So long netbooks. Your 15 minutes are about up.\n
From Either the Netbook goes or... on Tomshardware
\n\nWindows is in a lousy place. Its only growth market is Netbooks, and that seems to be about to implode. Sony seems to have finally gotten the PS3 game pipeline sorted out (except for the PSP Go fiasco). PC sales are pretty moribund and likely to stay that way -- new PCs aren't especially compelling, gamers don't care about PCs any more, and the economy sucks. And Microsoft is in a lousy place: although the sidekick fiasco was monumentally incompetent you have to give Microsoft credit for handling it well, their new Windows Mobile is being ridiculed by usually friendly reviewers, and their not-so-secret and bizarrely named \"Pink\" project is apparently in a shambles. Ballmer is talking down Windows 7.\n\nMicrosoft could have released Windows 7 as Windows Vista SP2. Why didn't they? Instead of bolstering their reputation for sticking with an initially failed product until they make it successful (as they did with Windows, Internet Explorer, Video for Windows Media Player, Microsoft Access, Visual Studio, and so many other products) they seem to be turning into Apple circa 1994 -- producer of half-assed, ill-conceived products that are left in maintenance purgatory and eventually abandoned, or -- worse -- released (Pocket Windows CE Mobile, Windows Vista, Windows ME). Microsoft has always had its share of failed products, but they were generally bold attempts to screw with someone else's core product (e.g. Microsoft Money) where Microsoft had little to lose and everything to gain.\n\nIf Microsoft had released Windows 7 as Vista SP2 they could have slowly turned Vista into a success and reduced the fragmentation of the Windows software market (oh good, so now I have to deal with XP, Vista, and 7). They could have bolstered their reputation for seeing through shaky projects to successful conclusions. Instead they've opted to run the risk of failing again in their core market while leaving Vista owners feeling cheated (even if they're willing to pay for the upgrade, the nightmarish upgrade process will not go down well). Even if Windows 7 is some kind of home run -- it's not clear how this will serve Microsoft better than having made Vista SP2 a home run -- or at least attempting to.","$updatedAt":"2024-06-05T09:24:26.184+00:00",path:"was-vista-really-a-flop-",_created:"2024-07-09T20:31:55.241Z",id:"1743",_modified:"2024-07-09T20:31:55.241Z","$id":"1743",_path:"post/path=was-vista-really-a-flop-"},"page/path=blog":{path:"blog",css:"",imageUrl:"",prefetch:[{regexp:"^\\/(([\\w\\d]+\\/)*)([\\w-]+)\\/?$",path:"post/path=[3]"}],tags:["public"],source:"