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Microsoft Alters Branding of Confusing .NET Strategy
Associated Press
| January 9, 2002
Posted on 01/09/2003 7:39:43 PM PST by HAL9000
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"We wanted to make sure we're clear and crisp in our naming and as consistent as we can be," said Neil Charney, director of Microsoft's platform strategy group for .NET. Dot-Net needs a new name. How about "Microsoft Bob 2.0"?
1
posted on
01/09/2003 7:39:43 PM PST
by
HAL9000
To: HAL9000
So what is microsloop trying to patent, copyright or trademark now... the "dot" character as in "period" on your keyboard "every time you finish a sentence bull guts gets a quarter?"
Or they trying to get a patent, copyright, or trademark on the file extention "net" or "Net"? Or perhaps the individual letter in NET, like N or E or T?
pathetic
3
posted on
01/09/2003 7:46:05 PM PST
by
Robert_Paulson2
(clintonsgotusbytheballs?)
To: HAL9000
Web services will allow computers to communicate, regardless of network, system, device, language or application. Isn't that what XML is for?
To: *Microsoft
To: HAL9000
I'm glad they're changing this. It was a source of confusion when I'd try to explain .Net to others in my company. I wonder if they'll remote it from Minesweeper.Net too?
To: HAL9000
"the powerful software that drives Internet computers"
uh..yeah...
7
posted on
01/09/2003 8:06:31 PM PST
by
visualops
("..we could give it all back to you, and hope you spend it right.." -Clinton on the surplus, 1-20-99)
To: Robert_Paulson2
To: HAL9000
Have our local MS shills gotten the memo? We shall see, as they emerge from the 2000 bushes and start claiming that, why, nothing's amiss, it was planned this way all along and there is no change! I love watching the yes-men squirm!
9
posted on
01/09/2003 8:12:47 PM PST
by
Revolting cat!
(Someone left the cake out in the rain I dont think that I can take it coz it took so long to bake it)
To: HAL9000
.NET never should have been used as the umbrella brand that it became, said Ted Schadler, principal software analyst for Forrester Research. This guy is exactly right. .NET is some fabulous technology, but plastering the .NET brand on everything they make just made it impossible for anyone to understand what .NET was all about.
I'm always amused by those folks that talk about how Microsoft's products are crap, and they just sell because of good marketing. Microsoft's marketing is very poor. Microsoft's products sell because they're good enough to get by, and very cost-effective, not because they are well-marketed.
To: Jeff Chandler
I haven't yet heard a convincing argument about how dotnet does anything better than existing technology (aside from boosting enrollment at tech training companies)
11
posted on
01/09/2003 8:46:56 PM PST
by
jz638
To: Joe Bonforte
Microsoft's marketing may not be very good, but it's good enough and it's better than the actual quality of their products.
12
posted on
01/09/2003 9:08:57 PM PST
by
HAL9000
To: HAL9000
That's pretty funny coming from you, the Apple shill. Apple has approximately 0.0001% of the server market.
13
posted on
01/09/2003 11:45:17 PM PST
by
Bush2000
To: Bush2000
That's pretty funny coming from you, the Apple shill. Apple has approximately 0.0001% of the server market. According to data from Gartner Dataquest, Apple had a a 1.2 percent share of the server market last year, but an annual growth rate of 273.8 percent, the fastest rate in the survey. Now that the Xserve is out, I expect Apple to grow their marketshare more over time.
I consider myself fortunate to have my own personal human punching bag for an opponent in debates about the trends in the computer industry. Thanks for stopping by.
14
posted on
01/10/2003 12:29:09 AM PST
by
HAL9000
To: HAL9000
Darn, I had to read this to find out I was confused. I thought that they were releasing new software called CONFUSING.NET as a new market strategy.
15
posted on
01/10/2003 12:31:50 AM PST
by
UCANSEE2
To: HAL9000
I've always considered Microsoft as much of a marketing company as a software company. They may not appeal as much to techies, but they manage to get through to the people who make buying decisions, and that's what matters in the end.
16
posted on
01/10/2003 12:38:55 AM PST
by
dfwgator
To: Jeff Chandler
XML is a way of storing data in a file. But the data can be "described". XML Web Services are just connectors into applications or environments that use XML to communicate.
It's like saying that English is now the world wide common language. If you want to get something from France, and your in Russia, then you can talk to France in English and they will understand you.
17
posted on
01/10/2003 6:49:52 AM PST
by
coar
To: HAL9000

Your most unhappy customers are your greatest source of learning. --- Bill Gates
18
posted on
01/10/2003 7:21:20 AM PST
by
AndrewC
(MS aims to learn a lot)
To: HAL9000
According to data from Gartner Dataquest, Apple had a a 1.2 percent share of the server market last year, but an annual growth rate of 273.8 percent, the fastest rate in the survey. Now that the Xserve is out, I expect Apple to grow their marketshare more over time.
That's hilarious. Gartner is usually the punching bug of choice for Mac head who question their reports of X86 market share.
19
posted on
01/10/2003 7:51:44 AM PST
by
Bush2000
To: HAL9000
Someday, .NET will probably be pretty cool.Someday.
But right now it's so screwed up that they actually NEED this:
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