About Technology Industry

BNET Technology provides daily industry trends and news coverage with insights for managers and executives about all aspects of the high-tech industry. In addition to detailed tech company profiles, we bring you industry analysis on new mergers and acquisitions, tech products, investments, patents, and a host of other important technology related business issues.

Microsoft And Dell: Tech's Biggest Sore Losers

By Michael Hickins | Jun 1, 2009

Why are Microsoft and Dell seeking to temper enthusiasm about a possible warming trend in our winter of economic discontent? Are they more skillful progonsticators than other tech bellwethers, or are they simply trying to protect their collective behinds behind the recession’s macroeconomic skirts?

Steve Ballmer must be preparing for his second career by reading economist Nouriel Roubini, because he’s taken to larding his remarks about Microsoft with macroeconomic blather and historical references to RCA and other tech behemoths of the past. Ballmer told Walt Mossberg at the D7 conference last week that Microsoft is doing “a lot of soul-searching,” and he’s apparently concluded that we’re far from out of the woods.

Is this [economic situation] a 50-year phenomenon? I don’t think so. But it’s not going to be over in three months, either.

Michael Dell was not much more sanguine, but at least put his company’s performance into a global context, saying prospects are less good for a quick recovery in international markets than in the U.S. Dell also noted that “indicators of global IT demand remain mixed.”

That said, Cisco, HP and Intel aren’t exactly small local providers, and their views are decidedly cheerier. But maybe that’s because they’ve made wiser investments than their surlier counterparts.

Cisco CEO John Chambers resolutely told Reuters that, “IT is back. Network IT is back in a big way because it enables the other segments of IT.” An important note here is that Cisco is far from dependent on networking for its revenues; it has recently entered the server market and has been ramping up its efforts for converged data and voice systems.

Indeed, over the last nine months, sales of so-called “advanced technologies” — products not included in Cisco’s traditional routers and switches segments — rose by 3 basis points, which management chalked up to “increased adoption of our web-based collaborative applications,” in its most recent quarterly filing.

Intel’s CEO, Paul Otellini, said the chipmaker thinks “PC sales bottomed out during the first quarter and that the industry is returning to normal seasonal patterns.” And the company has plenty of reason to be hopeful about sales of its Atom-powered netbook, which could take advantage of a growing segment of the laptop market.

Even HP also struck a somewhat optimistic note; CEO Mark Hurd told Reuters the company had seen “pockets of improvements.” Not exactly a full-throated cry of joy, but a careful acknowledgment of a thaw.

So Cisco, which has diversified into servers, and HP and Intel, which have recently diversified into netbooks, see brighter prospects for the next few months.

Microsoft, in the meantime, is investing close to a hundred million dollars in a market, search, where it doesn’t have a hope in hell of making any headway. And Dell can’t seem to figure out how to spend its money and has tried to hire an acquisitions chief who can’t get free of his former employer. Those don’t seem like economic issues to me; they seem more like management issues.

[Image source: Wikimedia Commons]

Michael Hickins is a professional writer and journalist with a passion for ferreting out the intersections between technology and culture.

BNET User Analysis

Web Buzz:
  • Dim Christmas

    BBC - 338 days 3 hours 21 minutes ago

    It's beginning to look a lot like Christmas. At least it should, by now. But the holiday lights - the ones people have bothered to put out - seem dimmer than usual, reflecting the mood of the few folks you see at the department stores normally packed wall-to-wall in the final days before the holidays begin. Even the snow itself seems gray and...

  • KB Toys files for bankruptcy protection

    MSNBC - 347 days 19 hours 15 minutes ago

    NEW YORK - They couldn’t hang on two more weeks. Just 14 days ahead of the biggest day on the retail calendar, KB Toys filed for bankruptcy and planned to start going-out-of-business sales right away, choked by a downturn so severe that sales were down 20 percent in what should have been its busiest season. Desperate to pull in shoppers, the...

  • Tories warn of return to 'winter of discontent'

    Epolitix - 28 days 3 hours 34 minutes ago

    The Conservatives today claimed that the UK could see a 'winter of discontent

  • 10 iPhone Apps Microsoft Must Make

    Silicon Alley Insider - 53 days 5 hours 1 minute ago

    As Apple's iPhone extends its lead as the world's most important mobile software platform, Microsoft, the world's biggest software company, must take it more seriously . We argued earlier this week why Microsoft must make more apps for the iPhone . Now we're making Steve Ballmer a to-do list. Read the rest of this story » See Also:...

  • Fashion house granted bankruptcy protection

    Financial Times - 264 days 2 hours 53 minutes ago

    Gianfranco Ferre was approved of the protection on Thursday, the launch of the autumn/winter fashion collections in Milan

 
Reply to Story

BNET TalkbackShare your ideas and expertise on this topic

Subscribe to this discussion via Email or RSS

  •  
    1

    Midnight_oz

    06/03/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Microsoft And Dell: Tech's Biggest Sore Losers

    Spoken like a true journalist -
    "no hope in hell", "surly" , "second career?,
    ?can?t seem to figure out how to spend its money?

    Let me give some words back:

    "if enough journos hit enough keys, one might actually produce a Shakespearean play?

  •  
    2

    Michael Hickins

    06/04/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Microsoft And Dell: Tech's Biggest Sore Losers

    And Shakespeare would have been a heck of a tech business analyst!

Please add your comment:

  1. You are currently: a Guest |
  2.  

Basic HTML tags that work in comments are: bold (<b></b>), italic (<i></i>), underline (<u></u>), and hyperlink (<a href></a)

advertisement
advertisement
  • Click Here
  • Click Here
  • Click Here