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Can India-born CEO Satya Nadella Revive Microsoft's Fortunes?

RiazHaq

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Haq's Musings: Can Indian-American CEO Nadella Succeed at Microsoft in Post-Wintel World?

Microsoft, the world's largest software company, has named Satya Nardella, an Indian-American company veteran of 20 years, as its new CEO to replace its long-time leader and Bill Gates' pal Steve Ballmer. It's clearly a matter of great pride for not only his fellow Indian-Americans in the United States but also in India, Nadella's country of birth. I offer my sincere congratulations and best wishes to Mr. Nadella and his fellow Indians who are celebrating it as their own success. The question on everyone's mind now is whether he has what it takes to bring back the Wintel-era glory to Microsoft.


Wintel Era:

Wintel (Windows+Intel) represented the most successful period for Microsoft and its partner Intel when the two companies together made history with the personal computer revolution. Working for Intel as an engineer in 1980s and 1990s, I had a chance to work with both Microsoft and Intel executives to help bring about the PC revolution. Both companies offered products that worked well together to address the needs of hundreds of millions of PC user in that period. Both companies enjoyed phenomenal growth and high profit margins. I met Bill Gates several times in the two decades at frequent Intel-Microsoft executive meetings. I also got a chance to work with other Microsoft executives including Paul Maritz, Rob Glaser, Nathan Myhrvold, Carl Stork and others.

One particular incident with Bill Gates that I remember was at the 80486 CPU launch event at McCormick Place in Chicago. Gates insisted on doing the 80486 CPU demo at the event. Gates was a real geek at the time. He showed up wearing a rumpled shirt. His hair was uncombed. As he began the rehearsal under a spotlight aimed at the stage, he started complaining that he couldn't see under its glare. Intel marketing manager suggested to him to not look directly into the light to avoid it. Somehow we got through the rehearsal and, later, the actual launch in front of the media and the analysts went quite well.

The Wintel duopoly enabled both Intel and Microsoft to increase performance, bring down prices and still enjoy unprecedented profitability in the computer industry. Dave House, Executive VP at Intel in charge of microprocessor business, put it best when he told me and my fellow 80386 CPU engineers in 1985 that "making 80386 microprocessor chips is like printing money". He went on to explain that "it costs more than 10 cents for the US govt to print a dollar bill but Intel's cost of printing 80386 chips is less than 10% of its average selling price". I believe Microsoft made even bigger profits with DOS and Windows operating systems and PC applications in 1990s.

RISC Challenge:

Wintel partnership came under severe strain in 1992-93 when Microsoft decided to build its Windows NT operating system to run primarily on Reduced Instruction Set Computing (RISC) processors from DEC and MIPS. Intel's CISC (Complex Instruction Set Computing) X86 architecture-based processors were considered by many as old and uncompetitive relative to RISC. RISC processors came with a reduced set of simple instructions executable within a clock period, lots of registers, more cache memory and powerful compilers which Intel x86 based CPUs lacked at the time. Intel responded to the challenge by offering much higher clock rates, larger cache memories, improved instruction pipelining, multiple execution units and highly optimizing compilers which made more efficient use of the limited number of registers and better instruction scheduling on the Intel processors. I was assigned the role of a program manager at Intel to work with Microsoft to optimize Windows NT for 80486 at the time. It was interesting to watch the competing arrogant management styles of the two companies on full display during this effort. Needless to say, Intel beat back the RISC challenge and went to become the world's largest and most profitable chip company.

PC Era Over:

The world has dramatically changed since the 1990s when Wintel ruled the roost. PC is no longer the dominant device. Smartphones and tablets have brought the era of mobile cloud computing where neither Intel nor Microsoft do not enjoy leadership position. Even developing like Pakistan are deploying cloud computing applications. A Google sponsored survey in Pakistan found that mobile computing is expected to overtake desktop computing this year. Several new and more innovative and powerful players have emerged to in this market. It is this new reality that stares Staya Nadella in the face.

Decline of Empires:

In a recent New York Times column, Nobel Laureate economist Paul Krugman compared the decline of Microsoft to the fall of the great empires of the past. Drawing upon the lessons of Medieval Muslim historian Ibn Khaldun, Krugman wrote:

"How could Microsoft have been so blind? Here’s where Ibn Khaldun comes in. He was a 14th-century Islamic philosopher who basically invented what we would now call the social sciences. And one insight he had, based on the history of his native North Africa, was that there was a rhythm to the rise and fall of dynasties. Desert tribesmen, he argued, always have more courage and social cohesion than settled, civilized folk, so every once in a while they will sweep in and conquer lands whose rulers have become corrupt and complacent. They create a new dynasty — and, over time, become corrupt and complacent themselves, ready to be overrun by a new set of barbarians. I don’t think it’s much of a stretch to apply this story to Microsoft, a company that did so well with its operating-system monopoly that it lost focus, while Apple — still wandering in the wilderness after all those years — was alert to new opportunities. And so the barbarians swept in from the desert".

Conclusion:

Krugman's comparison of today's Microsoft with ancient dynasties seems to make a lot of sense. The "Wintel" dynasty is being overthrown by hordes representing cloud computing "barbarians and tribesmen" at Apple, Google, Amazon and a whole bunch of other tech companies. Can a Microsoft lifer like Staya Nadella, steeped in Microsoft's established culture, fend off the "barbarian at the gates"? If I were a betting man, I'd say No! But let's wait and see.

Haq's Musings: Can Indian-American CEO Nadella Succeed at Microsoft in Post-Wintel World?
 
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wow ... only b'cos a person born in India & not converted to muslim faith make him so impotent that some great divine person betting him on his disability..

what next Indira nooyi is actually a hidden muslim or not Indian ??

Riaz Haq raises a good point about Wintel's future, but there was no need to bring the CEO's Indianness into the discussion.

It's completely irrelevant and will derail the thread into trolling.
 
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wow ... only b'cos a person born in India & not converted to muslim faith make him so impotent that some great divine person betting him on his disability..

what next Indira nooyi is actually a hidden muslim or not Indian ??

Be grateful that he didn't use the line 'India poor and Natella is poor in ideas' or some poverty puns.

I am actually surprised given the Author's history with jerking himself off to Indian poverty, he hasn't dragged that here

so Kudos :cheers:
 
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Intel/MS is going no where there is going to be no fall of empire here infact Intel getting into tablet chip market is going to deliver combined with MS/other windows based devices like tabs/smartphones to wider audience.

Android is not for organizations/business sorry that is just not the right OS, Apple also has traditionally kept itself away after trying so many times but couldn't get into server/large business the market is open to MS it needs to join Intel to work with Mobile platform to establish another era of empire.

MS new CEO is an excellent choice has best track record but please people don't tag him "indian" or what not by both side he has nothing to do with india he left india for better future he is very much american let him be like that his only focus/objectives is to make MS even better.
 
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Be grateful that he didn't use the line 'India poor and Natella is poor in ideas' or some poverty puns.

I am actually surprised given the Author's history with jerking himself off to Indian poverty, he hasn't dragged that here

so Kudos :cheers:

actually he put valid points about wintel & he's a person of good knowledge but his hate towards a certain country taking a toll out of him... pity
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Intel/MS is going no where there is going to be no fall of empire here infact Intel getting into tablet chip market is going to deliver combined with MS/other windows based devices like tabs/smartphones to wider audience.

Android is not for organizations/business sorry that is just not the right OS, Apple also has traditionally kept itself away after trying so many times but couldn't get into server/large business the market is open to MS it needs to join Intel to work with Mobile platform to establish another era of empire.

MS new CEO is an excellent choice has best track record but please people don't tag him "indian" or what not by both side he has nothing to do with india he left india for better future he is very much american let him be like that his only focus/objectives is to make MS even better.

Pretty much.
 
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Riaz Haq raises a good point about Wintel's future, but there was no need to bring the CEO's Indianness into the discussion.

It's completely irrelevant and will derail the thread into trolling.

Given the OP history, Satya's Indianness is certainly a point here.

As far as Wintel's future, even Microsoft agrees that computing is moving towards Cloud computing and Big Data.

But OP conveniently forgets that Satya used to head MS Cloud computing division and that MS cloud computing division grew by 107% last years. This was one of the main reason why Satya became the CEO above other big names
 
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zindage may kabhe jitnay PDF Indian member hain aaj tak zikar nahe suna insay is Nadella ka jab say Microsoft ka CEO kya bana hey sab Indians isko ub Indian Indian kehna shuruu hogaye hain hahahah yaar ageeb he koi ****** koom hey sahi kaha hey kise nay...
 
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zindage may kabhe jitnay PDF Indian member hain aaj tak zikar nahe suna insay is Nadella ka jab say Microsoft ka CEO kya bana hey sab Indians isko ub Indian Indian kehna shuruu hogaye hain hahahah yaar ageeb he koi ****** koom hey sahi kaha hey kise nay...
:lol: well said. Actually only time I saw Indians not jumping and taking credit was when some girl of Indian descent invented texting Panties :D That thread should be still somewhere in PDF archives :-)
 
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:lol: well said. Actually only time I saw Indians not jumping and taking credit was when some girl of Indian descent invented texting Panties :D That thread should be still somewhere in PDF archives :-)
Ok here I officially claim it now as well. :tup:

Who knows - one good thing out of this may be Pakistan lapping up open source operating systems :yay:
 
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zindage may kabhe jitnay PDF Indian member hain aaj tak zikar nahe suna insay is Nadella ka jab say Microsoft ka CEO kya bana hey sab Indians isko ub Indian Indian kehna shuruu hogaye hain hahahah yaar ageeb he koi ****** koom hey sahi kaha hey kise nay...

Satya Nadella was born in hyderabad
he is the son of an IAS officer
he served as a member of planning commision(India)
he did his schooling in hyderabad and degree in manipal university

i guess this is enuff to prove who he is.......

secondly.....zindagi mein apne unka naam nahi suna tha......sahi hai,maine bhi nahi suna tha.....jab koi acha kaam karega tabhi woh famous hoga,aur jab famous hoga tabhi aap uska naam sunenge na ........
abhi aap yahan baith kar ******* comment karoge toh aapko koi thodi na pehchanega.........aur apki koom bhi aapke jaise ****** soch rakhti hain......itni choti se baat bhi samajh nahi pati.. :lol:
 
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Ok here I officially claim it now as well. :tup:

Who knows - one good thing out of this may be Pakistan lapping up open source operating systems :yay:
:rofl: It would only hurt MS. They don't earn much from Countries like Pakistan but in turn small companies/people do write codes that run on MS platefarms. Its a bargain that let them use your tools/platefarm for free which in return indirectly support there business. We are no more in 90s dear! There are decent alternatives to MS operating systems totally free :tup:
 
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:rofl: It would only hurt MS. They don't earn much from Countries like Pakistan but in turn small companies/people do write codes that run on MS platefarms. Its a bargain that let them use your tools/platefarm for free which in return indirectly support there business. We are no more in 90s dear! There are descent alternatives to MS operating systems totally free :tup:
I know. I use Ubuntu 12.04 LTS. :angel:
 
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