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Word: microsoft (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 2000-2009
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When a company's revenues grow 17%, as Microsoft's did in the past quarter, it might seem a little churlish to suggest its glory days are over. Its chairman, Bill Gates, even reclaimed his title as the world's richest man, after a widely published story claiming that the founder of Ikea had replaced him turned out to be so many Swedish meatballs. And Gates' baby, based in Redmond, Wash., is still by far the largest software maker in the world, with a healthy $56 billion in the bank and revenue conservatively expected to rise 5% next year...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Is Microsoft A Slowpoke? | 5/10/2004 | See Source »

Answer: quite a lot. When you fly as high as Gates & Co. did during the 1990s, growing an average 36% annually, maintaining that altitude is nearly impossible. So Microsoft's growth rate is now no larger than that of the PC industry as a whole. Its stock price has stalled at 1998 levels. A new version of its flagship Windows product, once expected as early as 2003, may ship in 2006, lacking many of the cool new features Microsoft had hoped to include. By then, Windows is expected to be squaring off against its toughest challenge to date, from Linux...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Is Microsoft A Slowpoke? | 5/10/2004 | See Source »

...Microsoft began its 30th year last month, investors wondered whether it's a little long in the tooth. "It's clear that Microsoft doesn't see itself as a high-growth company anymore," says Matt Rosoff, a financial analyst with Directions on Microsoft, based in Kirkland, Wash. "The boom days are over." Last year Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer started giving employees stock grants instead of stock options--a sure sign that the share price is flatlining. Ballmer okayed a minuscule dividend for shareholders, but he has resisted calls to let them dip any further into the $56 billion cookie...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Is Microsoft A Slowpoke? | 5/10/2004 | See Source »

...bets in growth industries--the bigger, the better. "If you can't bring a $100 million business plan to the table, they're not interested," says Alec Saunders, a Windows programmer who recently quit after nine years at the company. Stung by a slowdown in corporate IT spending, Microsoft made a major play for our living rooms and pockets, with mixed results. It sank billions into the video-game business (Xbox and its soon-to-be-announced successor, Xbox 2), the cell-phone business (partnering with longtime ally Intel) and something called smart personal object technology (SPOT), which uses...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Is Microsoft A Slowpoke? | 5/10/2004 | See Source »

Computers running Windows 2000 or XP are vulnerable until they receive the Microsoft virus update download, available to Harvard staff and students on the Faculty of Arts and Sciences Computer Services (FASCS) website. Macs and earlier versions of Windows are safe...

Author: By Zander D. Rafael, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Worm Infects Harvard Network | 5/4/2004 | See Source »

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