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Technology Stocks : How high will Microsoft fly?
MSFT 472.22-1.3%Nov 21 9:30 AM EST

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To: Frederick Smart who wrote (12443)11/22/1998 11:30:00 AM
From: rudedog  Read Replies (2) of 74651
 
Frederick -
My suggestion to you would be to talk to some developers. Don't take my word for anything.

I certainly won't take your word for anything after this completely inane and off-base series of posts. I don't know what universe you live in but it's not closely related to the one the rest of us inhabit.

Are you in technology development?? That's my business. I'm not a coder

Excuse me, but that's obvious. You're a suit. Your concentration on money and the financial rewards that you believe drive technical people reflect the kind of empty thinking that affects too many technical companies.

Real programmers are more interested in the value of their ideas, the opportunity to actually produce something that others will want to use, and the chance to exchange ideas with others who can understand them (something that clearly won't happen in any discussion between you and a technically savvy developer).

Microsoft provides even entry-level people with a great deal of flexibility in their job scope and work assignments, the chance to interact with some of the best minds in the business, and the assurance that technical skill will be rewarded. The internal environment is more open to new ideas than companies like Oracle and Sun (both of which I have worked with on technical issues). How far would an Oracle developer get with the idea of a cooperative development with some Microsoft team? Probably not as far as his next paycheck. But there is no technical or business idea which is rejected out of hand at Microsoft. Ideas are subjected to intense scrutiny by others in the organization, but often the most off-the-wall and controversial ideas get the most traction, and the 'Microsoft idea' is just as likely to change as the new idea in this interaction.

The BEST talent has long left Redmond.
Keep on dreaming. You are showing your ignorance of the depth of technical talent in Redmond, and the degree of loyalty they have for the company. And that loyalty is based as much on an appreciation of the lifestyle and opportunity that breeds at Microsoft as on any promise of getting rich.

The Softies work hard, they play hard, and they have huge energy and drive in both activities.

I know lots of good technical people at Sun, Oracle, and other Silicon Valley companies who would go to MSFT in a heartbeat if they had the chance. I don't think there are too many Softies who would go the other way.

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