• On MovieTome: Who is directing GOD OF WAR THE MOVIE?
May 4, 2008 12:29 PM PDT

Without Yahoo!, Microsoft is left to continue failing alone

Posted by Matt Asay
  • Font size
  • Print

Microsoft has officially pulled out of its offer for Yahoo!. With Yahoo! goes Microsoft's best chance to transform its culture and technology to become more open. With Microsoft goes Yahoo!'s best chance to get the resources and ambition it needs to grow strongly again.

As for Microsoft's (and Yahoo!'s) insistence that they can go it alone, Paul Kedrosky's suggestion to the contrary is spot on:

  • If Microsoft could have solved its advertising and content problems organically, it wouldn't have been forced to make an outsize and humbling bid of former web wunderkind Yahoo. It's not exactly short of cash, people or need. To say that it now has the magic solution is, let's just say, the triumph of hope over recent experience.

  • If Yahoo really had in place the pieces to make a run at being ... something, we wouldn't be seeing the key employee attrition and weak revenue/traffic growth that we currently see. After all, the only thing that saved Yahoo's earnings bacon in the just-completed quarter was money gifted from Alibaba gains. It wasn't a changed company that did it, and wasn't the magic of Jerry Yang.

The two needed each other. To be fair, I don't think Microsoft would have gained much in terms of search or web momentum from Yahoo!, because combining two second- and third-place competitors rarely yields a first-place winner, unless it somehow solves their core deficiencies. In the case of Microhoo, it would not have resolved the two companies fundamental inability to wage a strong battle with Google.

But it would have given Microsoft leeway to compete on a broader platform than .Net and other Microsoft technologies, which both pave the way for its success...and ultimate irrelevance.

The future is open. Google "gets" that. Yahoo! "gets" that. Microsoft? Not so much.

Matt Asay is general manager of the Americas and vice president of business development at Alfresco, and has nearly a decade of operational experience with commercial open source and regularly speaks and publishes on open-source business strategy. He is a member of the CNET Blog Network and is not an employee of CNET. Disclosure.
Recent posts from The Open Road
Novell delivers another 33 percent quarterly rise in its Linux business
Cisco's $100,000 bounty: Get paid to love Linux, diss Microsoft
Apple more proprietary than Microsoft, survey finds
Facebook finally hits the mainstream
China Linux policy suggests open source is not always open
Pandora breaks free on the iPhone: Is the music industry listening?
Microsoft's mixed-up open-source TCO messaging makes perfect sense
Eclipse coaxing developers away from Windows Vista?
Add a Comment (Log in or register) 1 comment
by AppleSuxLeo May 4, 2008 12:58 PM PDT
They pulled out after finding out that Yahoo was`nt on the pill.
Reply to this comment
advertisement

In the news now

Slowing expectations at a green-tech start-up

Six months ago, biofuels start-up Mascoma had the wind in its sails, as did the rest of the clean-tech sector. Now, the company is treading carefully and scaling back.


With JavaFX, Sun seeks new coders, new revenue

With the launch of JavaFX 1.0, Sun is trying to reclaim Java's strength as a foundation for rich Internet applications. But it's no longer the incumbent.


Tim Lincecum, motion capture star

San Francisco Giants pitcher, who won the Cy Young award last month, dons a motion capture suit for 2K Sports' Major League Baseball 2K9 video game.


Resource center from CNET News sponsors
Business. Ready.
Sony VAIO® Professional PCs.

Click Here!
A new grade in mobility demands a new kind of notebook. And Sony delivers.Tough, portable and featuring up to 7.5 hours of battery life! VAIO® Professional notebooks are built for business. Learn more.

Click Here!
Built tough for business.

Learn more about the rigorous quality testing Sony puts its notebooks through.

Protect your investment.

Find out why VAIO® tech support recently won a Laptop Editors' Choice Award, July 2008.

Long battery life.

Up to 7.5 hours of battery life! See how VAIO® PCs will keep you productive longer when on the road.

Travel light

Check out our ultraportable line-up, starting at 2.87 lbs.

PCs for every need.

Find out which VAIO® notebook is right for you.

About The Open Road

Matt Asay brings a decade of in-the-trenches open-source business and legal experience to the Open Road, with an emphasis on emerging open-source business strategies and opportunities. Matt is general manager of the Americas division and vice president of business development at Alfresco, a company that develops open-source software for content management. He is a member of the CNET Blog Network and is not an employee of CNET. Disclosure.

Add this feed to your online news reader

The Open Road topics

advertisement
advertisement
Click Here

Inside CNET News

Scroll Left Scroll Right