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- Subject: MICROSOFT'S GATES PREPARES FOR THE NT PLUNGE
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- ============================================================================
- SUBJECT: MICROSOFT'S GATES PREPARES FOR THE NT PLUNGE
- SOURCE: ZiffWire via First! by INDIVIDUAL, Inc.
- DATE: January 15, 1993
- INDEX: [9]
- - ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- PC Week via First! : William Henry Gates III has gone from Harvard dropout
- to his current perch as the richest man in America, with a net worth
- estimated at $6.3 billion. Only 37, Gates has turned Microsoft Corp., the
- company he founded in 1975 with Paul Allen, into the world's largest
- software developer and the dominant force in the computer industry.
-
- Microsoft, however, faces several challenges in the coming year, including
- the timely release of its next-generation NT operating system and the
- continuing spectre of the Federal Trade Commission's anti-trust
- investigation. In a wide-ranging interview recently at the company's
- Redmond, Wash., headquarters, Gates addressed these and other issues with PC
- Week Assignment Editor Jai Singh and Senior Editor Amy Cortese.
-
- PC WEEK: What is your approach going to be for the large customer -- the
- high-end enterprise business?
-
- GATES: There's a lot of stuff we do that relates to that. The development
- tools for corporate customers relate to that; Access is a corporate
- development tool. Anything you do that's on the server or that's a
- development tool is going to be primarily aimed at the corporate market.
-
- The corporate market has elements of what we call bottoms up, with
- products like Word and Excel. Although you've got corporate standards coming
- down, the primary dynamic is end-user enthusiasm moving those things up.
-
- We [also] have software that can only be adopted in a top-down way, like
- mail, server software, file sharing, communications and databases.
-
- PC WEEK: The whole server area is somewhat new for you. Are there changes
- that Microsoft needs to make?
-
- GATES: I wouldn't say it's new.
-
- PC WEEK: When we're talking about products like [NT], that's an area that
- you haven't really dealt with before.
-
- GATES: We've certainly dealt with it. We're not the No. 1 company, but I
- made a decision three-and-a-half years ago to hire hundreds of people into
- the U.S. field sales force to focus on LAN Manager, bringing us up the
- learning curve on server products.
-
- We understand all of those things. Now that we have an advanced platform
- instead of a dead-end platform to sell our server software on, we expect to
- sell our server software. We are scaling things up for the NT generation of
- file sharing, communications, database, even development tools or
- activities.
-
- PC WEEK: If your customers are going to be running transaction processing
- systems on NT and so on ... there's something of a credibility -- it's not a
- gap, but it's something that Microsoft has to demonstrate in that area.
-
- GATES: Our credibility with corporate accounts is constantly increasing.
- You go back three or four years and people wouldn't have thought about us
- that much at all.
-
- Now NT really is telling some people who hadn't thought about it: Boy,
- this is at least one of the candidates for doing all their future
- applications on, certainly all their client work, if not all their server
- work.
-
- It just means you put more resources out there in the field to deal with
- customers. You use those resources not only for support, but also to get
- feedback on what those products should be.
-
- PC WEEK: What's the initial market potential for NT? More as a desktop
- client system or more as a server?
-
- GATES: NT will sell far more on the desktop than anywhere else, just
- because of the size of that business. It helps us a lot in the server market
- as well, but the numbers will be largely on the desktop.
-
- When you look at what we're doing from our [ISV] program, yes, we're
- getting every server application you could imagine. But all that stuff we're
- getting from engineering, financial analysis, that's all desktop software.
-
- PC WEEK: One interesting thing about NT is that ISVs are already putting
- out applications on it, even though it's not available yet. What do you
- attribute that to?
-
- GATES: Increasing credibility. I mean, people have seen that companies who
- didn't bet on Windows have been affected by not getting out ahead.
-
- None of the existing software companies except Microsoft bet on Windows
- ... [but] it changed things. That's why the PC [ISVs] are saying, "Whoa.
- This time we aren't going to look backwards. We're going to look like we
- really care about the future and show our customers we're going to be there
- as soon as they want to move up."
-
- PC WEEK: IBM says it has shipped 2 million copies of OS/2. There's a lot
- of internal corporate development for OS/2, more than you see applications
- show up in [Software Publishers Association] numbers, and basically for lack
- of something else to develop on.
-
- If NT isn't going to be out until maybe sometime midyear, in the meantime,
- does that leave a window for OS/2?
-
- GATES: Most people don't have development cycles where they'd have any
- problems starting their development now and being there when [NT] is
- released. ...
-
- You should be really careful when you use that 2 million number [for OS/2
- sales]. For example, [IBM] counts all the bundled systems.
-
- We have retailers who take the OS/2, delete it, and put DOS and Windows
- onto those systems. We capture a very high percentage of the systems that
- way. ...
-
- Believe me, they haven't shipped 2 million. Either that or they're just
- not paying us [royalties].
-
- PC WEEK: Your feeling is that OS/2 is a dead-end platform?
-
- GATES: It's certainly a dead end. That's indisputable. Nobody would
- dispute that it's a dead end.
-
- PC WEEK: Despite the Workplace Shell strategy they outlined?
-
- GATES: Just because you put a common shell on top of a bunch of things --
- Workplace is the name of a shell. It's not the name of an operating system.
- ... That's called a dead end.
-
- PC WEEK: IBM's Lee Reiswig made a comment recently about having the rights
- to clone Windows. We all know that agreement expires in September.
-
- Does he have the right to reconstruct Windows without licensing it?
-
- GATES: Well, after Sept. 17th at midnight he has no rights for any new
- work that this company does, whether it's user interface work or code that
- we develop or anything of the kind. They will never have the future Windows
- look and feel or development work. ... So people who write Windows
- applications that follow the Windows style guideline will not have any
- transference into the OS/2 environment.
-
- PC WEEK: Can you give us an update on Cairo?
-
- GATES: It's a very ambitious system, so you can think of it sort of as NT
- version 2. In terms of how it [uses] file structures and how it does things,
- it's very ambitious.
-
- We've done this thing where we treat the file system and the directory and
- the mail system all as one unified system. So it's much richer than today's
- file system.
-
- Virtually all the distributed pieces are working now, but there's still a
- lot of work to be done. It's likely that we'll want to get some broad
- feedback [on Cairo] in the second half of '93.
-
- [01-15-93 at 22:18 EST, Copyright 1993, ZiffWire, File: c0115081.5zf]
-