Microsoft faces competition in many areas despite its dominance in desktop operating systems and office software. While it has a monopoly on these two markets, its share is much smaller in other areas like databases, web servers, internet access, and programming languages. The outcome of antitrust settlement talks may not significantly impact Microsoft where it is already weak, such as in new markets like games consoles, but could affect its legacy businesses if its practices are more strictly regulated. Microsoft will need to adapt to increasing competition from open standards and technologies that are independent of the Windows platform.
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MS MONOPOLOY
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? 2001 Khan M. Klatt. All rights reserved. Graphic Design Credit: Kelly McNeill
All logos and trademarks are the property of their respective owners.
Microsoft's Monopoly May Not Matter
By Khan Klatt
Wednesday, October 17th, 2001
What does the outcome of settlement talks in
the antitrust case mean to Microsoft where it
matters -- its legacy and its plans?
With the Supreme Court denying to hear Microsoft's appeal
of the lower court findings of fact, Microsoft is looking at little
chance that the ruling that is a monopoly will ever be
changed.
Contrary to popular opinion, being a monopoly in itself is not illegal. It's anticompetitive behavior that
gets the government and competitors riled up.
So what's the industry to do if the ongoing settlement talks come out in Microsoft's favor? I think the
answer is: "Keep doing what you've been doing."
Yes, Microsoft has a monopoly, but let's remember that its scope is very limited. Microsoft, like any
shareholder-value oriented company, has tried to leverage its strengths, and despite widespread
corporate and consumer support for its products, it's not such a technology powerhouse as the average
user of its technology might think.
Credit Due
Take, for example, high-end database software. According to reports published earlier this year by
research firm Dataquest, Oracle and IBM each controlled approximately one-third of the industry. With 66
percent of the market dominated by these two players, Microsoft was able to eke out a stake of just under
15 percent.
While Microsoft dominates in the low-end markets with MS SQL Server, it's facing healthy competition
from free alternatives such as MySQL, mSQL, and PostgreSQL. A recent Neilsen//NetRatings report shows
that QuickTime and RealAudio software are used six times more often than Microsoft's Windows Media
technology.
More encouraging is the fact that Apple's QuickTime was adopted as the new MPEG standard.
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? 2001 Khan M. Klatt. All rights reserved. Graphic Design Credit: Kelly McNeill
All logos and trademarks are the property of their respective owners.
Who's Counting?
When it comes to Internet servers, Netcraft reports that the open-source Apache Web server software
serves 60 percent of the domains on the Internet, with Microsoft's IIS lagging behind with a relatively
paltry 28 percent of the market.
While Apache runs on Windows, it's a fairly safe bet that, likewise, 60 percent of the Web sites on the
Internet run off of Unix Web servers.
Interestingly enough, Netcraft also reports that 50 percent of Web servers are Microsoft operating systems
while Unix-based systems are a little less than 50 percent.
Putting two and two together, these numbers indicate that while the operating systems are evenly split,
Unix systems host 60 percent of the domains, while IIS only pulls 40 percent of its weight for the same
number of servers, according to the research reports.
The Net Effect
When it comes to Internet access, AOL and AOL Instant Messenger dominate the Internet access and
instant messaging markets, leaving MSN and Microsoft Messenger in its dust.
As for programming languages, Microsoft recently announced C# as the competitor to Sun's Java. Java has
enjoyed an active, vibrant developer community, while Microsoft's offerings have changed direction
several times over the past few years. With only a few Java developers signing on to C#, Microsoft
announced J#, which it hopes will attract Java developers to the Windows platform.
In my opinion, this is a poor choice for many Java developers. Java touts platform independence, while
Microsoft's J# ties developers to Windows. Java technology is pervasive these days -- it is included in just
about every popular shipping Web browser, and increasingly, is the underlying basis for cell phones and
PDAs, thanks to J2ME (Java2, Micro Edition).
Hot Java
The more penetration Java gets with developers and consumers alike, the less standardized do Windows
APIs become. Similarly, Java isn't the only alternative to Windows technologies. Perl, Python, and the
numerous others are open development standards, which don't tie their developers to one particular
platform.
Of course, unlike many of its competitors in the operating system arena, Microsoft doesn't build the
hardware that its software runs on. Sun, IBM, Apple, HP, AMD, Intel and SGI are sophisticated high-tech
companies that have chip fabricating plants or hardware design and assembly lines, areas of the market in
which Microsoft has never been bold enough to compete.
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? 2001 Khan M. Klatt. All rights reserved. Graphic Design Credit: Kelly McNeill
All logos and trademarks are the property of their respective owners.
Where it Matters
Microsoft's success as a software-only company simply comes from two strategies. First it controls the two
markets where it has gained dominance -- office productivity software and consumer desktop operating
systems. Second, it enters into promising new software markets as soon as possible and works to stop
competitors from gaining the upper hand.
What does the outcome of settlement talks in the antitrust case mean to Microsoft where it matters --
namely in its legacy and plans?
Adversity is the true litmus test for a business, not prosperity.
Does Microsoft stand to lose anything in the settlement talks in the antitrust case? Yes and no.
Microsoft has the most to lose where it is weak. And curiously, those stakes are in the bets Microsoft
placed in its legacy technologies of Windows and Office, as well as in its expansion products and services,
MSN and Xbox.
If the U.S. armed forces, China and France are any indication, StarOffice is gaining popularity worldwide.
Apple's MacOS X's launch came with rave reviews. Similarly, Linux is making new friends with both home
users and corporate allies alike.
Meanwhile, Microsoft's new markets don't look any better. Take, for example, the video console market
that Microsoft is entering with the Xbox. With fierce competition from Sony and Nintendo, industry giant
Sega bowed out of the hardware wars and gracefully chose to take part only in the software development
side of the industry, happy to write games for the remaining players.
Can't Handle
If industry stalwart Sega can't handle the competition, how does Microsoft hope to?
Already, critical impressions of the Xbox are coming forth. These range from an awkward form factor for a
TV-oriented console, unwieldy controllers, to absent test units for a device expected to begin shipping in
as little as one month.
How long will Microsoft keep this division afloat if it doesn't bear any fruit for its shareholders?
Fork in Road
Microsoft will find itself at odds with the desires of its customers. MP3 has recently become a household
term while the RIAA has become demonized in the public view because of what many view as the
organization's unfriendly bent toward artists, consumers and the marketplace.
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? 2001 Khan M. Klatt. All rights reserved. Graphic Design Credit: Kelly McNeill
All logos and trademarks are the property of their respective owners.
CD sales have dropped in direct proportion to the drop of Napster use, according to some studies. Due to
its implicit partnership with the record labels and media producers, Microsoft will be forced to push
closed technologies such as SDMI and WMF (Windows Media Format).
These efforts will meet a fate similar to DivX, which, if you'll recall, was so soundly defeated by the DVD
buying market that Circuit City and its cohorts had to quickly abandon the silly concept.
Despite the rejection of these technologies, Microsoft will be unable to embrace open technologies
without losing face or credibility with its content producer partners, thus leaving open standards ripe for
picking by its competitors.
Business As Usual?
Adversity is the true litmus test for a business, not prosperity.
Since Microsoft has been in a period of uninterrupted financial excess, the company could look the other
way while customers pirated its software. Microsoft was the jewel in the eye of many IT departments
because these individuals did not acknowledge the cost of doing business with Microsoft.
With licensing policies being more strictly exercised and a forced upgrade to XP looming on the horizon,
this false economy of scale offered by inappropriate licensing of Microsoft technology is now starting to
make people realize the cost of Microsoft products.
Ending Complacency
The days of Microsoft's complacency are over.
A settlement unfavorable to Microsoft won't prevent future injustices by the Redmond giant, as much as it
will punish the company for previous injustices.
Indeed, attributing the decline of Microsoft to the antitrust case will be doing its competitors -- outside of
the browser market -- a significant disservice.
Khan Klatt is an IT executive in the Pacific Northwest with a background in physics and computer science.
Khan has served as a Web developer, sysadmin, network engineer, information architect, and project
manager. He is notorious for his encyclopedic responses to simple e-mail questions. Khan maintains a list
of his editorials and other IT exploits at http://www.khan.org and can be reached at khan@khan.org.