MS Office for Linux?
John Chambers
jc at trillian.mit.edu
Tue Apr 4 09:54:59 EDT 2000
It seems to me that what Microsoft has a monopoly of is not so much
operating systems as "Killer Aps" for the office. Everyone uses MS
Office because everyone else does, and they can't read what others
write, or write what others can read, unless they use MS Office.
The problem is a lot deeper than this. On some other mailing lists,
there has been a bit of discussion of Microsoft's apparent gearing up
to do a Netscape on another emerging market segment: High-quality
sound processing software. This has litle if anything to do with
office software; it's a new arena for MS to conquer.
The discussion has been triggered by reports from people working on
sound software (usually music) who decide to try a new music package
that Microsoft has been distributing. It's described essentially as a
"do everything" package. The people who install it report that, like
your typical packaged sound system, it isn't all that high quality,
and you're better off as always mixing and matching your own
components. But - When they finish testing, they find that all their
other sound software is disabled. They can't uninstall the Microsoft
package; attempting to do so just replaces it with an even
lower-quality sound package that is included. They must re-install
every other package from scratch. And if they ever accidentally run
the MS sound package, all the other packages are destroyed.
It seems that, as with IE, MS has started the process of getting its
own sound software included with other commercial packages. You buy a
financial package, you get MS's sound software "for free". You buy a
video game, it silently installs the sound package. And so on. It's
highly likely that if someone wants to sell any other sound software
for Windows, they will have to "market" it by selling it to
Microsoft, just to get off the kill list. It's the Netscape story all
over again.
If the specs for MS Office files were commoditized, the problem would
(largely) go away. They should probably be made a standard, and in
addition, perhaps, put under the control of ANSII, or BEMA, or ...
The problem wouldn't go away at all for people trying to develop and
market high-quality sound-processing software. This has nothing at
all to do with MS Office. Except that we didn't think that a browser
was part of an OS, and it turned out that it was. We just might learn
that sound software is part of an Office app, and part of a tax app,
and part of ...
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