Once you;re inside the on-stage interview very hot seat,
Office 2010 Product Key, occasionally you may say issues you regret. And from time to time you converse the truth.My ZDNet colleague Larry Dignan covered Microsoft;s CEO Steve Ballmer;s hot-seat appearance this morning in the Gartner Symposium in Orlando. Whilst Dignan keyed in on Ballmer;s pronouncements and avoidances around slates and tablets, I observed proper off Ballmer;s answer to Gartner;s question about risky bets.From Dignan;s account,
Office 2010 Home And Student Key, Gartner analyst John Pescatore was performing a free-word-association model interview in the finish of his Ballmer Q&A. Pescatore asked Ballmer what he considered to be Microsoft;s “riskiest product bet.”I;d have thought he might say Windows Phone 7. Or maybe Bing. Or even Office Web Apps. But Ballmer;s answer? “The next version of Windows.”OK. This could be more of the hype we heard rumored earlier this year when the “Windows vNext” rumors began going about. There were reports that the next release of Windows — which most of us out here call Windows 8 — would be revolutionary, not evolutionary.But when we saw the leaked Windows 8 slide deck which looked to be from Microsoft (dated April 2010), the supposed early feature set concepts for Windows 8 looked solid, but weren;t anything I;d call “risky.” Fast startup, facial recognition as a security option, better support for slates, a possible app store — all good,
Purchase Office 2010, but not amazing. The one feature on the list that might possibly be considered remotely risky (mostly in terms of the ability of Microsoft to deliver it)? Push-button reset, which allegedly would reinstall Windows whilst maintaining all of your personal files,
Buy Office 2010, applications and settings.I;ve heard from some tipsters that Windows 8 would include a highly different kind of file system. I;m not sure what that would entail. I;m doubtful we;re talking about anything like the old WinFS concept (as this was, for the most part, tabled before the launch of Windows Vista).So why did Ballmer characterize Windows 8 as “risky”? I;m left scratching my head. Could he have meant risky because of the way it will or won;t compete with other coming PC operating systems like ChromeOS,
Office Enterprise 2007, Mac OS X Lion? Or risky because of the adoption by more customers of the cloud? Could Windows 8 and Windows vNext actually be two different issues? Or was Ballmer simply trying to deflect the question and provide an solution that would keep the scrutiny off the company;s newly launched products in mobile and gaming?Guesses? Ideas? Crazy (or not so crazy) theories?