←back to thread

371 points greggyb | 3 comments | | HN request time: 0.577s | source
Show context
legitster ◴[] No.41977299[source]
Having spent some time at the Microsoft campus, I can tell you this is basically the consensus view from employees today. Ballmer was not a cool, trendy, or fun CEO who people rallied behind - but he more or less "got the job done". He was the captain of a massive ship with a turning radius the size of a continent guiding it through icebergs.

Azure's success was specifically set in motion under Ballmer. Owed to the fact that it was developed to Microsoft's strengths (enterprise support) that it didn't piss off too many of their partners and sales channels. Same with Office 365 and all of their other successful services. None are glamourous - but all are impressive with how not awful they are given their design constraints.

Even things like Surface, while considered a failure, did its intended job of getting hardware partners to get their act together and make better consumer products.

replies(7): >>41978220 #>>41978337 #>>41978547 #>>41978554 #>>41978721 #>>41978916 #>>41982882 #
vjust ◴[] No.41978721[source]
Ballmer hated Linux & open source. He would've driven their cloud division to the ground trying to sell Windows servers in the cloud. It would've taken him another 20 years to accept that Linux was key to the cloud. VSCode (Visual Studio Code) - would never have taken birth. Microsoft survived and thrived once Ballmer had no option but leave.

In this era of Python development, Microsoft Windows still feels a step or two behind as far as using a Windows laptop for coding in the cloud. Python is the language of AI - not Asp.net, not C#. Ballmer would never have seen the writing on the wall. He would've pushed something wierd, like VBA .

replies(5): >>41978829 #>>41978837 #>>41981122 #>>41982752 #>>41985142 #
1. elzbardico ◴[] No.41982752[source]
Ballmer didn't hate linux and open source.

He feared it as a threath to Microsoft's business model and revenue streams.

replies(2): >>41982868 #>>41983295 #
2. dymk ◴[] No.41982868[source]
That’s a distinction without a difference
3. bsuvc ◴[] No.41983295[source]
That's just why he hated it.