Disruption is now business canon, even though it has legit critics and isn't general as many think. What was it like face "disruption" right when the paper/book came out in late 90s? Here's "Hardcore Software" on gaining org alignment for "Office9". 1/13 …rdcoresoftware.learningbyshipping.com/p/049-go-get-t…
2/ My favorite thing about disruption is how stories are always told after-the-fact when everything seems so clean and neat. Or conversely when everyone is quick to say and agree "ripe for disruption". Few consider the variable of time. Everything much more difficult. Book photo innovator's dilemma.
3/ In early 1997, Office had just really taken off on Windows with Windows 95. It was a huge hit and half of Microsoft's revenue. The internet was happening at the same time. And then "Innovator's Dilemma" came out. Everyone was being disrupted. (Annual report) Revenue from annual report. Platforms showing 5.97B and Appl
4/ A key element of disruption is what goes on inside a company when disruption happens. The story is often told as though it is a technology bet that the old guard won't make and the new insurgent technologists know what is better.

Ha, that's the academic version :-)
5/ Microsoft was hardly so simple. The company was over 20,000 people. Office was a tiny group relatively in the corner even compared to most R&D groups (lean!!). Here's the contemporaneous company org chart (courtesy Directions on Microsoft, @getwired). Looks like a VLSI layout. crazy microsoft org chart.
6/ The internet was also very "new". There were new technologies coming out all the time. Many seized on "disruptive" theory as a way to promote their new thing. Inside Microsoft, suddenly a big topic was how Office was going to be disrupted by new tech. Here's the complexity.
7/ Different parts of Microsoft had different ideas about which new "tech" would disrupt Office. Disruption was certain. Office was viewed as "not getting it". But the problem was even if we agreed we couldn't respond to each different tech.

We could only build one product.
8/ Was it building Office for the browser? In 1997 HTML 3.2 just got published. Scripting was still new and not settled. HTTP servers were still not app servers. Netscape could build lots into a browser. Internet Explorer wanted us to align with IE and extend IE to build Office. Netscape Communicator very promising headline in scanned sto
9/ Many knew the browser wasn't enough so they created Java to run in the browser. But that was kind of a hack. The allure of write-once-run-anywhere was HUGE. Sun backed it. But it kind of didn't work. The Dev Tools team at MS was really freaked out about java v. Visual Basic. Corel Office puts Java to work.IBM embraces Java Everywhere.
10/ Java Beans and "Components" was a whole other way to build software that might run in browsers. COM-component object model-was viewed by many at MS as "crown jewels". To battle components we created ActiveX. Some thought Office in ActiveX avoided disruption. (Beans "Arrive"!) Java Components: Java Beans arrive (Scanned article)Lotus Maps plan for Java components (scanned article)
11/ Network Computers were a new idea--a computer that was just a browser (!!). These were freaking out the Windows team because they were an assauly on all of desktop computing. They required Office in a browser, and a server. NCs go beyond hype (!) NCs move beyond hype (scanned article)
12/ So question is how to work through what to do and what bets to make. There was a huge amount of uncertainty and almost panic leading to a lot of angst. In the post in hardcore software I go through these technologies and how the company was conflicted. Wrote a long memo :=) Our Competitive Position Before looking forward to what our
13/ Please consider subscribing and joining in the journey of the PC. I'd appreciate it! Thank you. Next post is on the actual plan for "Office9". …rdcoresoftware.learningbyshipping.com
PS/ I think this post is perhaps what it feels like to be in traditional finance or banking these days, thinking through the technology of/competitors in crypto/defi/neobanks/etc and the different parts of a BigCo pointing at entrenched interests and potential technologies.

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More from @stevesi

25 Sep
“If you ain’t out on a iPhone 13 Pro nature walk, then where you aaaat?”

I think by now many know the new iPhone has macro and closeup capabilities. They are really cool. But just how cool? I’ll show you some first shots but the real cool is the march of innovation. 1/
2/ When portrait mode came out wrote this on how the phone is a revolution in tools and tools are what come to define the changes in the world we live in. Cinematic mode shows how much this has evolved. ♻️ “Nikon versus Canon: A Story Of Technology Change” link.medium.com/QRaWOdlAQjb
3/ Some shots with the new macro mode.
Read 17 tweets
20 Sep
iOS and iPadOS 15: MacStories Review // Worthwhile read for a lot of details about releases.

If you’ve been looking at Apple software releases for any time then you know “major”, “minor”, or “incremental” are all the wrong descriptors and upset me! 🙀 1/ macstories.net/stories/ios-an…
2/ What Apple does is “relentless execution” coupled with a “long-term and focused point of view”.

And they do that by releasing Every. Single. Year. At. The. Same. Time.

I guess after all this time, this fact is so taken for granted that we sometimes fail to appreciate it.
3/ This goes back to Apple history and failure to delivery the OS releases reliably. Of course everyone was failing to release software on time back then (even on mainframes). But Apple, much like Microsoft, teetered between betting too big and scrambling something out the door.
Read 18 tweets
17 Sep
"A predominantly remote future will challenge the need for layer upon layer of bureaucracy in American work by rejecting the assumption that 'management' is the only way to grow" @edzitron theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/… // Don't agree w/generalized view of "manager bad"...thoughts 1/
2/ Company structure is not a law of nature. Rather it is a product of strategy (intentional or not). The past 100 years have seen different waves of structure from chaotic, centralized, scale, conglomerate, re-engineered, and more. Every one of those had bad managers. A truism:
3/ The pandemic has shown that at a fundamental level what companies should revisit is not "how many managers" or "remote work" but what does a modern product/service execution strategy look like?

IMO, that will drive "the great restructuring" that will happen.
Read 14 tweets
14 Sep
Study of Microsoft employees shows how remote work puts productivity and innovation at risk geekwire.com/2021/study-mic… via @GeekWire // This is a paper out from a large group of researchers at Microsoft (and others). I have many thoughts on this. 1/
2/ My intention is not to comment on research per se but on how it might be misapplied. Studies of electronic communication in orgs--have been put forth ever since MSFT introduced email. At best this is telemetry and at worst it can be used to imply causality.
3/ I have no doubt that this research accurately captures the flow of information using digital tools around the company for over 60K people. That's a huge amount of work and analysis. Kudos. The challenge from the outset is that it conflates that flow with "collaboration".
Read 26 tweets
9 Sep
With early success in a product there's often a strong desire (or rush) to "make it a platform". Having an app is great and making it a platform is better.

How Microsoft and Apple worked *together* to create Macintosh is a huge lesson on building a platform. 1/ Steve Jobs on cover of InfoWorld February 1984 "Apple B
2/ Apple saw the value of having VisiCalc on Apple ][ and IBM saw that for PCs with 1-2-3.

The common thread is that platforms benefitted from a third party betting their future business on the platform. It was existential for the platform to have companies doing that.
3/ Conversely, third parties came to realize that betting their business on a platform can create a stronger relationship--an influencer relationship--with the platform. Bill Gates saw that potential with Macintosh.
Read 12 tweets
8 Sep
I know it is difficult to believe, but there was a time when key tech leaders and influencers of the world were dead set against the graphical interface.

In 1985, less than a year after Macintosh was unveiled the naysayers were out in full force... 1/ The images in this thread are all from a scanned article. If
2/ About 2M Apple ][ had been sold in total. About 3.5M IBM PCs (8086). About 8M Atari, TRS-80, C64 all combined. This was early. ~20M computers sold, worldwide, total.

Dr Dobbs, InfoWorld, Byte magazines were supreme. We're in "Halt and Catch Fire" S1. Joe MacMillan reads IW.
3/ If a hobbyist magazine printed a story you didn't like you probably just ranted at your user group meeting thursday night.

If it really bugged you, then you'd write a letter to the editor. Maybe they would print it a few weeks later. Then a few thousand people would see it.
Read 8 tweets

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