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[Other] bwLLGJoKMeNWyxx
Do you like it here? http://keandra.in.net/ keandra.com Where Ballmer has really succeeded—and where he has gotten relatively little attention—has been in making Microsoft more of a core player in enterprise IT departments. Sure, Windows and Office were dominant on client PCs when he took over as CEO, but under his leadership, the breadth and depth of Microsoft's IT offerings have grown amazingly. Yes, open-source standards have become de facto requirements for startups and Web-based companies, but in more traditional businesses Windows Server, .NET, and C# are the standard building blocks for internal enterprise applications. SQL Server went from being an also-ran to the main competitor to Oracle in enterprise relational database management systems. Exchange took over the top spot in enterprise messaging. Dynamics has become a much larger player in accounting and ERP systems. SharePoint and Lync have become prominent businesses is their own right. And Azure, though far from the leader, has gotten a lot of attention in Web services.
Author: Paris    Date: 7/8/2019 Response to this message
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