The next wave of growth will come from the Internet.
Published:
23 March 1999 y., Tuesday
Microsoft will spend $3 billion on research and development this year to keep improving its products, said its chief financial officer, Greg Maffei. "If you let Windows stay stale for even three or four years, it will be a dead product," said Maffei, who spoke last night at Harvard Business School_s entrepreneurs_ conference and awards ceremony in New York. Microsoft increased its sales quickly as it rode the PC revolution that began in the late 1970s. The next wave of growth will come from the Internet, and Microsoft is investing to make sure it rides that wave, said Maffei. Microsoft has been struggling with its Internet strategy with products such as its Microsoft Network online service and its content and electronic-commerce Web sites, which together have been losing money. Other rivals such as America Online have had more success at gaining both subscribers and profits.
Šaltinis:
Bloomberg News
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
Software company announced new structure_ of it_s business.
more »
The war against Iraq may be drawing to a close but the war over its Internet future is just beginning
more »
In five years' time, more Windows CE devices will be shipping than Windows PCs
more »
Wiretapping takes on a whole new meaning now that phone calls are being made over the Internet, posing legal and technical hurdles for the FBI
more »
The high price of piracy
more »
In spite of being mostly knocked offline, the Web site of Arab satellite news network Al-Jazeera was among the most sought-after on the Internet last week
more »
Canada has become the first nation to ratify expansion of the NATO defense alliance, which Latvia and six other nations have been invited to join
more »
Hewlett-Packard's future vision of shopping online
more »
The war hasn't spawned new viruses. Instead, the same old viruses are being sent with new subject lines in the e-mail.
more »
Eyebees, a Dutch-based start-up, has launched a beta version of a software application bearing the company's name that allows users to become either part of or lead an on-line "swarm" as they navigate the Internet
more »
search.lt presents newest links
more »