Microsoft's five big revelations

Geoff Spick16 April 2009, 9:45 AM

When one of Microsoft's head honchos speaks, its usually well worth a listen. Kevin Turner, Microsoft's Chief Operating Officer lists five epiphanies the company has had.


At Microsoft's Midmarket CIO (Chief Information Officer) Summit last week, Kevin Turner put forward the company's position on the future of Windows, among other subjects.

The mid-market (medium-sized businesses) is where Microsoft will be looking to make a lot of money early on from the new Windows and Office products as these companies can adopt new technologies and change faster than monolithic enterprises.


Microsoft's Kevin Turner, showing very bad ties are no barrier to rising up the executive ranks.

They should also emerge from the recession a little faster than their larger counterparts, making them a key target for Microsoft. Like dominoes, Microsoft must hope that once a few tip over to upgrading to Windows 7, the rest will start to follow in a neat tidal effect. These summit events, while high level, offer an interesting perspective on what the company is trying to do. You can read the full transcript here.

Turner makes a big sell for Windows Vista, explores a lot of what MS's future research will cover and mentions the current environment a lot. Some of the main points were:
  • Microsoft is hungrier than ever for feedback
You can believe this or not, but at most levels Microsoft seems to have transformed from a "we will do it our way" organization to one that is listening and responding to its customer needs.
  • Customer expectations have risen
Companies today do not just buy the new version of what they have always brought before. They are investigating every option (read Linux, Macs, sticking with what they have got) and calculating savings, training costs and other factors years down the road to find the best solution for them.

Yes, it does seem like a bit of a "no s**t Sherlock" type revelation, but at least Microsoft has learned from its experience with Vista that companies aren't going to commit millions of dollars to something that offers little more than a nice coat of paint on the old feature-set.
  • No economic recovery until 2011, information technology is becoming business technology
Microsoft is just one of many voices echoing the concern about an extended downturn, so perhaps changing the business name of the industry is one way to sneak some sales under the boardroom's radar by disguising computers as business tools.
  • Microsoft research and design spend going up by a $1B to $9billion
Now, that is a hell of a lot of money going into finding the next big thing. Perhaps those Surface and future videos are closer than we think, but does the bent on hardware mean that Microsoft is finally recognising the end of the OS software cash cow and entering a road of entire systems?
  • "Vista today, post Service Pack 2, is the safest, most reliable OS we've ever built"
Well, this is the one phrase from the speech that is echoing around the Web (800+ comments on Slashdot) and is the source of great debate. What it does mean though, is that Windows 7 will soon replace Vista in that respect and be a whole lot friendlier to manage.

So, do you think that his words stand up to scrutiny and, if you're in that mid-market target sector, are you convinced that the Microsoft boat is one worth catching in the immediate future, or will you be sitting on the sidelines to get a better perspective?

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Michael Quinn (User):

I've no doubt that Vista SP2 is reliable and safe(est). But holy crap it's a cow to work with.

16 April 2009, 12:29 PM (11 months ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

Tin (Senior Forumologist):

MS must exclude the boot loader from any reliability tests... Because the BCD thing is as flaky as bad dandruff. You even look at the partition table and it can crap itself!
And this isn't an issue only effecting nerdy people who dual boot... This is the most common Vista problem we get in our shop!

16 April 2009, 12:43 PM (11 months ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

jake (User):

vista is a b**** yes it may be the safest but it is also the hardest with the all the safety

16 April 2009, 1:10 PM (11 months ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

Bigred84 (New user):

I would honestly like to know how Vista is so "Difficult" to use, aren't the readers of this blog a little more technically minded? I challenge anyone who uses XP to try Vista (without the negative attitude) I've done so & I would agree with MS! My 64bit Ultimate is perfect, sometimes i don't shut down for days and the system stays stable! when I used XP Pro, i used to restart daily (sometimes even twice)

And what about the convenience of instant search? I hit the windows key & type "note" hit enter & viola! notepad is open, that may not be the most amazing feature, technically speaking, but it beats the hell out of "start->programs->accessories->notepad"

Overall Vista is a positive move forward, anyone who's used the Vista & has a Beta of Windows 7 will agree with me that there are minor usability changes in the most common functions of windows, it's really when you start "digging" that you find more user friendly & better designed (most of them upgraded) system utilities. I don't think that it will take long before 3rd party apps will U/G vista to a very good knock-off of Win 7.

so there, I said it, stop whining and move forward with the times, or stick with your relic OS!!

16 April 2009, 3:46 PM (11 months ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

Jeff (User):

Quoting Bigred84:
the convenience of instant search?


If by convenient you meant that an O(2n) search would be more efficient (not that I know how you could make such an inefficient search). And if you look at the way the start menu works I would hardly call that easy to use - yes it fixed the problem of the old style going all over the screen (which could be fixed by simply managing where you put things in the menu) and created a horrible to use menu instead.

Quoting Bigred84:
.so there, I said it, stop whining and move forward with the times, or stick with your relic OS!!


I am moving with the times, I have moved on to Linux which is faster, more stable and more secure. Those who continue to use Windows are the ones who are sticking to a relic OS - when was the last time MS actually did something innovative in Windows, rather than just copying what others have already done?

17 April 2009, 7:17 PM (11 months ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

carlleigh (New user):

You've wasted my time. Five epiphanies. What! They recognised the blazing obvious or is the article just an advert telling us that Windows Vista is more secure. I guess that means Microsoft has fixed the virus issue. Huh! No! Never mind.

16 April 2009, 4:00 PM (11 months ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

SLi (Cornerstone member):

The only two interesting yet obvious things in this article are:
1: Microsoft is hungrier than ever for feedback - Extremely obvious, anyone who has half a brain would have caught on by now... not much of a revelation, and this "revelation" as APC calls it, dates way back to the beginning stages of Windows 7's construction. What made you think that to be a revelation?????

2. Microsoft research and design spend going up by a $1B to $9billion
This is not soo obvious, however most people would have realised it. We have heard and seen Microsoft in their pursuit of touch compatibility for their OS's etc etc.

We got the picture long ago. The other 3 dot points are simply stating the obvious.

16 April 2009, 5:24 PM (11 months ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

djsflynn (APC staff):

I have to agree. Somebody take Mr Turner on a shopping trip to The Tie Rack and ditch that shrieking harlequin monstrosity for, well, almost anything..!

16 April 2009, 9:43 PM (11 months ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

Raindog (Senior Forumologist):

Quoting djsflynn:
that shrieking harlequin monstrosity

Could it be that Mr Turner's tie is actually an attempt to appeal to the common folk?
I know in poorer suburbs you often see cars with similar colour combinations. Red body, white bonnet, an assortment of different coloured doors.


16 April 2009, 11:13 PM (11 months ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

The Big Baboo (User):

Bring back Bill G. I say. At least he looked like he knew what he was doing instead of this commercial for men in need of hair transplants :)

17 April 2009, 10:59 AM (11 months ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

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