OMG this is pure gold. Probably [old] (the email is from 2003), but whatever
6/26/2008 9:22:47 AM
I'm typing so fucking hard!
6/26/2008 9:37:02 AM
if that's real, that is surprisingly bad writing for such a powerful businessman
6/26/2008 9:50:57 AM
i don't know if computer geeks are usually known for their superb grammar
6/26/2008 9:54:00 AM
He's right about stuff on Microsoft.comEvery time I try to get something from there I always spend 5 minutes just trying to figure out how to download it.
6/26/2008 10:14:05 AM
6/26/2008 10:34:05 AM
that is hard to read
6/26/2008 10:43:09 AM
6/26/2008 10:54:28 AM
Yeah, there's NO way that's real.
6/26/2008 11:02:29 AM
6/26/2008 11:10:42 AM
^
6/26/2008 11:17:47 AM
^^Check out the 15 page "Tales of the Technically Inept" on page 3
6/26/2008 11:32:21 AM
i was about to say "old, saw it on gizmodo"but then you posted the sourcelol
6/26/2008 11:39:39 AM
6/26/2008 11:43:44 AM
i thought it was a great email. it shows that when a company gets that big, it gets to be almost impossible to get the little things right.
6/26/2008 11:46:45 AM
^ yeah, i agree. And I can totally see someone like Bill Gates actually going through the steps of downloading Movie Maker or installing WGA or something like that, and finally saying "OMG.... where did everything go wrong". But then what is he supposed to do after that? These emails indicate he simply might not be a strong enough manager to drive change, unlike Steve Jobs. At Apple, you really get the feeling that Jobs is kicking ass and taking names and makes sure that nothing with the Apple name on it leaves the company without going over his desk first. At MS, though, it seems like Gates just doesn't have that kind of presence or control over the company (I also realize that MS is much larger and has a much wider breadth of products than Apple, and may be an order of magnitude harder to manage).
6/26/2008 12:36:31 PM
a) it's always been Windows Movie Maker (2 words)b) it's been embedded in Windows XP since 2001
6/26/2008 12:52:04 PM
point?
6/26/2008 12:54:14 PM
why would Bill Gates refer to it as moviemaker, and why would he try to download it?
6/26/2008 12:59:16 PM
6/26/2008 1:07:10 PM
^^ so you're saying it's either a fake or Bill Gates is an idiot?it says he wanted to buy the "Digital Plus Pack", which has more than just movie makerthe date on the email seems right. according to this press release, the digital plus pack was released on Jan 7, 2003, and the email is from one week laterhttp://www.microsoft.com/presspass/press/2003/jan03/01-07plusdmeavailabilitypr.mspxas far as calling it Moviemaker instead of Movie maker - eh, i wouldn't give that too much thought. He didn't make the product and probably wasn't on the team at all, and it's hard to remember all the spacing and capitalization of all the stupid software products out there[Edited on June 26, 2008 at 1:09 PM. Reason : .]
6/26/2008 1:09:29 PM
wtf is a paragraph?
6/26/2008 1:38:18 PM
yeah its like 392 typed that out
6/26/2008 1:56:25 PM
he should probably learn to google http://www.google.com/search?q=moviemaker+ms&ie=utf-8&oe=utf-8&aq=t&rls=org.mozilla:en-US:official&client=firefox-afirst one[Edited on June 26, 2008 at 2:26 PM. Reason : although i guess he's right in that it does have to go through windows update..shitty.]
6/26/2008 2:16:18 PM
6/26/2008 4:02:00 PM
It's real.This is what happens when you have company of 30,000+ engineers and only 500 designers and usability folks and we are the biggest design firm in the US!There are just soo many brilliant engineers, but so few usability people, only X number of products can get the attention they deserve. Victim of our own success I suppose. And it's not that there's a cap on designers, we just can't get qualified people, the market is SOOO thin for interaction and product designers.
6/26/2008 4:11:09 PM
6/26/2008 4:20:19 PM
^^ The usability issues he's describing though are not hard for an engineer to handle.
6/26/2008 5:08:57 PM
^ yes they are. or more specifically, the coordination of all the usability features is. To get a program up on microsoft.com, it probably has to go through 10 departments, each with their own specialty with and nobody overseeing the whole process to make sure it runs smoothly from end-to-end. sure, each little individual problem that he pointed out in the email can probably be fixed pretty easily. But each fix and change has to go through committee after committee, review board after review board, and eventually it either doesn't get fixed, or gets "fixed" in a different way. Add up 20 small features that need to get done to make one clean, consistent user experience, and you'll never get there without strict and overarching usability oversight
6/26/2008 5:21:58 PM
^ Yeah I understand that, but you only have to be marginally intelligent to figure out which of those problems are going to be usability issues. And someone who is an engineer should have the logical reasoning skills to do that job. So why not make one of the engineers on the project be the usability person too?In any case, plenty of large companies out there at least have decent usability focus. Even Sony I think does a better job than MS in this arena. It shouldn't be hard for a company as large as MS with I assume many talented people to restructure a little so that things work better.
6/26/2008 5:27:21 PM
6/26/2008 5:47:53 PM
All the people claiming it's not real obviously have never worked in a usability design and evaluation environment.This reads exactly like emails I get on a daily basis. When senior management of large development oriented corporations gets involved, they don't hit you with the smarmy press release bullshit doubletalk you see plastered on a PR site. They cut through the bullshit and get right to the heart of the matter.If something is fucked up, they will tell you, and chances are, they wont fucking spellcheck anything before they hit send. They're trying to tell you how to fix the shit they don't like, not impress you with their spelling and grammar skills.^ and yeah, gs7 is spot on.I can't tell you how many times I've been going through a UI review and I've seen something in one of my designs that I (the layour designer) and my UI designers never specified, and never even considered the use case of that had been implemented by some half-assed developer who thought he would be doing the user a favor.Those are some serious "What the FUCK is this shit?" moments, but I digress.It's a bit unfair to say that Engineers aren't UI designers, because they can come up with cool ideas and give you food for thought and perspective on certain use cases, but in general they're pretty out of touch.[Edited on June 26, 2008 at 7:32 PM. Reason : .]
6/26/2008 7:27:00 PM
^winner
6/26/2008 7:29:20 PM
Ive seen a few things before on websites, and yea they are honestly trying to help you out. Ran into soemthign today on the PA dot websiteThe way i explained it today to my grandmother is thisLets say you want to get a pizzaWell the design guy knows you need shoes to walk and get pizza, and you need a car.So when you search for pizza, first you must look through shoes and cars, and then you find the listings for pizza.They are trying to help you, but the problem is it makes the actual information you want untouchable.
6/26/2008 7:44:38 PM
6/26/2008 7:47:59 PM
6/26/2008 8:13:15 PM
The problem here has nothing to do with engineering or not having UI people. If you read the responses to this email by Microsoft managers (http://blog.seattlepi.nwsource.com/microsoft/library/2003Jangatesmoviemaker.pdf) , it's easy to see the problem is with the organization's management. Bill's email bounced around seven people who couldn't figure out if their particular group was responsible for the problem. The tone in the emails were so nonchalant, it seemed as if the managers weren't afraid of Bill G coming down and firing some people.None of the managers of each group had ownership of "user experience" nor did they have the power to tell other groups to fix their shit. The buck doesn't stop anywhere. This is a management problem -- I have no doubt that MS has the engineers and designers with the talent to get the job done. They just don't have the organization to apply the right people to the right problem.It's widely known that at Apple, the buck stops at Jobs. Steve Jobs is notorious for going down and talking the actual engineers/designers if he sees something he doesn't like. There are plusses and minuses to this style, but the end result is that you do have someone who is paying attention to the user experience and someone who has the power to get it fixed.
6/26/2008 8:23:04 PM
6/26/2008 8:38:56 PM
yeah, those responses are interesting
6/26/2008 8:43:24 PM
It doesn't matter if they threw all 500 UI people at this. They could come up with the best designs ever, but there doesn't appear to be a way the dozen or so groups involved in this could have coordinated the changes needed.[Edited on June 26, 2008 at 8:48 PM. Reason : This is another reason Jobs favors small teams with aces programmers and designers.]
6/26/2008 8:48:01 PM
I was unaware that Mr. Gates also posted on thewolfweb under the name drunknloaded[Edited on June 26, 2008 at 9:49 PM. Reason : *]
6/26/2008 9:48:55 PM
6/27/2008 2:21:28 AM
Anyone who for one second thought this was real needs to go home and take a long hard look at where their life is headedOh and Noen too regardless of what he thought just because he's the biggest told you so, know it all, poster in the history of internet message boards......I can't even imagine how miserable that guy must be to actually hang out with in person[Edited on June 27, 2008 at 2:49 AM. Reason : ]
6/27/2008 2:43:17 AM
i don't really care one way or another, butNoen works for microsoft.So he automatically has more credibility than you, random wolfweb guy.
6/27/2008 7:12:24 AM
6/27/2008 8:48:00 AM
I thought this part from Ian Mercer was hilarious, talking about problems with Windows Update:
6/27/2008 9:41:49 AM
agentlion: how much did that remind you of a Grant email ?
6/27/2008 11:54:43 AM
and all the responses - i can totally see that coming from Tony, Donald and Chip
6/27/2008 1:00:41 PM
Wait,People actually think billionaires have perfect spelling and grammar?hahahahahahaahahaahahahahahaha
6/27/2008 1:23:31 PM
yeah i was just about to say ppl (including myself obviously) put super rich people on a pedestal as if they're perfect--obviously they aren't, they usually just have good ideas and are great leaders. their grammar isn't really a huge factor of running a businessit's still hard to read that and believe it's from bill gates. but it's def possible
6/27/2008 1:26:13 PM