Slashdot Mirror


A Microsoft-Speak Timeline - From Altair to Zune

netbuzz writes "No company has had more to say about software over the past 30 years than Microsoft (for better or worse). How they've said it — the actual language used — reveals a lot about the company's evolution and is the focus of a new timeline. There's a look back at a 'tag cloud' provided by the Seattle P-I. In addition to analyzing the linguistics of about 90 documents, there are also links to such gems as Bill Gates' Playboy interview and his famous 'Open Letters to Hobbyists.' From the article: 'We're talking all the way from Altair to Zune, with stops along the way for every technology the company developed, bought or borrowed, right on through to current entanglements with Vista, Linux and Google. The tool allows for an at-a-glance view of company priorities as they evolve and shift.'"

6 of 114 comments (clear)

  1. Re:The most surprising thing to me by camperdave · · Score: 4, Funny

    Was the missing three years- just what in the hell was Microsoft doing from 1977 to 1980 anyway?

    Downloading CPM on a 300 baud acoustic modem?

    --
    When our name is on the back of your car, we're behind you all the way!
  2. A key to MS success is exposed here by mattnuzum · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Even in their marketing material, "programmers" and related terms are often more prominent than "users." Bill & co realized early on that the way to get users is to get software that users want/need. They've been courting developers since the beginning and I've never seen (historically speaking - since I was born about the time Altair came out) that they deviated from that plan. Apple didn't start this model until OS X came out and even Linux is only just starting to lower the barrier to entry for developers of *desktop software*. (that's not entirely true, actually, but we in the Linux community have generally treated trolltech/QT like redheaded step children so if you don't count them the previous statement is passable)

  3. Windows CeMeNT by viking80 · · Score: 4, Funny

    Our shop is 100% Microsoft, including:
    Windows Ce
    Windows Me
    Windows NT

    Due to the flexibility, nimble, responsive solutions we have, we call this

    Ce-me-nt

    --
    don't cut it off www.mgmbill.org
  4. Where's the word security? by millia · · Score: 4, Insightful


    I find the absence of the word 'security' very interesting. I wasn't expect to see a word like 'quality' of course.

    --
    stored on computers from birth to the grave
  5. Re:Keep on getting away with it... by xappax · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Try embedding an Excel spreadsheet into your non-MS calendar, or pasting a MS Word doc into a non-MS email app. It doesn't work so well, does it? The incredible inter-operability and compatibility that you're describing exists because MS has direct control over all the specifications and interfaces for pretty much all the apps most people use today.

    MS didn't "innovate" the idea of getting everyone to use only MS apps for everything. If any company held such a powerful monopoly, they could do something similar. MS enjoys a greater degree of compatibility and interoperability in their software because they control the whole game - the OS, the browser, the word processor, the spreadsheet, etc. are all totally under the control of MS. If a small company has a truly innovative idea, they have to fit it within the existing inflexible MS specs and APIs, or they're out of luck. Meanwhile, if MS has even the slightest idea for a new feature, they can just re-mold the entire OS and application architecture to implement it.

    What if you could get better gas mileage in a Ford, but you could only use Ford gas and drive on Ford roads? Would that be considered "innovative"? Requiring people to commit themselves to a restricted proprietary environment in order to get the benefits of interoperability is a sign of lazy development at best and anti-competitive profiteering at worst - but if that's what they call "innovation" these days, who am I to argue?

  6. A lack of Progress? by Mystic+Silverfox · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Not that should surprise any of us here, but I found somewhat humorous anyway. In the time line, for November 1984 is an ad for MS Word. While praising "Spell"'s ability to have custom words added to a dictionary they used the words cryptococcosis and aepyornis as examples of technical terms that could be added. Interestingly enough, 20+ years later, they're both still "addable". If a company was aware of these words over 20 years ago why not add them to the built-in dictionary somewhere along the way?