
Interview of the Microsoft boss by the Daily Telegraph <https://www.nzherald.co.nz/business/news/article.cfm?c_id=3&objectid=12059758>: ... Nadella's four years in charge cannot be described as anything but a success. Under his watch, its share price has increased by 170 per cent, finally overtaking the levels from the peak of the dotcom boom. Except that share price seems a somewhat short-sighted way of measuring a company’s success. Look at HP. "I always make this case, which is if it was not for Microsoft's openness, the web wouldn't have happened. I was talking to [web creator Sir] Tim Berners-Lee yesterday and I sort of said: 'Think about the current ecosystems and how closed and how walled gardened and riddled with all kinds of ways they've rigged it, [compared] to where we were.' Talk about rewriting history. The Web was growing by leaps and bounds long before Microsoft even noticed it (remember how the first edition of Bill Gates’ book “The Road Ahead” didn’t even mention it?). Netscape was the leader and de-facto setter of standards, until Microsoft belatedly entered the race, and took over by giving away their product for free. Then we had the long period of stagnation under Internet Explorer 6, until Firefox came in to jolt them out of their complacency, followed by Apple’s Safari and Google’s Chrome. So to say that “Microsoft’s openness” had anything to do with it is just shamelessly false.