How Microsoft competes
2008-05-23
The EU's top politician, José Barroso, was in Prague yesterday to
talk about nuclear power. Microsoft's CEO, Steve Ballmer, was in
town to talk about Microsoft. The value of their public remarks
was about the same - almost zero - but the Czech media gave
at least 20 times more space to Ballmer than to Barroso. It's sad
to see how Microsoft's public-affairs team manipulates
impressionable Czech journalists. Ballmer didn't have to field a
single question about the record antitrust fine his company
received from the EU. Nor did anyone ask how competitive the
bidding was for the multibillion-crown software deal Microsoft
is about to sign with Interior Minister Ivan Langer. Nor did
anyone marvel at how the CR can ask Jan Mühlfeit of Microsoft -
of all companies - to advise on competitiveness during the CR's
rotating EU presidency. Readers of HN did learn from Ballmer
that CEE countries are "much more open to modern
technologies" than the U.S. or W. Europe. No doubt because they
still play by rules that Microsoft understands.
[Czech Republic chief executive office energy Central and
Eastern Europe European Union anti-trust anti-competition]
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