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March 23, 2006

With Vista Shifting, Microsoft Will Shake Up Windows Division

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According to numerous reports, Microsoft is getting ready to shake up the management team in its Windows Division and bring in Microsoft Office head Steve Sinofsky to put Windows back on track. As a Microsoft insider told me recently, the Windows Division is full of the last vestiges of "the bad, old Microsoft. This can't happen quickly enough."

The shakeup could happen as early as this week. Under the new plan, Sinofsky will allegedly take control of Windows development and report to Kevin Johnson, who oversees the Platform Products and Services division. Sinofsky has a well-respected track record of shipping products on time. He's also a close confidant of Bill Gates and Steve Ballmer, and is expected to focus largely on Vienna, the codename for the Windows version following Windows Vista, as Windows Vista is largely feature-complete and just needs to be fine-tuned for release.

A Wall Street Journal report about the management shakeup discusses the "old Microsoft" my source described, referring to the "Cowboy culture" of the Windows engineers. These people have been riding the Windows cash cow for years, but now Vista is crashing down around them after years of delays. This product was original scheduled for release in 2003.

Microsoft co-president Jim Allchin, who currently runs the Platform Products and Services division with Johnson, has already taken the biggest step in turning around the division. In 2004, he effectively shut down Vista development and started over from scratch after recognizing that the project was going nowhere fast. Sadly, Allchin will retire at the end of 2006 when Vista is finalized. The addition of Sinofsky should help the Windows division overcome his loss.

This isn't the first time a major Windows version threatened to derail. Microsoft performed a similar shakeup when Windows 2000 veered wildly off track in late 1998. At the time, the company brought in Brian Valentine, another shipment guru, to kick butts and get that product back on schedule. At the time, Valentine was well known for his work with Exchange Server.

End of Article



Reader Comments
"Microsoft performed a similar shakeup when Windows 2000 veered wildly off track in late 1998. At the time, the company brought in Brian Valentine, another shipment guru, to kick butts and get that product back on schedule. "

And the next major Windows release was the highly successful *cough, cough* Windows Me!

Woo hoo!

"the Windows Division is full of the last vestiges of 'the bad, old Microsoft. This can't happen quickly enough.' "

Huh? I thought Everything! Microsoft! Did! Was! Exciting!

What is this "bad old Microsoft" of which you speak?

lotsamystuff March 23, 2006 (Article Rating: )


"And the next major Windows release was the highly successful *cough, cough* Windows Me!"

And what about XP that was released almost immediately after that?

"What is this "bad old Microsoft" of which you speak?"
In your own words, "the convicted felons" who should never be given an opportunity to change. That's how things are in your mac utopia vision.

And yes, everything that Microsoft does is news. Yesterday, the stock market went down because of their announcement. In fact, apple shares went up thanks to microsoft.

shark47 March 23, 2006 (Article Rating: )


"And yes, everything that Microsoft does is news. Yesterday, the stock market went down because of their announcement. In fact, apple shares went up thanks to microsoft."

That's because Microsoft was found to be an illegal monopoly controlling everybody's computers, so yes, it's big news when they hold back the computing industry by delaying their operating system for six years. You actually seem to be proud that Microsoft's actions can affect the entire industry so negatively. Were you this proud when two-thirds of the world's computers were rebooting thanks to the RPC exploit? Did you know that thing even affected hospitals and airliners?

The even bigger news is all the people switching to Macs in droves:

http://www.businessweek.com/technology/content/mar2006/tc20060322_658188.htm

bonch March 23, 2006 (Article Rating: )


"In your own words, "the convicted felons" who should never be given an opportunity to change. That's how things are in your mac utopia vision. "

Don't put words in my mouth, sharky. I never called them convicted felons. I called them "convicted monopolists", which is true. Microsoft--corporately--has been found by the U.S. Courts to be an illegal monopoly. Therefore, they must operate under a different set of rules than a legally-run business or even a legal monopoly. There's nothing that prohibits a company from being a monopoly, but there are laws against abusing than monopoly power. Those laws are the ones Microsoft ran afoul of. That's not opinion--it's fact.

Nor did I say they should not be given an opportunity to change. Nor do I see the world through a "mac utopia vision". I'm a realist. And I'm honest. And--as I've pointed out to you--I'm a PC user as well, and a Microsoft customer, although Windows is not my preferred Operating System for a variety of valid reasons.

"And yes, everything that Microsoft does is news. "

Where did I say it wasn't?

"In fact, apple shares went up thanks to microsoft."

That's a good thing, I suppose, although I won't chortle over Microsoft's ills. A successful Microsoft is a good thing--as long as they play by the rules.

lotsamystuff March 23, 2006 (Article Rating: )


Still, Vista will sell more in it first day of release than the entire installed OSX userbase. Laugh it up FanBonch.

alanm999 March 23, 2006 (Article Rating: )


"Nor did I say they should not be given an opportunity to change. Nor do I see the world through a "mac utopia vision". I'm a realist. And I'm honest. And--as I've pointed out to you--I'm a PC user as well, and a Microsoft customer, although Windows is not my preferred Operating System for a variety of valid reasons."

From your earlier comments, the only conclusions one can draw are:
microsoft is a "convicted monopolist", so they have to play by a "different" set of rules. Any lawsuit accusing them of unfair trade is "valid", since they were convicted of that ages ago.
That clearly indicates that you don't want the company to be given a chance to change.

Bonch, since the 90s, every year a few reports would be published about how microsoft was doomed and how competition would kill it. Each time, microsoft has proved these doomsday prophecists wrong. I'm sure the company is going to survive this latest setback.

shark47 March 23, 2006 (Article Rating: )


The more I think about the impending release of WinVista, the more I realize that if it had been released in 2003 it would have been a compelling OS. Today, Vista is so woefully delayed it becomes more and more irrelevant. By Jan 2007, Vista will likely be an OS that needs to be replaced by June 2007 ... perhaps by MacOS X 10.5.

mwrisner March 23, 2006 (Article Rating: )


"Still, Vista will sell more in it first day of release than the entire installed OSX userbase. Laugh it up FanBonch."

Ashlee Simpson sells more CDs than concert recordings of Mozart. Your point?

That's like saying because McDonald's sells millions more Big Macs per day than health stores sell salads, McDonald's is the better food.

bonch March 23, 2006 (Article Rating: )


"From your earlier comments, the only conclusions one can draw are:
microsoft is a "convicted monopolist", so they have to play by a "different" set of rules. Any lawsuit accusing them of unfair trade is "valid", since they were convicted of that ages ago.
That clearly indicates that you don't want the company to be given a chance to change."

The bigger question is why you're so eager to take their side after all their cheating behavior in the 90s!

"Bonch, since the 90s, every year a few reports would be published about how microsoft was doomed and how competition would kill it. Each time, microsoft has proved these doomsday prophecists wrong. I'm sure the company is going to survive this latest setback."

This is just not true. In the 90s, everyone wrote that Microsoft would take over the world. It's 2006, and everything has totally changed now, especially because of Google and the iPod and the six years of nothing from Microsoft. The future is now the web and digital media convergence devices in the home. Now, I know you're biased toward Microsoft, but they've spent six years trying to update Windows XP. This company is dead, and the only reason they're still around is the fact they were a monopoly in the 90s, and so the software relies on them still. But with the web, that is quickly changing. With web usage skyrocketing and Mac market share doubling every year, Windows is on its way out this decade. It's a technology relic with nowhere to go but down.

bonch March 23, 2006 (Article Rating: )


But, hey, if you guys don't want to see the writing on the wall, have fun waiting until January of next year to finally get an update to Windows XP from 2001. If you want to rely on a company that's so unreliable, be my guest. I don't have to worry about all the crap you guys have to, because I have a Mac. I just get work done. No restarting iexplore.exe, no endless "wizard" dialog boxes, no registries, no "installers" and "uninstallers" for programs (just drag and drop to install...light years ahead of the Windows way), no disk defragging, and so on.

Everything about OS X is better, from the window management (Windows uses the goofy parent-child window relationship, which is why apps like Photoshop have that big window with the gray background with little windows inside it like a mini Mac desktop) to the development environment (nothing touches Cocoa....NET is years behind it).

You'll convert eventually. You'll get sick of the clunky Microsoft Windows and its now 50+ million line codebase of cruft. I was a Windows fanboi too. I used to do development in C# and followed the Longhorn betas and defended Microsoft on Slashdot.

It all changed when I tried a Mac last February and was floored to realize using a Mac feels seven years ahead of where Microsoft is at. Try a Mac for a week and you'll feel the same wayand will cringe at the harshness of Windows when you go back to it. It's a breath of fresh air to not have to hand-hold your computer and diaper it from the Internet with antivirus/antispyware/firewall/etc. crap.

Every time I start my Windows PC, there's some thing that needs updating, be it antivirus, or Windows Update, or Ad-Aware, or the Dell system tray software, etc. It's a non-stop barrage that gets in my way. The interface sucks, the infrastructure sucks, the company sucks, the technology sucks.

I use a Mac because life is too short. See you in line for a MacBook...

bonch March 23, 2006 (Article Rating: )


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