The Microsoft split begs the question: Which part will get the name?
Second Guessing Game
The Microsoft split begs the question: Which part will get the name?
If Judge Jackson’s initial ruling is sustained, then
Bill and Steve have to decide who gets the music collection
and who gets that nice new electric wok. But here’s the
slightly bigger question: What happens to the certification
programs?
We could play the ostrich game and, with heads embedded
in the nearest sand hill, pretend that’s never ever going
to happen so why worry about it. Or we can look at all
the improbable events of the past few decades and decide
that a little consideration of the possibilities is in
order.
Redmond is more likely to publish all its APIs in the
National Enquirer than address any specifics about the-breakup-that-will-never-happen,
so let’s do some hypothesizing. Let’s call the two new
companies Windows, Inc., which gets Windows, and EverythingElse
Corp., which gets everything else. The two companies aren’t
supposed to have any special relationship, so the concept
of some kind of jointly shared certification will likely
be forbidden by the antitrust ruling.
So how will your MCSE hold up if the tests you’re taking
are for products owned by two separate companies? Maybe
your MCSE becomes a WSE (Windows Systems Engineer) certification.
Let’s see how the market reacts to that (actually, Auntie
guesses that a Windows-only certification will still carry
weight with employers).
EverythingElse Corp. gets the lion’s share of test-ables
in the MCSE elective list—including Internet Explorer—presuming
Bill doesn’t attempt to extend the definition of an operating
system to include any code ever executed between the orbits
of Venus and the Jovian moons.
Plus, EverythingElse Corp. gets Office, which brings
this discussion to the MCSD certification. Just as Microsoft
finally gets that track right, a corporate split could
knock it back to square one. Windows system architecture
(property of Windows, Inc.) is at the core of that program,
but the bulk of the exams are on the development tools
in Visual Studio and Office development, property of EverythingElse
Corp. The +I certifications and the MCDBA are in the same
boat. Sounds messy, eh?
Let’s face it: the certification program is way down
on the list of things Microsoft cares about. It’s up to
us to care and to pass our concerns along to the folks
in Redmond—that they’d better have a plan in place for
a post-split certification world. Chuck that why-bother-we’ll-win-on-appeal
attitude. It’s that kind of arrogance that got them into
this mess in the first place. Bill may well be thinking,
“That’ll never happen to us!” until the day Federal marshals
arrive on campus to enforce the court-ordered split.
Which brings us full circle to Auntie’s original idea
for this column. I thought it would be fun to come up
with some ideas for naming the two new companies: Engulf
and Devour, BillCo. and Steve’s Corp. I’m glad I didn’t,
because by now there must be a dozen Web sites that have
popped up with just as un-original an idea. So, I’ll leave
you with my initial thoughts for the names of the two
mutant children of Microsoft Corp.: Dumb and Dumber.
About the Author
Em C. Pea, MCP, is a technology consultant, writer and now budding nanotechnologist who you can expect to turn up somewhere writing about technology once again.