Reluctantly: Goodbye, Microsoft

Dear Microsoft,

First I want you to know that I’ve appreciated your software for the past 15 years. When I left Apple in 1994, I surprised myself by preferring Windows 95 over Mac System 7.x. Windows seemed faster, had better network support, ran a larger variety of third-party software packages, and (importantly for the small company I ran), was overall cheaper to use, since Macintoshes were quite a bit more expensive than PCs back then.

Fast-forward to today: the past two years have been a sinkhole of struggles with your software. I like to multi-task when I’m working, as do many others. I estimate I’ve spent 15-20% of my waking hours waiting for Microsoft software to do something simple.

The prime example is Vista. Slow, slow, slow. I had to beg Dell to sell me an XP driver CD. At first they said it wasn’t available. When I repeated my request six months later, Dell overnighted the drivers to me – no charge. Tell you anything?

But the intolerable offender is Office 2007. 90% of my wait time is caused by the application I spend 70% of my time using. Outlook not only slows or freezes when it checks for new mail and/or sends mail – it hogs the bandwidth of my laptop and slows or freezes every other application I’m running. (And please don’t refer me to the dozens of speed-up tips – I’ve tried them all.)

The nail in the coffin, though, is that I’ve lost trust in you. Software-development wise, you seem to have become too big in ambition and size to quickly craft tight, efficient code. The patched version of Vista, dressed-up with a new name (Windows 7), is promised no earlier than 2010 – three years after Vista’s release. Huh?

Another reason you’ve lost my trust: honest programmers seem to have devolved into spin artists. I haven’t heard a single acknowledgment that Vista or Outlook were shipped before they were fully tested – or that Outlook still has flaws that make it close to unusable.

So reluctantly, Microsoft: goodbye. I still believe you deserve your hard-earned success. I have great admiration and respect for the individuals who fueled that success, several of whom are good friends. But I’m getting older, and life’s too short to squander precious minutes.

Good luck, really,

David


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10 Responses to “Reluctantly: Goodbye, Microsoft”

  1. So I assume this mean you’re moving to Linux, using openoffice.org? If so, welcome to the club!

  2. I’ve been running Ubuntu for about a year now, and I love it. The only sucky thing is my company uses Microsoft Exchange, and I also need access to CS4. So, I have a VM, but I only open it up a couple times a week for an hour or so each time.

    I haven’t had a single computer crash / virus / malware incident in the past year. That alone makes it worth the switch.

  3. Anna Talerico Says:

    Great post. Welcome to the Apple tribe!

  4. @Sean and @Anna- we haven’t decided yet what we’ll use instead of Microsoft software.

    @Tim – how’s the speed of Ubuntu vs. Vista?

  5. David

    As a Microsoft guy I want to extend an offer to try to help here – I was going to suggest some speed tips for OUtlook ;) as I’ve had my own challenges there but will resist the temptation…

    No obligation to respond or accept but…if you’re open to one last extension of a hand of help, where could we start?

    Steve

  6. Hi, @Steve – thanks for chiming in. I’ll be happy to hear Outlook speedup tips.

  7. I feel the same way and I’m not even using Vista. I got the “new” Outlook and I was pretty excited to try the new contact manager with its expanded functionality. A million headaches later and I’m wishing I hadn’t upgraded.

    I’m not quite ready to switch to an Apple, but I’m so very close…

  8. Hi David

    I’m permanently looking for ways to speed up my Outlook experience and have some across a few tweaks in my time…though the best continues to be related to PST’s. Keep them below 1gb and all seems good. I know this isn’t always possible so I now have an archive strategy that pares off email that is quite old (3 months usually does it for me) and then leave those PST’s closed unless I specifically need to track something down.

    I wrote a post on the topic a while back which links to a very useful speed tips document but the links seems broken from http://blogs.msdn.com/stevecla01/archive/2008/05/19/speed-up-outlook.aspx

    so check it out at http://www.marketingyour.biz/factsheets-mainmenu-30/3619-factsheet-speed-up-outlook-2007-performance-tips

    let me know how you get on and hope this helps!

    Steve

  9. Thanks, Steve. I’ve tried all of those techniques. We use Exchange, so I’ll have a look at the Exchange optimization resources.

  10. David – Thank you for the post. I made the jump to the Mac side 18 months ago and I’m still excited. I have a few issues with Mac in using WebCEO or Web Position, but I use Parallels, which allows me to use these web-based programs. Besides the work environment Mac’s are a whole bunch more fun that PC’s anyway:-)

    Looking forward to meeting you at SES New York. I’ll track you down and introduce myself.

    Eric Fransen, President
    Klik Marketing
    @ericfransen

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