Joel's foreward to
Rich Chapman's book In Search of Stupidity resonates
with me because it's what I've always said about Microsoft: it's not that we've been
so much smarter than our rivals over the years, just merely that we've been less stupid.
Joel says that the worst mistake Microsoft's made has been the dancing paperclip, but that's not really true. I can think of a legion of boneheaded,
wrongheaded and just plain dumb things that Microsoft has done, large and small, since
I first came to work here. Microsoft Bob jumps to mind. Or the first, oh, I don't know, five years of MSN's life. Or
the Tiger media server - we
must have dumped a lot of moolah down that black hole. And for all the public
failures that we've had, there are plenty of internal screwups that never make it
to light.
One thing I think that has made more difference than anything else was the fact that
Microsoft tends to be pretty dogged about following the old maxim "if at first you
don't succeed..." Plenty of eventual success stories at Microsoft started off life
as fiascos, but we kept plugging away at them until we made them work. Through the
years, I've been amazed at the way that major competitors who could really give us
a fight in some area seem to lose interest once we start to do well against them.
(OS/2 springs to mind.) I sometimes wonder if Bill knows the secrets of the Jedi...
"This is not the market you are looking for. We can go about our business. Move along."