The Bill Gates Show Rolls in Canada
Bill Gates loves Waterloo, Ont., particularly computer science and
engineering students at the local university. In a talk/recruiting
drive yesterday, he extolled about the exciting prospects for the
industry and how the software giant is well-positioned. “Software is the place
where the action is”, he enthused. As an ardent believer in the
proliferation of Web-based services, I wonder how Microsoft will do
given it's still a desktop-centric software company. My take is it's the
browser where the action is happening rather than the OS as
more people gravitate to online services and applications. In a column
in today's National Post, I contend Microsoft risks falling behind
Google, AOL and Yahoo as we head into Web 2.0 or whatever you want to
call it. This take solicited an e-mail arguing Microsoft is right in the
middle of the action with an online portfolio that includes MSN, Hotmail and
instant-messaging (an application enhanced with the recent agreement
with Yahoo). Maybe as someone who hasn't used IE for years, I've got a
bias against Microsoft even though I still use Outlook, Windows and
Office. Maybe I'm under-estimating Microsoft's ability to change
(Titanics can change directions, right?). Maybe I'm simply caught up in the
hype surrounding Google, even though it's still a one-trick pony
(search/paid-placement). Maybe I've never recovered from a disastrous
interview with an uninspired and frazzled Gates several years ago in
the back of a limousine. When it comes to Microsoft, I'm on the fence
to see if an old dog can learn new tricks.








October 14th, 2005 at 9:36 pm
Remember Netscape. Don't underestimate them.