Gates Puts Faith In "Microsoft Innovation" - Isn't That That an Oxymoron?
-
Font Size:
From way over in Indonesia, Microsoft (MSFT) Chairman Bill Gates let it be known that Microsoft never needed to buy Yahoo (YHOO) to make headway in search and advertising. It just kind of wanted to.
"We have always felt we could do very well on our own and now that's the path we are focused on," Gates told AP in Jakarta on Friday. "The standard strategy for us is to just hire great engineers and surprise people at how well we can compete, even with a company that's got a strong lead."
Actually, that may be the first bit of sense out of Microsoft since the Yahoo thing first emerged. That is exactly what Microsoft is good at: identifying market leaders in interesting new tech markets, then systematically destroying them. In fact, Microsoft is probably better at it than maybe any company in history. Netscape, Lotus, WordPerfect, Novell, Real Networks...there's a long list of companies that invented something that Microsoft then copied and took down. And Windows, of course, was a copy of what Apple (AAPL) and Xerox (XRX) were doing. Now Microsoft's Zune is taking aim at the iPod.
Microsoft is at its best when it does this. It spends billions of dollars a year on Microsoft Research, but has yet to invent an entirely new business. (Microsoft did once get out in front of a tech development, creating travel site Expedia early on. So surprised was Microsoft that it did this, the company soon thereafter spun out Expedia -- perhaps so Expedia would not contaminate the Microsoft culture with actual market innovation.)
The thing is, though -- search so far is looking like Microsoft's Waterloo. Yeah, it's won every big battle so far, but Microsoft has spent vast amounts of time and money trying to crack search -- and so far has failed. Can it beat Google (GOOG) at Google's own game? That seems unlikely. Can it outwit Google and create an innovative new version of search that Google never thought of? That would be very un-Microsoftian.
So...now what?
Get Seeking Alpha Free Stock Alerts by Email!
Get Free Stock Alerts by Email!
ETFs In Focus
-
Editor's Picks
-
Most Popular
- Disclosure from Financials? I Call B.S.
- Financials and Housing: The Outlook Remains Ugly
- Martin Wolf on Capitalism
- Interview with Jim Rogers, Part I: Bigger Financial Shocks Loom
- Four Brazilian Profit Plays
- Apple & Google: A Detailed Comparison
- Full list of Editor's Picks »
- Apple: Great Company with Lofty Valuation - Due for Pullback »
- Cramer Continues to Dig a Sirius Hole for Himself »
- The Disconnect Between Supply and Demand in Gold & Silver Markets »
- Wall Street Breakfast: Must-Know News »
- The Great Consumer Crash of 2009 »
- With Help from California, Solar Gets Fired Up »
- Don't Cancel Motorola's Funeral Just Yet »
- Forget $100 a Barrel - Oil Will Plummet to $30 »
- Time to Pull the Trigger on Four Oil Service Stocks »
- 5 Potential Buyout Targets in Biotech - Barron's »
- Transocean: An Opportunity in Falling Oil »
-
Long Ideas
-
Short Ideas
-
Cramer's Picks
- Whose Freddie Investment Thesis Is Right?
- Steel Dynamics: Bullish with a Share Repurchase Program
- E-Trade Financial Carries High Risk-Reward
- Interested in Bank of America? Consider the Preferred Shares
- Northgate: Mid-Tier Gold Producer with Strong Cashflow
- Toll Brothers Staying Alive - Fast Money Midday Recap (8/19/08)
- Hedge Fund Tracking: Blue Ridge Capital (John Griffin)
- Petrobras: Buy and Sit Tight Like Soros
- Screener Picks, Part II: Three Mid-cap Growth Stocks
- Lowe’s Weathers a Tough Retail Market
- Full list of Long Ideas »
- Salesforce.com: It's All About the Guidance
- Three Casino Stocks Rolling Over
- New Web Site For Short Sellers: You Gotta Love Capitalism
- Commodity Carnage: Where to Turn Next?
- Fannie and Freddie Shareholders Run for the Exit
- Goldman: Readying Short Position Initiation Sequence
- Apple: Great Company with Lofty Valuation - Due for Pullback
- Russia's Too Risky - Barron's
- Fannie, Freddie Shareholders Will Be Left Holding the Bag - Barron's
- Pilgrim's Pride: The Weakest Link in the Food Chain
- Full list of Short Ideas »
- Cramer's Lightning Round (8/19/08)
- Still Growing - Cramer's Mad Midday (8/19/08)
- Which Stock to Pick - Cramer's Mad Money (8/18/08)
- Buy Weyerhauser - Cramer's Lightning Round (8/18/08)
- The Price of Oil - Cramer's Mad Money (8/18/08)
- Great Execution Pick - Cramer's Mad Money (8/14/08)
- Beaten Down Buy - Cramer's Lightning Round (8/14/08)
- The Fry Guy - Cramer's Midday Mad Money (8/14/08)
- Go Orbital - Cramer's Mad Money (8/13/08)
- Buy AMD Here - Cramer's Lightning Round (8/13/08)
- Full list of Cramers Picks »
Trading Center
Hedge Fund Jobs
Job Seekers: Search jobs by category, get job alerts by email or live feed, apply online See full list of jobs »
Employers: See all recruitment options, get applications online or by email Post a job »




This article has 6 comments:
When Microsoft destroyed folks, Kevin's clear and accurate term, "they" had waffled--Apple/Xerox, the classic; Netscape; Word Perfect, way too complex; Lotus, way too complex.
Now the players have emphasized the simple, crisp, and agile--where Microsoft used to win. Google is just...plain magnificent. Google docs is our latest discovery; enterprise list with no fuss. Gmail; search; and on and on and on. iPhone has made the PC the non-center of our corporate life--Safari, didn't even know what it "was" for about a month. Why? It worked so well.
Our retailers want openoffice.org in a non-geeky way; we couldn't make old office work on our Vista test machine (we hate Vista; our customers hate Vista, but we gotta figure it out--as it bobs and weaves through its chaos), so downloaded openoffice.org--and that was the end of that problem.
Working on the old 98 yesterday and was stunned by its elegance (OK, not MAC folks, but so much better than Vista, better than XP, and somewhat better than 2000--as they all get worse).
Microsoft is the new Sears. Big; irrelevant.
Kevin, why haven't they invented anything? What is that??
Great article.
Thx jegan ;-)
MSFT succeeded in the past 1) because it was easier to break the law (Pre-MSFT vs the US, vs the EU etc. antitrust cases) 2) they had a geeky, but semi-intelligent guy at the helm (Gates).
They have FAILED to prepare for for the future. Vista is STILL not UNIX-based, like LINUX or OSX; thus Vista will never be stable, high-performance, or secure. Windows has third-rate development tools. MSFT has no way forward OUTSIDE of OS's-- XBox, Zune, and Win mobile will NEVER be strong enough to carry this dinosaur company as Vista's market share erodes.
MSFT is like Apple after AAPL ousted Jobs in the 1980's and brought in Pepsi-man Sculley. But, of course, Apple weathered that (with considerable pain) by virtue of the fact the products were so advanced vs the competition-- an advantage MSFT clearly CAN NOT claim today.
My Atari ST was better with CAD-3D