It is hardly surprising when competitors in any field of business bad-mouth one another’s products. The kind of negative attack ads that have become so common in politics aren’t allowed in industry, by law, but there are subtle ways for a crack advertising company to make invidious comparisons (for example, we see them all the time in the “cola wars”). But there’s nothing to prevent one chief executive from running down another company’s products in interviews with the press. And if a company gets angry enough, and its lawyers think a case can be made, complaints can be filed with the Federal Trade Commission. That’s what began to happen in the computer world in the early 1990s. There were a number of competitors making complaints about Microsoft’s business practices, but the two best known are Phillipe Kahn, the French-born founder of Borland International, and Raymond Noorda of Novell Data Systems.
Kahn was already thirty when he arrived in California in 1982. He was late getting into the computer field, but he had been trained as a mathematician, and his technical wizardry soon made the tiny company he founded over an auto repair shop in Scott’s Valley near San Jose into the third biggest software company behind Microsoft and Novell. Within a year he had introduced an inexpensive computer programming language called Turbo Pascal. As the New York Times reported, “He sold his programming language mail order at a fraction of the price charged by larger rivals like IBM and Digital Research.” He followed that with Sidekick, which would become the most popular scheduling and information manager software for personal computers.
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Microsoft Word, which is our word processor, is used to write eighty percent of all the documents that are created in the world today, because it’s available in Chinese, and German, and every language you can name, but in no sense does providing that tool give us any influence over what people choose to write.
—BILL GATES, downplaying the power of Microsoft, 1995
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Despite the respect Kahn had as a technical genius, he also had a reputation as a wild character. He even styled himself as a “barbarian,” drove cars at speeds that brought him endless tickets, spent a lot of time sailing yachts, and played the saxophone, recording two albums with well-known jazz professionals—paid for by his company. He and Gates loathed one another. Kahn said that Microsoft was run like “Nazi Germany,” and Gates told Time, “Phillipe Kahn is good at playing the saxophone and sailing, but he’s not good at making money.” According to James Wallace in Overdrive, one group at Microsoft had T-shirts made up that read “Delete Phillipe.” And that’s exactly what Gates set about doing, by buying one of Borland’s chief rivals for database products, Fox Software. The deal went through in early 1992 for one hundred seventy-three million dollars; Microsoft used its sales force to push its FoxPro from ten percent to fifteen percent of the market in a few months. In December of that year, Microsoft introduced its own database product, Access, and sold it at a steep discount to undercut Borland. Borland began posting losses, and Kahn had to keep reducing the number of the company’s employees as he made mistakes of his own and fell behind in delivering new products. The personal animosity Khan felt toward Gates was hardly eased when his former wife started dating the Microsoft founder.
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Software companies are sometimes criticized for designing software that works best on the newest, most powerful machines. But it almost has to be that way because advances in computer hardware let software companies make products that are easier to use relative to what they accomplish.
—BILL GATES, 1995
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The antipathy between Raymond Noorda and Gates was more straightforward, growing out of tough Microsoft business stances. Noorda was not a technical person, but he was a frugal manager, and had turned around a struggling Novell when he was brought in to run it in 1982, at the age of fifty-eight. Gates had managed to block Novell’s attempt to purchase another software company, Aston-Tate, in 1988 (Aston-Tate was later bought by Borland International, in a disastrous deal that ran up Borland’s debt). Still, Noorda had been willing to talk when Gates had approached him about a possible merger between the two companies in 1991. Novell was the top dog in the business of producing networking software to link computers to one another, an area that was a real weakness for Microsoft, but one that Gates had great interest in and would continue to move forward on. But the deal with Novell was called off by Microsoft, and Noorda came away from the experience convinced that Gates had only been interested in getting a look at Novell’s inside workings and information.
Kahn and Noorda were thus both delighted to assist the Federal Trade Commission in its investigation of Microsoft’s business practices during the first half of the 1990s. The FTC’s interest had originally been aroused by the IBM/Microsoft agreement to develop OS/2 together, which immediately got antitrust noses twitching. When that agreement ultimately fell apart, the FTC had so much information on Microsoft and had received so many complaints about the way it operated from competitors that it kept right on investigating. Antitrust cases are always extremely complex, and, in a new field like computers, the law is often only vaguely applicable. But there were two main areas that the FTC was looking at. The first had to do with Microsoft’s agreements with the computer manufacturers, which gave them large discounts on the use of Microsoft DOS, provided a royalty was paid to Microsoft on every computer, regardless of whether it had DOS installed on it. Why, the question was asked, would a PC maker ever install an operating system from a competitor when it was already paying for DOS? The second main area of concern stemmed from complaints from competitors that, contrary to regulations, they did not receive the information they needed from Microsoft on new operating systems in a timely fashion that would allow them to develop their own applications systems that work with, for example, DOS for Windows. There was a suspicion that the Microsoft applications division was getting such information first, giving it a head start, despite the fact that regulations required competitors to receive it at the same time.
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Given the amount of mud people have thrown up on the wall to see if it sticks, I think it’s pretty amazing that not a speck of dirt has ever stuck.
—BILL GATES, on competitors’ charges that Microsoft is ruthless, 1993
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Raymond Noorda was leading the charge against Microsoft, with as many as seven lawyers active in the case, but Borland and several other companies also tried to sway the FTC commissioners to take action against Microsoft. Although the general public was largely unaware of what was going on—FTC investigations are far too complicated for the sound-bite reporting of the evening news programs, and get reported only when a case comes to a head—the Wall Street Journal and the business pages of other leading newspapers followed the case closely. James Wallace gives a lengthy after-the-fact treatment of the matter in Overdrive, but it became a story with an anticlimactic ending. On February 5, 1993, the five FTC commissioners met to take a vote on whether action should be taken against Microsoft, and with one commissioner recusing himself because of a conflict of interest, the remaining four split evenly. The matter was taken up again, after further study, on July 21, 1993, with the same result. The Justice Department’s Antitrust Division then took the unusual step of getting involved.
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It’s fine for the antitrust authorities to look into what is a very important industry and say, you know, “What are the dynamics here?” As they look at it, what they’re going to find is that we’re all just, you know, fighting to get our message across and get these new products out as fast as we can. And it’s exactly what government should look to in a market—U.S. companies doing very, very well and not being at all complacent.
—BILL GATES, to Charlie Rose, 1996
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The Justice Department case, led by Anne Bingaman, who had been appointed head of the Antitrust Division by President Clinton, went on for another year, and was finally settled with a consent agreement approv
ed by Bill Gates. It essentially changed the kind of licensing agreement Microsoft could demand from computer makers; from now on they could send out computers that had other companies’ operating systems without still having to pay a fee to Microsoft. This was claimed to “level the playing field,” but the press took the view that Gates had just been given a slap on the wrist.
All consent decrees have to be approved by a federal judge, who is assigned cases by lottery. The judge in this case was Stanley Sporkin, who also thought the consent decree was a slap on the wrist, and threw it out on February 14, 1994, infuriating not only Bill Gates but also Anne Bingaman. On appeal, with Microsoft and the Justice Department now on the same side, Sporkin’s decision was overturned by a three-judge appeals panel, and Sporkin was chastised for having overstepped his authority. The case came to an end three days before the launch of Windows 95 on August 24, 1995.
Not only was Bill Gates temporarily free of government interference and about to present the world with what would become the most successful computer software ever devised, but the two men who had been his greatest enemies were gone from Borland and Novell. Phillipe Kahn resigned—or was forced to resign by the board of directors—as head of the company he had founded a dozen years earlier, leaving on January 11, 1995. Kahn even showed up at the Windows 95 launch celebration; he had started a new company and needed to mend fences with Microsoft. As for Raymond Noorda, he had been gone from Novell for a year, retiring at the age of seventy, his memory failing.
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Scott hates PCs and he hates the fact that customers like PCs. When PCs were selling six million units a year he said that it was a stupid idea. Now PCs are selling seventy million units a year, and Scott’s trying to tell corporations that they should just rip PCs away, that flexibility and empowerment is bad stuff. If he’s using my image as part of that attack, then fine.
—BILL GATES, returning the compliments of
Sun CEO Scott McNealy, 1996
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Of course there were still plenty of competitors who disliked Bill Gates and regarded Microsoft as a dangerous gorilla of a company. The three who came to the fore to challenge Gates most openly were Jim Barksdale, the new CEO of Netscape, Scott McNealy of Sun Microsystems, and Larry Ellison of Oracle Systems Corporation. Barksdale is the most diplomatic of these competitors, and he can afford to be—Netscape beat Microsoft to the punch with an Internet browser, which still outsells Microsoft’s version more than two to one. Ellison had said that “everybody hates Microsoft,” but that is clearly wishful thinking. Scott McNealy is the most outspoken. He told Newsweek, “There’s two camps, those in Redmond, who live on the Death Star, and the rest of us, the rebel forces.” This is what McNealy told Newsweek in May of 1997. Of course, back in December of 1995, he had agreed to license Java—a computer language developed by his company that would become the standard for creating visual and audio effects on Internet web pages—to Microsoft. That was just good business. It would help establish Java as the standard, bring in plenty of cash, and prevent Microsoft from developing a rival language.
While such agreements between rivals—even personal enemies—occur in other fields, they are particularly common in the computer business, for several reasons. It has been fifty years since ENIAC’s components could fill an entire railroad boxcar. Thanks to the microchip, computers in that time have become small enough so that a machine that can be held in one hand can do more calculations more quickly than ENIAC could. Yet, as anyone in the field will tell you, computers are still in their infancy. Thus computer businesses, whether they produce hardware, software, or both, have a vested interest in the kind of cross-fertilization that creates further new developments. The vast possibilities that still lie in the future certainly create intense competition, but they also require that competitors quite often cooperate with one another in order to move the entire industry to a higher level. It is doubtful, in fact, if there has ever been another field in which the phrase “good for the industry” has been used so often.
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But don’t conclude that computer processing speed is out just because I don’t use the very fastest personal computer available. Keep in mind that by many measures a 480 notebook computer like mine outperforms an IBM mainframe computer of twenty years ago—and costs perhaps one-five thousandth as much.
—BILL GATES, 1995
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Microsoft itself, in spite of a dominance that drives both competitors and the government to worry about monopolistic practices, has created opportunities for dozens of other companies to develop specialized applications for its own products. Just as Microsoft was given an enormous push forward by its association with the then dominant IBM in the 1980s, so many smaller companies in the 1990s have been able to prosper, or indeed have come into being, because of the standards Microsoft has set. Rivals may launch lawsuits or push the government to take antitrust action, but they may also suddenly find themselves cooperating with Microsoft because it makes good business sense for everybody.
Again and again Bill Gates has defended his company’s practices, sometimes testily, sometimes in lofty terms. When asked by Time whether Microsoft was trying to create a monopoly by embedding its Internet browser into Windows, he replied, “Any operating system without a browser is going to be f——-out of business. Should we improve our product or go out of business.” In softer terms, he told Charlie Rose, “Well, what Microsoft does is we ship software products and we keep trying to improve them. And so in that sense, yes, we are relentless. We’re always hiring smart people. When you ship a great software product, there’s nothing tough about it. There’s nothing mean about it. People take it, put it in their computer and they decide if they like it and it’s word of mouth that drives that.”
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When you’re lucky and successful, it’s important not to get complacent. Luck can turn sour, and customers demand a lot from the people and companies they make successful. Big mistakes are rarely tolerated. I hope to remain successful, but there are no guarantees.
—BILL GATES, 1997
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It is also important to recognize that saying bad things about Bill Gates does not mean that he’ll never work with you again. Ron Glaser, the former Microsoft executive who was instrumental, as a subsequent part-time consultant, in pushing Gates to recognize the importance of the Internet in 1994, said of his former boss in January of 1997, “He’s Darwinian. He doesn’t look for win-win situations with others, but for ways to make others lose. Success is defined as flattening the competition, not creating excellence.” While Glaser also said he admired Gates’s vision, such remarks might be expected to cause Gates to seek retribution, right? Wrong. Seven months later, Microsoft announced a significant but undisclosed investment in Glaser’s own company, which specializes in computer sound systems. Gates may get angry, and he sometimes says harsh things about people who attack him, but he doesn’t hold the kind of grudge that prevents him from making a subsequent deal if he sees it as good for Microsoft.
As stated before, Gates sometimes had a combative relationship with Microsoft cofounder Paul Allen, and Allen can still be critical at times, but that does not interfere with their friendship of a quarter century. Gates is a combative person. It’s worth recalling that when he was sent to a psychologist as a teenager, the therapist ended up telling his mother that she would never win a battle with him and had to take another approach. In the long run, Gates became extremely close to her. It should also be kept in mind that when Gates shouts “That’s the stupidest thing I ever heard” in meetings with his employees, it is taken as a badge of honor. It means Bill Gates is paying attention. That kind of person may sometimes be difficult to deal with, but the business world is full of people who just smile at you and then stab you in the back when you least expect it. Many people would rather deal with Bill Gates’s frontal assaults.
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Well, I think, throughout our history, we wake up every
day knowing that in the business of technology you have to think about what you are missing. What is the research or customer feedback that you should be paying more attention to? And how do you keep that pace of innovation very, very high? How do you make sure that you are hiring the very best people? And that kind of focus has helped drive us forward through all the milestones the company has had.
—BILL GATES, to Charlie Rose, 1996
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One of those who knows all about both the difficulties and rewards of dealing with Bill Gates is Andy Grove, the head of the chip manufacturer Intel. Grove, nineteen years older than Gates, was born in Hungary, where he survived the Nazi horrors of a World War II childhood only to find himself living under the yoke of Stalinism. He was twenty when he escaped to the west after the 1956 Hungarian uprising, eventually getting a Ph.D. from the University of California at Berkeley. He and Gates first met when Allen and Gates dropped by to introduce themselves in 1978, when Microsoft was still located in Albuquerque. Two years later, giant IBM hired Intel to provide the chips and Microsoft to create the software as they tried to play catch-up with Apple in the new field of personal computers.
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