Steve Ballmer really likes to say a whole lot of nothing seasoned with chuncks of big fat obvious statements.
(From the article provided by Nemesis)
Ballmer: One, people value their time. Our stuff does more, and they like that. Two, people value their time, and those [free] things tend to be clunky. Let's say you think you can save $50. And then you go and waste three hours. You tell me how quick that payback is. You can sketch that out at the enterprise level as much as you can at the individual end-user level. So people value their time, and people value their capability. Frankly, people value not only the compatibility our stuff has with itself, but they value the add-ons and the third-party customization that people have done. As long as we keep pushing the pace of innovation and delivering that value, I think we have a great opportunity.
The only part of that that wasn't overly vague, incoherent, or just plain wrong was "people value their time".
You know, IBM (nyse: IBM - news - people ) doesn't stand behind Linux. They promote Linux, but if there's a bug in Linux, IBM is not the responsible party to fix that. It's whoever in the community. And you know, let's say that person has a death in the family. I'm not saying we're perfect, but at least you can expect appropriate commercial responses out of a commercial entity.
Ok, we're all members of the Dynaverse community in one way or another, and most of us are in some way involved in other online communities. Has anyone here experience a time when a community was unable to function because of the death of a family member? I mean, seriously, a community is about people pitching in and helping
especially in a time of crisis, and not because they are paid to but because they genuinely care and want to help.
Clearly something I'm saying must be right, because that is what's happening.
That statement deserves a big fat
By that logic, I could say that ice cream sales cause heat strokes because when the rate of ice cream sales increase, the rate of heat strokes also increase (completely leaving out the fact that both are caused by the heat of the summer).
Forbes: How closely do you follow the open source world? Do you watch the debates over the new GPLv3 license? Do you get that granular about what's going on out there?
Ballmer: We have people that do.
Translation - no, I don't.
(continuing from the same paragraph)
I probably know more now than I did six months or a year ago, about what's going on. So I'm getting smarter every day.
This is a total no-brainer. If I didn't know anything about Linux six months ago and someone just said to me, "hey, there's this thing called Linux," then I would definitely (not probably) know more now than I did six months or a year ago. You can only
gain that kind of knowledge. The only way if you could possibly know
less about something than you did six months or a year ago is if you've taken a severe blow to the head since then.
We know how we are competing, and it's working. We just have to keep running the same playbook hard.
Does Steve Ballmer watch (American) Football (or just about any sport for that matter)? Does he know what happens when you keep running the same playbook? The other team learns how to counter it and you lose.
I know that I may not be totally fair and am certainly not being unbiased in dealing these blows to Steve Ballmer, but he makes it so easy. At least Bill Gates can speak intelligently. Ballmer speaks too much like a salesperson, trying to make you feel really good about what he's selling you without giving any real information about it. Even if I wasn't biased against Microsoft, I just can't respect someone who talks like that.