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July 8th, 2009

Microsoft, hoist by a Chrome petard

Posted by Phil Wainewright @ 3:30 am

Categories: Architecture, Google, Microsoft, Rich Internet Applications

Tags: Google Inc., Netscape Communications Corp., Microsoft Corp., Web Browser, Web Browsers, Microsoft Windows, Operating Systems, Internet, Software, Phil Wainewright

As one Talkback commenter recalled during the discussion of my post earlier this week on free as a business model, Microsoft long ago used free as a weapon to capture the nascent Web browser market:

“Remember in 94 when Microsoft suddenly realised they had completely missed the internet boat? Netscape was THE browser, Microsoft didn’t even have a browser. Solution? Freemium it! Microsoft went to Mosiac … Then they shafted Mosaic and Netscape all in one go by giving the browser away ‘free’. Mosaic, who did all the development effort for what is now IE, were shafted. Netscape were also shafted. So there you have a lesson on how ‘free’ is done.”

Now Microsoft is shafted by the same tactic (or, in the Shakespearian idiom, ‘hoist by his own petard‘ — a petard being a medieval word for a bomb). Google’s new Chrome OS (see Techmeme discussion) will be a free-of-charge, open-source competitor to the Windows operating system, which is such a cashcow for Microsoft that its license fee is routinely described as a ‘tax’ on PC owners.

I’m old enough to remember when Microsoft worked with Intel and Compaq to make an end-run around IBM back in the late 1980’s, sabotaging the larger vendor’s abortive attempt to create a new PC operating system called OS/2 that would be a successor to the older PC-DOS developed for IBM by Microsoft. Windows triumphed over OS/2 because IBM moved too slowly and was too internally focused on its own roadmap for developing the PC to understand the importance of keeping ahead of other emerging new technologies, in particular Intel’s new 386 chip. Is Microsoft making the same mistakes now with Windows Vista and its successor, Windows 7?

Perhaps Microsoft is doomed to fail simply by virtue of being the incumbent vendor, with ingrained habits and obligations to an existing customer base that prevent it making the right choices (such as looking at the world through the prism of ’software plus services’ instead of reversing the polarity and thinking from a perspective of ’services plus software’). Google has none of that baggage holding it back, plus it has a huge advantage Microsoft lacked back in the 1990s — Microsoft had a fortunate windfall revenue stream from licensing PC-DOS, but the sums are peanuts compared to the billions of dollars Google generates today from its dominance of contextual Web advertising.

One thing I always ask when I see a vendor pursing a free strategy is, what’s the motive? As set out here yesterday, there’s a cost to free, which someone will end up paying. Often it’s customers who pay the price — look at the deadening of competition in the Web browser market once Internet Explorer had crushed its rival Netscape Navigator, leaving users in limbo until Firefox emerged to introduce long-needed innovation such as tabbed browsing. In the case of Google’s Chrome OS, I think there’s genuine cause for optimism, since the project seems to have been born out of frustration with the limitations of present-day operating systems to support web-based applications. If Google’s motivation is to unleash greater innovation and capability in cloud services and applications — which makes sense, since that is where Google’s future prosperity lies — then this is one case where a free product could benefit the market as whole. Except Microsoft, of course, so let that be a lesson to us all: you reap what you sow.

Phil WainewrightPhil Wainewright is a commentator and strategist on emerging software industry trends. See his full profile and disclosure of his industry affiliations.


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Related Discussions on TechRepublic

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  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 49 Talkback(s)
Big Blue is doing just fine...
They changed their business model from 25 years ago, but they are thriving more then ever. I think Microsoft has always been more agile then IBM and they will be just fine.... (Read the rest)
Posted by: MSFTWorshipper Posted on: 08/13/09 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
Live by free, die by free  Macintoshtoffy | 07/08/09
What Ive been saying about Linux and Google for a while now!!!  CrashPad | 07/08/09
What a spinner! Point is MS' monopoly power is failing.  No More Microsoft Software Ever! | 07/08/09
RE: Microsoft, hoist by a Chrome petard  kishorgurtu | 07/08/09
Closed propietory  CrashPad | 07/08/09
Nope. I have a choice to buy Apple and their OS.  No More Microsoft Software Ever! | 07/08/09
Nope, wide open Open Source.  TripleII | 07/13/09
Google has name recognition  Boot_Agnostic | 07/08/09
Free fails in the long run  CrashPad | 07/08/09
Time for you to crawl out of your rock hole.  No More Microsoft Software Ever! | 07/08/09
Can both of you fanatics  Boot_Agnostic | 07/09/09
It's the means to an end.  TripleII | 07/13/09
RE: Microsoft, hoist by a Chrome petard  Arun (sreearun) | 07/08/09
Already in the works...  CrashPad | 07/08/09
And will be for 4 more. Even then MS won't get it right.  No More Microsoft Software Ever! | 07/08/09
Good luck getting WGA to boot that fast  Ole Man | 07/08/09
Thats odd Phill.  jdbukis@... | 07/08/09
it's history  cameigons | 07/08/09
The history  daengbo | 07/08/09
A good reply  roaming | 07/08/09
It's substantiated  phil wainewrightZDNet Moderator | 07/08/09
Yeah, then MS took the tech to make NT, then 2000 thru Vista thru Win7.  No More Microsoft Software Ever! | 07/08/09
History Shouldn't Limit the Future  amywohl | 07/08/09
RE: Microsoft, hoist by a Chrome petard  nothingness | 07/08/09
oops, I meant "better" in place of "matter"  nothingness | 07/08/09
Even more oops. Just edit your original message. (NT)  No More Microsoft Software Ever! | 07/08/09
Firefox didn't innovate tabbed browsing  slingzenarrowzuvowtrayjissforchin | 07/08/09
Mozilla became Firefox so I think the author can be counted as correct.  No More Microsoft Software Ever! | 07/08/09
RE: Microsoft, hoist by a Chrome petard  dheady@... | 07/08/09
Stretched?  phil wainewrightZDNet Moderator | 07/08/09
Good call! Very nice use of colloquialisms. (NT)  No More Microsoft Software Ever! | 07/08/09
Free?  dheady@... | 07/08/09
And yet here you are on ZDNet. A site plastered with Ads.  No More Microsoft Software Ever! | 07/08/09
Chrome problems at the enterprise level  Skibum | 07/08/09
Yeah, I'm sure Google keeps all their money in the "Cloud"  Ole Man | 07/08/09
Don't Forget The Browser Wars ...  nottheusual1 | 07/08/09
Sounds like youre ....  CrashPad | 07/08/09
Unless you have real info to depart looks like others know more than you.  No More Microsoft Software Ever! | 07/08/09
RE: Microsoft, hoist by a Chrome petard  JoeSch | 07/08/09
Here here! OS/2 - a solid OS that every user deserved but MS pulled!  No More Microsoft Software Ever! | 07/08/09
To refresh your memory  daengbo | 07/08/09
RE: Microsoft, hoist by a Chrome petard  richard.e.morton@... | 07/08/09
Windows being boxed in?  Drakaran | 07/08/09
RE: Microsoft, hoist by a Chrome petard  rogercharlesworth@... | 07/08/09
Definition of petard  phil wainewrightZDNet Moderator | 07/10/09
RE: Microsoft, hoist by a Chrome petard  kayvaan | 07/09/09
Chrome OS vs other Linux  phil wainewrightZDNet Moderator | 07/10/09
OS affecting web-based applications???  jeffo@... | 07/11/09
Big Blue is doing just fine...  MSFTWorshipper | 08/13/09

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