Microsoft 2.0: How Microsoft Plans to Stay Relevant in the Post-Gates Era View Larger Image | Mary Jo Foley Wiley, Hardcover, Published April 2008, 375 pages, ISBN 0470191384 | List Price: $27.95 Our Price: $15.25 You Save: $12.70 (45% Off)
| | | Availability: In-Stock |
Read an excerpt:
Chapter 1: Microsoft 1.0: It Was All About Bill
Excerpt provided courtesy of John Wiley & Sons Inc. Copyright © John Wiley & Sons Inc. Written permission from the publisher is required for any use of this material.
|
Be the First to Write a Review and tell the world about this title!People who purchase this book frequently purchase: - Beginning SQL Queries: From Novice to Professional; Clare Churcher, $21.50, 39% Off!
- Windows Server 2008 For Dummies; Ed Tittel, et al, $15.95, 36% Off!
- SQL Bible, 2nd Edition; Alex Kriegel, et al, $30.95, 38% Off!
- Beginning Google Maps Applications with Rails and Ajax: From Novice to Professional; Andre Lewis, et al, $21.95, 37% Off!
Books on similar topics, in best-seller order:Books from the same publisher, in best-seller order:
Praise for Mary Jo Foley and Microsoft 2.0
"Mary Jo Foley is 'Ms. Microsoft.' She seems to know everyone and everything
that's going on at 1 Microsoft Way in Redmond, WA."
Robert Scoble, A-list blogger (http://scobleizer.com/) and author of
Naked Conversations
"When I want to know what's going on inside Microsoft, I turn to Mary
Jo Foley. She knows more about what's going on in Redmond than most insiders."
Ed Bott, award-winning technology writer (http://blogs.zdnet.com/bott)
"Mary Jo Foley has the correct scoop on everything Microsoft does, usually
long before everyone else is repeating their press releases. I'm ordering copies
of Microsoft 2.0 for everyone at my company, and if your career has anything
to do with Microsoft, I suggest you do the same."
Scott Braden, author of Microsoft License Secrets (http://www.netnetweb.com)
On July 1, 2008, a new chapter begins for tech-industry giant Microsoft. On
that day, Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates will no longer be involved with the
daily goings-on of the company he founded more than 30 years ago. Microsoft's
official message is that nothing will change; it will be business as usual.
But as anyone who has studied Microsoft
knows, a Microsoft without Gates participating in product reviews and articulating
Microsoft's strategies and priorities is going to be a very different company.
This year marks a new period for Microsoft -- its 2.0 phase, if you will. It
comes at a time when some industry watchers characterize Microsoft as a has-been
which will never be able to regain the same level of industry dominance as it
once enjoyed. Others believe Microsoft will never be toppled from its perch,
simply due to its size and its history.
Mary Jo Foley, the author of Microsoft 2.0, falls somewhere in between these
two extremes. She has spent almost all of her 25-years as a journalist watching
and writing about Microsoft. Throughout the pages of Microsoft 2.0, Foley provides
a unique vantage point from which to speculate on how Microsoft might write
its next chapter. Identifying signposts and interpreting clues she knows well,
Foley offers a thought-provoking view of the software giants post-Gates
game plan -- and challenges to it.
This is a book about Microsoft's future, not its past. The coming years will
be challenging ones for the Redmond software kingpin. Many of the executives
currently leading the Microsoft charge are likely to go their own way. Technology
will continue to advance at a breakneck pace. Microsoft will forge deals of
the size and scope it previously never envisioned in order to keep pace. Foley
doesn't claim to possess a crystal ball, allowing her to predict flawlessly
what Microsoft plans to do in the next few years
or even few months.
But based on the many Microsoft executives, partners, customers and competitors
with whom she converses regularly, she is sitting in a good spot to make some
fairly educated guesses that will be most interesting to her readers.
This book, Microsoft 2.0, describes the Microsoft people, products and strategies
that will be key for the next-gen Microsoft. Foley uses her professional experience
to piece the puzzle together in order to reveal a reasonable, educated guess
as to what Microsoft 2.0 will look like as it enters the next decade and beyond.
Table of Contents
Introduction.
1. Microsoft 1.0: It Was All About Bill.
2. Microsoft 2.0: The Buzzwords.
3. Microsoft 2.0: The People.
4. Microsoft 2.0: Products on the Near-Term Radar Screen.
5. Microsoft 2.0: Big-Bet Products.
6. Microsoft 2.0: Tried and True Business Models.
7. Microsoft 2.0: Untried but Unavoidable Business Models.
Conclusion.
Appendix A. Memos, Letters and E-mails (Just in Case Someone Hits that Delete
Button).
Appendix B. Essential Reading.
About the Author
Mary Jo Foley has covered the tech industry for 25 years and has been keeping
a close eye on Microsoft strategy, products, and technologies for most of that
time. An accomplished journalist, she has worked for various print and online
publications including PC Magazine, CNET's News.com, ZDNet, PCWeek/eWEEK, and
Redmond magazine.
As a commentator on the IT and business communities, Foley has appeared on
CNBC, CNN, and Fox News as well as radio programs for the BBC, ABC Radio, and
NPR.
Her All About Microsoft blog (http://blogs.zdnet.com/microsoft/) is among the
top business blogs on the Web, and her perspective is valued throughout the
tech community.
|