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Microsoft Posts Record Earnings

sriram_2001 writes "Microsoft has just had a record quarter where their profits have doubled from the previous quarter. Total sales are at $10 billion, exceeding both internal and external expectations. Microsoft has attributed the rise in earnings to increased server sales (where *nix-based systems are supposed to be doing well) and more XBox units being sold. For a company that most Slashdotters would say is on the decline, Microsoft sure has weird financial results!" To put it in perspective, Microsoft's income is about the same as New York State receives in taxes - below California, and well above the other 48 states.

528 comments

  1. Grin, borg, grin by AtariAmarok · · Score: 5, Funny

    I thought the Gates Borg icon had a larger smile this morning. Now I know why.

    --
    Don't blame Durga. I voted for Centauri.
    1. Re:Grin, borg, grin by LifesABeach · · Score: 1, Interesting

      X-Box as a server? Sure, why not. And considering that we are reading results from convicted liers; It's cool. But one has to ask ones self, "Why are the dewellers of Redmond so fearful of Linux?" I truly believe that these people are very intelligent, and do not do things without reason. So I submit the following tensor that reprecents their fears:

      Knoppix > the Redmond Product.

    2. Re:Grin, borg, grin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      To put it in perspective, Microsoft's income is about the same as New York State receives in taxes - below California, and well above the other 48 states.

      leave it to slashdot to compare Microsoft's earnings to taxes...

    3. Re:Grin, borg, grin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      I'm not sure were you get that "X-Box as a server" line from. And it's "liars", not "liers". Finally, it's "represents", not "reprecents".

      Thanks for lending credibility to the Linux movement...

    4. Re:Grin, borg, grin by alw53 · · Score: 5, Interesting

      One thing that Microsoft has always done is keep their people feeling that Microsoft is the underdog and needs to keep fighting. They believe that all the money belongs to them by right and they are incredibly bugged by ANYONE else who makes money in their business area. They also feel that the next innovation could obsolete them and while this does not drive them to innovate, it does drive them to co-opt others' innovations quickly.

    5. Re:Grin, borg, grin by MysteriousPreacher · · Score: 1

      So, basically they are the Church of Scientology.

      Wonder if Tom Cruise would endorse IE.

      --
      -- Using the preview button since 2005
    6. Re:Grin, borg, grin by Da+Fokka · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I know, pot and kettle, but how is this childish rant 'interesting'.

    7. Re:Grin, borg, grin by twiddlingbits · · Score: 1

      Leave it to /. to compare them INCORRECTLY, I just looked up the State Tax "take" for my State (TX) http://www.window.state.tx.us/taxbud/bre2006/2006s ummarytables.pdf for 2005 and it's $31B and we don't have a State Income Tax, only Sales Tax. So M$ income while impressive is NOT well above the other 48 states.

    8. Re:Grin, borg, grin by Mr.+No+Skills · · Score: 1

      I think you're comparing TN's annual revenue to Microsoft's quarterly revenue.

      --
      Sleep is for the Weak
    9. Re:Grin, borg, grin by twiddlingbits · · Score: 1

      TX not TN, and yes I am because thats the way the article was written. If you want to ass-u-me that M$ annual revenue = 4X the quarterly revenue then they are bigger than TX. They don't outrank CA though, CA took in 98.7B last year, 77.3B from direct taxes, the other from other type of taxes/fees.

    10. Re:Grin, borg, grin by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      Which would be why TFA says the don't rank California.

    11. Re:Grin, borg, grin by alw53 · · Score: 1

      See for example the childish headline

      Microsoft Claims It's An Underdog

      http://www.pub.umich.edu/daily/1998/oct/10-21-98 /n ews/news12.html

      A brief excerpt:

      Gates' deposition also was the subject of a federal appeals court hearing yesterday. Microsoft is trying to block public access to videotapes of the government's questioning.

      An obscure 1913 law requires that depositions in federal antitrust cases be open to the public "as freely as are trials in open court."

      But a Microsoft lawyer called the 1913 law outdated.

    12. Re:Grin, borg, grin by XopherMV · · Score: 1

      This does sound like the company about 4-5 years ago. Back then MS employees worked 80+ hours per week. Mothers would bring their children to the office to visit their fathers since they never saw them. People would literally sleep under their desk.

      Up until then, MS was out to change the world. And their employees seriously thought they could. They attracted the best and the brightest considering their stock was going through the roof. Just working there for a few years would make you a millionaire.

      But that was a different time and a different Microsoft. MS today is just another software company like all the rest. Employees work a standard 8 hour shift unless they're near a release. The stock price is now the same as it was in 2000. Any thought of getting rich after a few years is now laughable.

      MS sold $40 billion worth of goods last year. Even after the $3 per share dividend distribution last month, they still have $35 billion in the bank. They're not going away any time soon. Management knows it and the employees know it.

      Microsoft isn't the lean, starving underdog anymore - they certainly aren't acting like it either.

    13. Re:Grin, borg, grin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They should have used an icon made from these pictures of Bill Gates posted here which I know of from this old slashdot article.

  2. First Post? by neilb78 · · Score: 4, Funny

    I know vulnerability in their software probably generated these incorrect numbers.

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    © 2004 The SCO Group, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
    1. Re:First Post? by millahtime · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I bet these numbers are real and they should show us something.....

      That many people still see that you have to use Microsoft Products or that alternatives aren't out there for certain products that are easy for your average joe 6 pack to use.

      Alternatives are targeted at the tech savvy and are not marketed well enough. M$ is a marketing machine. Most of our folks have trouble programming a VCR clock. I bet it's very true.

    2. Re:First Post? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not sure when I last saw such a strange reply in the hurry to get FP.
      (which you, of course, failed at as well)

      You "know" a probable cause?
      Maybe the word you're seeking is "think".

      And why do you think the numbers are incorrect?

    3. Re:First Post? by fymidos · · Score: 5, Informative

      The numbers are real alright but they do say something else:

      I can't find the actual data of this quarter, but here are the data for the last four quarters. Notice that the quarter ending 12/31/2003 is the one used for comparison by the article.

      -quarter ending 12/31/2003:
      revenue $10,153,000, net income $1,549,000

      -quarter ending 9/30/2004:
      revenue $9,189,000, net income $2,528,000.

      How can they have a billion less in revenue and a billion more in income?
      The answer is also there: they spent $1.4 BILLION *less* in Research and Development.

      Microsoft is of course still in a dominant position, and their software still sells like no other piece of software ever did, but the real advancement from last year is a +6% in revenue (which is propably *less* than the overall market growth).

      --
      Washington bullets will simply be known as the "Bulle
    4. Re:First Post? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Interesting

      WRONG, they reduced OPERATIONAL COSTS.

    5. Re:First Post? by essreenim · · Score: 2, Interesting
      [millahtime]Alternatives are targeted at the tech savvy and are not marketed well enough.

      I think its more creating non tech-savvy groups than appealing to the non tech-savvy:

      Excludability is the power to prevent usage of a desirable utility, and is required for the property holder to force payment of the user (extract exchange-value). ..."The contradiction that lies at the heart of the political economy of intellectual property is between the low to non-existent marginal cost of reproduction of knowledge and its treatment as scarce property"[23].

      23. May, 2000, p. 42.

      A technology supporting the property regime must build a black box not comprehensible to the smartest user, and convenient to operate for users with the lowest possible skill. Users must be deprived of their technological knowledge that grants them control over the product, or else they will bypass the security systems [34].

      34. Operation Sundevil, a nationwide law enforcement campaign in U.S., directed against the hacker community (Sterling, 1994), should be seen in this light. However, direct repression against highly skilled users plays only a minor though complementary part in the agenda of securing the system from independent subjects. Its real momentum lies in lessening the skill level demanded of the average user, as is expressed in the deceitful phrase 'user-friendly technology'.

      Yes I do lean towards marxism and no, this is not a anti-capitalism rant although this article does point out the obvious (for some) that we have moved from feudalism to capitalism and are GRADUALLY moving towards something else. It doesnt matter how much money companies like Microsoft make. In order to change with the time, the company and otheres like it will change significantly towards the open model. They will still have allot of money but just money as long as they dont change. That is because Information Technology and the software organisations that grow on them are not manufacturing dependent or dependent on central control...and therefore cannot be conform logically to the analogue of property..

    6. Re:First Post? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      -quarter ending 12/31/2003:
      revenue $10,153,000, net income $1,549,000

      -quarter ending 9/30/2004:
      revenue $9,189,000, net income $2,528,000.

      Erm... 7-digit numbers are million, not billion.

    7. Re:First Post? by ArsonSmith · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I bet they just sold more XBoxes at less of a loss????

      --
      Paying taxes to buy civilization is like paying a hooker to buy love.
    8. Re:First Post? by Peter+Cooper · · Score: 1

      Well, of course they spent less in R&D. They come up with all these ideas, and then spend ten years trying to implement them. WinFS, etc. Why bother coming up with more new ideas if they already have a ten year pile to catch up with? ;-)

    9. Re:First Post? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Company that is on the decline? They are hardly "fading away". Despite a general desire for this to happen, it isn't.

    10. Re:First Post? by freemacmini · · Score: 3, Funny

      Maybe the numbers show that crime does pay.

      Maybe the numbers show that there is no competition and that MS is indeed a monopoly that should be broken up.

      Maybe the numbers show that MS is cutting R&D like crazy.

      Maybe the numbers show that accountants need to have fun too.

    11. Re:First Post? by Hognoxious · · Score: 2, Funny
      I bet these numbers are real and they should show us something.....
      Unless they're reported in a currency equal to the square root of -$1, you're probably right.
      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    12. Re:First Post? by Dr.+Evil · · Score: 1

      "How can they have a billion less in revenue and a billion more in income?"

      They sell in foreign markets and pay developers in the collapsing U.S. dollar.

      Or any of hundreds of possible reasons.

    13. Re:First Post? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Notice to dumbass moderators, "reducing operational costs" is just a snarky way of saying they spent less on research.

    14. Re:First Post? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Actually, if you read the press release the difference is largely due to Microsoft's 2003 decision to begin expensing grants of stock options, as per FAS 123. From Microsoft's public statements they no longer routinely grant stock options as compensation to such a large degree, and 2003 also included a little bit of extra expense due to historical option grants that had to be accounted for under the new accounting rules.
      Microsoft Corp. MSFT today announced record revenue of $10.82 billion for the quarter ended December 31, 2004, a 7% increase over the results in the same period of the prior year. Operating income for the second quarter was $4.75 billion, which was an increase of $3.27 billion over the same period in the prior year. The results of the second quarter of the prior year included $2.21 billion in compensation expense incurred in connection with the Employee Stock Option Transfer Program. Net income for the second quarter was $3.46 billion. Diluted earnings per share exceeded the company's guidance by $0.04 and were $0.32 including stock-based compensation expense.
    15. Re:First Post? by nelsonal · · Score: 1

      You can't compare other quarters with December of 2003 as that period had the XBox launch (huge ad blitz and lower gross margin) and the catch up accounting adjustment related to expensing options and equity grants. Sept 03 (and much closer to the trends in March and June 04) had rev of 8.2 billion and net income of $2.6 billion. Which is much closer to sept 04's margin.

      --
      Degaussing scares the bad magnetism out of the monitor and fills it with good karma.
    16. Re:First Post? by Assmasher · · Score: 1

      No offense, and I'm no pro-Microsoft retard, but many people buy Microsoft products for reasons other than "you have to use" or because they don't realize there are alternatives. Many Microsoft products are very strong. Don't equate security with being everyone's concerns either. There are many corporations who rely on their DMZ to maintain security (whether stupid/naive or not) ergo their purchasing decisions are made on other factors, such as usability, features, et cetera.

      Don't just dismiss Microsoft products as 'crap' out of hand (unless we're talking security of course, LOL.)

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    17. Re:First Post? by halber_mensch · · Score: 1

      This is an interesting thing about M$ that should be noted - while the linux camp is so focused on noticing Microsoft's use of FUD to play down the open source market, they also quietly play their borg game with a clever application of SAS (Safety, Assuredness, Stability) to protect their own market share. By keeping the public mind in the mindset that Microsoft is the unstoppable Juggernaut of growth and domination, they can hopefully sway more users into staying in their camp or migrating to MS products. MS is great at manipulating facts and figures to their advantage. Their propaganda team, I feel, have a very good understanding of logic - or rather what people often mistake as logic - and use that to their advantage. A good example of this is a PDF I have lost track of that MS published to 'enlighten' users of the catastrophical drawbacks of switching from MS Office to OpenOffice.org, which featured an apparently well formed argument based on a logical fallacy. The paper claimed, among other things, 2 specific items: 1. OpenOffice is not as useful as MS Office because it cannot process MS Word macros. 2. MS Word has better virus protection than OpenOffice.org writer. The faultiness of the argument is obvious when considering that the reason OpenOffice.org doesn't have virus protection is that it is not succeptable to MS Word macro viruses, which it does not process. With this clarification, the argument is clearly flawed because it is based on false, unspecified assumptions - that Word Macros are not a method of viral infection, and that all Office suites are succeptable to the same viruses regardless of mechanism. It's cleverly hidden, and takes advantage of logical fallacy to provide seemingly accurate propaganda.

      --
      perl -e "eval pack(q{H*},join q{},qw{70 72696e74207061636b28717b482a7d2c717b343 637323635363534323533343430617d293b})"
    18. Re:First Post? by robertjw · · Score: 1

      You have an excellent point. There are valid reasons for using Microsoft products. For example - My workstation at home is a dual-boot Slackware 10/Win2K box. I recently got an old HP laser printer from work. I set it up the other night, direct parallel cable, but didn't even attempt to print under Linux. I wanted to print a tax form off the internet and new I had little hope under Linux. My previous experiences attempting to printer were long and difficult. I booted into Windows, installed a driver and printed the form I wanted - 5 minutes tops (4 of that waiting for Windows to boot.

      I'm a linux admin, manage 30 linux servers and love them, but sometimes some of the most basic things are incredibly difficult. Printing, CD writing, DVD writing. Printing I've more or less given up on. I like to save the tress anyway. CD writing works OK, but the 2.6 kernel totally broke everything I have setup and I haven't had time to reconfigure it. My home DVD writer was a cheaper model, and won't work at all under linux.

      I recently wanted to make a dvd from some avi files I had. Spent several hours attempting to convert the files to mpg2, build a background and menu and then burn to dvd. Finally gave up. One of the other guys from the office downloaded a windows app that does it and works like a champ.

      When more linux apps can work through these problems and get close to the maturity and consistency in the basic functionality that some windows software has, Microsoft will be in trouble.

    19. Re:First Post? by Assmasher · · Score: 1

      Yep,

      I always wonder about the paradox between how great Linux would be if companies developed for it with as much effort as Microsoft's OSes, and by how much crap software would then exist on Linux ;).

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    20. Re:First Post? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not when they are posted in units of 1000.

    21. Re:First Post? by robertjw · · Score: 0

      Well, the crap we already have. Ever see freshmeat.org. Projects of every point in the spectrum are out there, from the fantastic to the horrid.

      The state of companies developing for it will come - actually already is well on it's way with things like firefox, realplayer, opera, Adobe Acrobat. It's a better, more stable platform, as soon as enough market share is achieved to make it worthwhile, many companies will start developing for it. Until then, we have to muddle along with what we have.

    22. Re:First Post? by Assmasher · · Score: 1

      Yeah, sadly the pervasive feeling amongst the software 'purchasers' of this world is that all Linux-ware is half finished and has to be compiled (usually true, lol.)

      I spend my free time writing a Linux replacement for ISAPI extensions and IIS for our products (we don't need a real web server, it was just 'convenient.') Firefox is one huge step forward. Man, what a GREAT browser (on Windows too.)

      The best thing is that schools are embracing Linux. That's where Microsoft pushed cheap/free Visual C++ in the early through late 90's, and it paid off for them.

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    23. Re:First Post? by online-shopper · · Score: 1

      I would tell you to scrap Gentoo, but you're using slack.
      at any rate, the HP laser printers should work fine in linux(see http://www.linuxprinting.org/ for more info) I'm amazed at how many people complain that stuff doesn't work without even trying it. Don't know about your setup. but on my fedora boxes, printing is a snap, CD writing works great, although I'm not cool enough to have a DVD burner. perhaps you have slack 3?

    24. Re:First Post? by robertjw · · Score: 1

      I'm using slack 10.0 with the latest KDE installed. I'm sure I could get this printer working - but it's not easy. Attempted to print a simple text file using kprinter and cups with no luck. Even tried just printing a test page through cups and got no response at all. No error messages no page printing out, nothing. I'm not saying it's impossible, just saying I shouldn't have to dedicate 6 hours of my life to getting a test page to print, especially when I can boot into windows and print in 2 minutes.

      I would concede that CD writing under linux is better than Windows, but definitely requires some setup. DVD writing is probably the same, but the DVD writer I have unfortunately isn't supported correctly and the media isn't Identified. Under Windows I can write a DVD with the free nero software that came with the writer.

      I work with Linux every day and it's my preferred platform at home for many reasons (stability, flexibility, performance), but I just don't think it will be a viable platform for every user until some of these fundamental issues are simplified. If someone like me, a professional linux admin with 8+ years experience, has trouble with basic functionality how can a neophyte home user be expected to convert.

  3. No matter ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    everyone knows 2005 is the year of Linux. I don't care what their "profits" show, but we've got M$ exactly where we want them

    1. Re:No matter ... by essreenim · · Score: 2, Funny
      Yeahhhh, all Microsoft employees will be begging on the streets in no time

    2. Re:No matter ... by randallpowell · · Score: 1

      Every year is the year of Linux. It just means we can get more converts and show them the loving grace of Tux.

    3. Re:No matter ... by TheKidWho · · Score: 4, Funny

      And then they get sucked in by Steve's RDF once they get too fustrated with linux :-P

    4. Re:No matter ... by anonicon · · Score: 1

      Funny, or Insightful?

      In my experience with the most user-friendly Linux distros out there (Mandrake and Xandros), they still pailed in friendliness next to my experience with Windows 2000, and had more bugs or annoying "features" without enough upsides. This is *my* experience, not anyone else's, so Linuxistas, please don't take it personally.

      Given that I won't be using Microsoft when I replace my current 5-year old PC in the next year, I'll be moving to OS X. It's not Microsoft, and it's a lot nicer than Linux. Of course, it also costs an arm and a leg, but c'est la vie.

      YMMV.

    5. Re:No matter ... by johnnyb · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Get an iBook. $1,000 will get you a pretty nice machine w/ WiFi, CDRW, 256MB RAM, a 30gig hard drive and OSX.

    6. Re:No matter ... by anonicon · · Score: 1

      I would, but it's a 32-bit G4. I'd really like to be able to run 64-bit Tiger with the 64-bit G5 and 64-bit apps when they come out in 2-3 years. To do that, I'm willing to bite the bullet and spend $1750 or more on a new PC, whether it's a low-end PowerPC, or a more expensive PowerBook (when they finally come out).

      As they say, if you're going to bother changing OS's, go whole hog. :-)

    7. Re:No matter ... by johnnyb · · Score: 1

      "As they say, if you're going to bother changing OS's, go whole hog. :-)"

      I'm pretty sure I've never heard "them" say that, for any definition of "they".

      Jon

    8. Re:No matter ... by hawk · · Score: 1

      >Of course, it also costs an arm and a leg, but c'est la vie.

      At that price, it leaves you with just over half a vie, doesn't it? :)

      hawk

    9. Re:No matter ... by Zico · · Score: 1

      MU HA HA HA! Remember Eric S. Raymond's prediction that Microsoft would be in a death spiral by the first or second quarter of 2001? Yeah, that looks like a great prediction in light of these record numbers. Good to see that Slashdot remains the place to go for high comedy. :)

  4. Server Sales are rising everywhere by enoraM · · Score: 5, Informative

    Server Sales 18% up - thats quite a share :-). Especially if you regard how hardware sales of servers developed in the end of last year:

    Hewlett-Packard: +21%
    Dell: +28%
    IBM: +36%
    (Gartner quote)
    http://www.itfacts.biz/index.php?id=P243
    There have to be quite a couple of linux- and other boxes, if Microsoft ist just +18%.
    Anybody got more precise infos on actual sales of iron?
    btw: Profits are also significantly up because of the cut in personell.

    Details on different aspects of server sales: http://www.itfacts.biz/index.php?id=C0_5_1

    1. Re:Server Sales are rising everywhere by SpongeBobLinuxPants · · Score: 1

      Server Sales 18% up

      That's probably the number of NT4 boxes replaced since M$ "discontinued" support on it.

    2. Re:Server Sales are rising everywhere by suso · · Score: 2, Informative

      Yes, I would say so too. We bought 5 servers in the past 6 months and 3 of them were for our customers, not for us. And we're a small company. So it appears that the demand for servers is up recently.

    3. Re:Server Sales are rising everywhere by stupidfoo · · Score: 1

      Hopefully this is a good sign for the IT industry. Medium range and high end products are being sold at higher levels. That means more people are needed to support them. Unless you work for my company which has been ordering new Dell Windows 2003 servers and then expecting their lone MCSE certified loser (me) to support them all...

    4. Re:Server Sales are rising everywhere by Johnny+Mnemonic · · Score: 3, Funny


      Even Apple is catching this wave:

      Xserve sales up 119% in third 1/4 '04, trend likely to continue.

      --

      --
      $tar -xvf .sig.tar
    5. Re:Server Sales are rising everywhere by realdpk · · Score: 1

      Slightly OT, but since servers were brought up: We bought a bunch of Dells recently, the 1750 model. Very slick box. Comes with cable management arms and rails that let you add CPU or RAM without having to derail it. Doesn't use much power (1A under load). Easy to add or remove ethernet cables, PS/2 keyboard, monitor, etc. Dual Xeon 2.8-3.0's.

      Then came the 1850s. That will probably be the last Dell model we purchase. All of the above? Scrapped. You have to remove the server from the rails to update it. It uses 2.5A under moderate load. The ethernet cables, VGA, PS/2 sockets, and rear USB sockets are all under a lip that protrudes about 2" out. They have weird blue "arms" that you have to push to get ethernet cables out (you might have to see these, I don't know if I can explain them properly) -- they push the little tab up because you can't get your finger in there. They barely work. It actually came with 2" extensions for the ethernet cables -- I can't imagine anyone using these in production, they look like they cost a penny to make.

      The only positive difference, it uses Xeons with a 800Mhz FSB vs. 533 FSB. Intel's specs say that would account for a 12% increase in power consumption.

    6. Re:Server Sales are rising everywhere by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So they sold 219 then?

    7. Re:Server Sales are rising everywhere by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You call laying off ~70 testers a "significant cut in personel"? The company employs over 50,000 people! Nevermind the fact that it happened less than a month ago...

  5. Unpleasant pattern emerging. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    For a company that most Slashdotters would say is on the decline, Microsoft sure has weird financial results!

    What is with the crop of stories that attempt to goad the entire /. community?

    First, I thought: "Was that parting shot really necessary?" Then I realised that the article submitter is a Microsoft fanboy

    Troll.

    P.S. If you want the editor to screen stories more carefully, please send your concerns to (daddypants)_AT_*NO_SPAM_*(slashdot)_tee_hee_.(org )

    1. Re:Unpleasant pattern emerging. by jejones · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Perhaps those of us who have submissions rejected should try sending them to Roland Piquepaille...

  6. In other news... by Private+Taco · · Score: 3, Funny

    fools and their money are still being parted...

    --
    If I could, I'd destroy you all.
    1. Re:In other news... by MadKeithV · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      And in YET other news:
      Fools and their money were lucky to be together in the first place!

    2. Re:In other news... by DaHat · · Score: 1

      As a foolish investor in Microsoft, I am quite the content fool. I'm hoping for another $3 per share dividend again this year... unlikely yes, but it was a nice bump around the holidays last year.

    3. Re:In other news... by gotgenes · · Score: 1

      Ha!

      --
      It's such a fine line between stupid and clever.
    4. Re:In other news... by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      Well you shouldn't be content. MS shares have been do nothing for years.
      1 yr, down 5%.
      2 yrs, up 5%.
      3 yrs, down 20%.
      4 yrs, down 20%.
      5 yrs, down 50%.

      Now, if you'd bought Apple, you'd be very happy indeed. But any MSFT shares held in the 21st century have been dead money. Or worse, lost money.

    5. Re:In other news... by randallpowell · · Score: 1

      $3? My 401(k) made $3 in 3 months. My CDs generated $400 this year. Unless you have lots of stock (stupid risk), I laugh at your attempt to wealth and mine.

    6. Re:In other news... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not as bad as that; you forgot to account for their dividends.

  7. Server sales by mirko · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Microsoft has attributed the rise in earnings to increased server sales (where *nix-based systems are supposed to be doing well)

    Maybe it's because more servers (both MS and !MS) have been sold this year so both were profitable...

    --
    Trolling using another account since 2005.
    1. Re:Server sales by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe it's because more servers (both MS and !MS) have been sold this year so both were profitable...

      Slow down man! If I wanted all this complex mathy stuff, I'd quit reading /. and go back to school!! I'm only here to bitch about M$. I don't wanna hafta think!!

  8. Re:Old earnings? by flumps · · Score: 1

    No they just used Excel. "Funny Accounting" was bought out just a few seconds ago ;)

    --
    "So there he is, risen from the dead. Like that fella, E. T." - Father Ted Crilly
  9. Ironic. by Atrax · · Score: 2, Interesting

    about two minutes ago I got sent this

    --
    Screw you all! I'm off to the pub
    1. Re:Ironic. by DenDave · · Score: 1

      LOL!

      How cute and funny this may be I still think business should make a business decision .. as for consumers, well.. aw go ahead and boycott the buggers!

      --
      -if at first you don't succeed, stay the heck away from paragliding.
    2. Re:Ironic. by Antonymous+Flower · · Score: 1

      This site isn't as informative as it should be. It spreads the anti-MS attitude without much argument and through sketchy quotes. The alternatives list leaves much to be desired, and their 'featured' alternative is a proprietary OS for obscure proprietary hardware. That isn't really the idea here, is it?

    3. Re:Ironic. by Chicane-UK · · Score: 1

      I can't believe they still have my IRIX review linked their front page. Yes, i'm embarassed to admit that I wrote that, and about 3 or 4 few years ago as well.

      A technical review of something has never been much of a strength of mine - I think its time they pulled it :\

      --
      "Hey! Unless this is a nude love-in, get the hell off my property!!"
    4. Re:Ironic. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you check out their store (a cafepress redirect) you can see that billyboy is none to happy about this site! http://www.cafepress.com/msbc/

    5. Re:Ironic. by lord+sibn · · Score: 1

      It would be ironic, but it's not irony. It is mere coincidence. I suspect you've been listening to too much Alanis Morissette. (;

    6. Re:Ironic. by emseabrown · · Score: 1

      Hello mr James Taylor

      I find your ideas intruiging and would like to subscribe to your newsletter.

    7. Re:Ironic. by Chicane-UK · · Score: 1

      Hahaha... thanks ;)

      Didn't actually notice that my name was down at the bottom.

      --
      "Hey! Unless this is a nude love-in, get the hell off my property!!"
    8. Re:Ironic. by Atrax · · Score: 1

      touché

      the irony* is, guess who I work for?

      *ok, coincidence

      --
      Screw you all! I'm off to the pub
  10. Wow by gnoos · · Score: 5, Funny

    1. Profit

  11. Good for them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I'm glad they're doing so well. And I'm glad Mac OSX and Linux are doing well too.

    This is probably one reason why Microsoft is increasing office space (a good hint at increased hiring if they're making room for thousands of extra workers).

    When will people stop wishing for the failure of others and start wishing for the success of their choosing?

    1. Re:Good for them by foobsr · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      To troll or not to ... ... see my sig.

      CC.

      --
      TaijiQuan (Huang, 5 loosenings)
    2. Re:Good for them by jellomizer · · Score: 1

      Good Point!
      There is pleanty of room for profit all around. Success in one area doesn't need hurt the other. If you look at the current year 2005 and some simple math you see it has been 5 years sience the year 2000 and many of these server were last upgraded 1999 for Windows 2000. So these servers were getting old and needed to be replace. Sure some went to Linux and other Went to Apple but most of them just upgraded to another windows server. Market share is the percentage of the piece of the pie. Profit determins how big the pie is.

      --
      If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
    3. Re:Good for them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When will people stop wishing for the failure of others and start wishing for the success of their choosing?

      When they stop being marketplace bullies/lawbreakers that produce a product that causes much heartache for those who have to deal with the consequences of shoddy construction.

    4. Re:Good for them by XopherMV · · Score: 1

      This is probably one reason why Microsoft is increasing office space (a good hint at increased hiring if they're making room for thousands of extra workers).

      I'll believe it when I see it. MS recently gave up it's option to buy land in nearby Issaquah. To me, that says they aren't as interested in expanding as they used to be.

    5. Re:Good for them by ChatHuant · · Score: 1

      MS recently gave up it's option to buy land in nearby Issaquah. To me, that says they aren't as interested in expanding as they used to be

      This will probably interest you. Microsoft is looking to add space in the Redmond campus for 10000 - 12000 new additional employees over the next 10-20 years.

    6. Re:Good for them by XopherMV · · Score: 1

      Yeah, the key point is 10-20 years. Hardly boom times again.

  12. Historically, not that great though by popo · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Not to be Mr. Sour Grapes, but 8% growth (while very healthy) isn't historically that wonderful for MSFT. While its certainly safe to say that MSFT is doing well, I'd say its also safe to say that the days of explosive growth (as in early to mid 90's) are behind them.

    --
    ------ The best brain training is now totally free : )
    1. Re:Historically, not that great though by mOoZik · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It doesn't take a rocket scientist to figure out that the days of explosive growth, a la in the 90's, is over. No IT company that has been around as long as MS will have high growth numbers. If anything, it indicates a mature, less volatile company. MS will be around for a while and will do quite well, much to the chagrin of the average slashdotter.

    2. Re:Historically, not that great though by JohnFluxx · · Score: 2, Interesting

      bah, it always sucks to do percentage comparisions of a small company against a large company.

      A 1 man outfit hiring 2 others is a 300% growth.

    3. Re:Historically, not that great though by BasilBrush · · Score: 0
      A 1 man outfit hiring 2 others is a 300% growth.

      If Microsoft accountants use those kind of maths, it could explain the inflated figures. ;-)

    4. Re:Historically, not that great though by Politburo · · Score: 1

      but 8% growth (while very healthy) isn't historically that wonderful for MSFT.

      Yes, and the MBA farm told us that if we're not growing as fast as we were last quarter, we're dying! Insert lame netcraft 'joke'.

      I'd say its also safe to say that the days of explosive growth (as in early to mid 90's) are behind them.

      Really? The tech boom is over? No shit!

    5. Re:Historically, not that great though by cammoblammo · · Score: 1
      A 1 man outfit hiring 2 others is a 300% growth.

      No, that's only 200% growth. The outfit is 300% larger than it's original size, but don't forget that it started at 100%.

      Good point though.

      --

      Cogito, ergo sig.

    6. Re:Historically, not that great though by JPriest · · Score: 1

      Well they sold 6.3 million copies of Halo 2. The games division posted a profit (for first time) of $84 million. Microsoft was not expecting to be turning a profit in that division till 2007.

      --
      Saying Java is nice because it works on all OS's is like saying that anal sex is nice because it works on all genders.
    7. Re:Historically, not that great though by game+kid · · Score: 1, Interesting
      I'd say its also safe to say that the days of explosive growth (as in early to mid 90's) are behind them.

      I'd say you're right. No Microsoft OS will be as popular or well-received as Windows 95--it was (one of?) the first to have Internet Explorer bundled, and back then a browser bundled with a relatively common OS was considered teh hot (especially over Mac OS). Piracy, Linux and IE security issues are certainly slowing down Windows sales--obviously a bad thing for the profits of the company we love to call M$.

      As Linux becomes well-advertised and even easier to use, I expect the distros to topple the "Mac-killer."

      --
      You can hold down the "B" button for continuous firing.
    8. Re:Historically, not that great though by randallpowell · · Score: 1

      MS games dept could turn a profit before 2007. Afterall, they turned tricks so fanboys could buy that patch/expansion pack called Halo 2.

    9. Re:Historically, not that great though by JohnFluxx · · Score: 1

      Oh, uh yeah, 0% growth is 100% the same size... oh well

    10. Re:Historically, not that great though by spells · · Score: 1

      Oh, uh yeah, 0% growth is 100% the same size... oh well


      Sorry. Admitting mistakes is not allowed on /. - especially on a M$ story. Why don't you just admit to browsing with IE and head straight to /hell ;)

    11. Re:Historically, not that great though by Laurence0 · · Score: 1

      No, it's 300% /of/ its original size, so 200% /larger/ that its original size. And you meant "its" not "it's". /me is clearly a Nazi Nazi...

    12. Re:Historically, not that great though by cammoblammo · · Score: 1

      Where did you get that crack? And I mean the one in the back of your head, not the one you're obviously smoking.

      The parent said '300% growth.' That implies 'larger than,' not 'of.' So I was correct, and I'm not sure what the point of your post is unless you're stoned, meaning there is no point.

      And on the it/it's thing, give me a break. I was posting at 1:42 am. Given that that was the only mistake I made, I thnk I'm doing better than one other person I'm replying to right now.

      --

      Cogito, ergo sig.

  13. New York's Income by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    That's surprising, considering how much money I have donated to New York State in speeding tickets

  14. I bet they would by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    After automatically charging your credit card for $50 for XBox live after your two month, "free", subscription is up and they only need the credit card to verify your age...

  15. Maybe it's because ... by DikSeaCup · · Score: 2, Insightful
    More servers are needed when using an MS server product to handle the load that another OS could handle with fewer (or, say, 1).

    1. Re:Maybe it's because ... by bigman2003 · · Score: 0

      Yes, the people who think they can get by with just one server deserve what they get. No matter what OS they are running.

      --
      No reason to lie.
    2. Re:Maybe it's because ... by grahamlee · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Some of us don't have the budget to buy a redundant server box - I make do with a warm-swap external hard drive that can boot a workstation from the server image in case of b0rk. Cheap, less effective, but good enough. People who think everyone has enough money to to implement the ideal solution deserve what they get. Which is a begging letter from my department ;-)

    3. Re:Maybe it's because ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Deserve what they get? You mean like they deserve to save money when they play it smart and buy one server that handles the load just fine when the alternative was multiple servers that still struggled to do it, plus cost you a mint?

      Yeah, they do deserve what they get.

      Not all servers need five 9's uptime, you know.

    4. Re:Maybe it's because ... by Jugalator · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      So you're saying that you always need more than one server regardless of network size or what you use it for?

      --
      Beware: In C++, your friends can see your privates!
    5. Re:Maybe it's because ... by ceeam · · Score: 1

      Who modded that funny? It is exactly what MS recommends - that you probably should have a server per each running server process. It's not at all funny when MSSQL or IIS take _all_ the RAM at opportunity and dump everything else to swap. Or CPU hogging for that matter.

    6. Re:Maybe it's because ... by boskone · · Score: 1

      It is what Microsoft used to recommend ala NT 4 timeframe. Have you looked at WSRM? It will prevent this... http://www.microsoft.com/windowsserver2003/downloa ds/wsrm.mspx

      Also, regardless of OS, there are times where you need a single app per server for security reasons, particularly on publicly accessible hosts.

    7. Re:Maybe it's because ... by k96822 · · Score: 1

      I agree -- and this isn't necessarily a M$ thing either. In a corporation, it makes sense to have processes running on seperate machines simply because, if one of the machines come down, it limits the loss of revenue by having one application down instead of many.

    8. Re:Maybe it's because ... by bigman2003 · · Score: 1

      If it's worth having a server, it's worth doing it right. If the server is something that multiple people depend on, then having some redundancy is important.

      --
      No reason to lie.
    9. Re:Maybe it's because ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Servers can be cheaper than their desktop counterparts too. A Dell SC420 is selling for less than 500bucks with a gig of ram and a 2.8GHz P4, and no OS.

    10. Re:Maybe it's because ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can adjust the RAM and CPU use of MSSQL with a fucking slider. How stupid do you have to be?

  16. shhhh! by Fr05t · · Score: 1

    "To put it in perspective, Microsoft's income is about the same as New York State receives in taxes" QUIET! You might give Bill ideas on how to double next years income!

  17. Correctiion: by AtariAmarok · · Score: 3, Funny
    1. Profit
    2. Profit
    3. Profit
    4. Profit!

    (I'd write more, except that that Clippy keeps popping up saying "You appear to be writing a Microsoft business history. Do you want any help?"

    --
    Don't blame Durga. I voted for Centauri.
    1. Re:Correctiion: by mirko · · Score: 1, Funny
      1. Developers!
      2. Developers!
      3. Developers!
      4. Developers!
      5. Developers!
      6. Profit!
      --
      Trolling using another account since 2005.
    2. Re:Correctiion: by operagost · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      7. Sweat profusely. 8. WHOOOOOHOOOOOOOO!

      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    3. Re:Correctiion: by CmdrGravy · · Score: 4, Funny

      1. Developers
      2. Less Developers
      3. Less Developers more Marketeers
      4. More Marketeers, More Lawyers, Less Developers
      5. Profit

    4. Re:Correctiion: by mirko · · Score: 1

      The guy who downmodded might not have seen the video, otherwise he would have understood how ontopic your comment was.

      --
      Trolling using another account since 2005.
    5. Re:Correctiion: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1. Developers!
      2. Developers!
      3. Developers!
      4. Developers!
      5. Developers!

  18. That's nice... by PoprocksCk · · Score: 5, Interesting

    But how do we know that this growth isn't just because we happen to be in a fairly prosperous time for the tech-market in general right now? These rates could take a turn for the worse in the next couple years. So this could all just be circumstantial.

    What I'd like to see is a comparison of growth rates of major software companies. Even if Microsoft still comes out on top, at least the comparison would be relative to _something_.

    1. Re:That's nice... by Ian+0x57 · · Score: 0

      " fairly prosperous time " huh ?? are you kidding me ?? i know a dozen friends who have been layed off in the last year in high tech.

    2. Re:That's nice... by Agret · · Score: 1

      It's not so much as important as why Microsoft got this growth but the fact remains that it got it.

      --
      Have you metaroderated recently?
    3. Re:That's nice... by Badly+Configured · · Score: 2, Insightful
      But how do we know that this growth isn't just because we happen to be in a fairly prosperous time for the tech-market in general right now?

      The increase in server sales is probably sustainable because servers are being deployed in environments where they used not to exist. For example, small businesses used to shut down all the PCs for the nigth. Now they run their own web servers or email and file servers for remote access. I guess it is the broadband Internet connections that make the difference. You first try it on your old PC, then become dependent in it, and finally shell out the money for real server OS and/or hardware.

      I have first-hand experience of this because I've just been installing a Windows 2003 server at home, and my housemate has just ordered a new Linux server. It is just so much more convenient to have your data always online.

    4. Re:That's nice... by siphoncolder · · Score: 0, Troll

      Thank you for the obvious. That's exactly one of the reasons stated in the article.

      You ain't discovering shit or being insightful. Thanks for nothing.

      --
      i'm amazed that i survived - an airbag saved my life.
    5. Re:That's nice... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I guess perspective is everything, i know a dozen friends that have been hired or found new jobs in the it industry last year. But i'm also in the red hot Washington DC area.

    6. Re:That's nice... by killmenow · · Score: 1

      Which is precisely why the times are fairly prosperous...for the companies that no longer have to pay their salaries...and for the burgeoning middle class in India.

    7. Re:That's nice... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So? I know at least 20 that have been hired as temps and permanent employees.

    8. Re:That's nice... by l4m3z0r · · Score: 1

      Well of course. The idea of infinite growth is just plain silly. Its kinda hard to grow when you have cornered the entire market. You simply have no direction in which to grow. These profits are largely trumped up by personel savings. Until MSFT takes a huge dive they arent going to have any room for future growth.

    9. Re:That's nice... by NanoGator · · Score: 1

      "What I'd like to see is a comparison of growth rates of major software companies. Even if Microsoft still comes out on top, at least the comparison would be relative to _something_."

      Yeah, because whenever there's a silver lining, there's bound to be a dark cloud. Right?

      "Let's poo poo Microsoft!"

      --
      "Derp de derp."
    10. Re:That's nice... by leerpm · · Score: 1

      What I'd like to see is a comparison of growth rates of major software companies. Even if Microsoft still comes out on top, at least the comparison would be relative to _something_.

      Comparing Microsoft to other companies would be worthless, as the other companies could have either had bad quarters or good quarters. The only way to measure this is using a sector-wide metric, and if you do some research you will see that there aren't a lot of tech companies reporting above-average earnings right now.

    11. Re:That's nice... by Billly+Gates · · Score: 1

      Thats why there is horizontal integration.

      Companies enter a new market after one is saturated to keep growing and growing forever (theoritically)

      McDonalds for example has saturated its core market but owns a smoothie company which they are now using to generate more revenue.

      After that they will probably buy Chili's or something else to grow in that market as well.

  19. licence fees by CdXiminez · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I guess they are becoming ever more skillful at squeezing money out of contracts.

    1. Re:licence fees by gunnk · · Score: 1

      I think there may be some truth in what you say. We have a site license here at the university where I work. I was very opposed to the license at the time and continue to believe it was a very Bad Thing.

      Basically the license let us be "clean" on licensing in the event of an audit. The blanket license keeps us from ever having to prove that every piece of software is properly licensed. The overwhelming majority of the software on university-owned machines IS above-board, but finding the paperwork to prove it is just about impossible.

      The original license covered (for a flat yearly fee) all university desktops and laptops as well as Windows and Office for home use by faculty and staff.

      This year MS changed the license on us -- faculty and staff home use is no longer covered -- there's now an extra fee. Of course, the university could reject the new terms. If it did, however, our current licenses would expire -- requiring us to purchase new individual licenses for every machine that had software installed under the old agreement. That's a big problem because no one keeps records of what is installed under a site license. The only way to "pass" an audit would be to relicense pretty much every machine on campus. No one has that kind of money, so no matter how Microsoft changes the agreement, the university now has little ability to protest. Just smile and write another check!

      The moral of this story is to never ink a deal with the devil... the devil gets his due.

      --
      Life is short: void the warranty.
    2. Re:licence fees by Politburo · · Score: 1

      The moral of the story is to buy a lifetime license. If you can't, go somewhere else.

    3. Re:licence fees by Richard_at_work · · Score: 1
      Sooooo basically:
      • Someone at your University is inept enough to not store valuable license information in a safe and secure manner, and thus cant produce it when needed
      • Microsoft offers a non perpetual 'way out' for a period of time
      • During this term you do nothing to make the initial problem go away, indeed you increase the problem
      • And somehow its Microsofts problem when they update the blanket license conditions when you want to renew?
      Forgive me, but it sounds like your University missed a golden opportunity to get its licenses in order. Dont blame the Devil when user stupidity is the true culprit.
    4. Re:licence fees by gunnk · · Score: 1

      Nooooo, basically:

      You missed my point.

      No, it isn't "Microsoft's problem". As I said, I felt the license agreement was a bad idea to begin with because it doesn't really solve anything in the long haul. My POINT was that these kinds of licensing agreements give Microsoft future leverage to increase the profit on the contracts. That's just smart business -- the same as you get if you make a "deal with the devil" -- the devil isn't in the business of being fair, but works to maximize his gains. My post was in response to a parent post that suggested that Microsoft might be improving profits by finding ways to leverage existing contracts into more profitable ones. This contract was simply a real-world example of that.

      --
      Life is short: void the warranty.
    5. Re:licence fees by Richard_at_work · · Score: 1

      In that case, I do apologise :) But our points were both correct, the University didnt fix the underlying problem, they only papered over the cracks.

  20. Re:Old earnings? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting
    The state of New York doesn't pile money into a big bank account. The state redistributes that money (facilitating cash-flow) by funding government, public infrastructure, schooling, etc.

    IBM, for example, makes big bucks too, but they also facilitate cash flow because most of their revenue goes to vendors, contrators, etc.

    Microsoft is a money sink. Society sinks money in it, but hardly any comes back out (that's why Gates can spend so much on charity, in case you were wondering..)

  21. Rise in server sales by flokemon · · Score: 1

    Well that does not mean they have gained new customers. 2005 has seen lots of companies finally migrating from Windows NT, or upgrading from Windows 2000 to Windows 2003.

    1. Re:Rise in server sales by flokemon · · Score: 0

      2004 even.

  22. is everyone up? Apple is too..... by johnpaul191 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    the day after MacWorld, Apple reported its best quarter ever.
    http://www.apple.com/pr/library/2005/jan/12results .html/

  23. Predictions? by ceeam · · Score: 1

    Is MS a blackhole or a supernova about to blow up?

    1. Re:Predictions? by popo · · Score: 2, Insightful


      I think its just a "star". The reason we're talking about it is because it was a "small moon" 20 years ago, so its growth has been stunning.

      But now its another company. Its earnings are good, but not wonderful. Its products are good, but not wonderful. Its growth is good, but not wonderful. (So the black-hole / supernova thing probably doesn't apply). What it does have insane amounts of is cash. So its also not a star that's going to run out of fuel any time soon.

      --
      ------ The best brain training is now totally free : )
    2. Re:Predictions? by Jason+R · · Score: 1

      That's no moon!
      (Queue Imperial march)

  24. No SWE's on debugging by elecngnr · · Score: 2, Funny

    They obviously saved a load of cash by getting rid of that expensive code debugging department.

    --
    Having done so much with so little for so long, I now can do anything with nothing at all.
    1. Re:No SWE's on debugging by Chemicalscum · · Score: 1

      "If God had to use a computer, it would be a Mac." - wrong God is a computer.

  25. What, you say? by AtariAmarok · · Score: 1

    Take off every xbox, for great profit.

    --
    Don't blame Durga. I voted for Centauri.
    1. Re:What, you say? by 9-bits.tk · · Score: 0

      Turn on every 'xbox', for crap software All your computer are belong to us

  26. One Time Boost by popo · · Score: 4, Insightful


    It should also be said, that there's no Halo next quarter.

    MSFT would love to make the claim that this is largely due to server software... but its Halo II... and that ain't happening again any time soon.

    --
    ------ The best brain training is now totally free : )
    1. Re:One Time Boost by stupidfoo · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Well, only some of that can be attributed to Halo 2.

      It's probably sold close to 7 million copies now. Add in an average of $10 worth of accessories to each sale (some people buy a new controller or two, but most buy nothing else).

      So, you have (Halo 2 ($50) + $10 accessories) * 7 million = $420 million, roughly $300 million of which is profit. Plus all the new Xbox live account, which is probably pulling in a couple million in profit per month.

      Nice bump from Halo 2, but it's clearly not enough to double their profit from the previous quarter.

      Also, sales of new xboxes don't count, since this is profit, not revenue.

    2. Re:One Time Boost by fimbulvetr · · Score: 1

      Actually, it's 9.6 million. With something like 1.3 million Live.

      http://www.usatoday.com/printedition/life/20041123 /d_vidgames23.art.htm

      Just something I saw a couple days ago.

    3. Re:One Time Boost by stupidfoo · · Score: 1

      Wow... guess my number was a little old. Thanks for the info.

      So, the profit number is closer to $500 or $600 million. And still wouldn't account for the huge increase in overall MS profits (although it still helps some).

    4. Re:One Time Boost by cgenman · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Just to put these numbers into perspective...

      Halo 2 has sold 6 million units at 50 dollars each. If you count wholesale againt "total sales" figures, that adds 180 million dollars. Considering Microsoft reaps publisher, producer, and licencing margins on each one sold, Halo 2 accounts for *all* 90 million in profit the Microsoft games division made last quarter.

      Still, that's nothing compared to the 2.5 billion in profit from their desktop division.

    5. Re:One Time Boost by KirkH · · Score: 1

      No, according to the article the 9.6 million number is the installed base for Xbox in North America, not the number of Halo2 copies sold.

    6. Re:One Time Boost by fimbulvetr · · Score: 1

      Whoops, sorry man. I should have looked closer.
      I revise to 6.4 mil.

      http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/6848748/

    7. Re:One Time Boost by igny · · Score: 1

      But most of the Xbox sales could have also been attributed to the release of Halo.

      --
      In theory there is no difference between theory and practice. In practice there is. - Yogi Berra
    8. Re:One Time Boost by cornjones · · Score: 1

      I was at a talk recently where they started talking up Halo2 numbers. Biggest opening weekend in entertainment history, etc.... $200 million in sales...blah blah blah

      After expounding on how great Halo2 did, he continued on w/ " To put things in perspective though, windows does that every 2 days."

    9. Re:One Time Boost by Keeper · · Score: 1

      Microsoft doesn't receive $50 per sale. The retailers take a good cut of that.

    10. Re:One Time Boost by stupidfoo · · Score: 1

      According the numbers I saw when I worked in retail (at the #2 US big box electronics store) the profit margin on PS2 and XBox games ranged from $3-$7 for the retailer.

  27. Unix migrations by gilesjuk · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Many Unix systems are being migrated to either Windows or Linux. This is why both Linux and Windows sales can rise even though they're competitors.

    1. Re:Unix migrations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      While that may be true it won't be sustained. Companies are simply going through tough times and junior admins are running around screaming Windows/Linux is the solution.

      Companies will come back to -- better than x86 platforms -- sooner or later. Either that, or x86 may even become a legitimate platform one day.

    2. Re:Unix migrations by _Sprocket_ · · Score: 2, Insightful


      Companies will come back to -- better than x86 platforms -- sooner or later. Either that, or x86 may even become a legitimate platform one day.


      From where I'm sitting, this isn't true. Over the past four years, I've seen more and more proprietary hardware being replaced by commodity hardware. This is happening for various 'nix strongholds - from servers to engineering workstations. And while many folks will view this as a Windows vs. Unix issue... it's not. It's all about the hardware. The commodity hardware is cheaper and for these applications, just as capable. Windows just comes along for the ride.
    3. Re:Unix migrations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >>Companies are simply going through tough times and junior admins are running around screaming Windows/Linux is the solution.

      When I was a mainframe sysprog I remember the same guys running around shouting that UNIX was the solution.

      Of course, most of the companies that went down that dead-end soon retreated back to the mainframe when they realised the hidden costs in terms of availability, reliability and security.

  28. Where is all the money coming from? by Xpilot · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I once attended a technical presentation about OSS, and I recalled some interesting facts.

    Even during the most difficult of economic times, Microsoft has made billions.

    Even when tech companies are in a slump, and businesses fold left and right, MS continues to rake in the dough.

    So where does this money come from?

    "IT CAME FROM YOU!" said the presenter.

    Yes, while your companies are struggling to make a penny or two, MS just leeches off of you with their Windows licenses and forced upgrades. Face it, you get little in return for every new version of Windows you buy. Win2K->WinXP was just a hideous facelift.

    Yet people still pay through the nose for Windows. It's inexplicable.

    --
    "Backups are for wimps. Real men upload their data to an FTP site and have everyone else mirror it." -- Linus Torvalds
    1. Re:Where is all the money coming from? by garcia · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Yet people still pay through the nose for Windows. It's inexplicable.

      It's not inexplicable... Microsoft started out by squashing competition in every arena they could until they were above and beyond the most dominant force in the computer industry.

      They received a slap on the wrist from the Government and continue to dominate...

      The reason that people continue to go with upgrades and new versions of software like Office is because they don't have a choice. If you want to interoperate in the business world today you do it via Microsoft products.

    2. Re:Where is all the money coming from? by Otter · · Score: 1, Funny
      "IT CAME FROM YOU!" said the presenter.

      On the plus side, at least geniuses like that are no longer pulling down the big bucks as open-source consultants. A bigger mystery was always where their money was coming from.

    3. Re:Where is all the money coming from? by truthsearch · · Score: 0

      Just to expand on this, it is, in a way, extortion. Those struggling companies require computers to stay competitive. It's beyond crack, it's food. Ignore it and die. Once you're invested in one platform and you're losing money it's very hard to justify a huge sum to switch platforms.

      It's like telling a starving person they now have to pay $100 for every pound of food. They either pay or die.

    4. Re:Where is all the money coming from? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Three little words. CRIME DOES PAY! Microsoft is a convicted monopolist with profits several times the average for corporations. Please don't wonder how they do it - it's a continuing criminal enterprise.

    5. Re:Where is all the money coming from? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It didnt come from me, I pirate my windows.

      Though, by using windows, it means i use windows software, which means more people write/sell software for windows, which means more people use windows etc.

    6. Re:Where is all the money coming from? by govtcheez · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Jesus Christ, Captain Drama. Extortion?

      "Oh my god, my company has to buy new fleet vehicles every couple years because the old ones just aren't as good anymore! GM's just one big organized crime syndicate!"

    7. Re:Where is all the money coming from? by SpongeBobLinuxPants · · Score: 1

      Why is it when M$ makes a ba-zillion dollars I get an icky feeling in the pit of my stomache, but when Apple has a profit for a quarter I feel happy all day long?

    8. Re:Where is all the money coming from? by tmortn · · Score: 1

      One slight difference. Your ability to drive those 'old' vehicles to your points of business contacts to not change so long as it is operable.

      A perfectly serviceable version of office 97 is essentially non-funcioning if the people you interoperate with use a newer version of office. This isn't because it is impossible to exchange information between most versions, but because for the average office drone the concept of saving in a reverse compatible format is to much of a hassel. Not to mention M$ seems to delight in causing problems with maintaining formating information when trying to do reverse compatibility.

      Thus in a very real way they DO force people to upgrade in a way GM has wet dreams about regarding fleet vehicles.

      The only real alternative I have seen to date is open office because it generally can adapt to new versions as they come on the scene. But breaking the M$ hold is not easy when you average drone thinks a different name on the app means they suddenly don't know how to use a Word Processor or spread sheet application.

      --
      I don't ask you to be me. I only ask you not expect me to be you.
    9. Re:Where is all the money coming from? by GoofyBoy · · Score: 1

      >If you want to interoperate in the business world today you do it via Microsoft products.

      There are many good replacements for MS business products today. (not home products) Not all of them are free/OpenSourced but they are non-MS.

      Its really at a point today that if you are locked in to MS, its because you made the decision, not because of illegal activity by MS.

      --
      The surprise isn't how often we make bad choices; the surprise is how seldom they defeat us.
    10. Re:Where is all the money coming from? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Well since much of the extra earnings this quearters probably came from government sales he was right.

      Rumors has it that sales to DoD related organizatons have almost doubled compared to last year.

    11. Re:Where is all the money coming from? by operagost · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Face it, you get little in return for every new version of Windows you buy. Win2K->WinXP was just a hideous facelift.
      Stop propagating that meme.

      I'm no MS fanboy, but repeating misinformation won't get you anywhere. Besides, someone who is actually in IT will tell you that most of the OS money is spent on server licenses and CALs, and the difference between 2000 Server and 2003 Server is even bigger than that between the desktop versions. A fancy UI doesn't get you far on a server (and it's turned off by default in 2003). Anti-MS zealots keep focusing on the desktop Windows, which tells me that most of them are probably working in retail during the day and playing "'blog-master" at night.

      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    12. Re:Where is all the money coming from? by hoggoth · · Score: 1

      > Why is it when M$ makes a ba-zillion dollars I get an icky feeling in the pit of my stomache, but when Apple has a profit for a quarter I feel happy all day long?

      Because we told you what to feel.
      -Slashdot

      --
      - For the complete works of Shakespeare: cat /dev/random (may take some time)
    13. Re:Where is all the money coming from? by Politburo · · Score: 1

      It's inexplicable.

      It really isn't. MS-Intel maximizes the (Cheap Hardware) + (Easy-to-use Software) metric for most users. If there was something better, people would use it. Linux doesn't meet the Easy-to-use Software portion, and before the new Mac came out, Mac didn't meet the Cheap Hardware portion.

      Now that there are cheaper Macs, it will be interesting to see if we see a shift. Unfortunately, I don't think we will, because most businesses are against change. In the home arena, though, I think we may start to see more of a move towards Mac.

    14. Re:Where is all the money coming from? by truthsearch · · Score: 0

      Software doesn't wear out. Trucks do.

    15. Re:Where is all the money coming from? by govtcheez · · Score: 1

      In a similar way, my company could easily continue to maintain our old, crappy vehicles, but we don't. They don't look good anymore, don't have all the newest options, and present a bad image to our clients. Same thing with offic suites; frequently it's a cosmetic choice as much as a functional one.

    16. Re:Where is all the money coming from? by garcia · · Score: 1

      There are many good replacements for MS business products today. (not home products) Not all of them are free/OpenSourced but they are non-MS.

      No matter what the OSS zealots tell you the OSS software alternatives available do NOT work well enough to interoperate in the business world 100%.

      It's a fact of life for right now and sadly will probalby be for quite some time.

    17. Re:Where is all the money coming from? by killmenow · · Score: 4, Insightful
      ...its because you made the decision...
      Yes, the desicion to be in business. Most companies I work with still consider Microsoft (I'm quoting verbatim words I've heard from CEOs, CFOs, CIOs and the like) "the cost of doing business."

      Regardless of the existence of acceptable replacements, there is still a belief by senior management that Microsoft is like the government: you avoid giving them as much money as you can get away with but sooner or later you have to pay them. It's literally factored in as part of the rules if you want to be in the game.

      Now, the good news is the times, they are a changin'...
    18. Re:Where is all the money coming from? by -brazil- · · Score: 1

      Except that if you find GM's prices too high or their quality too bad, there is very little that prevents you to switch to Ford or some other maker instead.

      And, more importantly, YOU decide when "the old ones
      just aren't as good anymore". You're not forced to upgrade to stay compatible, or because the old ones are "not supported anymore" by the service garages.

      --

      The illegal we do immediately. The unconstitutional takes a little longer.
      --Henry Kissinger

    19. Re:Where is all the money coming from? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh heaven forbid a company that makes a business out of upgrades, the humanity! /sarcasm

      Its easy to knock a company that is DEBT FREE and making billions, something works, or the whole world is stupid? :P

    20. Re:Where is all the money coming from? by naelurec · · Score: 1

      In my latest assessment of conversions for a few different companies -- while the picture is better (more general business apps available for non-MS platforms (groupware, office suites, email/web, etc..)) each company had some critical software that was NOT available for any platform besides Windows.

      While I suppose it could be possible to run this software via terminal services or similar (displayed on a non-MS desktop) this involves additional expense, additional complexity, etc that the small businesses I consult for simply do not want to deal with (they are not a tech company trying to make a point and the MS Tax isn't great enough to overcome the fear of change.)

    21. Re:Where is all the money coming from? by Vollernurd · · Score: 1

      > It's inexplicable.

      Oh no, not enotirely. Incidents of mass-delusion are quite common: See here [Amazon.co.uk].

      --
      Smokey, this is not 'Nam, this is bowling. There are rules.
    22. Re:Where is all the money coming from? by tmortn · · Score: 1

      I disagree. There is often an overiding functional problem with using old office aps when your primary points of interaction use a newer version. These problems often lead to failures of communication, mishandling of files which leads to delays and lost productivty and or extra cost in processing. Often the question of whether or not to upgrade is decided by whether or not the people you do business with need you more or you need them more. If they need you they will work with you. If you need them more they can dictate terms.

      These are not cosmetic issues. It is like the difference between a ragged vehicle showing up to get the work done and a vehicle never showing up because it broke down. One issue is cosmetic but causes no problems to accomplishing the task... they other is an impediment to doing business. One MUST be addressed, the other is an optional.

      --
      I don't ask you to be me. I only ask you not expect me to be you.
    23. Re:Where is all the money coming from? by Taladar · · Score: 1

      News for you: Business Software (from MS and other companies) doesn't interoperate flawlessly either. Quite the opposite. Even different versions of Office create big problems for untrained users that have to be resolved by the admins.

    24. Re:Where is all the money coming from? by Taladar · · Score: 1

      So some customers comes into your office, looks at your screen and says "Bah, your version of Office is old and ugly, I won't buy from you"?

    25. Re:Where is all the money coming from? by rev_sanchez · · Score: 1

      Microsoft is the software Walmart.

      --
      If you didn't come to party don't bother knocking on my door. Prince '1999'
    26. Re:Where is all the money coming from? by antiMStroll · · Score: 1

      Profits = return - costs. What I've heard from people working for Microsoft is the company continues to reduce internal operating expenditures by trimming staff. It's 'invisible' because Microsoft employs a high proportion of semi-permanent contract personel. Staff aren't being layed off, contractor renewal options aren't being picked up, which is un-newsworthy. My understanding is being a Microsoft employee today is not what it was in the nineties.

    27. Re:Where is all the money coming from? by igny · · Score: 1

      Yet people still pay through the nose for Windows. It's inexplicable. Most of the revenue came from sales to corporations, not individual persons. If this was up to me, all Universities and colleges, all government offices, research labs, etc etc should convert to Macs and Unix servers.

      --
      In theory there is no difference between theory and practice. In practice there is. - Yogi Berra
    28. Re:Where is all the money coming from? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I hope it's because you have Apple stock and not MS's. At least that would be a logical reason.

    29. Re:Where is all the money coming from? by k96822 · · Score: 1

      I understand the frustration. What should M$ do in this case, though? They must be allowed to add new features to their software.

      I've run into problems with people's concept of Word myself. I use FrameMaker 7 for everything and do not own a personal copy of Office. When people send me Word documents, I use the Word Viewer to view them. But, when they send me Word documents to edit, I have to tell them I do not have Word (I can use it as RTF, but that usually messes-up the formatting). There is always this silence, like I've just rocked their world. "How can you not have Word," says the person who got it with their OS. "Everybody has Word. And you are a Computer Scientist?" They look like I've betrayed them or something, like I'm not a real computer user at all. It makes me chuckle.

      Now that I've added a PowerMac G5 to my setup, it'll get worse. I'm running OpenOffice, but I'm still going to upgrade from FrameMaker to InDesign and stay as far away from Word documents as I can. Now I'll get the looks from not only avoiding Word, but using a Mac (even though I run Windows XP, Debian Linux, and AmigaOS 3.1 along with it -- it's a hobby).

    30. Re:Where is all the money coming from? by ifwm · · Score: 1

      "but because for the average office drone the concept of saving in a reverse compatible format is to much of a hassel"

      This has nothing to do with MS. If your idiot personnel can't do what you tell them, then it's also a management problem.

      MS does lots of crappy stuff. I'm sure you can find a better example.

    31. Re:Where is all the money coming from? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Typical Slashbot FUD. I have never encountered an interoperability problem between versions of recent Office.

      Yeah, between 97 and XP there are issues but that's why you need to keep up on it.

    32. Re:Where is all the money coming from? by Mybrid · · Score: 1
      If there was something better, people would use it.

      Alas, do you understand what a monopoly is? There are lots of things better than Microsoft's crap. The problem is their preditory business practices that our Federal Government chooses to endorse.

      Standard oil only had a 50% market share when they were trust busted. Microsoft has 90% plus. No matter how much better any competitor is to Microsoft these days it won't matter.

      However, the naivity of people like you is what keeps the computing industry static. Your naivity is what keeps incompetent, all powerful companies like Microsoft publically popular. People's expectations are lowered because people are told nobody does it better exactly because people believe "if there was something better [other] people would use it" when in fact Microsoft's position is completely based upon preditory business practices coupled with shoddy products. If you keep your attitude then the computing industry will end up just like the automobile industry: a couple of mediocre to lousy large companies.

      One could easily make the argument that the DOMINANT reason computing technology has stagnated in this decade is because techonolgy has stagnated due to Microsoft's monopoly strangling of innovation just to keep themselves rich.

      It's time for people to wake up and understand that Microsoft doesn't compete on a technical competence level, but a business predatory level.

    33. Re:Where is all the money coming from? by ifwm · · Score: 1

      So use a mac. You people act as though MS is the ONLY alternative, and while I've heard people try to justify that idea, it fails every time.

      When you have a viable alternative, it's a little ridiculous to use "lock-in" as an excuse.

      The fact is alternatives for MS products are available. How badly you want them, and how much you'll pay, are where things get sticky.

      "the old ones are "not supported anymore" by the service garages."

      You mean like when I try to get parts for my 76 Porsche 914, and am told "That part has been discontinued"?

    34. Re:Where is all the money coming from? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well if that office drone cannot or will not "save as"....I would be looking for someone who would! That is not an MS problem its an employee problem...

      Since when does MS force upgrades? Last time I checked a NT 4 box can logon to an NT 4 Domain AD 1.0 or an AD 2.0 domain. Sames goes for Win2k and XP. We are at AD 2.0 (server 2003) and amazingly enough we still have an Exchang 5.5 SERVER!!!!!! and MS SQL 7.0......as well several Win2k servers and hundreds of workstations.....Please explain that, since MS forces upgraged?........Wait let me save you the time and effort THEY DO NOT FORCE UPGRADES!!!need me to say it again? Dont let your hate of MS cloud the facts......

      Opps looks like I just bustd' your little "forced upgrades" anti/hate everything MS bubble........

    35. Re:Where is all the money coming from? by soulhuntre · · Score: 1

      This isn't because it is impossible to exchange information between most versions, but because for the average office drone the concept of saving in a reverse compatible format is to much of a hassel.

      So Microsoft is to blame because users don't know how to make use of the tool stitting right in front of them.

      Man, it will be interesting if Linux ever makes it big on the desktop and all these problems happen again and I get to see people say "It's not Linux's fault the users are stupid!"

      Oh, wait - if we replace the word "user" with "administrator" we can see this double standard at work today.

      Further, if MS had kept the formats the same since 97 and never added a feature, or made an improvement we could then watch people trash them for moving too slow.

      As for the truck analogy - it's a bad one. Try this ...

      "That damn Internet conspiracy! I can't get all the data I need to run a business because I won't upgrade from my telegraph! It's a conspiracy to keep me from doing business I tell you! Bah progress! Humbug!"

      --
      --> Fight tyranny and repression.... read /. at -1!
    36. Re:Where is all the money coming from? by soulhuntre · · Score: 1

      Alas, do you understand what a monopoly is? There are lots of things better than Microsoft's crap. The problem is their preditory business practices that our Federal Government chooses to endorse.

      This is a great fiction. It is one so powerful, and so appealing to those who have failed to compete that it has now entered the realm of religeous truth.

      Now, obviously MS has done some illegal things, like all large companies have - but the illusion that the only reasont hey stay on top is because of this and not their product is to forever misunderstand your opponent.

      However, it seems clear many woudl rather be wrong and fail with their elitism intact than see the real issues at work and get going on actually competing.

      --
      --> Fight tyranny and repression.... read /. at -1!
    37. Re:Where is all the money coming from? by Politburo · · Score: 1

      While lock-in and MS market dominance do depress the market, it cannot be said that these are the dominant reasons for technology stagnating. IMO, there are two main reasons for the stagnation. One is simple economic recession. The other is a backlash from the tech boom. Companies aren't going to invest millions of dollars in tech at the drop of a hat anymore. They're going to want some sort of return on their investment, and that means they need some sort of assurance that the products will sell.

      There are lots of things better than Microsoft's crap.

      There are? How many OSes are there for general desktop use? 3? Okay, 4 if you count BSD. Are they all better than MS on a technical standpoint, yes. But only one is better than MS on a usability standpoint and we all know that is OS X. Until a few weeks ago, using OS X required buying overpriced hardware, which limited the market for OS X. As I said in my initial post, it remains to be seen whether this will have a strong effect on the market.

      Standard oil only had a 50% market share when they were trust busted. Microsoft has 90% plus. No matter how much better any competitor is to Microsoft these days it won't matter.

      IMO, Mozilla/Firefox is a strong counterexample to this assertion. Also, I need to remind you that simply being a monopoly is not illegal. It is using that monopoly unfairly that is a problem. MS was found to use their monopoly unfairly, but then it turned out that the judge had the appearance of prejudice, and nothing really came of it.

      Your naivity is what keeps incompetent, all powerful companies like Microsoft publically popular.

      Well, since you were able to figure me out based on a 3 paragraph slashdot post, you must be right. However, back in reality, MS isn't really that popular. People bitch about MS products ALL THE TIME. The only reason they still use them is because they do not feel that there are better+cheaper+easier-to-use alternatives.

      And that's the thing that some people can't grasp about MS. It's not about just being technically better. It's not about just being easier to use, and it's not about just being cheaper. There is a balance between all three of these items, and in the current market, MS is in the right spot. Until Linux gets easier to use for the general public, or Macs get cheap enough, or another OS comes along that adequately satisfies all of these desires, MS will continue to dominate.

    38. Re:Where is all the money coming from? by poot_rootbeer · · Score: 1

      Win2K->WinXP was just a hideous facelift.

      MAN TRUE.

      If a hideous facelift is what you look for in an OS upgrade, might as well just migrate to KDGnomelinux!

    39. Re:Where is all the money coming from? by Billly+Gates · · Score: 1

      Really?

      How do you send word docs that are not improrerly formated unser MS Word with customers?

      How do you migrated MS-Exchange/Outlook apps with custom CRM and calander apps?

      How do you migrate VB sql-server apps?

      Catch my drift?

      You use MS because you have to in order to survive and you do whatever the hell they tell you to do.

    40. Re:Where is all the money coming from? by Billly+Gates · · Score: 1

      Yes but they work much better than openoffice.

      Many businesses use VBA anyway which can not run on anything but ms.

    41. Re:Where is all the money coming from? by Kethinov · · Score: 1

      So tell your customers / clients / other businesses you're working with to use the same OSS. For crying out loud, it's free. That means it costs them nothing to open up that file in exactly the same program it was created in.

      The real issue isn't OSS interoperability. The issue is nobody is willing to change, or learn anything. Businesses equate new software, even if free, with retraining. And to them that translates to costing money because most of their employees don't have computer skills basic enough to read buttons and menus on GUIs.

      I once worked with a woman who refused to read dialog boxes on principle. I rebooted her computer after updating it for her one day and the next time she went to turn it off, she couldn't figure out why it kept rebooting. The shutdown windows dialog's default had changed to reboot instead of shutdown because that was the last selected option. She wouldn't even read the menu.

      No, I'd definitely say that fear of change and resistance to learning threatens OSS spreading moreso than interoperability.

      --
      You're right, I wouldn't steal a car. But if it were possible, I sure as hell would download one!
    42. Re:Where is all the money coming from? by tmortn · · Score: 1

      When this occurs in my experience the problem is not your drones it is someone elses drones. Again the force dosn't come from M$ holding a gun to your head. It comes because they entice some people to upgrade. Then these people who have upgraded begin to face problems in their information sharing with businesses that are not upgraded. In some cases you might have a roll back but in others you have force upgrades for business compatibility reasons. It is a snowball effect and once it reaches critical mass it dosn't take to long before the new version is adapted by the majority of users.

      ie business X interacts with business Y. Business Y upgrades and has idiotic drones that do not understand the concept of reverse compatibility. Now your reduced to their level of competence and not what you can train your people to do. Short of teaching them to patiently train the other staff over the phone which is not what you pay them to do.

      So one business decides to upgrade that is HUGE and they have data transactions with other companies. They run into problems either from their own employees being incompetent or the smaller businesses being unable to read their formats. Instead of user training to be more savvy to the capabilities of the programs they simply dictate that all business will henceforth be by X format only or there will be X fee asciciated or even that the jobs will no longer be accepted.

      I have dealt with this very issue from both sides in the Bulk mail world. Not just spam but bulk mail to large client mailing lists ( like UPS stock holders, or Turner Movie Club membership etc ).

      I am not against improovements but good lord. How much has Word and or Excell really changed in the last 10 years ? Why does M$ shroud the details of the changes to their formats. Why, once it is more or less easily used across multiple platforms, does the new version pretty much always arrive ?

      --
      I don't ask you to be me. I only ask you not expect me to be you.
    43. Re:Where is all the money coming from? by tmortn · · Score: 1

      Hmmmm repeat after me. Server solutions are not office suites.

      --
      I don't ask you to be me. I only ask you not expect me to be you.
    44. Re:Where is all the money coming from? by Mybrid · · Score: 1

      You just don't get it do you. Think automobile industry. Those who have failed to compete, eh? Try and start a new car company in America. Try and start a OS company in America. Think very carefully. You convince me that you would have any chance, any chance, that with a better automobile idea that the major automobile companies would let you start that company. Tyranny's biggest chains these days are not those chains of perceived oppression, but those that are invisible. Think the Matrix. You actually really believe that some new idea of a better operating system would actually stand a chance to survive in today's market?

    45. Re:Where is all the money coming from? by Mybrid · · Score: 1
      There are?

      Yes there are. Just because you are unaware of them doesn't mean they don't exist. Having said that of course with Microsoft's 90% market share arguably how would you or anyone unless you looked really long and hard.

      But only one is better than MS on a usability standpoint

      Interesting claim but certainly not fact at all. This is your prison this belief.

      There is a balance between all three of these items, and in the current market, MS is in the right spot.

      That's your bondage. You are a slave to this perception. You have a good rationalization and denial skills.

    46. Re:Where is all the money coming from? by soulhuntre · · Score: 1

      You actually really believe that some new idea of a better operating system would actually stand a chance to survive in today's market?

      That depends ...

      Can they bring it to market?

      Can they capitalize it's development?

      Are they comeptent?

      Is there a market for another OS not being met by a current one?

      Is the new OS enough of an advantage to make the conversion cost a non issue?

      Is it dependable?

      Is it usable?

      Will the company be percieved as strong enough to attract developers?

      See... the fact that someone has a "better idea" has never been the only factor in business... in any business. Thats not MS's fault, thats reality.

      I may have a great idea for a better toaster - but if I can't fund development, productionand advertising it doesn't amke a damn bit of difference... unless yous omehow think it is an obligation for yoru competators to pay for your start up costs?

      Linux, for example, had a compelling story for a while... and it succeeded. So clearly when the right factors happen it can be done.

      --
      --> Fight tyranny and repression.... read /. at -1!
    47. Re:Where is all the money coming from? by Politburo · · Score: 1

      Yes there are. Just because you are unaware of them doesn't mean they don't exist.

      Why din't you name any, then? Look, I'm not against anything non-MS. It's just that I don't see anything else besides Mac and Linux, and no one else I've talked to does either. If there are other alternatives, as you claim, let's hear it!!!

      Interesting claim but certainly not fact at all. This is your prison this belief.

      Why can't you counter it with more than "you're wrong"? What, *for the average user*, is easier to use than OS X? After that, what is easier to use than Windows? Again, I'm not saying Windows is great. It's just better than all but one of the alternatives (unless one of your mystery alternatives fills the void?).

      That's your bondage. You are a slave to this perception. You have a good rationalization and denial skills.

      It's a statement based on market realities. I'm sorry that you can't open your eyes. When a product has 90% market share, they must be doing something right.

  29. This just shows how Piracy is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    .. completely destroying the industry! I call for more draconian laws to curb the practice which is clearly destorying Microsoft and robbing its shareholders of profits!

    1. Re:This just shows how Piracy is by puckylunk · · Score: 1

      If server sales and xbox are their prime moneymakers, then where does piracy come into this? Servers ship with legit licenses, right? And it's difficult to pirate hardware with out first breaking and entering. I'm just thanking Billmer that they have these other divisions to offset the substantial losses brought on by software piracy. You watch, next year they'll be reporting more record sales due to the crackdown on software piracy! Not that I'm a huge MS supporter. Psh. I do kinda dig what the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation is doing, though. I mean, at least SOME of the money is being put to good use.

  30. Xbox sales boost profits? by xtermin8 · · Score: 1

    "Microsoft has attributed the rise in earnings to... more XBox units being sold." Wow! Is this credible?

    1. Re:Xbox sales boost profits? by codesurfer · · Score: 1

      I would think that it may account for some of the rise, alright. More and more people are using XBoxes as a complete media center (no pun intended about MediaCenter, which the Xbox can run). Once modded and hooked to the computer, you've got games, tv programs, movies, music all right there. Once torrents came on the scene, a lot more people started modding those boxes.

    2. Re:Xbox sales boost profits? by Von+Helmet · · Score: 1

      Well, I've heard that apparently buying an XBox actually costs MS money (the parts themselves cost more than they sell them for), so it's not the consoles themselves that are making the money. Console games however... see printer companies for a similar business model.

    3. Re:Xbox sales boost profits? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They didn't make money selling Xboxes. They made money selling Halo 2.

    4. Re:Xbox sales boost profits? by pandrijeczko · · Score: 1

      Wow! Steve Ballmer's coming on a little strong this afternoon, ain't he?

      --
      Gentoo Linux - another day, another USE flag.
    5. Re:Xbox sales boost profits? by RailGunner · · Score: 4, Interesting
      Certainly. And if you look at my comment history, where I argued against people who thought "If you buy an XBox, MS loses money" - where I told them if they wanted to hurt MS then they just shouldn't buy one period - well, you'll see I was right.

      Most console hardware is only a loss leader at launch - eventually, they will get cheaper to produce, as the price of components goes down. Look at the cost of processors - you can get a Pentium 3 800 Mhz at Fry's for what, $20, if even that now? Look at Hard Drive prices - can you even find an 8 GB Hard drive on a shelf? Even if you could, what would you pay for it?

      And you have to figure that MS is buying bulk, and is getting an even cheaper price. So, yes, I would image right now XBox hardware sales are giving MS profit.

      And as far as Halo 2 goes... even if it comes out for the PC, I won't be buying it. Nor will I buy Age of Empires 3. (No, I will not pirate them either - I'm just not interested in owning or playing any Microsoft product.)

      Besides - Burnout 3 is also a helluva lot of fun on my PS2.

    6. Re:Xbox sales boost profits? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      have you ever heard the expression "cut your nose off to spite your face"? kinda retarded.

    7. Re:Xbox sales boost profits? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Besides - Burnout 3 is also a helluva lot of fun on my PS2.

      Just go ahead and trade one monopoly for another, eh? Witness EA's movings in the sports department.

    8. Re:Xbox sales boost profits? by FriedTurkey · · Score: 1

      Yes the XBox division made their first profit. A better question is: "Do people still justify buying an Xbox by saying 'I am helping Microsoft lose money'"?? I doesn't bother me if you want a Xbox but stop lying to yourself that you aren't supporting Microsoft.

    9. Re:Xbox sales boost profits? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      eventually, they will get cheaper to produce, as the price of components goes down... Look at Hard Drive prices - can you even find an 8 GB Hard drive on a shelf? Even if you could, what would you pay for it?

      The fact that they are using an 8 GB hard drive probably isn't going to make it that much cheaper than larger capacity drives. Since consumers don't buy 8 GB drives anymore, they will make the drives in smaller quantities than they used to. Smaller quantities = little to no price drop for customer (Microsoft). Whoever is making them still is probably charging Microsoft alot since they could be using that production line to produce higher capacity drives that consumers would want buy.

      When Microsoft drops the price of the XBox from time to time, it probably reflects price drops of other components like CPUs, RAM, etc except for the HD. Therefore they are still probably around the break even point on the hardware, perhaps even still losing money.

    10. Re:Xbox sales boost profits? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I'm just not interested in owning or playing any Microsoft product"

      Yet you have a hotmail address (Rail_Gunner@hotmail.com).

      Moron.

    11. Re:Xbox sales boost profits? by kai.chan · · Score: 1

      What you've said is very true. However, there are a lot of Slashdotters who knows about Microsoft's business tactics and how they are detrimental to innovation, but they turn around and buy an XBox and Halo. They then go on to proclaim Microsoft's entry into the console market is a good thing.

      When Halo 1 and Halo 2 was released, and a story was posted on Slashdot, I was amazed at how many readers came out to provide their support for a company they usually dislike.

  31. Can anybody say "New CEO" by malcomvetter · · Score: 1

    Isn't anyone going to mention how Gates relieving the CEO spot to Steve Ballmer had an effect on this?

  32. the microsoft tax by OglinTatas · · Score: 1, Troll

    "Microsoft's income is about the same as New York State receives in taxes - below California, and well above the other 48 states."

    I stopped paying the microsoft tax last year when I bought my first Mac.

    1. Re:the microsoft tax by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So you've switched to the Apple Tax then?

      Six of one, a half-dozen of the other...

    2. Re:the microsoft tax by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      so now its the apple tax.....?

    3. Re:the microsoft tax by OglinTatas · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      one good troll deserves another, I guess.

      letsee: $1300 for the mac, or $800 (minus a 15" LCD, whatever that would have cost back then) for a bitchin AMD game rig. $150 for a hardware bound license of xppro. (prices are approximate--what I remember from a price comparison last year)

      Hmmm... I spent and extra $350 to not pay Bill, and guess what? I actually have fun with the damn thing, no constant fighting with the OS, no constant rebooting, no constant spyware/adware/virus scrubbing, no running programs with admin rights because for some reason it will not run in a user or even poweruser account.

      Is getting your life back worth a $350 apple tax? It was for me, especially since I still have to deal with all the MS baggage at work. When I get home I just want to relax.

      Macs just work. Windows just seems to work... at first. Anyway, my original point is that Bill will not get any more money from me.

    4. Re:the microsoft tax by Politburo · · Score: 2, Funny

      I stopped paying the microsoft tax last year when I bought my first Mac.

      And you started paying the Apple Tax.

      What you just said is like this: "I stopped paying NY state taxes last year when I moved to NJ."

    5. Re:the microsoft tax by quacking+duck · · Score: 1

      Just like lottery tickets, it's not a tax if you're willingly forking it over ;-)

    6. Re:the microsoft tax by octal666 · · Score: 1

      At least, when you pay the Apple Tax, you see something usefull is done with your money, compare Windows XP SP2 with Mac OS X Tiger.

      Let's see how the Longhorn is done with 1,5B$ less on R&D.

      --
      DON'T PANIC
  33. Growth Rate by webword · · Score: 2, Interesting

    "We have to discern the enthusiasm over 7 percent growth versus 30 to 50 percent growth we had seen 10 years ago..."

    You have to keep in mind that it really will get harder and harder to maintain high growth rates. Multi-million dollar markets are not big enough for M$ now. They will only enter larger (billion dollar) markets. Furthermore, without market and sales growth, their stock price simply cannot grow at a high rate. Think "mature company" not "young, fast, growing company" from here going forward.

    1. Re:Growth Rate by Billly+Gates · · Score: 1

      True is that growth rates slow down but bigger companies are safer investments.

      Mainly because they enter new markets when growth is needed. THe size causes them to take in alot of money in return.

      MS has been outsourcing to India recently which is also why they are more profitable.

  34. Re:Old earnings? by canuck57 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    This isn't another episode of funny accounting is it?

    It is of sorts. Microsoft has so much cash in various accounts is is commonly known in the past that not was all accounted for as to make their profits more reasonable. With a 80-90% markup in North American markets does not hurt either.

    Y2K was 4-5 years ago, and alot of the sales are upgrades from NT to W2000 or W2003. 1999 was a bubble sales year and after 4-5 years write down many companies will upgrade servers. Sales for this type are Y2K cyclical and will not last.

    And if you don't plow the income into R&D to fix issues of security, usability and reliability then it is like milking a cow without feeding it.

    Novell had such a bubble near it's end at the top as did Digital and IBM before them. History is just repeating itself.

  35. not possible... by Ian+0x57 · · Score: 0

    I read here everyday how MS is doomed... this must be wrong :)

  36. Yeah, well they halved R&D expenditures... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...from what they spent the previous year.

    When you're slashing expenses like that, it shouldn't be too hard to keep the money around to claim as profit.

  37. You will be assimilated by AviLazar · · Score: 1

    To put it in perspective, Microsoft's income is about the same as New York State receives in taxes - below California, and well above the other 48 states.

    And in the news today, Bill Gates says:

    "Come join our friendly community, we promise to tax you less then California, but in our wonderful community you get great programs to."

    Microsoft has decided to cede from the union and create their own country.

    --

    I mod down so you can mod up. Your welcome.
  38. Re:Of course by pandrijeczko · · Score: 1
    And I'm still not sure about Linux (or other free os) defeating Windows.

    Sorry, but where did you get this idea from? I don't recall Linus Torvalds, Richard Stallman or any of the other Open Source people ever talk about defeating Windows...

    Linux is an alternative and a good one at that. It exists despite Windows and it's getting better and better as time goes on - that's all that matters...

    --
    Gentoo Linux - another day, another USE flag.
  39. The Register suggests.. by lurvdrum · · Score: 5, Interesting

    ...that 1.5 billion of the increase in profit is due to a 1.5 billion reduction in R&D. Wonder what long term effect halving the R&D budget will have on future MS technology?

    1. Re:The Register suggests.. by SpongeBobLinuxPants · · Score: 3, Funny

      The R&D department was replaced by 1 guy google'ing companies for M$ to buy.

    2. Re:The Register suggests.. by miffo.swe · · Score: 1

      Not much. When was the last time you saw something useful spring out of MS R&D? They just buy/rob some little company that has done all the hard work as always before.

      --
      HTTP/1.1 400
    3. Re:The Register suggests.. by nekoniku · · Score: 1

      Wonder what long term effect halving the R&D budget will have on future MS technology?

      Hey, no problem; Apple's still in business, right?
      Seriously, though, it has long seemed to me that Microsoft's R&D department consists of Apple and small companies Microsoft buys into the fold.

      --
      "It's a wonderful idea. But it doesn't work." -- Tad Danielewski
    4. Re:The Register suggests.. by hcdejong · · Score: 0, Troll

      In view of the amazing innovations we've seen in recent years (ie none), I'd say the long-term effect isn't going to be shocking.
      Even $1.5B is plenty for "Redmond, start your photocopiers".

    5. Re:The Register suggests.. by sootman · · Score: 1

      Shouldn't be a problem. Apple is doing quite well these days, so MS can afford to trim a little here. :-)

      --
      Dear Slashdot: next time you want to mess with the site, add a rich-text editor for comments.
    6. Re:The Register suggests.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Microsoft products will probably improve in both stability and performance now that they've slashed the "innovation" department.

    7. Re:The Register suggests.. by biz0r · · Score: 1

      Maybe I just don't understand what you are saying here...but if a competitor (Apple) is doing well, then MS cannot afford to cut corners in R&D as that's where any innovation and new ideas will come from (as far as MS is concerned). So halving their R&D in this instance may improve short term earnings #s, but could very possibly have a horrible effect in the long term.

      Or, I could've just completely misunderstood your post...feel free to correct me if that is the case.

      --
      /* sig */
    8. Re:The Register suggests.. by sootman · · Score: 1

      It's an old joke that Apple is MS's R & D division--that MS copies everything from Apple. So if Apple is doing well (i.e., will still be in business in the near future), then MS doesn't have to invest in R & D because Apple will be around to do it for them.

      --
      Dear Slashdot: next time you want to mess with the site, add a rich-text editor for comments.
    9. Re:The Register suggests.. by Locutus · · Score: 1

      As everyone knows, Microsofts R&D department isn't really coming up with anything new and never has. IMO, that money sink is just a way for MSFT to buffer the financials. Notice how all those losing business unit just recently had it's earnings propped up? They were all losing money for years and years. Look at the WinCE unit with it's ($250) million losses almost every quarter since day one( 8+ years ago ).

      Nope, the future of MSFT is changing and creative financing is the new innovation at Microsoft. They faked the computer tech industry( read PHB's ) and not it's time to do the same to WallStreet. Bill and Steve don't like to lose but they also don't realize they won the lottery back in the early 80's and though the ride isn't down yet, it sure isn't what it used to be.

      LoB

      --
      "Anyone who stands out in the middle of a road looks like roadkill to me." --Linus
    10. Re:The Register suggests.. by hawk · · Score: 1

      > Not much. When was the last time you saw something
      >useful spring out of MS R&D?

      1993, of course. Why do you ask?

      hawk

    11. Re:The Register suggests.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Does MS actually do any decent R&D? I can barely think of any innovations coming out of Redmond. More like imitations.

    12. Re:The Register suggests.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well who says we need innovation? I'd be up for Windows 2000 Second Edition where they fixed all the junk, secured it, and avoided all the bullshit in XP. Microsoft office 2000 was perfectly functional, but just needs stability and minor memory usage improvements. Windows Media player kicked ass back at version 6.4

      More and more I think MS needs to STOP what they call innovation (which is just adding more garbage) and focus on the product and its purpose.

    13. Re:The Register suggests.. by biz0r · · Score: 1

      Doh, I stand corrected. Thank you.

      --
      /* sig */
    14. Re:The Register suggests.. by jesterzog · · Score: 1

      As everyone knows, Microsofts R&D department isn't really coming up with anything new and never has.

      Actually, Microsoft employs some great researchers who have a lot of respect in academia and elsewhere. It's not fair to claim that Microsoft Research doesn't do anything constructive or innovative.

      If you follow some of their output, MS Research produces a lot of interesting work. For instance, Microsoft's employment of perhaps half of the prominent functional programmers and language designers in the recent past has arguably had quite an impact on language design in their .net platform. (I don't really follow language stuff these days, so in this case I'm quoting what I've heard.)

      Where the main problem lies is that so much of their research output doesn't seem to actually make it into Microsoft products. That's one reason why, for instance, the Microsoft Windows user interface has been so hopelessly drab and annoying for so long. The marketers would rather have the glitter that appeals to consumer's interpretation of "good usability" than actually work on implementing genuine usability. Surprisingly, there are a lot of people out there who think something's more usable entirely because it has a GUI and looks tidy, and those first impressions are frequently what sells products moreso than long term evaluation which costs time, money, and is boring.

      Unfortunately the results of research aren't employed in the commercial world until someone decides to implement them, and that's why Windows is so ironically bad against so much of what we know in all kinds of areas. One would think that Microsoft is in a much better position to take advantage of their own research commercially than universities and other primarily research organisations, but regrettably they don't.

      My own belief is that apart from providing some token commercial benefit for Microsoft here and there, one of the main purposes of Microsoft Research is to maintain respect from academics by giving something back to the world. It also functions to snap up good researchers, primarily so that nobody else can have them and get an advantage over Microsoft's existing products.

    15. Re:The Register suggests.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, halving R&D will obviously stymie "future MS technology", but that may be in line with what kind of role Microsoft wants to play.

      Compare and contrast HP (huge R&D investments, new technologies, patent everything in sight) to Dell (little to no R&D, repackage and sell other people's technology in new ways). Two different roles, but both companies have shown they can be ridiculously profitable if managed right, and on opposite ends of the R&D spending spectrum.

    16. Re:The Register suggests.. by Locutus · · Score: 1

      Very nicely written but except for the part about part where you say that Microsoft snaps up good researchers "primarily so that nobody else can have them".

      Everything I've seen or heard from Microsoft and Bill come AFTER someone else has already done much of the work. Win API after Apple, DDE from Wang, COM from SOM, ActiveX and dotNet from JAVA, Cleartype again from Apple, and many many others.

      Considering how closely Bill Gates runs that ship, the fact that their stuff still stinks is more of an indication that it's research department isn't much of one. I don't care what they pay people to spin their wheels on, it's not showing up out here. And man, does academia really respect Microsofts technology? Most all of my instructors laughed at it and most all developers who've worked on other OS's( OS/2 and UNIX ) feel Windows is inferior technology.

      I do agree that they hire many of the best in the industry but from what I've seen( see halloween docs ), it's like you say, they do it to keep these people from doing real work for others. If Microsoft hadn't do so much to kill off innovative tech year after year, I'd not be soo anti-MS but year after year they attack anything which starts getting interesting and many times bury it.

      I do agree that alot of research never finds a home in the market but again, like you say, that's exactly how Microsoft works. Therefore, I'll stick by what I said earlier unless something else comes to light.

      BTW, those exclusive academic contracts which showed up over the past couple of years were very "interesting"....

      LoB

      --
      "Anyone who stands out in the middle of a road looks like roadkill to me." --Linus
    17. Re:The Register suggests.. by miffo.swe · · Score: 1

      The only thing i can remember came 1993 was Windows NT. To my knowledge NT wasnt designed inhouse. If you delve down into it you will soon see that most if not every product has been a complete ripoff. Microsoft just dont have it in them to innovate. Without small companies to get things from the state of computing would stand firm as a mountain on the same spot.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Microsof t_ Windows
      http://www.ntsecrets.com/info/whatisit.ht m

      --
      HTTP/1.1 400
    18. Re:The Register suggests.. by hawk · · Score: 1

      I'm thinking of Word 5.1 and Excel 4.0, actually.

      hawk

  40. Virtualization? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Could this somehow be related to a move toward utility computing in large / medium enterprises where virtual M$ servers running in products like EMC's VMWare still require a license?

    1. Re:Virtualization? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No.

  41. All I care about is... by pandrijeczko · · Score: 1

    ...that apart from the occasional piece of MS-branded hardware, like mice or keyboards, none of their profits came from my hard-earned cash.

    --
    Gentoo Linux - another day, another USE flag.
    1. Re:All I care about is... by puckylunk · · Score: 1

      What's wrong with Logitech? ;)

      Granted, they've got a knack for changing around the Ins/Del/Home/End/PgUp/PgDn keys, which drives me nuts, but MS is doing the same thing.

  42. Copy-protection scheme working by takis · · Score: 1

    Maybe it's just because their copy-protection scheme are getting better. I know a lot of people who used to copy Windows CD's until XP, which they for some reason couldn't.

    This would make their marketshare stagnant and their income rising.

    1. Re:Copy-protection scheme working by pandrijeczko · · Score: 1
      Maybe it's just because their copy-protection scheme are getting better.

      For products like XP that are sold through computer stores to the general public, this may be the case. But MSDN CDs have very little in the way protection on them and everyone I know who runs MS products at home just copies those from work.

      I always find it amusing asking my peers and colleagues if they would still use MS products if they were forced to pay the going prices for them and not get them for free.

      The analogy to MS being the "drug pusher" is perfect - most people now have their "MS addiction", from this point on, as DRM and copy protection become more widespread, the addicted users are going to have to start paying for the products.

      It's going to be interesting to see what the take up of Open Source will be over the next few years as MS starts clamping down on copying.

      --
      Gentoo Linux - another day, another USE flag.
    2. Re:Copy-protection scheme working by William_Lee · · Score: 1

      Their copy protection schemes remain as weak as ever. Trust me, anyone who wants to run a pirated copy of Windows XP is running one. Ever since the original build of XP, they've been easily available, simple to install, and with a keygen/changer, easy enough to masquerade as a valid copy.

      I doubt this is coming into play as a factor in helping their income.

    3. Re:Copy-protection scheme working by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah but is it sustainable? It's true that in places like China they used illegal copies for years and now Microsoft is making them pay up. But are they really going to keep paying? Why do you think China is suddenly so interested in Linux?

  43. Yet, the outsourcing continues by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    (Posting anonymously to save my hide)

    A good portion of Microsoft PSS has been flushed to "better utilize [Microsoft's] world wide resources," in the words of the VP of PSS. The Bangalore India site is now taking Premier contract calls, while Wipro and Convergys sites in Mumbai are taking the bulk of Professional call volume. A Canada site has been online for about a year and a half taking a combination of Pre and Pro depending on time of day.

    All this, and Microsoft continues to rake in the cash. Their US employees are getting flushed by the boatload (platforms and Exchange support in the US are shells of what they used to be, especially at the two non-Seattle sites), all because Microsoft wants to save a few dimes on support. If you are a Premier or Professional-Partner subscription holder, please tell your account manager you don't want this. India is about to start taking Premier-level calls, and that's hopefully when the Dell-style crap will hit the fan...

  44. But...but..Eric Raymond said Microsoft was doomed! by mr_majestyk · · Score: 1

    December, 1998:
    "I've said it before in public, and I'll stick my neck out again," says Raymond, "Microsoft will no longer be a factor in that market in 18 months."

  45. That explains their exceptional stock performance! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As shown here

  46. Re:Of course by mOoZik · · Score: 0

    Who are you kidding? The Linux fanboys on Slashdot and just about any other OSS coder believes that Linux will overate MS and become the next Windows. Hell, Torvalds said something along those lines in the recent issue of BusinessWeek magazine, which incidentally, I submitted to Slashdot, was accepted, but never published.

  47. Lower per-share compensation by npistentis · · Score: 3, Informative

    The increase in earnings is a result of lower compensation per share- instead of offering a 2-to-1 split or dividends to their investors, Microsoft kept the cash on hand. At the same time, demand for Windows and Office products dropped.

    --
    Gentlemen, you can't fight in here! This is the War Room!
    1. Re:Lower per-share compensation by Tod+DeBie · · Score: 1

      Their earnings are lower because they did not split or offer a dividend? WTF are you talking about? A split would have no impact whatsoever on earnings. As for a dividend, last year, Microsoft paid out the largest one time dividend in the history of the world ($32 Billon), doubled their annual dividend to 32cps and announced a $30 Billon four year stock buy back.

      Microsoft's dividend was so large, it actually increased US personal income by 2.9%!

      http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/businesste ch nology/2002157688_dividend22.html

    2. Re:Lower per-share compensation by npistentis · · Score: 1

      just giving the information I heard on NPR last night...

      --
      Gentlemen, you can't fight in here! This is the War Room!
    3. Re:Lower per-share compensation by Tod+DeBie · · Score: 1
      just giving the information I heard on NPR last night...
      That is obviously the problem. I would not expect them to know that splits don't impact earnings or revenue and that Microsoft did in fact give a huge dividend last year.
    4. Re:Lower per-share compensation by kalinh · · Score: 1

      hey moderators, mod parent up. the grandparent poster was completely ignorant of what he was talking about.

      --

      Metamuscle.com - News in the Iro

  48. Gates' political leanings? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    No, he's probably still grinning after yesterday, when Tony Blair lent him political legitimacy by sitting down to a world economic conference with him :/

    1. Re:Gates' political leanings? by KarmaMB84 · · Score: 2, Funny

      But who lent Tony Blair political legitimacy, and does Tony not know it's not nice to lend out someone else's stuff?

    2. Re:Gates' political leanings? by SgtChaireBourne · · Score: 1
      Chairman Bill looks like he plans to walk over anyone and any country that will allow it. He has already been in effect designating consuls / ambassadors to keep designated countries on the short leash and away from open standards or open source.

      --
      Beta is broken and the link to classic doesn't work. Stop wasting our time or there won't be anybody left here.
  49. Lying with statistics, MS style by Ancient_Hacker · · Score: 1

    Sure, you can say profits have doubled, if last quarter was unusually bad, or you took some large charges last quarter, or if there was some non-recurring windfall this quarter. And IIRC they were losing money on xbox hardware, how can they make that up on volume? Hmmmm... { I recall talking to a TI salesman, in the glory days ( Sept 15-17, 1983 ) of the TI-99 computer. He managed to keep a straight face, admitting they lost money on each one, but would make it up on volume. }

  50. They cook the books. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I used to temp for MS from 1998-2000, I was a bus rider and the traffic was so bad from Redmond to Seattle that some employees would cruise the bus stops asking for a third person to qualify for the car pool lane. If you didn't take the HOV lane, it would add 45 to 90 minutes to your commute.

    One time I got a ride with someone from accounting. The conversation must have been started about how they posted record profits that day and he was all giddy about it. He went on about how they withhold money back in some financial quarts in order to show off record results in another. I'm sure this has become familiar with many people over the 90s that once or twice a year MS would post record profits. The sole purpose would be to drive up the price of the stock. I laughed and asked him if it were legal, he said that not only was it legal, but very common in the industry. What he was doing wasn't any different from what other companies did during the dot com explosion.

    I haven't temped there in a while, im not sure how things are in the labs or meeting rooms. Everyone benefits from a higher stock price, but im thinking this may be to keep their talent from jumping ship. Back in the mid to late 90s, a program manger or developer could be expected to work there for 7 years, then cash in all their stock options and retire at the ripe old age of 30. Its obviously not like that now because the stock price is lower and has been like that for several years. Investors really aren't that worried about the stock price, they are in it for the long term investment. But not the workers! Oh no, they want to work that 7 years and get the hell out of dodge and its the stock options that really keeps a MS employee working there. I've heard it from a few developers that if it wasn't for the stock options, they would quit their jobs in a heartbeat.

    1. Re:They cook the books. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      The practise you describe was very normal in the 80's and 90's. GE did it for 25 years!

      They used various financial instruments and accounting techniques to achive "steady growth" because thats what the stock market expected from the company. So instead of a very volatile stock at each quarter eranings release, the investors more or less knew what to expect.

    2. Re:They cook the books. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      That's fine and dandy to do 4 years ago. With Sarbane's Oxley in place there ain't a chance in hell you can do this anymore. These profits are legit.

      Hell 2 years ago and you'd still burn for this, ever since Enron got busted the auditing firms are keeping a much closer eye on public companies.

    3. Re:They cook the books. by thoth · · Score: 1
      I've heard it from a few developers that if it wasn't for the stock options, they would quit their jobs in a heartbeat.

      We will see soon enough. MS doesn't issue stock options anymore to the regular (non executive) employees. Instead, they give stock grants, which don't have as much profit potential. Of course, there are still unexpired stock options floating around, but most/all are underwater.

    4. Re:They cook the books. by johndeeregator · · Score: 1

      This is neither legal nor common. The companies who have done this in the past and their CFOs have gotten in big trouble for cooking the books in this way.

      Someone please mod down this parent.

    5. Re:They cook the books. by GoofyBoy · · Score: 1

      >He went on about how they withhold money back in some financial quarts in order to show off record results in another.

      It was very common to do this before. Not sure how much it is now.

      Depending how they did it, it could be legal, but technically its illegal (then and now).

      --
      The surprise isn't how often we make bad choices; the surprise is how seldom they defeat us.
    6. Re:They cook the books. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      RE: I used to temp for MS from 1998-2000, I was a bus rider and the traffic was so bad from Redmond to Seattle that some employees would cruise the bus stops asking for a third person to qualify for the car pool lane. If you didn't take the HOV lane, it would add 45 to 90 minutes to your commute.

      - - - - -

      what a rat race, glad i am not part of it...

    7. Re:They cook the books. by Ice+Station+Zebra · · Score: 1

      SOX is like .NET nobody really understands what it is. I like to think of it has a way to keep people from really knowing what the accounts are actually doing by locking everybody who could potentially whistle blow out of the system.

    8. Re:They cook the books. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      RE: what a rat race, glad i am not part of it...

      Oh yeah, what a nightmare it would be if there was a sporting event going on. Im much happier in my current job, which has a much faster pace, pays 8$ less per hour, and offers me a 10 minute walk to work. The only problem with it is that my boss knows I used to temp for MS, and is fearful that I might 'hack' thier 'gibsons'. So when someone asks me about how to fix a problem, I tell them I dont know anything about computers (even though they know I do), and quietly walk away.

    9. Re:They cook the books. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I call shenanigans. No competent accountant would disclose information like that... especially to a temp.

    10. Re:They cook the books. by iabervon · · Score: 1

      I wouldn't be too surprised if this quarter's results were due to new acounting standards forcing them to report a backlog of unreported profit that they'd made over the years and hidden so that they could report completely predictable earnings. Analysts have been saying for a long time that MS earnings are just too regular, and that they must be doing this sort of thing. In order for it to be at all reasonable, they have to underreport earnings, not overreport them, which means that they have to maintain extra earnings. If they had to report these now, they would clearly have a report quarter.

    11. Re:They cook the books. by hawk · · Score: 1

      One share and one stock option have *exactly* the same profit potential. (but diffrent downsides).

      NOw, 100 optionns likely have more profit potential than a single share.

      hawk

    12. Re:They cook the books. by jafac · · Score: 1

      YES.

      VERY common in the industry.

      Former employer (early 1990's) (later purchased by a company that rhymes with Flea Bait) used to dump the first week's distributor sales of a month into the last day of the previous month. Software wouldn't actually SHIP until 5 to 7 days later. We'd process these *anticipated* orders on the last day. We weren't public yet, at that time, we were trying to go public *(but ended up getting bought).

      Later on, I found out that our hardware supplier (won't name names, they're still in business) was doing the same to us. They'd shave off a few bucks if we'd give them a heads up on our order a few days in advance.

      I (much later) found out, that this practice is illegal.

      A few mergers and acquisitions later, the company made a trade with a major ISP, software for free advertisement. Our books listed it as profit for the quarter, which had a huge effect of boosting our stock price EVEN THOUGH THE DETAILS OF THIS DEAL WERE DISCLOSED IN OUR QUARTERLY REPORT FILED WITH THE SEC. Afterwards, I got laid off, then the SEC announced an investigation. The market bitchslapped them HARD. I don't think they were ever actually fined, but they were forced to restate eventually.

      It wasn't the CRIME that hurt their stock price. The crime BOOSTED the stock price. It was GETTING CAUGHT that hurt them.

      It was shortly after that, that they very widely trimmed back on the Employee Stock Incentive Program. Not that the stock was worth anything at that point.

      No way in hell my current employer would even try to get away with that crap. Way too much oversight. The Grown Ups are in charge here. I don't have stock options, but I'm a lot happier.

      --

      These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
  51. Whoah, huge! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    About the same as New York State receives in taxes - below California, and well above the other 48 states. No wonder people talk about the MS tax!

  52. Software Assurance scam by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Don't forget all those sucker companies that bought Software Assurance contracts and saw them expire without getting anything in return.

  53. A sick point by TheNextBigThing · · Score: 0

    Call me a troll if you want, but I havent spent that much on Microsoft. When I built my computer I bough t a copy of XP Home and haven't given them another dime.

    I've actually spent more on multiple Linux distributions. Of course thats because I was curious and doing my own price comparison.

    I'll actually spend more money to keep my iBook updated with OS upgrades coming out every year. Don't get me wrong I think the price is worth it for all of these products but I was just interested on how little I have spent with MS.

    No don't use office.

    Yes I know MS makes tons from corporations.

    --
    Three men walk into a bar. They all got concussions.
    1. Re:A sick point by XopherMV · · Score: 1

      I havent spent that much on Microsoft. When I built my computer I bough t a copy of XP Home and haven't given them another dime.

      What'd you pay for XP Home, $100? That copy cost about $15 to make.

      I know MS makes tons from corporations.

      Surprise! Corporations at least get bulk discounts. Unless you buy directly from another big corporation, MS actually makes a bigger percentage of profit from people like you.

  54. Re:Of course by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    I don't recall Linus Torvalds, Richard Stallman or any of the other Open Source people ever talk about defeating Windows

    Actually, since Gates' stated aim was to leave no alternative, to be the ONLY suppliuer of software and OS's in the world, Linux has defeated MS already. It hasn't destroyed them but it has prevented them achieving their aims. So far. That's why they're so keen on Digital Rights Mitigation.

  55. SEC Confirms It by paranode · · Score: 1, Redundant

    Microsoft is not dying.

    1. Re:SEC Confirms It by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Linux reports 156 USD Paypal-donations and a used preservative for the last 20 quarters.

      Stockholders are gay.

    2. Re:SEC Confirms It by Mr.+No+Skills · · Score: 1

      How the heck is the second post "redundant"?

      --
      Sleep is for the Weak
  56. That's No Moon ... by strelitsa · · Score: 0

    That's Bill Gates' wallet!

    --
    No mod points, no meta-moderating/Firehose/all the other free work Slashdot wants me to do.
  57. Re:Of course by grub · · Score: 1


    Sorry, but where did you get this idea from? I don't recall Linus Torvalds, Richard Stallman or any of the other Open Source people ever talk about defeating Windows...

    Nor I. Virtually all of the "Topple teh micro$of7!!!!1`11``" rants are from /. users. Except from the new converts who are in their "angry atheist" phase I rarely hear such things IRL.

    I always tell people "use the right tool for the job" so they shouldn't feel dirty if they maintain a Windows box (or dual boot) to play games, etc.

    --
    Trolling is a art,
  58. Cheap Labor... by EmagGeek · · Score: 1

    I wonder how much of those record profits were due to laying off American workers to hire cheap foreign labor...

    1. Re:Cheap Labor... by tbone1 · · Score: 1
      I wonder how much of those record profits were due to laying off American workers to hire cheap foreign labor...

      I have the information, but unfortunately I left my Sony laptop in my Honda.

      --

      The Independent: Reverend Spooner Arrested in Friar Tuck Incident - ISIHAC, Historical Headlines
    2. Re:Cheap Labor... by EmagGeek · · Score: 1

      You mean it's in your car that was made in Tennessee? :)

      Incidentally, I had sort of an epiphany today when I realized that outsourcing and the falling dollar are tightly coupled. Labor is the most expensive component of any product or service, so by outsourcing, you are exporting the largest economic driver that exists. The dollar is falling against foreign currency because we're sending all of our dollars to pay overseas labor. We're basically just flooding the world with labor dollars...

      Granted, I just pulled this idea out of my ass, but I'd rather sit around pulling things out of my ass than expend a ton of effort training my Indian replacements they just brought over on restriction-free L-1 visas...

  59. How, then by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Is it 'record' growth if, historically, it's not much of a record?

  60. slashdotters are wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny

    For a company that most Slashdotters would say is on the decline, Microsoft sure has weird financial results!

    I know this is hard to believe, but maybe, just maybe Slashdotters are WRONG! Gee, who would think that using a community of Microsoft-hating, Junk Science loving, geeks wouldn't be the best way to forecast financial results.

    1. Re:slashdotters are wrong by trisight · · Score: 0

      I dont' hate m$ exactly.. I recognize the awesome business skillz that they have. I mean to scam people out of their software (in the beginning) and sell it to others for a premium.. that's just cut throat biz tactics that work..

      But you have to admit, if you heard that your life support system was running off of a windows OS you would be a little nervous.

      --

      The Nomad
      "Men of lofty genius when they are doing the least work are most active."-da Vinci
    2. Re:slashdotters are wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, you are wrong! obviously if microsoft is making money then there must be some conspiracy at work, overlooked fact, borg, blah blah blah etc.

  61. Microsoft in decline? Why? by Junks+Jerzey · · Score: 1, Interesting

    I go to the local coffeeshop and there are cute girls and middle-aged women using notebooks running Windows. 4-10 people at any given time, maybe 1-2 of which have iBooks or PowerBooks. Most of the others have notebooks from Dell. I go to the local college campus and *everyone* has a notebook PC. About 25% of these are Macs, the vast majority of the rest are Dells.

    PCs and their operating systems are ubiquitous these days. They're not geek toys, they're tools for everyone. And except for the smallest handful of people, they're all running Windows or OS X. Come to think of it, I'm in the habit at peeking at what people are doing on their notebooks and I have yet to see anyone running Linux or another minority OS.

    Truthfully, the average PC user is getting worried about virii and spyware. And more and more of them are running Firefox as a result. This doesn't mean they're attempting to ditch every product Microsoft makes, not by a long shot.

    1. Re:Microsoft in decline? Why? by dtfinch · · Score: 0

      I guess I'm lucky. About 1/3 of the laptops I've seen in the past 4 years have been running Linux.

    2. Re:Microsoft in decline? Why? by hoggoth · · Score: 1

      > there are cute girls and middle-aged women using notebooks running Windows

      What do the ugly girls use?

      --
      - For the complete works of Shakespeare: cat /dev/random (may take some time)
    3. Re:Microsoft in decline? Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Some old Apple OS.

    4. Re:Microsoft in decline? Why? by Surreaberal · · Score: 1

      I agree, microsoft is far from being in decline. Just because microsoft does things in a manner that the mac/linux elite disagrees with, doesn't mean that microsoft isn't, or shouldn't be making a ton of money.

    5. Re:Microsoft in decline? Why? by LilMikey · · Score: 1

      So 20-25% of the people in your local coffee shop aren't using Windows and 25% of people at the college campus aren't either? That's actually pretty damn impressive if you ask me. What do you think those numbers were 5 years ago?

      And in all fairness, the Linux geeks are at home playing DnD instead of at the coffee shops and, unless you're in a computer lab or dorm, you're probably not catching many of them around campus either :)

      --
      LilMikey.com... I'll stop doing it when you sto
    6. Re:Microsoft in decline? Why? by Threni · · Score: 2, Informative

      > virii

      The word you are looking for is "viruses".

    7. Re:Microsoft in decline? Why? by MobyDisk · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Be aware that FireFox won't harm Microsoft's profits, so long as those people are running Firefox on Windows. In a way, perhaps Firefox for Windows is harming Linux. Get those users onto Linux & Firefox, and then there is something to be joyous over.

    8. Re:Microsoft in decline? Why? by spitzak · · Score: 1

      You have basically said that Macintosh is 20-25% of the market, which is 2.5 times better than anybody has ever claimed! Yet somehow this indicates why Microsoft is doing better? Huh?

      There was a time when EVERY SINGLE ONE of the laptops you would see would be running Windows.

    9. Re:Microsoft in decline? Why? by toddestan · · Score: 1

      I see it as just a step in the right direction. It might be a bit much to make someone goes from Windows (with IE, MS Office, MSN Messsenger, etc.) to Linux (with Firefox, OpenOffice, Gaim, etc.). But if you can get them gradually switch to running Firefox, OpenOffice, Gaim, etc. on Windows, then it will be easier to for them to switch the underlying OS, once they are comfortable with the applications common to both OS'es.

    10. Re:Microsoft in decline? Why? by Ogerman · · Score: 1

      In a way, perhaps Firefox for Windows is harming Linux.

      Mozilla/Firefox is an applications platform that makes the operating system irrelevant. "Oh sure," you say, "that's what everybody predicted in the 90's for the web, but it never happened." But several things have changed since then:

      1.) Mature XHTML, CSS, DOM, and JS/ECMAscript standards.

      2.) XUL. It is now possible to write very "native feeling" applications that run in Mozilla and do not require any special components or intepreters to be installed first.

      3.) Server-side Java/J2EE as applied to web applications is now a mature and efficient development tool thanks to Open Source efforts like Spring, Hibernate, and the Apache/Jakarta project.

      So, in the end, what Firefox is doing is preparing the world for a new generation of web applications. It's not just a nicer / safer way to browse the public web.

    11. Re:Microsoft in decline? Why? by NeoSkandranon · · Score: 1

      The guys who run Linux are typically at home working out electrical or computer engineering problems or coding, not sitting in a coffee shop.

      --
      If you can't see the value in jet powered ants you should turn in your nerd card. - Dunbal (464142)
    12. Re:Microsoft in decline? Why? by Ogerman · · Score: 2, Interesting

      This doesn't mean they're attempting to ditch every product Microsoft makes, not by a long shot.

      The average, non-technical person uses Windows because that is what came installed on their machine, along with some version of MS Office. If you look at the whole landscape, you'll notice that most people are really not dependent on MS for anything other than Windows and Office. In fact, you could even say that they are only dependent on Windows *because* of Office.

      Beating MS has absolutely nothing to do with "what people are used to," because that is always changing anyhow. (ex. compare Win98 to XP) It has everything to do with replacing or obsoleting the need for Office. And beat them we will.

      Although another interesting factor is your note that 25% use Macs. It's interesting because this represents the next generation of users. If that number is true, it is a huge indication that people are really fed up with MS nonsense and are even willing to pay more for an alternative -- even an alternative that is far more different than Windows than Linux + KDE.

    13. Re:Microsoft in decline? Why? by ClosedSource · · Score: 1

      "There was a time when EVERY SINGLE ONE of the laptops you would see would be running Windows."

      Sure, but what about the INVISIBLE laptops?

  62. Decline? by nurb432 · · Score: 1

    Nah, not them. If they feel things slipping they will just buy more markets..

    They wont be declining/going away for at least another 20 years..

    After that.. who knows..

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
  63. I smell Enron by freshBlueO2 · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    I have a funny feeling the Borg Deoderant isn't working. Don't worry. I'm sure you can get some tips from Martha Stewart in time.

  64. Re:Of course by pandrijeczko · · Score: 0
    The Linux fanboys on Slashdot and just about any other OSS coder believes that Linux will overate MS and become the next Windows.

    There are as many MS zealots as there are Linux ones. Just look in any corporate IT department, mine included, and find a bunch of MCSEs who refuse to deploy Open Source software for certain functions where it quite clearly outperforms MS products - purely because those same people are too afraid to learn something new.

    Remember that a lot of Linux people, myself included, migrated from Windows by choice and can happily make rational comparisons between Windows and Linux. Most Windows people never touch Linux yet feel qualified to form opinions based on FUD and rumour rather than from personal experience.

    Believe me, I'd love to fully ditch Windows tomorrow because I hate using the products of a convicted monopolist - but the fact is, for the 20% of my computing time when I play games and use some specific Windows apps, I still use Windows 2000.

    For me personally, Linux is the way forward but I am not going to "cut my nose off to spite my face".

    --
    Gentoo Linux - another day, another USE flag.
  65. Total Perspective Vortex by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    To put it in perspective, apples taste about the same as oranges, which taste nothing like fairy cake.

    Fixed the summary. All taxes require to collect is simple coercion, whereas for all its myriad flaws Microsoft earns money primarily through creative production. (Yes, they use some 'coercion' - but never the force of a gun.)

  66. not good at counting. by wild_berry · · Score: 1

    Um. I'm not great at counting, but that doesn't look right.

    Growth is different to magnitude or size. The one-man outfit which hired two others is 300% in size but that makes it only 200% up: the growth is 200%.

    Thanks for helping me get my scout "Counting Nazi" badge!

  67. Re:Old earnings? by SilentChris · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "Novell had such a bubble near it's end at the top as did Digital and IBM before them. History is just repeating itself."

    There's one big difference. In each of those cases, Microsoft was there to burst the bubble and take away the market share. This time around there is no "other Microsoft".

    Don't get me wrong, there's going to be competition. OSS continues to make strides in usability (Firefox), and Apple is finally selling a cheap computer. But I think, by best estimates, Apple/OSS could only take away 20% of MS's market share on the OS level.

    When Novell collapsed, it was because Microsoft was rising. Same with IBM (fortunately for them, they reshaped their business from software to services). No one is going to grind Microsoft into the dirt anytime soon.

  68. Re:But...but..Eric Raymond said Microsoft was doom by Maffy · · Score: 1

    To put this into context, the preceding sentence was "But Raymond is positive that open source, in the form of Linux, is about to take the battle deep into Fortune 500 server market."

    I've got no idea if the profit figures give any information on how much Microsoft made from the "Fortune 500 server market".

    Matt

  69. On other news MS hired Enron's Creative... by presarioD · · Score: 1

    ... Accounting Firm to do Math!

    --
    Yam, yam, uga booga, yam, yam, yade, yade, uga booga, yam, yam, yade, yade
  70. Re:Old earnings? by sriram_2001 · · Score: 0

    Hmm..going by your logic, if companies replace their servers every 4-5 years, it is going to be a long time before Linux sees any server market share.

  71. Re:Of course by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Pardon my nitpick, but Richard Stallman would be one of the Free Software people.

  72. Can't align those statistics that way. by tgd · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Thats not a safe assumption to make. A lot of organizations have site licenses for the software, so its easy for server sales to outpace OS sales.

    While there may be an increase in Linux deployments, you can't infer that from any of this information.

    This morning on Bloomberg News they specifically called out Halo 2 as being a very large contributor to the suprising jump in sales, as a large number of people (myself included) bought an X-Box specifically for Halo.

    The dual facts that the XBox is the first modern console I've ever bought and that I've since bought ten other games is icing on the cake for them. There are a lot of people being pulled into modern consoles who were never tempted before by them.

    1. Re:Can't align those statistics that way. by antiMStroll · · Score: 1

      More accurately it's not safe to assume any OS sales, MS included, from server sales. All Linux installs are effectively site licenses too. BTW, does the Windows EULA permit migrating server software to a new machine? I thought it was one machine per license, period.

    2. Re:Can't align those statistics that way. by freemacmini · · Score: 1

      There is no such thing as a "site license" from MS. Corporations join select programs which give them discounts based on the volume buy you still have to pay for each item separately.

    3. Re:Can't align those statistics that way. by leerpm · · Score: 1

      That is not quite correct, there are a number of programs that MSFT offers its partners and ISVs, where you pay a fixed subscription fee and have free run for up to X number of licenses.

    4. Re:Can't align those statistics that way. by Locutus · · Score: 1

      [QUOTE]The dual facts that the XBox is the first modern console I've ever bought and that I've since bought ten other games is icing on the cake for them. There are a lot of people being pulled into modern consoles who were never tempted before by them.[/QUOTE]

      So, I see Microsofts xbox unit broke even on you. Now THAT's impressive...but "icing on the cake"? Not likely. Go out and purchase another one or two games and THEN you've given something back to Microsoft. Otherwise, all you've done is reduce their loss on the product/sale. The last I know, it was estimated that the sales of 10 games were required to makeup the loss on the hardware but that was when the box was $199 at retail.

      You know, Microsoft COULD afford to lose money on all it's other business units( like MSN, WinCE, Xbox ) but not any more. It's growth has flattened and investors could start dumping now that the one-time payout( $3/share )is over. It's time for them to find a way to make it look like they have growth prospects outside of the desktop/server OS and MS Office units.

      Cutting R&D by $1.5 billion and fancy book keeping can do that. More smoke and mirrors IMHO.

      LoB

      --
      "Anyone who stands out in the middle of a road looks like roadkill to me." --Linus
    5. Re:Can't align those statistics that way. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      modern console?



      What? I's a cheap basterdized pc...modern console? What the fuck is so special about it? DRM? Get your head out ot the clouds. Game counsels seem to be stuck at this level since PS1...

  73. Coincidental? by RasendeRutje · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    In one week Gates donates 750 trizibillion dollars to the third world and M$ announces multimega profit... might there be a correlation?

    --

    If Microsoft was mass, stupidity would be gravity.
  74. Re:Of course by pandrijeczko · · Score: 3, Insightful
    I always tell people "use the right tool for the job" so they shouldn't feel dirty if they maintain a Windows box (or dual boot) to play games, etc.

    Linux now occupies about 80% of my computing time but I am also the first guy all my friends and relatives asks to fix their Windows PCs when something goes wrong with them.

    Sure, I point them in the direction of OSS Windows apps like Firefox, Thunderbird, OpenOffice, GIMP, etc. but if they feel they are productive using Windows, then who am I to tell them otherwise?

    Remember that OSS does not have huge advertising budgets and getting the word out about killer OSS apps is a case of word-of-mouth on places like /. However, only a few people here are zealots - most of us don't like the fact that when the next Windows virus hits, we all suffer through slow Internet connections and people turning up on our doorsteps with broken PCs.

    --
    Gentoo Linux - another day, another USE flag.
  75. Re:Old earnings? by Ubergrendle · · Score: 4, Informative

    WinNT to W2003 resulted in a huge upswing in MS spending in the later half of last year for my company. I was hoping for a decent rationalisation of why were were using WinNT in some of these cases (e.g. DNS??? file/print servers???), but as usually business managers have their backs up against the wall (e.g. procrastinate on spending) and just want to pay their way out of a situation when they have no choice.

    And if you have to upgrade the OS (which results in lots of application regression testing, which is labour and the most expensive cost of the whole process), you may as well replace the server which is probably 4-5 years old at this point. So the upswing in server sales for the last quarter or two I would attribute to this WinNT retirement. WinNT upgrade = license fees, + labour + h/w....ironically the catalyst is probably the least expensive component in the equation.

    At least, that's how it played out at the bank I work at...

    --
    John Maynard Keynes: "When the facts change, I change my mind. What do you do?"
  76. Great, but stock still flat by bblazer · · Score: 2, Informative

    Glad to hear it. But as an investor I would like to see their stock price tick up a bit with this news. Since their last stock split a few YEARS ago, the price has stayed in the $22-$28 range. Pretty flat performance.

    --
    My .bashrc can beat up your .bashrc!
  77. I think I know why its happening. by zwilliams07 · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    First and foremost we know that the average Windows User is completely in the dark as to how OSes and software works.

    Pair that up with the recently rise of malware.

    Boom! Sales soar because "Windows Technicians" can't figure out how to get rid of that damn CoolSearch spyware so they buy more machines!

    /runs away from impending troll ratings

  78. Re:Old earnings? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Novell had such a bubble near it's end at the top as did Digital and IBM before them. History is just repeating itself. "

    Im not going to comment on novell or digital but....exactly what are you saying about IBM? Have you looked at its stock

    stock prices?

    Yes, History is repeating itself. IBM is making lots of money.

  79. Moderately intriguing this. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Moderately intriguing this. Looking at the figures its immediately obvious that sales are still basically flat. So the big hike in profit is either fanny accounting or largely attributable to cost cuts. Impressive hike though. Considering how long it is since MS last released a significant or interesting product (must be close to 10 years now) I guess this shows that being creative and doing cool stuff (TM) is no longer a requirement to make money.

  80. Other questionable financial actions by truthsearch · · Score: 5, Interesting

    From MS Versus:
    "According to an ABC News 1/22/99 article by Michael Martinez, Microsoft's own internal auditor, a respected 30 year veteran and former partner of Deloitte and Touche, was fired in 1996 after informing management that their earnings manipulations were illegal and violations of the SEC and FASB laws. He was given the option to resign or be fired and later settled for $4 million after suing under the Federal Whistle Blowers Act."

    "The single most lucrative product Microsoft sells is its own stock. Microsoft receives almost as much cash inflow from the stock market as it does by selling goods and services... Basically, Microsoft receives cash by issuing employee stock options, after which the company then receives billions of dollars in tax deductions from the IRS for doing so. Add in the warrants it sells on its own stock, and the company made over $5 billion off the stock market [for the] fiscal year end[ing] July 1999, tax-free. For comparison, its after-tax net income was only $7.8 billion. Microsoft may not be much in the programming department, but its accountants are impressive." (Landley, Rob. "Why Microsoft's Stock Options Scare Me." The Motley Fool 17 Feb 2000)

    1. Re:Other questionable financial actions by CODiNE · · Score: 1

      I've heard of this tactic for several years now. What it leads me to wonder is, after doing this for so long how much of MS is still owned by the company? Carried on indefinitely eventually the company itself would hold ZERO percent. Could they continue and actually end up with a negative amount of shares in their hands? What I really want to know is what will happen when this whole practice nails them? Are there signs that it's ever going to happen, or can they just bury it under the books until it goes away?

      -Don.

      --
      Cwm, fjord-bank glyphs vext quiz
    2. Re:Other questionable financial actions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      This is very old commentary and information. First, to a very large degree, Microsoft has switched away from the granting of stock options as a form of employee compensation. Second, in 2003 Microsoft elected to follow the Financial Accounting Standards Board's FAS 123 rule for the proper accounting and expensing of stock option grants. Third, while there may be a kernel of truth about the accounting games played (and still played), there is no denying that Microsoft is an extremely profitable company on its own operatitng merits... the commentary's suggested rationale simply isn't sustainable and Microsoft has clearly pumped billions into it's and it's shareholder's coffers.

    3. Re:Other questionable financial actions by hawk · · Score: 1

      Usually, comapanies don't own *any* shares in themsleves. (though some keep "treasury shares" around).

      However many shares there are, they represent 100% of the company. (Which is why expensing options is just plain silly--the balance sheet is for the company as a whole, and isn't affected by the number of shares or potential shares--adding more just makes each exisitng share of lower value, leaving the company untouched. It's just a redistribution of ownership).

      hawk

    4. Re:Other questionable financial actions by truthsearch · · Score: 1

      Well it's a lot less of a factor these days. They're no longer a growth company, so can't rely on their stock price continually skyrocketing and splitting. Notice the removal of unreported stock options and dividend payouts. If they got enough bad press they would have ended up just like Enron. The only difference between Microsoft's financials and Enron's were the shell companies Enron produced. Microsoft now has enough cash flow where they're very unlikely to simply collapse. But it's only because of these terrible business practices of their past that they have so much money now.

      They may be doing less questionable financial tricks today, but they have no shame at all and would still be doing it today if it would serve their wants. I give them no credit for cleaning up their act a little.

  81. I don't understand how much money that is! by forgotten_my_nick · · Score: 1, Funny

    Can someone translate it into football field sizes?

    1. Re:I don't understand how much money that is! by CommanderData · · Score: 1

      OK, lets figure it out:

      US 1 dollar bill = 6.125 x 2.5625 inches = 15.6953125 Square Inches.
      1 Square Foot = 144 sq.inches so we can fit 9.1747 $1 bills per sq.foot.
      1 American Football field = 360 x 160 feet = 57,600 Square Feet (including endzones).
      Rounding down, we carpet one football field with 528,462 $1 bills.

      So with 10 billion dollars we can carpet (astroturf!) 18,922.8 football fields with $1 bills!

      --
      Urge to post... fading... fading... RISING!... fading... fading... gone.
    2. Re:I don't understand how much money that is! by Taladar · · Score: 1

      Money is paper so the correct unit would clearly be libraries of congress.

    3. Re:I don't understand how much money that is! by twiddlingbits · · Score: 1

      Just in case Bill Gates does not have 18,923 football fields he can stack 1 football field 18,923 *.0043[thickness of US currency paper] inches or 81.369 inches deep (or 6.7 feet deep).

  82. Really? or Nominally? by dtfinch · · Score: 2, Informative

    It could just be the US $ inflating their sales. But even if these are real figures, their sales actually haven't increased much. Most of the profit is due to cutting costs. Taking inflation and exchange rates into account, we could turn this story around and say that their sales have decreased, and they've scaled back to compensate for this and expected future decreases.

    1. Re:Really? or Nominally? by FzBravozF · · Score: 1

      Would you mind explaining how your going to erase 3 billion dollars in profit? I find that hard to believe. Also would the same be true of every other company that has release earnings figures this year?

      Otherwise I'm going to have to call BS on this one.

      --
      "Blah"
  83. Re: Linux not yet good enough! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    You are right, this is largely a marketing problem. Given M$ marketing budget relative to Linux/GNU this isn't going to change soon.

    However, the server component does indicate that
    the lock-in aspect is incredibly important. This indicates that even for supposedly "Tech-savy" users, M$ produces a product that many view as good enough.

    For those who believe that M$ profits need to begin to shrink to enhance world freedom, what this means is that 1) Linux has to get relatively much better at a technical level and 2) that Linux/GNU needs to make it clear to M$ users that they are at a disadvantage from a user perspective. Linux/GNU needs to identify and target specific classes of M$ users and demonstrate just what a competitive disadvantage means. If they can't of course, this may mean that some might have to admit that at least from a business perspective M$ has a better product.

    Hype and pomposity will unlikely change the situation. Only concerted action and a redoubling of effort on the part of the Linux/GNU/FOSS community will change things.

    Stop hyping and and blabbering about how great Linux/GNU/FOSS is relative to M$ in upity-tones and use that energy to do things that will make the community more attractive to the average Joe (and particularly average Joe businessman), who hasn't figured out that Linux/GNU/FOSS is the better deal for himself and for society. Its time to work more constructively with other members of our Linux/GNU/FOSS community.

  84. Financial information by ahziem · · Score: 1
  85. Microsoft State by boatboy · · Score: 1

    To put it in perspective, Microsoft's income is about the same as New York State receives in taxes - below California, and well above the other 48 states.

    A great point. I think we need to start viewing business and government along the same lines. I've heard plenty of people deride "big business" for anti-privacy, fraud, etc., and turn a blind eye to "big government" doing the same things. If you think about it, there's really very little difference.

  86. Here's a novel idea... by Jrod5000+at+RPI · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Record profits probably means a nice high stock price. So, let's all dump our MSFT shares. A flood of MSFT selling, the price will plummet! We can sink microsoft! Together, we can SLASHDOT-EFFECT MICROSOFT'S STOCK!

  87. All I could think of when reading this... by eomnimedia · · Score: 0

    Get your stinking paws off me you damn, dirty Gates.

  88. Not looking to run out of steam anytime soon by mcraig · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I must say having looked at some of the presentations on Longhorn, it does actually look very impressive *ducks*.

    While Linux is still trying to compete to become the desktop of choice, Microsoft don't seem to be resting on their laurels and are making impressive strides in the application space.

    Linux while it may be becoming a strong contender for the desktop still appears to be years behind in terms of applications when you look at what Longhorn is doing

    http://msdn.microsoft.com/Longhorn/productinfo/c on ceptvid/default.aspx

    Doesn't look like Microsoft is going to be going anywhere in the near future.

  89. In other news... by crunk · · Score: 1

    Downloads of Adaware and SpyBot are at an all time high.

    --
    It's the battle of the minds, and everyone's unarmed.
  90. Re:Lying with statistics, MS style by Tod+DeBie · · Score: 1
    Sure, you can say profits have doubled, if last quarter was unusually bad, or you took some large charges last quarter, or if there was some non-recurring windfall this quarter.
    True, but, did Microsoft actually have either of those conditions?
    And IIRC they were losing money on xbox hardware, how can they make that up on volume?
    While they do loose money on each Xbox, some of those costs are fixed, so the more they sell, the less they loose. Also, they make money on the games, accessories, XBox Live, etc. They made a profit on the whole XBox program.
  91. I'm a stockholder this is GREAT news. by gelfling · · Score: 1

    Quarters like this are roughly the difference between an average college and a really good college for my kids.

  92. Gamers and such by baggins2002 · · Score: 1

    Both my brother and a friend of his purchased servers from Dell. Neither actually use the computer for something I would call a server, both purchased based on equipment specs. Mainly they wanted a high end workstation with raid and multiprocessor. I'm curious as to whether this would have been classified as server sales by MS and /or the equipment manufacturer.

  93. Amazing really... by IainMH · · Score: 1

    ...
    ...considering this is what they regard as the quickest journey:

    1. go to http://mappoint.msn.com/DirectionsFind.aspx
    2. start address: country : Norway / city : haugesund
    3. destination address: country : Norway / city : trondheim
    4. Route type: Quickest
    5. press get directions

  94. Re:Lying with statistics, MS style by Richard_at_work · · Score: 1

    Basically, 'making it up on volume' is easy. As you buy more and more parts from a supplier, you gain the bargaining power to make them charge less for the parts. So while you initially make a loss, the cost of the item goes down over time, and you simply dont pass this on to the consumer in its full amount. As your volume increases, the cost goes down.

  95. Awesome by That's+Unpossible! · · Score: 1

    Where can I get this Clippy browser plugin?

    --
    Ironically, the word ironically is often used incorrectly.
  96. It's not really that suprising by digitalgimpus · · Score: 1

    If I sell a trillion dollar hammer, I only need 1 customer to beat Craftsman in yearly income. Nor does it mean I have a more popular product, or more customers, or a better product. It just means I sold an expensive hammer.

    Shouldn't confuse this with units sold. Or how their marketshare is doing.

    As the poster suggested, "server sales" are to thank. And guess what? The server software is not at all cheap.

  97. "Weird financial results" by jimfrost · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Increased sales can actually be indicative of a failing market. Consider two examples, DEC and Sun.

    In DEC's case, the influx of workstation-class machinery caused a weakening of the mini market. This weakening killed off all but the strongest mini maker (DEC). Customers fleeing from failing makers split themselves between DEC and the new workstation vendors, thus causing a boost in DEC's sales right before the crash of the whole mini market -- DEC peaked amongst the carnage of their market, then crashed spectacularly.

    Sun's case was a repeat of the behavior. Sun's market had migrated from workstations to servers from the late 80s through the mid 90s. By the mid 90s, however, we were already seeing a market shift towards PCs acting as servers. As the server vendors' market weakened (still prior to the Internet boom) we saw diminishing workstation/server sales for many companies in that sector (e.g. HP, SGI). Meanwhile Sun's sales skyrocketed, again attributable to a split in the market where some of the people leaving failing vendors went to Sun.

    Sun would have had a crash in the 1999 timeframe if it weren't for the internet boom, which dramatically increased demand for large servers. When the boom ended, however, so did Sun's fortunes -- very fast. You can see in Dell's sales where the market went.

    Microsoft has been benefitting from the failing of the server vendors, same as Sun. (Though, really, the biggest winner in this is Dell.) If this were a normal hardware-only migration Microsoft would rapidly capture upwards of 80% of he market and be dominant until the next hardware shift. But it's not normal because this is the first transition where the software is decoupled from the hardware.

    Microsoft should have won by default, with customers shifting from server-class systems to PCs as customers went with the default option of Windows servers. And, in fact, Microsoft did extremely well for the first several years of the transition when there really wasn't much competition in the PC space.

    Linux has thrown a huge wrench in the works. It's maturing very nicely and offers the huge win over Windows in that it's both cheaper for licenses and especially for migration.

    If there's any one thing we can count on in this industry it's that the cheapest thing that gets the job done wins (which I've been saying so long now I call it Jim's Law). Until Linux came along the cheapest thing was Windows servers. Now it's not. The market impact of that is going to be phenomenal.

    In a typical market transition you can expect more or less equal boosting of the various competitors in the market as people flee dying companies. But in a typical market transition there is not much price difference between the competitors -- usually within 10%, as everyone attempts to maximize the market opportunity.

    Linux turns that on its head by offering a scale of prices starting at zero (no support) through prices that are more or less competitive with Microsoft's offerings (full support). That gives Linux a significant market advantage.

    I expect we'll see a major market move towards mid-priced systems (some support, not "enterprise class" support, call it the $500 price point). Microsoft is trying hard to push for higher prices in that market just as Linux is depressing them.

    If things continue the way they are going I would expect Microsoft to peak in the next one to three years at perhaps 65% of the market (by units) as the migration from server-class systems to PCs-as-servers completes, and then fall over the following five years to about 30% of the market as people migrate to more cost-effective Linux solutions.

    But Microsoft won't take this laying down, they'll start reducing prices to match those of the midrange Linux products (more on that in a minute), to whatever degree they can afford. As such I think we're going to see the products come very close to price parity and we'll see Windows stabilize at 40-45% market share with

    --
    jim frost
    jimf@frostbytes.com
    1. Re:"Weird financial results" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's fine and all but you're forgetting about OS2. :)

    2. Re:"Weird financial results" by Scott7477 · · Score: 1

      Very nice analysis...I have been looking closely at Apple's products recently and to me right now the Powerbook G4 a fairly priced alternative to Wintel high end notebooks. Unless something changes radically in the next year or two my next computer will be a Powerbook.

      It seems that an alternative combination to Wintel is emerging where IBM and Apple form the alternative. I could see a large corporation run its servers and databases on IBM hardware(of course using PowerPC chips) and issuing Apple machines to employees for desktop use(Mini's for those who don't need laptops and Powerbooks for those who do). Given the superiority of the PowerPC architecture and the OS X/Linux software I could see this as a serious threat to Wintel.

      --
      "Lack of technical competence coupled with the arrogance of power, as usual, leads to no good end."
    3. Re:"Weird financial results" by rseuhs · · Score: 2, Insightful
      [..] we'll see Windows stabilize at 40-45% market share [..]

      I agree with most of your analysis, but not with the above.

      Windows marketshare will not stabilize at any percentage lower than 80% [of the PC-centric market (=x86 and AMD64), not the whole computing market] because Windows needs domination to be viable. The Linux community can write most drivers for hardware, Microsoft is dependent on hardware vendors to write drivers for Windows, they just can't do it themselves.

      Similar effects with software and support: The only real advantage Windows offers is a larger/better software library which is a result of their domination.

      Without domination, Windows loses all it's advantages - but the disadvantages remain.

      Therefore once Windows loses domination, it's fate is doomed and will become legacy software because it offers no advantages anymore.

      But of course just because Windows is doomed, doesn't mean Microsoft is doomed. They have just too much money to be doomed...

    4. Re:"Weird financial results" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nice, but just where are you pulling these numbers? Out of your ass?

    5. Re:"Weird financial results" by jimfrost · · Score: 1
      [..] we'll see Windows stabilize at 40-45% market share [..]

      I agree with most of your analysis, but not with the above.

      Windows marketshare will not stabilize at any percentage lower than 80% [of the PC-centric market (=x86 and AMD64), not the whole computing market] because Windows needs domination to be viable.

      All but the last paragraph of my original posting refers to server penetration. Windows does not now have, nor has ever had, 80% share of servers. Last numbers I saw pegged it at somewhere in the mid-50% range (not sure if that was unit or revenue). I believe it'll pull another 10 percentage points, peak, and decline in that market.

      Similar effects with software and support: The only real advantage Windows offers is a larger/better software library which is a result of their domination.

      It also offers more integrated solutions that at least have the appearance of being easier to support, which will appeal to some audiences. And we really can't count out the value of .NET, which is a remarkable system.

      Without domination, Windows loses all it's advantages - but the disadvantages remain.

      We disagree on this count. Windows does offer value, at least in some cases. And inertia counts for a lot.

      But of course just because Windows is doomed, doesn't mean Microsoft is doomed. They have just too much money to be doomed...

      Like Lotus?

      Money gives you additional chances at life, it doesn't give you immortality.

      --
      jim frost
      jimf@frostbytes.com
    6. Re:"Weird financial results" by Ogerman · · Score: 1

      Desktop systems are going to be a very interesting market to watch, too, as Microsoft's monopoly gets dented (although probably not broken). .... In the US and most of Europe the numbers will be much different: Microsoft share will drop to probably 80% with Linux and MacOS splitting the difference almost evenly.

      You're making one huge assumption here: that the fates of the server and desktop are not inextricable. There is a growing push in the business world for simplified, easier to manage, increasingly server-side solutions. You hit the nail on the head when you said, "the cheapest thing that gets the job done wins," because that is precisely the driving force. Here's why: Linux / Open Source based server-side solutions have the opportunity to make the desktop itself irrelevant. Modern, rich web applications have the capability not only to replace all existing client-side business software, but also to obsolete the very concepts behind traditional, clumsy "office suite" software. Consider, for example, how spreadsheets may be replaced by easily customizable database software and word processing may be replaced by web-based document processing systems. (think: division of content production and typesetting)

      If the open source community can pull off this revolutionary paradigm shift instead of chasing MS's desktop-centric taillights, it will dramatically change the future of the industry. Most people are always asking, "What will be the 'killer app' of Open Source on the desktop?" Many think it will be OpenOffice but I disagree. They should be asking, "How can we completely re-define the desktop such that the result is the killer app of Open Source."

    7. Re:"Weird financial results" by jimfrost · · Score: 1
      I got them the same place as most analysts :-). The numbers are roughly what we've seen in other markets given similar situations but in the end it's all guesswork, of course.

      Bookmark this puppy and get back to me in 2008 and we can see how I did. I save these predictions (I have them going back a decade on this particular subject) to see if I'm out to lunch. Aside from not seeing Linux coming until 1999, even though I was running it myself two years earlier, I've been doing way better than the big analysts. Like picking NT as crushing the UNIX workstation market in 1995 (in 1997 UNIX workstation sales started to collapse) and in 1997 saying Sun was going to start having financial problems no later than 2001 (didn't expect the dotcom boom to play out like that, but that didn't really do much did it?).

      In any case if you get just one thing out of this commentary, let it be the cheapest thing that gets the job done wins. You too can be two to five years ahead of the analysts just by paying attention to that rule.

      --
      jim frost
      jimf@frostbytes.com
    8. Re:"Weird financial results" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Which would very much explain why Microsoft is branching out into the consumer electronics business.

    9. Re:"Weird financial results" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      If there's any one thing we can count on in this industry it's that the cheapest thing that gets the job done wins (which I've been saying so long now I call it Jim's Law).

      If your law applies (and I think it does) then commercial software will be finding it harder to battle against Open Source Software.

      The Apache web server may be the first major instance of an Open Source Software package killing an established commercial forerunner (Netscape Server). There's a strange phenomena going on though for the market of Microsoft's IIS web server. The "value" added by IIS is negative but there is a large enough pool of people/companies who have standardized on the Microsoft eco-system to not consider other technologies.

      I'll predict that in the future there will be fewer in-house corporate applications (expense reports, vacation requests etc.) developed using Active-X features in IE but more use of Firefox plugin capabilities. The price ("free") is the same but better usability and security will be compelling reason for braver corps to migrate away from IE. That has to concern Microsoft as any trend away from dependencies on Windows as a requirement for client software allows users to start having other vendor choices.

      I've heard that Microsoft has reincarnated the IE development team which had been disbanded in response to the Firefox browser being released.

    10. Re:"Weird financial results" by jimfrost · · Score: 1
      If your law applies (and I think it does) then commercial software will be finding it harder to battle against Open Source Software.

      Indeed. In order for commercial software to compete in the long term it must provide significant value-add, and even then its pricing will be depressed. You mention IIS as being a negative, but I disagree. There is quite a tools ecosystem built around it, and it's much easier to set up and work with than Apache (I've run both, but I'm not crazy enough to expose IIS to the net at large).

      But while everyone is looking at Microsoft vs. Linux now, that's not going to be the only big name to see open source significantly impact their business.

      Pay attention to Oracle vs. MySQL. Nobody's really going to start talking about that until 2007 when you'll start seeing significant vendor support for it (this in response to developers using it as a cheap and lightweight alternative). Oracle will have to react in the 2009-2010 timeframe and their financials will start being negatively impacted as soon as 2013 and no later than 2015.

      The Mozilla effort is going to bear significant fruit, too, although not so much on desktops -- unless we see Firefox get bundled by major PC vendors, which I would bet against. I figure 10% maximum desktop penetration on PCs, nearly 100% on Linux, and somewhere around 20-30% on Macs (less if Safari gets better).

      The real win is going to be outside of desktops on more purposed devices, especially media devices. In fact, these will be where open source (especially Linux) makes its biggest impact -- royalty free is too big an advantage for those vendors to pass up.

      The really good part of this from the consumer's point of view is that if it's running Linux, you can get at least some of the device's source code. That will lead to a lot of third-party product enhancements (ala Tivo hacks and Sveasoft).

      Outside of infrastructure code like this, though, I think open source will have marginal impact. You need a certain critical mass of users and developers to sustain and nourish it, and that's hard to do as you get more vertical. Still, we're talking change-the-world market penetration in a number of horizontals. Not half bad results stemming from the ravings of a greasy hacker.

      --
      jim frost
      jimf@frostbytes.com
    11. Re:"Weird financial results" by rseuhs · · Score: 1
      All but the last paragraph of my original posting refers to server penetration. Windows does not now have, nor has ever had, 80% share of servers. Last numbers I saw pegged it at somewhere in the mid-50% range (not sure if that was unit or revenue). I believe it'll pull another 10 percentage points, peak, and decline in that market.

      Well, the server-market and the x86-server-market isn't the same thing. And of course Windows domination in the non-server market helps with drivers, etc.

      It also offers more integrated solutions that at least have the appearance of being easier to support, which will appeal to some audiences. And we really can't count out the value of .NET, which is a remarkable system.

      If driver support is there, Linux is much more "integrated" and easier than Windows because everything works right out of the box, while you have to feed driver CDs when installing Windows. Of course if there is no Windows-driver all "easy support" goes to hell, because there is no community to create it.

      And .NET is just Java with more language bindings and less platform support.

    12. Re:"Weird financial results" by jimfrost · · Score: 1
      If driver support is there, Linux is much more "integrated" and easier than Windows because everything works right out of the box, while you have to feed driver CDs when installing Windows. Of course if there is no Windows-driver all "easy support" goes to hell, because there is no community to create it.

      I was thinking of the applications on top; so far as I'm concerned both systems have very good device driver support.

      And .NET is just Java with more language bindings and less platform support.

      That's very true; after Sun sued them, Microsoft took their VM, extended it slightly, transmogrified the libraries slightly, added a lot of new features (particularly around network protocol and XML support), and wrote new front-ends for it.

      It's kind of funny to me that Sun's lawsuit ultimately hurt them more than Microsoft. But then again Sun never seemed to have figured out that Microsoft was not their enemy, Intel was. If anything Microsoft did them quite the favor by proving either unwilling or unable to make Windows scale well enough to allow Dell et al to compete head-to-head.

      Anyway the one place where Microsoft just did a better job than Sun and all the rest is in the IDE. It really is a nice IDE, at least for small to medium size applications -- point it at a web service and it generates the code; tell it to deploy to a web server and next thing you know your application is up and running. It's neat and clean and easy.

      I spent eight of the last nine years writing Java code, and I'm here to tell you: Microsoft did a better job in a number of places. In particular, J2EE sucks goat balls. It's almost like they went out of their way to make it as painful as possible to use even for the simplest things. Microsoft didn't try to do all the things in J2EE, they just tried to do a really good job at the things people do all the time (to whit: Writing web pages and integrating them with databases). Not that we didn't see the same kind of stuff in Java years earlier, but that stuff unfortunately didn't become the standard.

      But whatever, it is a fact that Microsoft has at least the perception of easier configuration and better integration. Fact too, sometimes. And that alone will make them a certain number of sales.

      --
      jim frost
      jimf@frostbytes.com
  98. Whatever! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    For a company that most Slashdotters would say is on the decline

    Speak for yourself. They're kicking butt. You can't stop R&D and lots of money to back it up.

  99. finally a Gamer profit by peter303 · · Score: 1

    MS was losing hundreds of millions on their game box for many years, but made a modest profit this year due to some hit games. MS has the resource to weather years of slow product ramp-up.

  100. So cut benifits, profit? by hsmith · · Score: 1

    My cousin works for MS in their consulting dept, apparently they have slashed benifits this past year like crazy. How can they be posting massive earnings and screwing over their workers?

    1. Re:So cut benifits, profit? by nomadic · · Score: 1

      How can they be posting massive earnings and screwing over their workers?

      Replace "How can they be" with "They're" and replace "and" with "by".

  101. Putting in perspective ... by fygment · · Score: 1

    ... To put it in perspective, Microsoft's income is about the same as New York State receives in taxes

    Come on! Let's use some standard measures here.

    How many football fields high would that be if the money was stacked?

    Ans: ~1670 football fields high of dollar bills

    How many times would it circle the earth if it was laid end-to-end?

    Ans: ~860 times

    --
    "Consensus" in science is _always_ a political construct.
    1. Re:Putting in perspective ... by Reignking · · Score: 1

      Speaking of standards...

      are we talking about comparing MSFT's earnings for the quarter versus the tax income for the year for New York?

      --
      One man's Funny is another man's Offtopic.
  102. Comparison to tax revenue? by rnd() · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It's odd to compare Microsoft's revenue to tax revenue... but consider the following:

    Everyone who paid Microsoft a dime did so voluntarily, while people who paid the state of New York did so to stay out of jail.

    --

    Amazing magic tricks

    1. Re:Comparison to tax revenue? by B2382F29 · · Score: 1

      people who paid the state of New York did so to stay out of jail

      and people who paid Microsoft did so to stay in business. I'm not saying MS products are better but you NEED them if you have to send out a document or else you get answers like "Your .doc has weird formatting" and "What is .sxw? are you trying to send me a virus?" Many businesses have to have at least ONE copy of M$-Office.

      --
      Move Sig. For great justice.
    2. Re:Comparison to tax revenue? by Kwil · · Score: 1, Informative

      Bzzt, thanks for playing.
      Given when these numbers are from, most people who paid Microsoft a dime didn't have a choice.. because it came pre-loaded on the machine they purchased so that they could take work home from the office/give their kid to do homework on from school, etc.

      These days, things are a little better, but it's still a bitch to get a PC without Windows, and even when you do, you have to suffer through a lot of software that, sad to say and despite the karma burn this'll earn me, simply doesn't work as well for a lot of real world tasks.

      I wanna be a Linux guy. I really do.

      But my job requires editing of reports with multiple people. Most of whom don't have any computer skills to speak of. Hell, they can barely get Word running. There simply isn't another option. Open Office's revision tracking is near painful to use. Trying to get it to interoperate on files from people who have bargain basement PCs and no tech background to speak of?

      No dice.

      --

      That Jesus Christ guy is getting some terrible lag... it took him 3 days to respawn! -NJ CoolBreeze

    3. Re:Comparison to tax revenue? by rnd() · · Score: 1

      if the cost of not having office is greater than the cost of having it, you save money by buying it.

      --

      Amazing magic tricks

    4. Re:Comparison to tax revenue? by rnd() · · Score: 1

      Bzzt. Nope, people buy computers with Microsoft software pre-loaded because they're cheaper than computers that don't have it pre-loaded.

      If you want to take the time to learn to build a PC from parts, or if you want to order a server configuration that is sold w/o an OS, you can do so, and you can even buy a PC from a local vendor who built it from parts... but all of the options are in some way more expensive to the typical person than just calling up Dell and ordering a $399 PC with an included flat screen and 6 months of free internet access.

      --

      Amazing magic tricks

    5. Re:Comparison to tax revenue? by Phantasmo · · Score: 0

      I don't know about you, but I'm happy to pay taxes. They pay for a lot of stuff that I rely on (health care, transit, school, police, fire department).

      --

      The US Army: promoting democracy through unquestioned obedience
    6. Re:Comparison to tax revenue? by rnd() · · Score: 1

      I think we're all happy to pay some taxes... but whereas Microsoft is forced to charge low prices in order to stay competitive, governments have very little fiscal accountability... of course, we're all at fault for this, but the difference is striking.

      --

      Amazing magic tricks

    7. Re:Comparison to tax revenue? by Geoff-with-a-G · · Score: 1

      Given when these numbers are from, most people who paid Microsoft a dime didn't have a choice.. because it came pre-loaded on the machine

      Those people didn't pay Microsoft, they paid Dell. They did that willingly, because they wanted that computer for that price. Dell then paid Microsoft, willingly, because selling computers with Microsoft Windows on them is a far more profitable business than selling computers without Microsoft Windows on them. In both cases the money is given willingly, which is not the case with taxes.

    8. Re:Comparison to tax revenue? by jvj1 · · Score: 1

      It always been called "The Microsoft Tax" :)

    9. Re:Comparison to tax revenue? by rnd() · · Score: 1

      Yes... it's interesting what a misnomer that is... indicative of how little people understand about the economics of their own behavior. It's like being upset that your PC came with 4 USB slots when you only needed one. Of course, products are packaged for the majority of users not the minority.

      --

      Amazing magic tricks

    10. Re:Comparison to tax revenue? by jc42 · · Score: 1

      Of course, products are packaged for the majority of users not the minority.

      Here in the US, one of the conventional counterexamples is the fact that hot dogs are sold in packages of 10, while the buns are sold in packages of 8.

      This is, of course, a running joke, and every stand-up comedian uses it as an example of our economic rationality. But it can be fun to watch people try to explain that this is done because the customers want it that way. ;-)

      Fact is, marketing is good at coming up with ways of tricking people into buying something different from what they really want. And Microsoft is an example that nearly everyone understands. Just ask them to explain what a lot of the files on their disk are there for. They paid for them, right? So they must have wanted them, right?

      Even the dumbest Joe Sixpack understands the cynicism behind this.

      --
      Those who do study history are doomed to stand helplessly by while everyone else repeats it.
    11. Re:Comparison to tax revenue? by rnd() · · Score: 1

      The cynicism is understandable, but your example about hot dogs is simply false. The last time I bought hot dogs there were the same number of dogs as there were buns.

      Do you know the purpose of all of the transistors in your television? You paid for them so you must have wanted them, right?

      --

      Amazing magic tricks

    12. Re:Comparison to tax revenue? by jc42 · · Score: 1

      Yeah; this running joke is getting to be less true than it used to be. I've noticed mostly that the package sizes seem to be more varied than they used to be. And, of course, there are more supermarkets with deli sections, where you can just ask for N hot dogs. I mostly get Hebrew National dogs, because they taste good. The small ones are 6 per package; the big ones are 4 per package. (And I always add cheese, to cancel the kosherness. ;-)

      Do you know the purpose of all of the transistors in your television? You paid for them so you must have wanted them, right?

      Yes, of course. ;-)

      (Actually, I've never bought a TV set. My wife came with one, and she has bought a couple more. But since she found out about Netflix, she has stopped using the TV sets, and we're planning to drop the cable service as soon as we can get the bundled phone transferred to a different supplier. Probably sell the TV sets, because she has found that her Mac Powerbook does a better job with DVDs. TV is obsolete, especially since it no longer has news.)

      --
      Those who do study history are doomed to stand helplessly by while everyone else repeats it.
    13. Re:Comparison to tax revenue? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Right. And you pay your taxes just as willingly, because if you didn't want to, you could just shut the hell up and leave the country, couldn't you?

      I hear Afghanistan doesn't have income tax yet. Let me know how the weather is.

    14. Re:Comparison to tax revenue? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And if you want to you can leave the country and not pay taxes too.

      Guess they're still the same thing.

    15. Re:Comparison to tax revenue? by rnd() · · Score: 1

      Well, if Microsoft put in place fee collection measures like those used by governments, everyone would consider them draconian.

      --

      Amazing magic tricks

  103. Forced upgrades? by glrotate · · Score: 1

    Win2k and Office2k function quite well for the Fortune 100 company I'm at. What "forced upgrades" are you talking about?

    1. Re:Forced upgrades? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Win2k and Office2k function quite well for the Fortune 100 company I'm at. What "forced upgrades" are you talking about?


      Count yourself lucky that you're not in the NT4 brigade. Wait'll the 2k products are EOL'd and you'll understand.
    2. Re:Forced upgrades? by YrWrstNtmr · · Score: 1

      Currently, W2000Pro has extended support out to 2010.
      I think after using it for a decade, you might be ready to move up. Are you still running the same Linux version you had in 1995?

    3. Re:Forced upgrades? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      At least MS support timelines are several years long. RedHat has EOLed versions of their OS after only 12 months! Add to that that you have to pay them their (more expensive than Windows) licensing fees EVERY YEAR. It's that sort of a forced upgrade? Like every year?

  104. Broadband= MS Profit by Aeron65432 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Microsoft is majorly profiting because I'd say because of the explosion of broadband. With more people accessing the internet (running XP, no doubt) the servers increase. That's a profit.
    As more and more people get online, more servers will be required, and with anti-Linux propaganda at the ready, Microsoft can take advantage of small business sans IT.
    (http://www.microsoft.com/windowsserversystem /fact s/default.mspx)
    That being said, I'm sure Linux groups (Red Hat, etc.) have sold more servers also.

    As previously mentioned, more and more computers are being sold. The vast majority are dell-whorish mass-produced Windows XP computers.
    Case in point, I'm at my school library using brand new IBMs running Windows XP. As long as schools, libraries, individual users, etc, continue to buy desktops, Microsofts profits will continue to rise.

    On a side note, the computer next to me just crashed.

  105. Program Manager? Wow! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Back in the mid to late 90s, a program manger or developer could be expected to work there for 7 years

    And I thought I held on to Windows 3.1 too long....

  106. Whatever by smcdow · · Score: 1

    The sheep herd market doesn't decide what are the best technical solutions.

    It decides what was marketed the best.

    Stupid sheep.

    --
    In the course of every project, it will become necessary to shoot the scientists and begin production.
    1. Re:Whatever by Quill_28 · · Score: 1

      Yes, you are right. Everyone who uses MS is a sheep.

      They are stupid, blind, pig-headed, and believe all the adverts for MS.

      Thank you for clearing that up.

    2. Re:Whatever by smcdow · · Score: 1

      No problem. Glad you have a better understanding of the situation.

      --
      In the course of every project, it will become necessary to shoot the scientists and begin production.
    3. Re:Whatever by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Some Linux evangelical user screaming about being superior to other people for using some particular OS is pathetic and continues to be irrelevant in the market.

      Get in your fucking head, computer to most people is just a tool to get their work done. They choose a balance between price, usability, and performance. MS is successful in hitting the right balance. Real scientists and engineers only care to get their work done instead of messing around with some config files to setup their latest download of crapware. The platform might be Window, Solaris, or Linux. Using whatever the right tool is to get the job done, instead of using the tool for the purpose of using that tool.

      I know plenty of tech wannabes who think using some clone of 30 years old technology makes them cool and like "hackers". Most ECE students don't use Linux. Why? Because they ara too busy with getting real works done instead of messing around with some pointless software overheads.

      Linux's sales point is being much cheaper (if you discount your labour cost) while being just bearable good enough to get the job done. There is still a long way to go.

      I love some open source applications, such as Vim and Firefox. But overall open source softwares does not measure up, and that is the impression that people have no matter how much some guy scream about other people been sheep.

    4. Re:Whatever by smcdow · · Score: 1
      Most ECE students don't use Linux.

      References, please, to back that statement up.

      It's for your own good. Otherwise, people will that you're just another damn lying Microsoft shill.

      --
      In the course of every project, it will become necessary to shoot the scientists and begin production.
  107. Re:Old earnings? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No one is going to grind Microsoft into the dirt anytime soon.

    yes, I am.

    You'll see!

  108. OT: Perspective by jdavidb · · Score: 1

    And to really put things in perspective, I remember an article on Wal-Mart for a year or two back that said, "This year, Wal-Mart plans to grow by the equivalent of one Microsoft."

  109. Yah, but by agent · · Score: 1

    IS Windows New Technology Tecchology on any of the DNS root servers?

  110. Re:Old earnings? by DrugCheese · · Score: 1

    Isn't Novell again rising with SuSE?

    --
    *DrugCheese rants*
  111. even with all that piracy by heliosphan187 · · Score: 1

    considering how easy it is to download windows from p2p, i wonder what percentage of their sales are coming from companies?

  112. Re:Old earnings? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "There's one big difference. In each of those cases, Microsoft was there to burst the bubble and take away the market share. This time around there is no "other Microsoft"."

    There sure is. But in this case there are two:

    L*I*N*U*X
    and
    M*A*C*I*N*T*O*S*H

    It's time to change.

  113. Re:blood for blood by randallpowell · · Score: 1
    some fag gets modded up for his "funny" yet played out soviet union joke

    In Soviet Russia, Micro$oft profits YOU!

    or

    In Korea, only old people don't pirate Microsoft software.

  114. The numbers are never what they seem by BlindRobin · · Score: 1

    No doubt their earnings are high, but neccessarily as high as reported and surely not for the published reasons.
    Other's in the recent past have had some pretty fantastic earnings figures as well.
    When you have the internal and external resources, access to the fiscal instruments and influence with regulatory institutions that Microsoft ha[s,ve] true disclosure is largely at the corporations own discression.

    Pay no attention to that man behind the curtain...

  115. No wonder by slapout · · Score: 1

    They must have been using Excel to do the calculations! :-)

    --
    Coder's Stone: The programming language quick ref for iPad
  116. Just a ponder by pittuck · · Score: 1

    What would happen if *nix systems were used for businesses day to day work and held lots of important data from everyday users and their downfall would cause public outcry, would *unix turn out to be as holy as MS? Would hackers be able to find loads of holes? hummm...

  117. Re:Of course by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Most Windows people never touch Linux yet feel qualified to form opinions based on FUD and rumour rather than from personal experience"

    Anyone who has used Unix pretty much knows all they need to about Linux.

  118. "sure has weird financial results" by l3v1 · · Score: 1

    You know, signs like these can also mean the beginning of the end in the lifecycle of a company. Cash cow anyone ? And like the story goes, high market share is not a guarantee in itself.

    I'm not suggesting M$ is on this way though.

    --
    I am putting myself to the fullest possible use, which is all I can think that any conscious entity can ever hope to do.
  119. Re:Of course by ClosedSource · · Score: 1

    I'm not sure if Gates really stated that, but if he did, he was defeated long before Linux came along. There have always been multiple OS's around and there always will be, with or without Linux.

  120. microsoft doublethink by edward.virtually@pob · · Score: 1

    being a monopoly that controls over 90% of the worlds computers, the chance of it being "on the decline" in any meaningful (i.e.: financial) sense is zero. the "amusing" thing about the profit report (i.e.: microsoft raking in the dough from it's monopoly despite the rest of the economy still going down the toilet) is to contrast it with the hyping of their new anti-piracy program:

    David Lazar, a director of the Windows Genuine Advantage program, says piracy has cost Microsoft "billions of dollars over the past ten years."

    of course, the two are not contradictory -- i'm sure piracy has impact microsoft to some degree -- but the contrast suggests that the harm caused by having thousands of unpatchable (since the owners are not going to be stupid enough to sign up for a visit from the spa) and exploited systems on the internet outweighs the impact on their profit margin.

  121. Cost cutting by einhverfr · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I have not looked at the 10Q yet. But right after I worked there, Microsoft started very agressive cost-cutting. Benefits, etc. Even my whole department was eventually moved to India. I seriously doubt that this is primarily due to increased sales (MS usually only has notably large increases with the release of products) but rather to these cost cutting measures.

    Otherwise, it would seem like an artifact of accounting (revenue posted one quarter but not earned until this quarter, etc).

    --

    LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
  122. For my part .. by sundru · · Score: 0

    For my part I have bought 3 versions of suse retail and a redhat WS retail box :) . $0 to microsoft .

  123. Re:But...but..Eric Raymond said Microsoft was doom by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Regardless of the context, the main point is that Raymond was very, very wrong.

  124. Irrational Exuberance XP by bADlOGIN · · Score: 4, Informative

    For a company that most Slashdotters would say is on the decline, Microsoft sure has weird financial results!

    Yeah. People were laughing at Alan Greenspan for a number of few years before that bubble burst too. I guess some of us silly Slashdotters just don't "get" the new Microsoft economy. It's ok though, you just go ahead now and keep putting your money there. After all, what could be wrong with Microsoft's accounting practices?

    --
    *** Sigs are a stupid waste of bandwidth.
    1. Re:Irrational Exuberance XP by Geoff-with-a-G · · Score: 1

      Slashdot comments tend towards anecdotal evidence.
      "I hate Windows, I only run Linux on my servers, and the people I know hate Windows, therefore Windows is declining"
      rather than
      "The following link is to surveys showing a decline in IT spending on Microsoft products"

      and when you hear enough of the former, you start to get the impression that everyone thinks that way.

    2. Re:Irrational Exuberance XP by cooldev · · Score: 1

      Hahaha... A classic "Bill Parish" link. From 1999. Welcome to 2005.

      Only now, Microsoft is expensing stock options and being as transparent as possible in its accounting, so the link simply doesn't hold water. Not that it ever did.

  125. All's busy on the Knoppix front. by dr_leviathan · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Some good news... I just handed out three copies of KNOPPIX_V3.7-2004-12-08 today to co-workers and its still only 8:03 in the morning.

    One of them just had his hard drive (or something) fail to boot (could not find OS). It's not clear yet what whether the drive is any good, but if is just corrupted OS files ==> Knoppix to the rescue!

    Another was complaining that Linux doesn't like his older laptop with one of the first GeForce-2Go chipsets ==> GamesKnoppix-3.7-0.1-EN will prompt you about loading load the proprietary nVidia drivers on boot. Hey, it might work! You just have to remember when you're trying to type "yes" at the prompt that although it is the "English" version it still thinks you've got a German keyboard at boot so the Y and the Z buttons are swapped.

    Finally, there's a fellow who has been thinking about trying GNU/Linux on his old Windoze hardware. So I burnt another copy of Knoppix and handed it to him.

    Ahh... I've got a warm fuzzy feeling.

    Now if I could just get back that copy of _Knoppix_Hacks_ that I lent to my neighbor so I could lend it out to someone else.

    --
    Religion is poison to rationality, and we lose sight of that at our own peril. -- Lurker2288
  126. Re:Old earnings? by ScentCone · · Score: 1

    Not to mention that Novell wasn't also into mice, keyboards, video consoles, a jillion software titles, business accounting systems, and so many other diversified areas. Gates is not dumb.

    --
    Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
  127. Re:Hmmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Would this by the converse of "Pump and Dump"?

  128. Re:Old earnings? by Patoski · · Score: 1


    There's one big difference. In each of those cases, Microsoft was there to burst the bubble and take away the market share. This time around there is no "other Microsoft".

    When Novell collapsed, it was because Microsoft was rising. Same with IBM (fortunately for them, they reshaped their business from software to services). No one is going to grind Microsoft into the dirt anytime soon.



    This is true to a limited extent. Why was MS able to unseat these titans (IBM and Novell as you've mentioned) from their thrones? MS created an environment in which these old companies could not compete (i.e. MS was much less expensive). So MS is used to providing the lowest price point for software that is "good enough" and in some ways a bit better (usability [I'm talking corp. accounts here since that's where the real money is]) than their competitors.

    Now Linux has come along and done much the same thing that MS did in the 90's. Software that is "good enough" (from a usability perspective) and in some ways better than Windows (reliability, transparency, etc.) and priced anywhere from free to "cheaper than what MS is charging for their software." Ballmer himself said that MS is used to competing on price and they can't do that with Linux. Now MS has to rely on studies describing TCO, RIO and all those other acronyms that corporate America loves to talk about to attempt to justify their higher prices (does this sound familiar?).

    MS is going to have a very hard time in the coming years. Linux has already forced them to do a number of things they weren't eager to do such as "releasing" source code, creating a crippled version of XP, restarting IE development, etc. To say that no one is there waiting to eat their lunch denies the MS' own reactions to this new competition.
    --
    G. Washington on Government "it is force. Like fire, it is a dangerous servant and a fearful master."
  129. it's about time... by DanielJS · · Score: 0

    ...that Microsoft things actually work... our Windows 2000 servers, some have been up for over 2 years now, Windows XP does not crash... but what, it all took years of torture... hopefully they will not screw it up...

  130. MS income more than NY State? Wrong. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    NY State has budget of over $100 Billion. Most of the money for the budge comes from tax revenue, and even if you take into account NY's deficit of less than $20 Billion, you're still left with about $80 Billion of tax revenue.

  131. Preach on! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hey brother I love what your saying. I hate that damn Microsoft, too. Where can I get more reading information on your products... should I email you (Rail_Gunner@hotmail.com) ?

    hey...wait a minute...this doesn't seem right...

    1. Re:Preach on! by RailGunner · · Score: 1

      I signed up for hotmail LONG before MS bought it. Besides, they aren't making any money off of me.

  132. Re:Old earnings? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I disagree. Merely because if you've read the white-paper on Longhorn, it's easy to see that they aren't worried about Linux.

    Right now all they are doing is scrambling to offer the customers something temporary until Longhorn is released, and after that... Linux is going to have a hard time catching up to both the internal kernel capabilities and general OS usability.

  133. Entirely my fault, sorry! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I broke my long-standing oath to never buy a Microsoft product again, when I bought my wife a laptop (XP Home) for Christmas.

    It won't happen again, I promise...

  134. This must be a hoax by SlashDread · · Score: 1

    Surely,

    MS just reported a LOSS of kazilion billion due to lost sales due to "pirated copies" of Windows. They even had to stop updating illegal versions!

    Surely they are close to bankrupt now.

  135. What should M$ do in this case... by dpilot · · Score: 1

    Specifically, as long as no new features are used, every version of every Office program should be able to exchange every Office document. There shouldn't be any of this, Office 95 can't read Office 97 files, and Office 97 can't read Office 2k files, etc.

    Of course the new version will want to come out with new features. But the reader architecture should have been smart enough to recognize that it can't handle something, realize it's a new feature, and prompt the user for some sort of action. This isn't rocket science.

    Sometimes it's even possible that there just may be a better storage architecture, and it's time to break backward compatiblity. That happens. But it shouldn't happen every single release. The fact that the settings can be tweaked to save in old formats by default, combined with the fact that there are companies happily running that way, suggest to me (and others) that MS uses file format changes to "urge" upgrades.

    --
    The living have better things to do than to continue hating the dead.
  136. Halo 2 Boosts Home Division by EXTomar · · Score: 1

    Halo 2 is the reason why their "Home Entertainment" division is in the black but they won't be that way later this year. And in the end it is a small portion of their revenue stream. There bread and butter is still Office and OEM Windows deals.

    Microsoft ran some cut costs (including cutting R&D funding which IMHO is dangerous for a technology company) and had a confluence of good timing (servers from the pre-bubble era need replacing about now) leads to this. The real question I have in my mind is how they will be at the end of the year. I'm not seaying they will be bankrupt but I suspect the picture for MS Q4 2005 isn't as rosey.

  137. Microsoft spread by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Think to the Catholic church when you think Microsoft. When the western world grows wise to their pitch and stops buying, they turn to endoctrinating developing countries for their income. They make even more money because their pitch and products, already developed and paid for by western buyers, are relatively new there. Compare populations, rate of development and the possible "faithful". Then go figure about why they're making more money.

  138. The real reason why they posted gains by H0bb3z · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Okay, the REAL reason why Microsoft has posted such gains is that it is no longer supporting the NT4 operating system. Enterprises that want to have continued support have been forced to purchase Windows 2003 Server upgrades to maintain support.

    Microsoft touts this as "high demand" for their server platform, when in reality, its a strong-arm move to keep their customers locked in to their platform, support and licensing model.

    Most enterprises likely had little choice but to upgrade. It was the easier choice in my company, despite my loathing of the Microsoft business model (NOTE: I said *easier* choice, not the *right* choice). It would be far more difficult to migrate to a non-Microsoft platform when there are well known dependencies on MS technology.

    Unfortunatly, the closest thing related to an IT architecture strategy around my company looks remarkably like the Microsoft technology roadmap.

    I need a new job...

    --
    "There *IS* no patch for stupidity" -www.sqlsecurity.com
  139. Accountant Olypmics by Corellon+Larethian · · Score: 1

    Accounting should be an Olympic sport, because they manage to pull off some impressive moves, sometime.

    Microsoft would totally win the Gold, with this one.

  140. Doesn't necessarily mean anything by petrus4 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    A quarter is what, three months? In the grand scheme of things, that's a momentary spike. Meanwhile they still have the same problem they've had for the last ten years...Namely, no clue of what to do with themselves in the OS space (their heartland) after NT 4. (XP does NOT count...it's NT 5.x with eye candy) Longhorn has been essentially cancelled, which in a history of mistakes was probably the single dumbest thing MS has ever done.
    Big picture, Microsoft needs to do three things:-

    1. Get a concrete, long-term operating system plan in place...and not one which is implemented one minute and scrapped the next, a la Longhorn. They need to find something and run with it.

    2. Get a substantial new OS release out the door ASAP. It's been way too long since the last one...and as anyone who writes software knows, for the most part you're only considered as good as your last release.

    3. Do something serious about Ballmer's constant gaffes and idiotic, embarassing behaviour...this ties in with an urgent need for MS to clean up its image in a big way in general.

    If Bill can pull off these three things, and also post *sustained* gains, (and instead of one, try eight or so) then I might believe that in a long term sense, he's back in the game. Until then, an isolated decent quarter here and there is so much hollow optimistic hot air, IMNSHO.

  141. And how is the Microsoft stock? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hmm ... still hanging around $26 this morning, flat, and a loss of 50% from its year 2000 highs.

    Not much reason for excitement.

  142. Anonymous Numbers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That's great that MS is going well, since a lot of folks have a chunk of their portfolios invested in this company. But before you jump all over this, consider:

    * They're pressuring OEMs to keep the MS Tax in place (I had to fight with Dell to get OEM Windows removed from $300K worth of computers).

    * Considering the above, an increase in server equipment spending (it's cyclical - companies replace infrastructure every 5 or 10 years) will give it a bump.

    * Licensing changes and policies make it so you have to buy something other than per-seat (per-CPU specifically) for lots of trendy Internet-based services.

    You'd be having a record quarter too if you got a cut of every PC sold without spending a dime getting your product on it, or supporting it.

    Re: Difficulty and competition... I'm moving our network over to all CIFS/MS Networking. Where I don't need to run Windows installers, I run Linux. The other boxes are WS2000. Samba on Linux was much easier to configure and troubleshoot, and overall had less problems with the clients. Whatever.

  143. Oh no! This could lead to stagnation and bugs! by Werrismys · · Score: 1

    MS better up their R&D budget fast. Imagine if the company was known for bug-ridden, non-innovative software!

    --
    'Once scientists, even the dim-witted social scientists, get muzzled, the Western Civilization is finished.' - oldhack
  144. Re:But...but..Eric Raymond said Microsoft was doom by Maffy · · Score: 1

    Please could you back up that statement. I have seen no evidence either way as to how significant a player Microsoft is in the "Fortune 500 server market". You say "regardless of the context". My point was that you can't just disregard the context. ESR was talking about a very specific market segment and Microsoft's profit figures do not (as far as I've looked) demonstrate that they are a big player in this market. Matt

  145. Earnings Management by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Microsoft has played the "earnings managment" game before (mid to late 1990's) and could be doing that now. What is Earnings Managment (AKA Earnings Manupilation)? It is when a company sits on a pile of money and slowly recognizes it as income when filing its quarterly and annual financial reports. Companies do this b/c Wall Street likes it. Nothing beats a predictable stream of earnings growth (in the eyes of Wall Street investors and analysts).

    Microsoft has the giant pile of cash with which to manipulate earnings. The have also sold a whole lot of software licenses that span some sort of time period. Let's say Microsoft sells you a copy of XP Home for $100 and Microsoft plans to provide support for XP Home for another 5 years. Microsoft might claim $50 immediately as "revenue from goods sold". Then Miscrosoft would allocate the other $50 to a "Software Support Funds" (an asset) and create a liability in the amount of $50 and call it "software support". In each of the five years, Microsoft would recognize one year's software support as revenue.

  146. Re:Old earnings? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    My company upgraded my box yesterday, from win ME to win 2k pro. On an old PIII.

    Ohh and autocad 2005LT is buggy, you need to download autodesk's sp1 if you want a stable autocad.

    Sounds like a joke huh?

  147. Re:Old earnings? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What, your claiming the lunch is eaten before even the end product is there to actually test and prod. Or in other words without proof.
    Since when exactly has MS made all the hype come true on it's products, or for that matter had a product that had things noone hadn't thought of and implemented before?

    Ofcourse anyone can change, but MS has a very long history behind it of not being the most innovative or groundbreaking. And we already know they have top notch PR, so lets jsut see what the actual product is before praising it into the heaven.

  148. Re:Old earnings? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    I am posting anonymously because of obvious reasons. I own a Suse/Novell partner company in EMEA and we have been BLOWN AWAY with Novell's OES product. You can download the beta at www.novell.com/oes but basically, what it is is Netware on Linux. Impressive as hell.

    I am extremely glad of the way Novell are going, I think they have exterminated Redhat in features and in six to twelve months time they will start killing Microsoft in NT4/Win2000 migrations. OES is THAT good.

  149. Microsoft Financials and how slashdot tries spin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Wow! An online website with a forum full of Anti-Microsoft Trolls trying to explain how microsoft is failing in the market even though they are still doing well even in 2005 (years after the dot bomb). What a suprise!

    If everyone on this list got a job and got out of their parents house, then there would be nothing else to talk about.

    Linux is better because it's not Microsoft isn't going to work anymore kids. Get on with your lives, get away from the computer. Go get a girlfriend and a job and maybe you might be able to save your life.

  150. I wish they'd ditch the stupid borg icon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's so fucking purile!

    Slashdot should do itself a big favour and GROW THE FUCK UP!

    1. Re:I wish they'd ditch the stupid borg icon by qwerty+asdf · · Score: 1

      Nice try, Bill.

  151. When you don't pay sales tax .... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Microsoft has its sales offices in Nevada because Nevada doesn't have a sales tax.

    Microsoft pays its coders in stock options and avoids posting payroll offset to income, making profits even larger than those that would be posted by companies doing a fair accounting.

    Microsoft gets a tax "rebate" (corporate welfare) in an amount equal to the stock option when the employee cashes in that option. The employee pays the option cost. That rebate is additional income for Microsoft but is furnished at the taxpayer's expense.

    Then Ballmer and Gates have the gull to lecture Citizens in Oregon and Washington that they should not dodge paying their 'fair share' of taxes.

    They've been using these techniques and more for years: http://www.billparish.com/msftfraudfacts.html

  152. Stock Options by demon411 · · Score: 1

    I read somewhere that in 1999 ms had like $8.7 billion or so in profits, but if you properly accounted the options ms gave to employees they would have resulted in a loss of $11 billion . The widespread use of stock options to compensate employees has caused corporate earnings to be grossly overstated, since the options reduce the amount of wages charged against profits.

  153. Re:But...but..Eric Raymond said Microsoft was doom by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Let's use a little common sense. ESR said this in 1998, so 18 months later can't be any later than July of 2000. Do you really doubt that MS hasn't sold any server licenses to Fortune 500 companies since July of 2000?

    ESR didn't say that MS wasn't going to be a big player, he said that MS wasn't going to be a factor; there's a big difference in the two.

  154. argh by mattyrobinson69 · · Score: 1

    so i bought an xbox with no games for no reason then?

  155. Re:Old earnings? by Superfarstucker · · Score: 1

    I feel you are being overly optimistic in your forecasting of the rise of OSS to market dominance. Suppose you are at least right that Linux's emergence as an alternative in the market has forced Microsoft to make some changes under the hood. So what? In the grand scheme of things how do they lead to the conclusion "MS is going to have a very difficult time in coming years?" To an uninitiated such as myself none of these changes seem significant. Wake me up when microsoft posts an unusually bad year and oss posts a good one.

    I'd be more inclined to agree with something reasonable...

    'It seems likely Microsoft will be giving up some market share to Open source software in coming years.' Being dramatic lends nothing to this conclusion.

  156. You forgot: by AtariAmarok · · Score: 1

    0. Steal original DOS and make a mint.

    --
    Don't blame Durga. I voted for Centauri.
  157. Re:MS income more than NY State? Wrong. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In fact, the tax revenue of most states (except maybe Utah, Hawaii, and other small states) probably is higher than MS.

    Somebody's bad at thinking big.

  158. Health Care? by Fished · · Score: 1

    Not sure where you're coming from, but around here if taxes are paying for your health care, they are almost certainly not your taxes.

    --
    "He who would learn astronomy, and other recondite arts, let him go elsewhere. " -- John Calvin, commenting on Genesis 1
  159. err by hawk · · Score: 1

    Don't multiple windows servers just give you that many *more* security holes? :)

    hawk

    1. Re:err by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't multiple windows servers just give you that many *more* security holes? :)

      At least multiple spam hosts, so in a way yes. :)

  160. oops, beware the double-negative by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That should have been:

    "Do you really doubt that MS has sold some server licenses to Fortune 500 companies since July of 2000?"

  161. Money != profit by truthsearch · · Score: 1

    Profit for shareholders of a growth company only means that people bought a stock which later others are willing to pay more for. The billions go into Microsoft's coffers more from stock purchases than pure profit (at least historically). For all the details on how they were unprofitable during the 80s and 90s read this. If you can read all of the facts and quotes from people who were involved and still think they were profitable by product sales alone then you're choosing to be blind.

  162. DEC's demise by hawk · · Score: 1

    What killed DEC wasn't the changing market, but recto-cranial inversion in the upper layers of management.

    Listen to someone from there describe the demise and changes (Cutler's regime seems to be a common cutoff point).

    They out-appled apple.

    DEC was even more efficient than VW (though the same basic story) at cutting off limbs. After the two previous attempts to kill off the bug failed as people didn't buy the new models, they insured that the third *would* be their new main model by refusing to produce their most popular product.

    hawk

  163. Re:Old earnings? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That product has been in alpha testing for a LONG time now, and thus avaliable to us MS testers. Even the alpha version of LH leaves OSS far in the dust.

  164. Pirated Windows by poirchr · · Score: 1

    Looks like all those pirated versions of windows are really cutting into the profits.

  165. License agreements? by Billly+Gates · · Score: 1

    Can someone who works with MS in the enterprise comment on licensing agreements?

    Rumors on slashdot claim that MS is raising the cost of MS Office if corporate buyers do not also buy or promise to switch from Unix to Windows.

    Like, oh we would like to run Oracle on Linux but our licensing agreement with MS makes us use SQL-Server.

    Is this true or just abunch of rumors? This is slashdot after all.

    Last, sales of IT are UP! Look at the nasdaq? Businesses who did not upgrade since 1999 are doing some maintance on their systems. Windows and Unix should be included on this.

  166. Re:Perhaps, BUT... by symbolic · · Score: 1


    I can easily see Microsoft lapsing into the same kind of "saturated market mentality" that afflicts other industries. Instead of focusing on innovation and providing real value, they'll focus on ways to use the same medium to extract more cash- increased licensing fees, unbundling of certain components, software-as-a-service, annual subscriptions, and countless other possibilities that will require payment over and above the base cost.

  167. voluntarily my ass! by Xtifr · · Score: 1

    Everyone who paid Microsoft a dime did so voluntarily [...]

    I've got a stack of unused Win CDs here that calls you a liar. No, the difference is that some of the money I spend in taxes has provided me with benefits (better roads, police services, etc., etc.), while none of the money I've been forced to send to Redmond since the early nineties (the last time I actually used an MS OS) has done me any damn good at all.

    1. Re:voluntarily my ass! by rnd() · · Score: 1

      If you had been able to save money by not obtaining those CDs, you would have. Therefore you saved money by obtaining them as part of a discounted package or got them for free. QED.

      --

      Amazing magic tricks

  168. Re:Old earnings? by Patoski · · Score: 1
    Suppose you are at least right that Linux's emergence as an alternative in the market has forced Microsoft to make some changes under the hood. So what? In the grand scheme of things how do they lead to the conclusion "MS is going to have a very difficult time in coming years?" To an uninitiated such as myself none of these changes seem significant. Wake me up when microsoft posts an unusually bad year and oss posts a good one.

    I'd be more inclined to agree with something reasonable...

    'It seems likely Microsoft will be giving up some market share to Open source software in coming years.' Being dramatic lends nothing to this conclusion.


    Now, no one is saying that MS is going anywhere tomorrow, next year, or even ten years. It is crazy to think otherwise. It took MS ten years to effectively kick IBM out of the OS / Office suite market. Add to the equation that MS is sitting on billions in cash (that isn't going to evaporate overnight). Shoot, all the companies MS beat in the great grandparent of this post (IBM and Novell) are still very much in business. However, MS losing any substantial amount of market share to anyone is a "big deal" in that it is an inflection point away from the MS monoculture we see today. Large change happens slowly but I think we're at the very beginning of one that is worth taking note of.

    One other thing to consider... Almost all of MS' profits come from the sale of Windows and Office. Because of this they are almost unassailable in other markets and any company competing against MS is competing against their money generating cash cows, Office and Windows. If those two bulwarks are challenged in a substantial way then you are turning the screws on the other unprofitable areas of MS (of which there are many).

    Look at the XBOX for instance... It has lots hundreds of millions of dollars and MS is unfazed by this. MS is able to write this off as the cost of getting into the market due to the horde of cash they have accumulated. What other company would be able to do this? I can't think of any off the top of my head.

    I wasn't *trying* to be dramatic. Sorry if I left you with that impression. I'm willing to go 50/50 with you and say it was 50% me being more dramatic than I intended and 50% the internet and your expectation (and mine for that matter) of a typical /.er's incoherent rant. ;-) Anyhow, thanks for the thoughtful reply. I hope I cleared up my viewpoint a bit. We still might not agree but I hope I've at leas made myself more clear. :-)
    --
    G. Washington on Government "it is force. Like fire, it is a dangerous servant and a fearful master."
  169. Microsoft is Dying by pyrrho · · Score: 1

    Netcraft confirms it.

    --

    -pyrrho

  170. Re:Old earnings? by DrugCheese · · Score: 1

    That's great to hear! I've been a long time uber-fan of SuSE and it's the only linux product I use for myself and clients.

    In 98 when I tried RedHat for the first time even then I could see that with each new distro SuSE was taking strides while RedHat only crept along.

    And now Novell owns Evolution to give MS Exchange Server and Outlook that final One-Two punch.

    I may be blinded by my faith in them, but I have a ton of faith that Novell/SuSE will be the company in the news credited for being Microsofts demise.

    --
    *DrugCheese rants*
  171. You may want to research first... by VolciMaster · · Score: 2, Informative
    I don't know who thought New York State only makes $10b in tax revenue - we have a $100b+ state budget! I went to http://www.osc.state.ny.us/finance/finreports/2004 cafr.pdf and checked the report of the state comptroller. Page 148 (of the pdf) has the majo stats on state revenues. Personal Income tax: $24b; total tax revenues: $42.2b. NYW collected $10b in just sales tax.

    Microsoft's $10b is a lot, but it's nowhere near New York.

  172. ...Or they just have a GREAT accountant, by waferhead · · Score: 1

    I assume they pull money out of Bills couch, and can make the nubmers say anything they want.

  173. Very small compared to IBM by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    IBM had $28 billion last quarter, you can compare that to Microsoft's $10 billion.

    And we all know that IBM is championing Linux.

    Don't forget that :-) It's not all gloomy and stuff.

  174. Re:Old earnings? by canuck57 · · Score: 1

    Hmm..going by your logic, if companies replace their servers every 4-5 years, it is going to be a long time before Linux sees any server market share.

    For some companies where managers need to feel a familiarity between their desk top and what a server looks like... and perhaps have low skilled server manager - yes. These markets will be initially hard to crack. Some of these shops still might even still be running Netware.

    But do remember, Linux is in almost every Netgear, SMC, LinkSys cable modems, routers and even cell phones. For web servers, Netcraft reports more sites run on Linux/BSD/xNIX than Windows.

    China bought a million seats of Linux from Sun not to long ago. And since most distros are free -- no one really knows how many there out there but I would bet the farm that it is alot more than Microsoft will admit to or have you believe.

    Many shops use VMWare to run Windows servers to increase reliability by removing driver depenancies. VMWare also facilitates quick backup and recovery as well as OS instance sharing of hardware. VMWare server version is modified Linux. Modified versions of xNIX can be found in Bluecoats, file share devices

    This you can be sure of, China with relatively inexpensive labour could pile 1,000,000 programmers towards Linux and like TVs, computers, camera, auto parts, toys and hundereds of other things the next software package for ERP, HRS or servers might also come from the orient.

    And China isn't going to spend $1000 per PC on Microsoft for 5 billion people. More like 50 cents for a Linux distro with a Chinese version of Open Office that runs on a $125 PC. Comes with source for quick bug fixes and isn't back doored.

    The chinese are learning Linux now. Give then a year, maybe two and the shrink wrapped ERP server might be at your door to replace that Microsoft server.

    Intel is already feeling the pinch as why spend $300 for a P4 when I can get the whole system, memory, hard drive, case CD-RW for $300.

    Our businesses feel the pinch as users routinely load spyware and viruses daily costing billions in unproductive time for our companies. And yes, users infect more machines than worms do. A Linux appliances will come in a way the user can't do this and save adopers many millions.

    So no, I think the Linux revolution is huge and only begun. And it is building momentum by the day. And I do predict the day Micosoft adopts Linux as theor OS or they will be crushed.

  175. more xbox units sold == profit? False Conclusion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Microsoft has attributed the rise in earnings to increased server sales (where *nix-based systems are supposed to be doing well) and more XBox units being sold.
    Microsoft loses money on xbox sales.
  176. Re:Lying with statistics, MS style by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ancient_Hacker (751168)

    Not that ancient, are we?

  177. Re:more xbox units sold == profit? False Conclusio by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    True, but Microsoft doesn't want people to know that.

    Nope, they made money off of Halo 2, and that's it. That is the state of Xbox.

  178. Re:But...but..Eric Raymond said Microsoft was doom by hunterx11 · · Score: 1
    October, 1991:
    "Hurd will be out in a year..."

    Somehow I don't think that leaders of the open source movement are the paragon of prescience :-)

    --
    English is easier said than done.
  179. Who Is This Asshole? by Master+of+Transhuman · · Score: 1

    "Microsoft has attributed the rise in earnings to increased server sales (where *nix-based systems are supposed to be doing well) and more XBox units being sold. For a company that most Slashdotters would say is on the decline, Microsoft sure has weird financial results!"

    Yeah - and Linux will do $35 billion over the next few years.

    That's $35 billion Microsoft will NOT get...

    The predictions stand that Linux will first take out proprietary UNIX systems on the server side, then roll back Microsoft on the server side, then take the desktop.

    Have a nice day, moron.

    Is that all you got, huh? Are you nuts? Come at me!

    --
    Richard Steven Hack - This sig is TOO GODDAMN SHORT TO DO ANYTHING USEFUL WITH! MORONS!
  180. SCO said the same thing by sl4shd0rk · · Score: 1

    they were full of shit too.

    --
    Join the Slashcott! Feb 10 thru Feb 17!
  181. Hookers make a lot of money to... by Your+Average+Joe · · Score: 1

    Do you want your daughter to be a hooker just because they make a lot of money? Enron executives also made a lot of money and look where it got them...

    --
    Your Average Joe
  182. Appearance of profit by slashing R&D by SgtChaireBourne · · Score: 1
    The profit, despite plummeting revenue is due to MS gutting its research and development. That means no new products in the pipe, except spin, hype and lobbying.

    It's been a long time since MS was an IT company and for the last few years it's even been leaving the marketing sector in favor of international lobbying. I suppose this is just a watershed moment.

    MSIE was its chance to get a death grip on the WWW, but MSIE won't last without the desktop monopoly. The desktop monopoly has been eroding quietly for some time, especially in Europe, China, S America and Africa. Now the sound of the erosion is not so quiet as the world discovers that Linux and other F/OSS is easy to install and use.

    Yes, MS still sells MS-Windows like no other piece of software has ever sold. However, the mainstay of the desktop monopoly has been control of the OEMs, which supply over 90% of the sales of MS-Windows and about 70% of MS-Office sales. Without those two, there is no revenue to speak of. Get the OEMs and the whole dot-com bubble called Microsoft goes away overnight.

    Cutting off R&D is cutting off future revenue. MS is now demonstrating how dire its situation is. It's become redundant as its defective products are replaced around the world with competing ones that actually get the job done for a change.

    --
    Beta is broken and the link to classic doesn't work. Stop wasting our time or there won't be anybody left here.
  183. If you don't like the taxes in New York... by Prof.+Pi · · Score: 1

    ...MOVE! Nobody's forcing you to live in New York. You're free to move to New Hampshire or some other tax-free-as-in-beer state.

    There are only a few alternatives to Microsoft, which has a 90% market share. There are 50 states to choose from, the largest of which has only 10% of the market for residents. So it looks like state taxpayers have more choice than those who pay the "Microsoft tax.".

    Of course, maybe you can't move because your job is in New York. Well, your employer voluntarily made the decision to locate in New York, and you're always free to get another job.

    (Note: this is meant as a parody of the "using Microsoft is voluntary" argument, not necessarily an endorsement of New York's taxes.)

    1. Re:If you don't like the taxes in New York... by rnd() · · Score: 1

      It would be nice if states actually competed for residents. That was the way the USA was supposed to work, with the Federal government serving a well-defined and limited role. Since the amount that an individual pays in state taxes is deducted from his/her Federal tax burden, there is really very little incentive for states to lower taxes.

      Ironically, the framers imagined the majority of a person's tax burden coming from the state and little or no Federal taxation.

      You do have a point in mentioning that competition does exist between states and countries in terms of attracting taxable residents and businesses, but there is a great deal of competition in the software industry, and contrary to taxation people willingly part with their dollars. Note the absence of automatic payroll deduction for software fees, jail terms for people who choose not to buy particular software, etc.

      --

      Amazing magic tricks

  184. Bill Parish, the Michael Moore of finance? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Hahaha... A classic "Bill Parish" link. From 1999. Welcome to 2005.

    Only now, Microsoft is expensing stock options and being as transparent as possible in its accounting, so the link simply doesn't hold water. Not that it ever did.

    I don't know if this is a fake or a real Slashdot comment from Bill Parish, but Parish apparently responded to criticism of his sensational Microsoft fraud claims in a rambling, paranoid rant:

    Bill Parish Responds on Microsoft Fraud Study
    The original Slashdot story:
    Investment Advisor Alleges MS Financial Fraud