(Microsoft) clearly gets where the focus of the competition needs to be. |
(Open source) will just be part of how you do business. |
afraid of the future. ... They want more time to study it. |
Early on, when software was developed by computer scientists, just people working with computers, people passed around software because that was how you got computers to do things, |
I don't believe in definitions. |
I just love that, ... 'Beneath every no lays a yes that had never been broken.' To me, there's this wonderful spirit .… You know, I believe people are fundamentally good and want to find things that make life better for themselves. There are social dynamics for people that work, and there are ones that are pathological. But beneath every no lays a yes that had never been broken. I put my life-faith in that. |
I like to think that even if we make some really bad choices and go down some bad paths, we'll eventually emerge from it. |
I still think Yahoo has a heritage to overcome. |
I think in most cases it's just an example of companies trying to figure out what they have to do to make their services work. These are small companies. They have to ask, what does it take? |
It's back to 1995 where the Internet was this great rallying cry. One of the areas where Microsoft has a lead is that they are focusing on non-PC devices. That may be one of their secret weapons. |
It's back to 1995, where the Internet was this great rallying cry, |
Like many important concepts, Web 2.0 doesn't have a hard boundary, but rather, a gravitational core. |
My basic belief is you need to ride the horse in the direction that it's going, |
People still like to meet face to face. That's how you glue together a community. |
The publisher position is a do-nothing position, |