ZDNet UK


Skip to Main Content

ZDNet.co.uk - Winner of Best Business Website 2007
  1. Home
  2. News
  3. Blogs
  4. Reviews
  5. Prices
  6. Resources
  7. Community
  8. My ZDNet

 

ZDNet UK RSS Feeds


IT Jobs

Desktop platforms Toolkit

Ballmer: Software is becoming a service

Ina Fried CNET News.com

Published: 28 Jul 2006 10:30 BST

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendly
  • Post Comment

Acknowledging the software industry is undergoing a radical transformation, Microsoft chief executive Steve Ballmer said on Thursday that his company is moving rapidly to create products that can be funded by ads and served up over the Internet.

"Software is becoming a service," Ballmer said at the company's financial analyst meeting being held here. "Embracing advertising and subscription-based models and Internet-based delivery across Microsoft's product line is an important part of what we will do."

Ballmer likened Microsoft to a multicore processor, saying the company is trying to add two new cores, entertainment and Internet services, to its existing cores, desktop and server software.

He pointed out that in the 1990s, investors questioned whether the company could even manage those two.

"We were a desktop company," he said. "That's what we were thought of for many years."

In the new areas of entertainment and Internet-based services, Ballmer said Microsoft may not succeed overnight, but he is confident that in the long term the company will profit.

"We're not afraid to (encounter) initial resistance to our ideas," Ballmer said, adding that the company will "put even more bright people" behind those ideas. "Sometimes things take a really long time."

Earlier this month, Kevin Turner, Microsoft's chief operating officer, told a meeting of the company's business partners that Microsoft is "shifting from being a product-centric company to a services and solutions company".

At Thursday's meeting, the big question on financial analysts' minds was when Vista, the next version of Windows, will ship. Kevin Johnson, co-president of the company's platform unit, said the product will ship when it is ready, but did not offer a firm date.

Johnson said there was no data that suggested the company can't wrap up development in time for a launch to business customers in November and to consumers in January. He didn't, however, commit to hitting that time frame. "We will ship Windows Vista when the product is ready. Quality is job No. 1. We go milestone by milestone."

Johnson did not announce pricing for Vista, but said Microsoft will charge roughly similar prices as it does for the comparable Windows XP flavour. "We don't expect significant changes in our pricing strategy," he said. "However, Vista Ultimate is a new (product) and we will sell that at a modest premium to today's offerings."

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendly Print with HP

Did you find this article useful?
89 out of 174 people found this useful


Full Talkback thread

1 comment

  1. Mr Ballmer would do well to stick to what he seems... Alain Zola

Company/Topic Alerts

Create a new alert from the list below:




Related Jobs

.Net, asp.net developer- Entertainment Compnay- Uxbridge

I am currently working on behalf of a global leader in childrens and family leisure time and entertainment products and services, including the ...

C# .NET Developer - Entertainment/Media - London Contract

Our Leading Media/Entertainment Agency is looking for an experienced Web Programmer to join its Web Development team. We are looking for a well ...

Network Services Manager, ISP, Internet Services, London.

Network Services Manager, ISP, Internet Services, Cisco, Juniper, Foundry, DNS, TCP/IP, BGP, OSPF, SMTP, FTP, POP, IMAP, HTTP, HTTPS, Unix, Windows, ...

Desktop Management Benchmarking

Test Your Desktop Management Systems

How good are your company's desktop management solutions? How do they compare with those of your peers?

Take two minutes to complete our new Desktop Management and Energy Consumption benchmark, and find out what issues your business needs to focus on.

Featured Talkback

if the OLPC winds up as a vehicle to create a dependence on Windows for millions of poor people, the net effect for humanity will be negative. What makes it good is if it leads the users to freedom through free, freedom-respecting software.

By: mattlee

Read full story:
Negroponte: Windows key to OLPC philosophy