Microsoft/Quotes
"To have a heart-to-heart, you have to have two hearts." —Novell chairman Ray Noorda about smoothing over relations with Microsoft.
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Q: How many Microsoft employees does it take to change a lightbulb? |
Q: How many NT Admins does it take to change a light bulb? |
Q: How many Microsoft programmers does it take to screw in a light bulb? |
Microsoft's... promised support for open protocols is always leveraged against or bridged to its internally controlled, Windows-centric standards. —Nicholas Petreley, Infoworld, May 6, 1996
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After all, how do you give Microsoft the benefit of the doubt when you know that if you throw it into a room with truth, you'd risk a matter/antimatter explosion?" —Nicholas Petreley, Infoworld, September 16, 1996
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When I was one-and-twenty |
The day Microsoft produces something that doesn't suck is the day they start making vacuum cleaners. —Ernst Jan Plugge
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That's not to imply that Microsoft's marketing hype is always unreliable. Even as a longtime critic of the company, I must admit that Microsoft occasionally flirts with the truth. Well, perhaps "flirt" is too strong a word. Let's just say Microsoft sometimes honks and waves as it drives by her house. —Nicholas Petreley, Infoworld, June 14, 1999
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I love the way Microsoft follows standards. In much the same manner that fish follow migrating caribou. —Paul Tomblin, sdm
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The code of tribal wisdom says that when you discover you are riding a dead horse, the best strategy is to dismount. [But lawyers] often try other strategies with dead horses, including the following: buying a stronger whip; changing riders; saying things like, "This is the way we've always ridden the horse"; appointing a committee to study the horse; ...declaring the horse is better, faster and cheaper dead; and, finally, harnessing several dead horses together for increased speed. —Judge Thomas Penfield Jackson, during the Microsoft antitrust trial, February 2000, quoted in Wired, November 2000
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Asked whether Microsoft could threaten Linux, Torvalds said: "What can they do? What is the Microsoft threat? They certainly can't program around us. The only other thing they can do is marketing, and sure, let them try." —From the .sig file of Gus Hartmann
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There are lies, damned lies, and Microsoft brochures. —Brief History of Linux (Part 3) by James Baughn
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"Microsoft discovered that word processing was a "killer app" and killed off all the competition with it." —Spotted on Slashdot
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Atlanta, Ga. - Scientists at the Centers for Disease Control today confirmed that hoof-and-mouth disease cannot be spread by Microsoft's Outlook email application, believed to be the first time the program has ever failed to propagate a major virus. |
Microsoft is a cross between The Borg and the Ferengi. Unfortunately, they use Borg to do their marketing and Ferengi to do their programming. —Simon Slavin in asr
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"And now for some irony: Microsoft's print ads touting its .Net development tools as the solution for DLL hell -- a bit like a cobra advertising antivenin, don't you think?" —Bob Lewis, "Survival Guide", Infoworld, 7 March 2003
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Doing anything with Microsoft software is like doing brain surgery in the Amazon while being stalked by a leopard. They've built an amazing amount of really cool camping gear that actually makes it doable, but wouldn't it have been smarter to build a hospital first? —Peter DaSilva
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All I know is that I'm being sued for unfair business practices by Microsoft. Hello, pot? It's kettle on line two." —Michael Robertson, founder, Linspire
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If Microsoft is innovative in any area, it is in creating new forms of intimidation. —Ralph Nader
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We need to slaughter Novell before they get stronger….If you’re going to kill someone, there isn’t much reason to get all worked up about it and angry. You just pull the trigger. Any discussions beforehand are a waste of time. We need to smile at Novell while we pull the trigger. —Jim Allchin, Microsoft
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