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I'm so confused, But apparently, it's working out in the end. ;-)
First it was Everquest, then it become WoW, now it's leaning Second Life. As they always say, first hit is free.
http://money.cnn.com/2006/03/21/news/companies/...
When are you people going to just admit that it's a failed project, put windows into maintenance mode, and try to figure out what you actually CAN do?
If there was any doubt that management incompetence is out of control in Redmond, it's all gone now. Time for the shareholders to start rolling heads, starting with Ballmer.
MyTake : all thig blog thing is Bullshit from the start.
I didn't know about it, but sort of expected it (although I was hoping that it'd stay on track). When beta 2 got pushed out that was a warning sign.
It's software done by people. I've learned long ago never to buy into dates in this industry.
I'd rather have a good product than something that shipped on time. I'm glad that the managers looked at the quality and decided it wasn't ready rather than tried to force something out the door that would have caused lots of problems for our partners and customers.
Of course. Just sugar with the spun poison. It will still 'kill' you, but you'll feel better about it, as you had 'naked conversations' with key people. Instead of being proactive, and meeting the customers where they are, why you can blog and take shaky cams all around Redmond (and the Valley) and 'connect', marketing without leaving your cubicle. Won't work for 90% of key customers however, which view blogs as unofficial lines of communication.
Instead of getting a straight answer, why you can live on the net, follow 400 differing voices, getting a basic puzzled-idea of the current spin, more or less. Or you can just purchase analysis from Directions, and follow Mary Jo's report, and find out what's really going on.
Blogs in theory are noble ideas, in actual practice it's chaos.
Well that's fine, I don't think much people think otherwise. I am saying that blogs don't serve as a heart pulse to the company's actual position over what's-left-before-RTM. That's a very disappointing thing, and I can't recommend anyone to continue reading those blogs.
I also note with irony that, while blogs are updated virtually every hour, no hot or damaging topic is really being discussed. In fear of otherwise. That's what you'd expect from the corporate pages, not the blogs.
Boils down to :you
I guess the tipping point is when you know one thing, you asked while being under NDA and you got an answer, and this thing gets officially announced two years later as something hot etc (with somebody called Scoble hyping the thing all the way).
Note that there are things you can recoup and figure out, so your point itself is moot.
And for the record, all the guys that I know being under NDA with Microsoft have barely an internet presence : no blog, Googling their name returns nothing, etc. So when you say the secret info leaks, I call BS on this. There is way too much stake and the win-win NDAs help a lot get the mouth shut.
Nice FUD try tho.
I'm not saying kids shouldn't do this kind of stuff -- but the impact on their development if abused of is a huge question mark for me. Anybody else (particularly people with psy/educator backgrounds) got opinions on the subject?
and getting hundreds of emails every day is no great accomplishment.
Conversations like this are endearing: did flying wow your son too? :)