I've just written a comment to the post by Svetlana Gladkova – "Microsoft Plays Nicely with IT Departments – Lets Block Internet Explorer 8 Installations". Reason's icy intimations came out to be wordy, so I decided to voice my doubts in a separate post (since I got no answer :-))
The key idea: as business on the Internet is a kind of kafkian (you'll never know for sure who is a real enemy/competitor) and at the same time hobbessian (everyone against everyone) world – how can one establish a whatever strategy? [ha-ha, it's an open question]
Take for example a hypothetical war of browsers. I think there might be a kind of cognitive dissonance. For PCs we have three serious players: MS, Mozilla, and Google.
Meet Mozilla. The company earns most of its revenue from an agreement with Google for generating search traffic (according to the FY07 audited FS it accounted to 91%).
Good old MS distributes its "optimized for Google" IE7 for free (to be more precise, they have to). MSN holds a ...m-m-m... healthy 10% in the search market. The cash cow of MS pastures on the other side of monitors.
Here comes a knight, Google. These guys make 0.3% in royalties (FY08 3Q FS), while the rest effectively comes from ad revenues of which 66% is search engine. Google is threatened to lose its search revenues as the pie is being bit by aggregators, wikis, etc. (and at less extent by competitors). So they want to control search at each level of users' activity.
Now, only guys from Mozilla probably know how to monetize a browser in itself. For Google it looks as if MS moved into PC market. MS, in its turn, may not even have a clue what do they struggle for in terms of $.
No matter how you slice it, the bottom line, IMO, looks as follows: each of the 'Big 3' has its own, different, and in somewhat opposite motivation. So where are the logical foundations of "the new browser war" (as Svetlana calls it)?
I mean the war might burst out, but the battling sides will remind of Russia in the World War I.
Illustrations: fooloffun.co.nz, marketshare.hitslink.com
Beyond “Prompt and Pray”
23 часа назад
1 коммент.
Comment by Svetlana Gladkova
Alan, sorry I did not reply to your comment promptly on my post - got distracted in the evening. Thank you for transforming your comment into a real post, and an interesting one at that.
As for the "war" term, I certainly did not invent it - I've just recently read something pretty lengthy (and can't remember where) about the new browser war, featuring Google with Chrome as well this time. But these war does look strange with enemies fighting for different things and using very different arms - too many paradoxes makes the comparison with Russia in the WW1 totally valid here.
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