix standards. But Linux was completely created from scratch. BSD was an off shoot from AT&T Unix to run on small computers.

Even though BSD/Linux were not mainly created to compete with Microsoft, they are indirectly doing so.

A GUIed Linux/BSD does not compete directly with Microsoft. It is more of an indirect competition. KDE/Gnome are striving to make working with Linux/BSD easier. It does not matter that Microsoft exist. KDE/Gnome would still be here.

BSD/Linux would still be here if Microsoft didn't exist.

BSD and Linux mostly follow the 'improve what has already been done' model. But there are innovations happening in the OSS community.

Could Microsoft provide a Live CD like Knoppix, Suse and Slackware? Could Microsoft enhance security like OpenBSD does? Is Microsoft capable of creating a web browser that not only follows standards but comes up with new features like tab browsing and mouse gestures?

OSS does not need to compete with Microsoft but Microsoft needs to compete with OSS. OSS is here to stay and will always be around.


...in summary
by Bill on Thu 13th Nov 2003 17:23 UTC

1. A senior exec from a big company said his company and its products are wonderful and their competitors products derivative. (No surprises so far).

2. The highly passionate supporters of one competitor took this badly. Like a red rag to a bull in fact. (Still no surprises).

3. People who like Big Company's product say unkind things about competitors. Argument starts. (So far so normal)

Wake me up when it's finished.

Define Innovation
by Marco Polo on Thu 13th Nov 2003 17:32 UTC

From the Websters Dictionary:

in·no·va·tion

1. something new or different introduced: numerous innovations in the high-school curriculum.
2. the act of innovating; introduction of new things or methods.
[1540–50; < LL innov!ti$n- (s. of innov!ti$). See INNOVATE, -ION]

By this definition every OS or project that is active is INNOVATING. Period!

That is creating something new. They all do so Linux does not innovate more or less than MS. They all do innovate.

I think the TERM that should be used is

INVENT

From the same dictionary:

in·vent
1. to originate or create as a product of one's own ingenuity, experimentation, or contrivance: to invent the telegraph.
2. to produce or create with the imagination: to invent a story.
3. to make up or fabricate (something fictitious or false): to invent excuses.
4. Archaic. to come upon; find.
[1425–75; late ME invented (ptp.) found, discovered (see -ED2) < L inventus, ptp. of inven#re to encounter, come upon, find, equiv. to in- IN-2 + ven(#re) to COME + -tus ptp. suffix]
—Syn. 1. devise, contrive. See discover. 2. imagine, conceive. 3. concoct.

I think this is a better term that we can use to measure the similarities and differences between different OSes for this debate.

And if you use this term you will see that again most of the OSes are INVENTING. Linux has invented in the past and is inventing now. Mac OS has invented as well and even MS Windows has invented.

Examples abound no question.

So if this is the case then what is with this FUD from MS you may ask?

I think it's nothing surprising. I think this is one area where MS does not invent. They are predictible at throwing out FUD and troll bait.

You have to see what they will have to gain if people even listen to them. And then tell it how it is to the same people. Let the people decide. They will know who is BSing and who is not.

Now back to you people.

3 more years for 'Longhorn';
by Matthew24 on Thu 13th Nov 2003 17:42 UTC

Maybe they have started innovation by starting all over again!

1) Steve talking about low TCO with Windows: Don't make me laugh, I make a living (with many others) trying to keep that crap running.

2) About only a few people not liking MS.: Most users do not know better, they accept things as they are. MS creates a huge 'industry' of people who are depending on their bugs for their living. (IT people, proud of their knowledge of an insane OS) or people who can do years of writing to figure out how the mess is put 'together'. (The Press).

If people only knew...

Car analogy
by Marco Polo on Thu 13th Nov 2003 17:42 UTC

At the end of the day I still use OS (Linux, FreeBSD and others) because the features that they provide fit my needs both on the desktop, server and embeded hardware I own and/or I work with. Ant they do that at I price _I can_ control.

The same is with my car. I still use my Golf although I can buy an Audi A8. It will be a burden to pay off the A8 and I can use my monetary resources for something better like house improvements or vacations or whatever. The point is _I am not rich_ and the price of my Golf _I can_ control.

I'll probably never buy an Audy A8 and I'll probably never buy a MS piece of software but that does not mean they are not good. They are not affordable and in the case of software it comes with too many strings attached.

Again back to you.

Linux is a UNIX clone, huh?
by Frodo on Thu 13th Nov 2003 17:44 UTC

Maybe... But XP is an OS/2 clone in a clown suit.

@Anonymous (IP: ---.ofw.fi)
by Great Cthulhu on Thu 13th Nov 2003 17:50 UTC

The "horror that is Wine"? I'm sorry, but what the hell are you talking about? At this time and point in Linux usage, Wine is great! It enables one to use the most popular MS programs without needing a Windows license, and within a Linux environment.

Wine isn't a "horror", it's an outstanding (if still evolving) achievement. In any case, it's already proven to be good enough for the marketplace, as Disney animation studios uses Crossover Office so that they can run Photoshop on their Linux workstations.

What exactly is it about Wine that you find so horrific?

v Remember
by alanj on Thu 13th Nov 2003 18:06 UTC

123 comments already at this point.

True Microsoft Innovation
by Axel Rivera on Thu 13th Nov 2003 18:32 UTC

Microsoft announces a new and revolutionary pop up blocker for Interent Explorer and suddenly they are innovating!!!! Guess what Steve, everybody else (Including Mozilla, Safari, etc, etc, etc.) has a pop-up blocker in their web browsers except Microsoft. This is just one of many examples where Microsoft tries to reinvent the wheel and they call the technology "the best thing invented since sliced bread."

Give me a break!!!!!!

where are you microsoft wankers in real life?
by Anonymous on Thu 13th Nov 2003 18:37 UTC

with as much cross platform consulting that i do, where are you guys?

i find the linux "passionate" at the lug meetings.

but you microsoft monkeyboy wannabes...where are you in real life???

those making over the top pro microsoft statements would be left a smouldering pile of rediculed ashes, after i was done with you.

-nt admin since 96, -linux admin since 2000

Ballmer about open source
by Me on Thu 13th Nov 2003 18:41 UTC

"Certainly the open-source world has proven it can do a certain kind of work, even if it's not what I would say is the most innovative stuff out there."

That's about the same as my idea about Microsoft.

That is a good point
by Nicholas James on Thu 13th Nov 2003 18:44 UTC

Open source is not as focused and wastes too much effort creating different products for similar purposes.

You don't mean the 100s of text editors, maybe the 100's of email clients? Linux does offer a stable alternative to MS. The comunity does need to come together & linux needs standards.

He's right
by polygon on Thu 13th Nov 2003 19:00 UTC

Linux is not innovating. Linux has been biting the tails of Microsoft for god knows how long. All they do is try and produce product of the same or better quality as MS. The real innovators are Apple.

innovate or intimidate?
by Jeffrey on Thu 13th Nov 2003 19:08 UTC

I was at a Microsoft Office event recently and had to endure the keynote suit's stock FUD line about security concerns, particularly intrigued by how unconvincing said suit was while obviously reading the FUD (about Red Hat Linux 9, by the way).

This gave me pause to think about how the folks at Microsoft EVER got to where they are now, considering that way back when the BASIC interpreter was their claim to fame.

Lest one forgets (OEM intimidation and forced client-side preloads aside) Microsoft took over market leadership in the organization on the server side (from Novell) largely by effectively marketing NOT to system administrators but to management (who, being both non-technical and naturally risk averse with their funding decisions, were complete push-overs for the Redmond hype, which largely amounted to bullet points about a future that was yet to occur while pushing a next-generation "nobody will get fired going with Microsoft" line to replace the old saw about IBM purchasing being safe for one's career).

At this time NOBODY who was technically savvy would pick Microsoft over Novell on technical merits at the server, but they MIGHT consider Microsoft for greater client-side (Windows) connectivity simplicity.

The pointy-clicky method of system administration also appealed to management, because anybody who could marginally operate a Windows computer (i.e. managerial secretaries) could perform simple system administration tasks. Management likes to save money at EVERY turn, and if specialized (expensive) administration skills are NOT absolutely required, then the mean cost of system administration drops precipitously (cost savings rule a manager's thinking).

Add to this Microsoft's willingness to create any sort of friendly corporate customer support presence and this package bought significant management mindshare (NOBODY prefers one-stop shopping like management).

This is past, but remember that past is prologue. And prologue IS necessary.

Especially since this prologue represents a significant reason for the current state of lock-in that exists with Microsoft products, the ONLY networked computing experience quite a few organizations have EVER known.

Thus, absent Microsoft, said network integration would have been impossible (at least as defined by the folks from Redmond, who have successfully framed these issues in the minds of management).

In fact, Microsoft successfully defining the thought patterns of so many management teams (especially in the pre-Internet era when Windows-based infrastructure was not necessarily a foregone conclusion) is probably their single greatest achievement as a company.

Anybody open to Redmond alternatives who has had to repeatedly combat the, "Does Microsoft offer that?" questioning from management knows what I am talking about: every IT budget line item became Microsoft's to lose.

As a result of this success, Redmond is now in the position to leverage management mindshare plus the natural resistance to change (oh so common to the human condition) in the latest effort to maintain the lock-in.

However, Redmond faces something new. Given the current economic climate, management is quite open to alternative means to maintain IT performance while still cutting costs.

Unlike any threat to Microsoft hegemony before it, Free Software/Open Source Software is a MOVEMENT, not a discrete corporate competitor that can be brushed aside or bought out.

This particular movement offers possibilities simply not available with the latest upgrades to the same old lock-in products, which exist solely to perpetuate the monopoly.

Organizational IT freedom and choice, plus outright independence from any single vendor, along with dramatic cost savings are suddenly possible, and these create a significant problem to the marketing wizards at Microsoft.

Previously designed marketing strategies designed to defeat another corporation have simply not played out all that well, either.

Clearly those charged with designing the next set of winning strategies do not appear to be succeeding, which is why the constantly changing nature and degree of vitriolic FUD from Redmond is so stark.

Microsoft now has to exist in an environment where it is unfamiliar, where gloss and shine matter less than before and promises that something better is in the pipeline due some time from now will be worth the wait--and cost.

Microsoft has to demonstrate WHY staying locked-in according to their script (give us your money and do what we say when we say) is beneficial, and this translates badly to Excel charts and PowerPoint presentations.

While Microsoft can claim to have clients saving tens of thousands of dollars per year staying locked-in while those freed from Redmond's control can DEMONSTRATE saving many times that figure (usually on CAL savings alone) then in tight economic times, who stands to win?

The abject panic in Redmond is that the mindshare carefully cultivated but now intimidated and abused (forced upgrades, strong-armed licensing, etc.) may NOT simply comply lockstep to the latest monopoly marching orders.

Management is now willing to listen to non-Microsoft ideas, and Free Software/Open Source Software is the most threatening idea of them all, because it offers freedom from the very lock-in Redmond requires to survive.

Intimidation continues as the modus operandum these days and innovation is the marketing buzzword of choice. It's high time to work with management to help them see the fact of the former and the emptiness of the latter, to see the truth that remaining locked-in runs counter to the organizational charter.

Desperate
by Leftbas on Thu 13th Nov 2003 19:46 UTC

This quote merely shows that Balmer is very desperate.

First, he flatly dismissed OSS as a threat, then he began to take it more seriously (possibly while examining Windows to see if it's actually competitive), and now he's spreading some pretty nasty FUD. It can only mean that he's worried that Windows can't stand on its own merits, and now he has to go around bashing OSS to take the spotlight off his company.

Sad.

Microsoft - A history of Innovation
by slash on Thu 13th Nov 2003 19:49 UTC

A lot of revisionist historians have painted a very negative picture of Microsoft and innovation, but in truth Microsoft has been in the forefront of innovation since it's inception.
It all started back in the early 1980's when Microsoft first wrote DOS. Seeing how good DOS was, AT&T and a horde of universities copied it and called it Unix. It wasn't long before Microsoft saw it's grip slipping and realized it needed to innovate. The obvious solution was to innovate Microsoft Excel and Microsoft Word. However, within days of their creation, a group of hackers pieced together Lotus 123 and WordPerfect. Again, Microsoft got shafted.
At this point, they decided to differentiate themseleves from the competition and invented a graphical windowing system. They would call it Windows. But before it could take off, a company called Apple ripped off their idea and released MacOS. At about the same time, Microsoft had also came up with the idea of a business presentation tool called presenter. However, Forethought Inc. copied Microsoft, beat them to the punch and released their version of Presenter. However, Forethoughts version was horrible and Forethought realized that it was impossible to compete. So they decided to do a hostile takeover of Microsoft, but retain the Microsoft name. They renamed their merged product PowerPoint 1.0.
In the 1990's, due to the increased importance of data, Microsoft needed some kind of data storage software. They invented the idea of SQL and created Microsoft SQL Server. Again, it wasn't long before IBM and Oracle copied them. A company called Sybase was so bold that they even copied Microsoft code, line by line.
Then with the maturation of the internet and emergence of email, Microsoft came up with the idea of a graphical email system and a graphical browser. They created Outlook and Internet Explorer. Not long after, Netscape released Navigator and Eudora release Eudora Pro.
Well, Microsofts proud history of innovation and creating competition continues to this day. Just look at it's new directory services and C# / .Net idea of running in a middle layer. After their latest innovations, Novell is creating their own directory service and Sun has a new product on the horizon called Java.

Not quite Jango Fett
by attheriskofbeingcalledtroll on Thu 13th Nov 2003 19:57 UTC

"Say what ? How is Linux *not* a clone of unix ?"

Um well, actually clone implies exact copy. Otherwise it's not a really a clone, just an "offshoot". If it's a clone then it should be fully compatible with Unix, right? And all those guys (and gals) at OSDL are sitting up there playing Fallout: Tactics all day. And even though Sun, SGI and IBM already have Unix, they're sinking into time and money into this other Unix (cause two Unixes are better than one)?

Let's face it, "clone" is the wrong word to be using here. Haven't we all seen Attack of the Clones by now, notice just how much alike they all were?

RE: Microsoft - A history of Innovation
by Leftbas on Thu 13th Nov 2003 20:07 UTC

Are you kidding??? Let me set you straight on just three of your so-called facts concerning MS history.

1. Microsoft did not write DOS, they bought it (or perhaps stole and reverse engineered it, I'm not sure which), itself a clone of CP/M.
2. AT&T began work on UNIX in the late 1960s, well over a decade before Microsoft acquired DOS.
3. Apple, another producer of a DOS (AppleDOS, to be exact), came out with their GUI about 1984, several years before Microsoft released Windows. And the GUI in MacOS was itself a clone of work done by Xerox Palo Alto Research Center (PARC)

As for your other claims about WordPerfect being a rip-off if Word et al, I cannot comment. But owing to the blatant inaccuracies in the above examples, I'm inclined to conclude that all your 'facts' are all complete fabrications.

An now that I think about it, I can believe I fell for this flame. But I feel better pointing it out. Now go do some real history research, Slash.

Balmer
by Grusic on Thu 13th Nov 2003 20:12 UTC

Microsoft don't innovate, they dominate thru sheer marketing power and anti-trust tactics.

Every time I see a MS commercial about how MS want to revoltionize my life and provide me tools to help me realize my potential, I want to throw up.

Microsoft is not my *friend*, they're a business. And Balmer is a marketeer first and for most. So of course he's going to play MS products up and down play any precieved threat to MS's market share. His "reality distortion field" is probably just as big as Steve Jobs.

Everytime I hear some CEO of some company talk these days, they all sound like rabid military people. We'll "dominate", "compete", etc etc... As long as these people have this mindset, the world will never see true innovation because all these guys are in defense mode.

And meanwhile, Bill G. makes another billion dollars while half the world starves to death or dies from dieases that should have been wiped out a century ago.

It saddens me really. These guys spend all their time making millions of dollars, more then anyone could possibly spend in a lifetime, when all that talent and intellect could do something really useful for humankind

What is innovation?
by cheezwog on Thu 13th Nov 2003 20:22 UTC

Why is anyone bothered about such a nebulous thing as 'innovation'?
As long as I can get work done on my computer, browse the web, send email, play games, movies and music I'm happy. Both Linux and Windows do this, though Windows still has the edge for audio apps.... But for that to be solved requires a few companies to port their programs to Linux, it does not require any 'innovation'.

How will anyone 'innovate' a movie player? I rarely use more than 'play' and 'stop'.

Does anyone think that anyone outside fairly hard core computer fans care about innovation in their OS?

It's just Microsoft trolling (and very successfully too!).

Re: Balmer (and Bill)
by attheriskofbeingcalledtroll on Thu 13th Nov 2003 20:24 UTC

"Microsoft don't innovate, they dominate thru sheer marketing power and anti-trust tactics."

That's the one place Microsoft really does innovate. When it comes to business tactics, there are few who are the match of Gates. He made fools out of all of them at one point or another, whether he was "borrowing" from them, out-manuevering them or running them through when they were already down to make sure they stayed down. Bill is a living testimony to Corporate America.

My favorite response here that has the word "innovate" in it is the one that quotes "The Princess Bride."

There should be some kind of buzzword police... once a word gets used more than four times in one paragraph of rambling nonsense... NO, more importantly: once a word is used as both a noun and an adjective in the SAME sentence... the word must be retired.

@leftbas
by Rayiner Hashem on Thu 13th Nov 2003 20:37 UTC

Raise your hand if you got slash's joke. C'mon man! That was such blatent sarcasm it wasn't even funny! The part about ForeThoughts doing a hostile takeover of MS and renaming themselves MS should have given it away!

right on
by Yep on Thu 13th Nov 2003 20:37 UTC

linux is a garbage pail of borrowed scraps

windows is to some degree too, but ms innovates a great deal more.

Yep
by dpi on Thu 13th Nov 2003 22:09 UTC

Thanks for sharing this great analysis!!!!11

Red Flag
by franknputer on Thu 13th Nov 2003 22:24 UTC

Anytime I hear anyone from MS using the "I" word, I feel reasonably confident that the rest of their statements are pure bullsh*t.

Slash's sarcasm
by Leftbas on Thu 13th Nov 2003 23:46 UTC

Ok, hold on...

(smacks himself on forehead)

Doh!

I missed the part about Forethought...maybe I should just go have a beer.

what is the most innovation in wind*w world then?
by foobar on Fri 14th Nov 2003 00:15 UTC

I think it might be wid*w itself.. it is a ultimate virus on which no more innovations are needed at all

Paper Clip? Anyone?
by Tony Maccaroni on Fri 14th Nov 2003 00:43 UTC

Microsoft Inovation History "1976-Present"

1995- Paper Clip ;) in Office Suite
2001- Fast User Switching in XP

Fell free to add stuff to this list if I skipped over something or these two arent really microsoft inovations. ;)

An Apple anyone?
by Tony Maccaroni on Fri 14th Nov 2003 00:54 UTC

Apple Inovation History 1976-Present

1983-One Button Mouse ;)
1988-Coined the term Corporate Multitasking ;) where when one app. crashes, others corporatley crash along nicely
199x- Newton
199x -OpenDoc
1997-2001 Fruity Macs 6 flavours to match your taste
2003-Cheese Grater


*list excludes thousands of abandoned and cancelled projects

An Apple amendum.
by Tony Maccaroni on Fri 14th Nov 2003 00:56 UTC

Sorry! Forgot Quick Time

Conclusion
by Tony Maccaroni on Fri 14th Nov 2003 01:01 UTC

So you should give Linux some more time folks. It took Microsoft almost 20 years to come up with something "original" and useful like that paper clip ;) :)
I typed "Innovation" into it and it came with.
"I don't know what you mean,please rephrase your question"

Innovation? Bah!
by Jeffrey Flowers on Fri 14th Nov 2003 01:07 UTC

Just what does MS mean by "innovation"? If they are trying to mean "inventive", the only things that MS has crafted that would qualify as such is the scroll wheel (on the MS Mouse) and their licensing agreements. Otherwise, all they do is copy others' work and ideas; not unlike the open source software they are trying to FUD. (I think that this is why they helped Apple stay afloat; to keep their unofficial R&D department alive.)


MS in is no position to point out a lack of innovation in others. The UI of their OS is sorely behind what Apple is doing. Internet Explorer still does not support W3C standards as well as it should. They artificially limit Windows XP Pro to ten network connections just to pump up NT4/2000/2003 Server. And then they have the gull to overcharge for an OS when they have a monopoly.


Innovative indeed.

Linux is a UNIX clone... (Read on)
by lcpolymerguy on Fri 14th Nov 2003 03:43 UTC

Well, windows is just an apple clone. 'nuff said.

M$ Innovation?!?
by lcpolymerguy on Fri 14th Nov 2003 03:49 UTC

Micro$oft doesn't innovate. They just take other corporations good ideas and use them as their own. When faced with litigation, they just settle by offering 'discounted' licenses. I know this for a fact from an insider of another company.
M$ and this other company had a 'non-disclosure' agreement. About a year later, guess what, the technology of the other company appears in Windows.
Well, of course M$ didn't 'disclose' any info, because they won't release their source code. They settled out-of-court with bribes of discounted windows licenses.

w0Ah
by Anonymous on Fri 14th Nov 2003 04:12 UTC

LolZ ROFL, M$ NyHH

Seriously, grow the hell up ;)

I'm sorry, but...
by lcpolymerguy on Fri 14th Nov 2003 04:15 UTC

I will follow the rules of this forum, because I am grown up.
Read the terms....

And besides, there is nothing immature about stating a fact.

Thank You, and have a great evening. ;)

I'm sorry but...
by lcpolymerguy on Fri 14th Nov 2003 04:17 UTC

I probably didn't make myself clear. Flaming? Hello? Read the terms....

Auf Wiedersehn.... ;)

Makes me think of...
by Maxlor on Fri 14th Nov 2003 17:37 UTC

This whole campaign makes me think of this terrific Mahatma Ghandi quote:

"First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win."

Looks like they've entered the fighting stage now ;)

RE: Microsoft - A history of Innovation
by Drill Sgt on Fri 14th Nov 2003 19:30 UTC

All I can say to this is....LOL

Thanks for the laugh ;)

Jeffrey
by top speed on Sat 15th Nov 2003 00:08 UTC

You said...

NOBODY who was technically savvy would pick Microsoft over Novell on technical merits at the server, but they MIGHT consider Microsoft for greater client-side (Windows) connectivity simplicity.

[/i]The pointy-clicky method of system administration also appealed to management, because anybody who could marginally operate a Windows computer (i.e. managerial secretaries) could perform simple system administration tasks. Management likes to save money at EVERY turn, and if specialized (expensive) administration skills are NOT absolutely required, then the mean cost of system administration drops precipitously (cost savings rule a manager's thinking). [/i]

Add to this Microsoft's willingness to create any sort of friendly corporate customer support presence and this package bought significant management mindshare (NOBODY prefers one-stop shopping like management).

This is past, but remember that past is prologue. And prologue IS necessary.

Especially since this prologue represents a significant reason for the current state of lock-in that exists with Microsoft products, the ONLY networked computing experience quite a few organizations have EVER known.

Thus, absent Microsoft, said network integration would have been impossible (at least as defined by the folks from Redmond, who have successfully framed these issues in the minds of management).

In fact, Microsoft successfully defining the thought patterns of so many management teams (especially in the pre-Internet era when Windows-based infrastructure was not necessarily a foregone conclusion) is probably their single greatest achievement as a company.

Anybody open to Redmond alternatives who has had to repeatedly combat the, "Does Microsoft offer that?" questioning from management knows what I am talking about: every IT budget line item became Microsoft's to lose.

As a result of this success, Redmond is now in the position to leverage management mindshare plus the natural resistance to change (oh so common to the human condition) in the latest effort to maintain the lock-in.

A very good analysis of the 'past'. However you then go on to say...

However, Redmond faces something new. Given the current economic climate, management is quite open to alternative means to maintain IT performance while still cutting costs.

Not really correct. The economy is a lot better, and companies are significantly invested into 'the M$ way' which has worked well for all the reasons you mentioned but primarily simplicity of use. The only real problems they've had are all these viruses, which they firmly blame on the 'anti-M$ crowd' anyway, so why in the world would they want to join that 'movement'?

Much of Linux was 'snuck' in the back door of big IT shops to begin with, and there are no plans to roll it out to normal end users where it's immaturity would result in disaster. These shops will continue to run it for specialized tasks, but it's widespread acceptance is nowhere near a reality. And it may never be, since 'wizards' and other simple processes that made Windows what it is are so frowned upon by the Linux controllers.

RE; Ballmer: Linux is not Innovating
by terrabyte on Sat 15th Nov 2003 13:52 UTC

Hey, Steve;

Try to tell those words to LinkSys wireless routers factory owners. Try also to tell Sony not to ship all its new line of car stereo's on embeded Linux OS, and tell them all to replace Linux with Windows.

Also give it a shot to direct your words to all the Internet service providers that are using Linux & BSD, plus tell SUN microsystems to hide the source code for Solaris on X86 architecture. Do the same to Palm with OpenBeOS.

Also, let me see MS Windows work on MIPS architecture, PDA, PPC, Sparc, and build a few thousand nodes cluster server of every platform you can imagine, including, but not limited to, PS2, Cobalt cube, every Mac including G3&G4, IBM, HP, SUN, DEC, and all of them running MS Windows instead of Linux.

Just keep on selling to the grey haired, corporate ballons- of-igo that you socialize with. They are about to retire in few years, if not retired already. You'll face a new generation of computer savey users, that needs answers on technology, and knows how to get it on line.

That moment, you better be ready to defend the sloppy source of windows with the claim that "You guys are not supposed to see this, you need to use it blindly and pay me for this house of cards"

Good luck with the next generation, it is just a matter of time before they record Microsoft as the biggest crock on History of mankind. Make sure to hide your coffin deep in the mountains, because everyone got hit by a virus on his machine, would like to spit on your grave for all the lost work and effort that just vanished due to your empty ego and the sloppy code and structure.

RE; Ballmer: Linux is not Innovating
by frost on Mon 17th Nov 2003 01:24 UTC

Innovation? How about stability and completeness? What MS *still* doesn't get is that we need software to be reliable and stable most of all. We don't need more features, bells & whistles. We need a stable code base that features can be added to as needed, once code has been thoroughly debugged. 95% of Windows users only use about 5% of it's abilities (how many people have computers for web browsing and e-mail only? Plenty!). What the Linux community does understand is that core stability and completeness is much more important that the newest gee-whiz-click-on-this feature that nobody was really asking for. Do they always get it right? No, but then nobody does; this is a human effort, after all. But computers are like cell phones in this regard- most of us don't need cell phones to take pictures, play the latest Eminem tune when it rings, or have a beach scene as a background- we just want them to work as cell phones! Same for an OS- just provide basic services and a clean API. Get that part done, then worry about being a home theater PC, or including "movie maker" features, or a slick-looking-but-even-kludgier-GUI, or whatever.