This guy is a typical turkey denying Christmas. No surprise he’s published in the PC World blog. That company is just another cog in the Microsoft ecosystem of businesses owing their existence to the cost and complexity that company turns out. For my part the world would be a better place without Microsoft. I refuse to use it, and get by just fine.
It’s the thought experiment we all like to engage in. What would life be like without Microsoft Windows? To listen to the free open source software crowd, the demise of Windows — and by extension, Microsoft‘s hegemony over the PC universe — would signal a kind of rebirth for information technology. Software would finally be free of the corporate shackles that have stifled innovation and dragged down the best and brightest among us.
Such thinking is naïve, at best. Rather than freeing IT, the demise of Microsoft would plunge the industry into an apocalyptic tailspin of biblical proportions — no visions of hippie utopia here. The withdrawal of the Redmond giant’s steady hand would cause today’s computing landscape to tear itself apart at the seams, with application and device compatibility and interoperability devolving into the kind of Wild West chaos unseen since the days of the DOS big three: Lotus, WordPerfect, and Ashton-Tate.
[ InfoWorld envisions five possible futures for Microsoft. Which do you think is most on target? | Get the analysis and insights that only Randall C. Kennedy can provide on PC tech in InfoWorld's Enterprise Desktop blog. ]
And don’t believe that the Web will somehow mitigate the impact of Windows’ demise. Although Google talks a good story about supplanting traditional compute models with a Web-centric paradigm, the truth is that the folks from Mountain View are no less sinister when it comes to grandiose plans for world domination. If anything, the rise of Google — or any dominant cloud-computing player — should be perceived as a potential threat to IT independence. As the saying goes, never put all your IT eggs into a single vendor’s basket.
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