Falling Microsoft Income Endangers Yahoo Bid 195
Dionysius, God of Wine and Leaf, points out a new wrinkle to Microsoft's pursuit of Yahoo. The most recent quarterly results, which saw Microsoft's earnings drop by 6% from the previous year (revenue from Windows alone was down 24%), have caused the stock to dip. This has reduced the value of the cash-and-stock offer from its original $44B to something nearer $40B. Yahoo, of course, has maintained all along that the original offer was lowball. A business professor is quoted: "Whatever leverage [Microsoft] built up in the last few days could be slipping away."
Clearly caused by H-1b limits (Score:5, Funny)
Anyone who was around during the dot-com era remembers how it was H-1b limits that caused the crash of that wonderful era. Those who do not learn from history are doomed to repeat it.
wrong wrong wrong* (Score:5, Insightful)
Venture capitalists poured billions into the industry without considering that the market had yet to produce the great new age of commerce that was promised.
Startups without a coherent product were valued as multiple million dollar companies, and attracted investment like dead dogs attract flies.
And all this at a time when I believe broadband wasn't even widely deployed.
It was a bust waiting to happen. It's just a shame that so many viable companies were taken down in the crash.
Re:wrong wrong wrong* (Score:5, Informative)
And don't try the old asterisk in the subject line trick - we can see you're not a subscriber!
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That was the stealthy sound of sandpaper-dry sarcasm whistling coarsely overhead.
You are right, though.. There was very little sanity going on there, and we all suffered because of it.
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Well, many did.
Others made a killing billing obscene hourly rates.
I really can't complain too much. It's a psychological hit to go from billing $175/hr back down to $75 (and even $50 in the lowest of the lows of 2001-2) but that's fake bruised-ego pain. Not real suffering. Not suffering like a lot of Americans go thru during bubble-busts.
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Re:Clearly caused by H-1b limits (Score:5, Insightful)
I was going to make a joke about this but actually its not funny.
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I really wouldn't worry.. (Score:3, Interesting)
The weak companies can burn to the ground to un-clutter their marketspace and allow healthy, new companies to grow in their wake.
The strong dollar led to rampant outsourcing in the late 90's/early 00's.
The US was an expensive place to do business.
As the dollar weakens, the US becomes more and more attractive for foreign investment. European companies (like Volkswagen, for example) see a supremely talente
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The fact that European companies find it cheaper to employ people in the USA than other countries is not a good thing. The ability to outsource to other countries where labour is cheaper is a sign of economic strength, not weakness.
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Sure, as a currency reaches the extremes (both high and low) of its value, some people are hurt by that economically speaking.
But that's the point of a personal and social safety net.
I mean, the notion that a currency should be static just makes no sense whatsoever. A currency is essentially a "score" of the performance of a given economy. When an economy is strong, when growth prospects are strong, the currency is str
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Again, take China.
If they stopped their artificial manipulation (like the US and EU would like), there's no doubt that the Yuan would increase in value. Maybe even dramatically. And not instantly, but over a couple years time.
It's a bit tortured, but a decent sports analogy would be the team that purposely loses game after game after game in order to win some excellent draft spots.
But in China it's not JUST about future gains, it's also about social engineering. Among other th
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As the dollar weakens, the US becomes more and more attractive for foreign investment.
The US was already on its way to pauperization through foreign investment. If the rest of the planet invests even more (presumably with dollars they are eager to get rid of) then inflation would run rampant and things become too expensive for the locals.
As much as I like the sound of your wildfire analogy, its much more serious than that. You can't motivate people in a purely capitalist society without a stable currency that engenders trust. That is what we are facing: a profound breakdown of confidence an
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And the more non-throwaway goods are usually designed in the USA or Japan and manufactured smewh
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Wonder what industry of the US left by the Japanese will be taken over by the Chinese. Cars and electronics are taken.
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Since the US economy relies so heavily on imports, I'm surprised the devaluation of our currency hasn't caused more inflation. We've felt the impact through gas prices, certainly. But imagine if imported cars, clothing, and electronics had shot up that much. We'd be wiped out. I noticed, for instance, that motorcycles now cost significantly less in Euros than US Dollars, but the differ
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Currently the companies hold the H1-B visa holders by a tight leash because they can't switch jobs once Green card is applied. Also they can't switch jobs in the early years.
If both these restrictions are removed, companies will not be able to afford to
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For the record, I'm no US citizen, and I do actually think that this might increase my chances for a visa. If I ever wanted one, that is.
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It's clear that if Bill Gates could just get the H-1b caps lifted, the best and brightest from around the world could come to the US and be paid $100k straight out of college to save Microsoft.
Anyone who was around during the dot-com era remembers how it was H-1b limits that caused the crash of that wonderful era. Those who do not learn from history are doomed to repeat it.
Ahh.. so not people over investing in any idea that came along, no matter how outlandish it was, just because some of these ideas might pay off in a big way?
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The reason they want the cap lifted is becuase the people being brought in from abroad are cheap pure and simple!
BY the way I'm live in the UK and so therefore have no agenda.
This rubbish about it stopping PHD's etc is crap. By the way if they are being bought in to fill postitons in the US, why do they need to create start ups??
Its a ruse,the high tech companies do not want to pay a decent living wage to americans, when they can hire and fire foreginers, who will also be l
ummmm (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:ummmm (Score:4, Insightful)
this might shock you so hold on to your strawberry daiquiri, it takes years to get enough experience to even start training at the level MS needs to hire people to stay competitive.
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I work with people taking their Ph.D's, I don't have a Ph.D (or any formal qualifications for that matter) but I train them and could quite easily do the research work.
But I doubt I'd make the cut because I don't have a Ph.D. on the same grain if they took someone like me on a few years ago as an employe
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M$ failings have nothing to do with a lack of technical staff but everything to do with the Vista (P)OS, the user interface failing on Office 2007, the Zune edsel music device, pathetic xbox360 failure rates and, the failed re-branding of M
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Because, outside the US of A, there are still some people who understand humour. Inside the US of A, of course, you can't even spell it.
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Downward spiral? (Score:2)
Re:Downward spiral? (Score:5, Funny)
The crash is coming (Score:2)
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Microsoft is still a company with basically two extremely profitable cash cows (OS and Office) which are both under threat.
What, exactly, is a serious threat to Office? OpenOffice? IBM's new Lotus thing? I don't think so. Neither of those will be a serious threat to Office's market share in the next year or more.
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The death of Office application suites.
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That's not realistically happening anytime soon. It's just not. Few if any businesses are in a hurry to get away from them.
Further, the combination of Office 2007 and the newest version of the dev tools to go with it (VSTO 3.0) open a lot of new possibilities for what an Office suite can/should do for a business -- and what's more, a lot of these are the kinds of possibilities that play extremely well to the pointy-haired boss crowd. Once that dam breaks expect Offi
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In case you haven't noticed, the cool developers aren't working on Windows apps any more. There's a new development platform called the web.
Sure, it's easy to laugh at stuff like Google Docs today. But that stuff is the future, and it will be the death of MS Office.
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Not so much, no.
I'm a consultant. In any given years I spend time working in the offices of a lot of different businesses. Some of these will be Fortune 500 companies, some will be medium or small. This gives me a pretty good read on where a variety of different businesses are going.
Number of these businesses going to Office 07: several. Number of these businesses even looking at making a transition to something like Google Docs: zero.
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A lot of my clients are fast moving technology companies and they certainly are moving many things onto the web, and that process is accelerating.
Of course big enterprises and smaller companies in slower moving industries will be the last to move. But it is only a matter of time...
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We definitely do, and I'm glad to hear yours. Stuff like this is what keeps me coming back to slashdot. I see a pretty good variety of businesses in my work, but there's a lot more out there I don't see and it's interesting to hear what else is going on out there.
I think most companies at this point are using the web for some things, and not others. Some of this will definitely shift as new technology emerges (for example, ten years ago there was a pretty star
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Automatically processing email orders using a plug-in for Outlook is in my opinion a pretty horrible technical solution, and one I would never implement or recommend.
Much better to have an online form that people can fill in when submitting orders, which can then go directly into SAP or whatever. Including the Outlook application in such a solution is, in my opinion, a horrible hack.
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The majority of the office workers that I've interacted with have seemed to struggle with the new interface for a bit (usually around a day to a week or so) but then thereafter seem happy with it, usually finding that Office will do things for them that they didn't know it could do.
Definitely, the "power users
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I work at an engineering company, and we even use Excel's programming functions regularly for project management. But we'll never upgrade to 2007. No need. Microsoft's empire was built on growth, and Office, just like XP, got to a good enough stage many years ago. They still have some opportunity in the developing world, that hasn't already bought the software, but they're built out here.
Re:Downward spiral? (Score:4, Insightful)
If we had a truly open single platform, progress and innovation would have been a lot faster.
It was always inevitable that a more open platform would take over from the myriad of incompatible systems that were available years ago, unfortunately it was only the hardware that was open, or at least competitive, while software became more locked in than ever.
Microsoft have stifled the evolution of the open IBM compatible platform, not helped it. They stalled the transition to 32bit, and are doing the same with the transition to 64. They delayed other valuable technologies like USB and SATA by being way behind everyone else in supporting them. And they are keeping people stuck on the crufty legacy bios, because of their unwillingness to support EFI, or anything else that would be newer and better. How many other good technologies have been delayed or killed completely, simply because microsoft couldnt be bothered to support them, or supported them in such a half assed way as to make people falsely perceive them as useless.
They (along with other closed source vendors) are also stopping people moving to other superior architectures (some of which are more open than x86, but less widely supported because they wont run windows).
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Thats the worst load of crap ever uttered in this industry. Most things on the hardware side has been hold back because of Microsofts unwillingness to support new technologies.
If you take your time and compare what was on the market when Microsoft started dominating the x86 platform you will find that first Dos then Windows was long behind the competition. T
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Had IBM held onto x86 Microsoft as we know it would still be making stoplight-software.
You have more than two errors there. IBM chose the 8088 as their first PC chip. It was Intel's own documentation for that chip that suggested it was best used for controlling traffic lights (the docs I had recommended 8086 for regular microcomputer usage). And if Microsoft had been doing traffic light software, there would have a boom in the ambulance-chasing lawyer industry like you wouldn't believe. Oh wait ...
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Maybe we should thank heavens that Microsoft went towards the PC world?
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Its a beautiful day after all! (Score:3, Funny)
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The Offer is NOT LOWBALL (Score:5, Insightful)
Look at the earnings growth of Yahoo for the past five years. IT IS pitiful. Yahoo is being too arrogant for its own good.
Personally, I think Microsoft should just walk away. Watch that Yahoo stock drop faster than gravity.
Offer is attractive to shareholders (Score:2)
Re:The Offer is NOT LOWBALL (Score:4, Interesting)
Yahoo has only run into problems during the last 2 years, which is kinda short to declare the company dead. And their current P/E (with a price based on Microsoft's offer) is 35, which seems about average for most tech stocks. The day prior to Microsoft's bid, YHOO had dropped so low I was considering picking some up. I'm still kicking myself for putting off the research for a day so I could watch a movie.
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And battling Microsoft is a fun that many people here can probably understand!
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It could also be a matter of them really not wanting to become part of MS because they're aware of what tends to happen, or that they know how desperate Ballmer is to find some way of competing with Google, and that there aren't many companies he can buy with any realistic chance of giving them that capability.
"Personally, I think Microsoft should just walk away. Watch that Yahoo stock drop faster than gravity."
The question from Microsoft's viewpoint is whether
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No, my side hobby is investing in the market. Yes I am long MSFT, but I am also long AAPL. I would be long GOOG, but I find GOOG a bit too opaque for my tastes. Though they are a good company.
My point is that I am looking at this deal from a financial perspective and Yahoo is an idiot...
Just the excuse they need (Score:2)
I know...go buy Comcast! That would be cool. I think I would actually like you better as my ISP. And that's saying something.
Windows revenue dropped 24% ??!?!!! (Score:3)
24% decline in revenues could mean that people are either:
1. Pirating Windows XP very easily or
2. Corporate customers buying PCs with no OS, and installing Corporate licensed XP or
3. People switching over to Macs and Linux.
I think it could be a bit of all the above. In 3 years time, if Microsoft does not release a really good successor to Vista, it could be Curtains for Windows! (TM). Will it happen?
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Re:Windows revenue dropped 24% ??!?!!! (Score:4, Insightful)
Microsoft could afford to misspend the money it took to develop Vista. But Microsoft cannot afford to allow Windows share in the installed base to erode 10 points from the current level. Apple has already taken advantage of that opening, and Linux, mainly Ubuntu, is growing even faster, though from a such a tiny base that the statistics are iffy.
How bad would a 10% decline be? It would leave Microsoft with 80% of all personal computers that access Web sites. That doesn't seem irreversible. But it is worse than it looks for two reasons:
1. That 10% contains a large number of opinion leaders.
2. The momentum would be hard to reverse.
If a 10% decline happens in the next 18 months, before Microsoft has a response, then Microsoft will be in serious trouble.
3 years is far too long for Microsoft not to have a response. Well within 3 years we will know if we have a long-term competitive environment for personal computer OSs, possibly with new entrants other than Mac OS X and Linux.
It's a bit more ugly than that, methinks (Score:2)
2. This decline has been registered despite extra sales of Windows XP that people bought before MS "fixed" the issue by allowing XP licenses in parallel with Vista (only Pro versions). To clarify, Many new PCs have forced us to pay the Vista tax, and early adopters/sufferers paid for an XP license on top. Sales, h
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I don't know how they can clock up a 24% loss with Windows, which is much more "automatically" sold than Office. Something doesn't add up here (pardon the pun).. Maybe using those flawed OOXML math interpretations on an old system with the Intel FPU bug?
I bet it said "Vista capable"
Apple sales are up (Score:2)
However, in North America technology is always lagging the rest of the world, so you likely won't notice anything there for the next 5 years.
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Apple sales are up and Asus alone, sells more Linux machines than Apple sells Macs.
You keep saying this. It wasn't true then, it's not true now. Apple sold 1.4 million portables in Q2 2008, Asus sold 350,000.
Quit lying.
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Thanks.
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1. Pirating Windows XP very easily or
2. Corporate customers buying PCs with no OS, and installing Corporate licensed XP or
3. People switching over to Macs and Linux.
I think it could be a bit of all the above. In 3 years time, if Microsoft does not release a really good successor to Vista, it could be Curtains for Windows! (TM). Will it happen?
Certainly not the second one. Corporate Windows licenses are upgrade-only - you still need either a retail or an OEM license on the hardware.
I'd imagine it's a combination of a two main things:
1. Vista has few, if any, compelling features.
2. The economy isn't exactly in the healthiest of states.
This combination has businesses and individuals alike asking the question "What benefit is there to buying a [business: whole lot of] new PCs rather than just adopting a policy of replace when broken and not befo
Mising option: recession buying (Score:2)
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Some other reasons:
I found intere
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Advertising in Vista has no relations to revenues, only expenses.
As far as identical OEM pricing is concerned, I think unless Corporate customers buy PCs with NO OS at all; MS would atleast be getting the same revenue as previous years? The PC market is still growing, so a 24% drop in revenues should be really alarming for Microsoft.
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I think you hit the nail on the head.
Revenue from Windows down? (Score:2)
Why is Windows revenue down? What was the official reason, and official response?
Is this a normal dip that happens this time of year? Are they blaming the recession? Are they expecting an upswing in the next quarter?
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It's another thing entirely for Microsoft to say that OS sales (presumably XP+Vista+CE) are down.
My guess is recession + mature market where users don't have the push to upgrade systems, but I was wondering if there are other insights into what's going on.
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Everyone has an opinion on this, but the consensus seems to be that Vista is a huge dud. Part of Microsoft's decline can be attributed to an economy that has slowed, but the fact remains that consumers are rejecting Vista in large numbers. Also, while Microsoft's revenue from Windows (and I believe Office) was down significantly, Apple's revenue was up 46%. People are spending money on computers, not just on Microsoft like they once did.
Check out this entry [nytimes.com] from the New York Times tech blog, and specifica
A company name right on the mark: (Score:2)
Yaaaaaaahoooooooooooooo!
Revised Figures (Score:2)
You know the economy is bad... (Score:2)
Falling income, heh? (Score:2)
Yahoo offers to buy Microsoft!
Easy (Score:2)
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Microsoft used to make damn good mice and keyboards. I don't know about joysticks.
However, the new Microsoft mice and keyboards that I've tried out are not that good, really.
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For some reason Microsoft is desperate to compet
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It was never going to happen anyways.
Agreed. Attempting to merge these two companies would so badly mangle the infrastructures of both that they would be like discarded wreckage alongside the Information Highway. The primary benefactors of the merger would be IBM and Google.
Microsoft knows this: they would never have consummated their offer. They would have found some reason to back out when the books were opened to inspection, if not before. The whole point of this exercise has been to generate FUD and divert attention from failings of Vi