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1. AJRF+(OP)[view] [source] 2026-02-04 17:53:44
They really dropped the ball on this - they are down ~12% for the year.

When they first started, they seemed to be firing on all cylinders and looked like they were going to be big winners, but the strategy has just been a slow motion car crash.

I wonder if Satya is the right person for Microsoft.

replies(2): >>pjmlp+8h >>simonc+ue1
2. pjmlp+8h[view] [source] 2026-02-04 19:04:21
>>AJRF+(OP)
It was a fresh air after Balmer and he helped opening the company to open source, naturally not without their own intentions, however Satya has been a disaster for the consumer branding, anything related to Windows.
replies(1): >>bitwiz+Hr1
3. simonc+ue1[view] [source] 2026-02-05 00:11:18
>>AJRF+(OP)
> ...they are down ~12% for the year.

Given how unstable stock prices typically are over the short term, and given that we're currently something like thirty-five days into the year, I don't consider that fact to mean much.

Also, wow, your comment is almost exclusively metaphors. I've not seen the like since the last all-hands email from the CEO.

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4. bitwiz+Hr1[view] [source] [discussion] 2026-02-05 01:56:23
>>pjmlp+8h
Just because Satya is bald and Indian, doesn't make him Gandhi. Ballmer was Bill's bulldog, but he couldn't direct the company's strategy nearly as effectively as his predecessor; Nadella is craftier. Microsoft has been Microsofting harder than ever lately, and their open source strategy is very subtly embrace-extend-extinguish. I honestly think that by 2030 they will have begun executing a plan to disallow Linux (or any other OS) from running on new PCs without a Windows hypervisor underneath it.
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