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Posted in Microsoft at 3:53 am by Dr. Roy Schestowitz
Summary: Microsoft’s efforts to control the Web are falling flat on their face; we judge this also based on the past week’s news
Silverlight has become either a niche or a dead product by now [1, 2, 3]. Success stories or major new clients have been hard to come by for well over a year; it’s almost unheard of. In one whole week, the only headline with “Silverlight” in it was a press release and it was mentioned briefly in another (no headline match). That’s the symptom of a product that does not matter anymore. When all that a product can do for publicity is get this kind of puff piece, i.e. a sort of advertisement for BizSpark (not news), then it is practically part of the past. We saw that with Surface for example. There are many other examples though. A few days ago we noticed that the Microsoft press (Redmond) had begun advertising BizTalk, courtesy of Kurt Mackie [1, 2, 3]. This publication long ago quit pretending that the press is independently reporting on Microsoft, so does that count at all?
=> 1 | 2 | 3 | ↺ a press release | ↺ mentioned briefly in another | ↺ this kind of puff piece | ↺ 1 | ↺ 2 | ↺ 3
Another product we have been tracking is hosting (in its different forms) from Microsoft, which has suffered many downtimes recently [1, 2]. That too is somewhat of a niche, at least for the time being. “Azure” for example was mentioned just once too (in a whole week’s stock of headlines). This one too seems to have become somewhat of a niche product. GNU/Linux-based equivalents are well ahead in that regard and Microsoft can only try to trash-talk or attempt to extract a patent tax from those.
=> 1 | 2 | ↺ just once
In all the above examples we continue to see attempts by Microsoft to gain power on the Web. All these attempts are failing. In a later post we are going to give some numbers. For the time being, the take-home message is that Microsoft still fails on the Internet. It had high ambitions some years ago. █
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