- Microsoft word keeps freezing before my doc gets saved software#
- Microsoft word keeps freezing before my doc gets saved windows#
The decay inside the Windows org has been very sad to see in particular. My experience of Microsoft products in the past decade, both Azure and Windows, as a developer, has been extremely poor. There's lots of talk about how MS has 96,000 "talented engineers".
Yes, the article is good but that's where it goes off the rails. I am aware this is slightly anecdotal, but I am also having a hard time imagining myself as a founder and then asking my CFO to use Notion to prepare investor pitches. Most young people I know use a combination of Discord + Google Suite to collaborate. The velocity that is afforded by Excel in terms of formulas is unmatched and there's a reason it has yet to be unseated as the kingpin of modern finance. Yes, you can have pretty, nested documents in Notion and that's great, but a tabular database in Notion is by no means a replacement for Excel or even Google Sheets. Notion is a decent product, and I have used it for a few small-scale team projects in uni (mainly for Kanban-related stuff) - but to call it a replacement for O365 is an exaggeration at best. I recognize this is an oversimplification, but even so, it seems like a stretch. > To oversimplify Notion to its demographics, it is Office 365 for people below age 35. The author got down to brass tacks pretty quickly and brings up interesting hypothesis about $MSFT. The net result looks good on an Excel spreadsheet, features that managers care about are there - and they keep getting business. That's the true success of microsoft: they've always been big enough to do things well enough, conglomorate enough stuff, and amortise its effective cost over lots of different offerings.
The broader their product offering, no matter how shit it is to the poor saps that have to use it, the cheaper it effectively becomes. They provide "return" on the "investment" of paying the microsoft tax. Salesforce can't also do, say, long-term archival storage on Azure for less than a cent per GB, and won't provide you with a calendar-and-meeting-filled video-chat app that is "free" with your existing subscriptions.Īll of these things tick boxes. Sure, other companies can do this (looking at you, Salesforce) but this is just one example. Tie it in with their other B2B offerings and you have central control over both employees' performance, and customer's offerings, in a very tailored, swish way.
It's not the business's "core competence" to redevelop those skills - they're hard.
Microsoft word keeps freezing before my doc gets saved software#
They have created a huge, confusing, proprietary computer-verse completely orthogonal to the rest of the world (except inasmuch as the rest of the world needs to interact with it).Ī lot of their product line boils down to implementing MBA newspeek in disguise: clearly writing good web software is difficult and a good business-orientated app features database, GUI and user-interaction parts – thus Dynamics CRM is born. The net result of this is that they know what managers like, which is, in fact, to manage. Microsoft as a company seems to love DRM they invented activation, for god's sake. Office has, for many years, come with some form of document-based DRM. GPC can deny a user the ability to do something with their computer that other users can do. Microsoft's true success in the business world comes from ultimately targeting managers – be they in an IT department or otherwise. Arguably their only successful "end user" product line is Gaming, and that (on Windows) has grown with comparatively modest investment on Microsoft's part or with phenomenal (bought, third-party IP-based) software and a bucketload of cash (Xbox division). Perhaps controversially, I think Microsoft's real "B2B" success comes from treating end users like crap. On the other hand, I'd never want to work there they treat employees like crap. except for Amazon, which is hyper-customer-focused, and has a track record of successful forward-looking projects. However, they're the only one of the bunch you'd want to partner with for B2B. * Microsoft has a bunch of cut-throat teams, competing with each other. I think they've reached the end of the growth line. They've lost the smarts and the ethics, and they're in a bit of a hole. They also started in algorithm-driven markets like search and ad-words, where everything was statistical and individuals didn't matter. They started with brilliant people who were used to being smarter than everyone else. Monopoly profits drive a political empire where people at the top think up something random, and it gets built. * Facebook seems to be a bunch of smart people working on pet projects. I feel like the elephant in the room is culture.