The early days of the Windows operating system when it was transitioning from nothing more than a DOS graphical shell to a 32 bit system. Microsoft server operating software was incredibly buggy. Many preferred alternatives to the Office suite. But MS prevailed with lots of marketing and buying up the competition.
For a pretty good overview of the business practices in the early days of microcomputing, check out the 1999 film Pirates of Silicon Valley, based on Michael Swaine’s 1984 book Fire in the Valley: The Making of the Personal Computer. To oversimplify, the basic premise is that everything that we today think of as brilliant innovations from incredibly creative minds was swiped from some little guys who got quickly exterminated and forgotten. Guess which category Steve Jobs and Bill Gates fall into.
BE THIS GUY about 3 years ago
Sounds pretty tame for a mad dog.
Renatus Profuturus Frigeridus Premium Member about 3 years ago
Smart working in 1996 from Montmartre.
syzygy47 about 3 years ago
Pain au chocalate, I looked it up thinking it was some made up frou-frou. Yeah, I’ve had that, under the general name chocolatine.
Randallw about 3 years ago
Thought she was cheating on Mike there for a moment with talk of her and her co-workers going to bed.
lance_ryley about 3 years ago
The Crazy Dog. Sounds about right for a 90’s tech company.
More Coffee Please! Premium Member about 3 years ago
What about Apple?
Prey about 3 years ago
My opinion is that Microsoft sells things you need and Apple sells things you want.
mourdac Premium Member about 3 years ago
The early days of the Windows operating system when it was transitioning from nothing more than a DOS graphical shell to a 32 bit system. Microsoft server operating software was incredibly buggy. Many preferred alternatives to the Office suite. But MS prevailed with lots of marketing and buying up the competition.
vaughnrl2003 Premium Member about 3 years ago
Chien Fou? Mad Dog? Mad Dog software. I like it. To bad Microsoft crushed it.
Bob Blumenfeld about 3 years ago
For anyone wondering, I just Google-Translated “Chien Fou.” It’s “Mad Dog.”
Richard S Russell Premium Member about 3 years ago
For a pretty good overview of the business practices in the early days of microcomputing, check out the 1999 film Pirates of Silicon Valley, based on Michael Swaine’s 1984 book Fire in the Valley: The Making of the Personal Computer. To oversimplify, the basic premise is that everything that we today think of as brilliant innovations from incredibly creative minds was swiped from some little guys who got quickly exterminated and forgotten. Guess which category Steve Jobs and Bill Gates fall into.
198.23.5.11 about 3 years ago
Kim was introduced as a baby,so I’m still trying to figure out how she aged much faster than anybody else in the strip.
bakana about 3 years ago
Micro$oft owes their early success to one fact about hte Computer Industry at the time:
“No One was Ever Fired for buying IBM.”
Those early Personal Computers had IBM’s name on the Outside. And, M$ software screwing up the Insides.