Well, it's not the Microsoft CEO's mother - it's analyst Yvonne Genovese who interviewed Ballmer at the Gartner Symposium.
"My daughter comes in one day and says, 'Hey Mom, my friend has Vista, and it has these neat little things called gadgets - I need those.'"
Said Ballmer: "I love your daughter."
"You're not going to like her mom in about two minutes," said Genovese, while the crowd laughed.
She went on to explain that she installed Vista for her daughter - and two days later went right back to using the XP operating system.
That must have been one entertaining session. Read the full story at Computerworld. But first, here's another quote from Ballmer, clearly on the defensive:
"There is always a tension between the value that end users see - and frankly, that software developers see - and the value that we can deliver to IT."
Yesss. The key word is IT. As in "expert only". Perhaps it's time Microsoft recognize that they failed to serve two "masters", and in catering strictly for IT, delivering a super-secure (?) system they created a monster quite unusable by individual consumers.
I've been ranting about Vista enough here, let me just add another gem to prove my point.
It's probably fair to assume that a lot of Vista (home) users will have at least one older, XP machine around - and if they do, they want these to see these connected on a Home Network. This should be a piece of cake... or not.
- Your Vista PC won't see the XP ones on the network at all.
- There's no documentation whatsoever, but after Googling around you can figure out that you need to patch the XP machines (!) for them to be seen by the Vista. (Incidentally, the patch requires WGA, which fails on one of my perfectly legit computers, but that's another story)
- When Vista still can't see the networked machines, back Googling again.
- After some research you'll discover a well-hidden statement that it may take up to 15 minutes for a Vista PC to see a networked pre-Vista one. Fifteen minutes!!!! in 2007!!!!
This is just one example of the many idiocies crippling Vista. Nothing major, just stupid little things that don't work and there is no easily accessible info about.
Vista is for the corporate world with IT departments, period. I can hardly think of better promotion for Apple then releasing Vista to the consumer market. Oh, and since a picture is worth a thousand words, here's one from Princeton University (by way of Espen Antonsen)
Update: Ballmer speaks; Can Microsoft be everything to everyone? at Between the Lines.
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