Comment on Art of the deal..
CheesyFox@lemmy.sdf.org 4 days agoTo invest billions is more difficult because high growths opportunities with high margins rarely exist in that price range.
Yes, you won’t be able to multiply your money. But once you have millions or billions to spare, it’s pretty easy to invest them in such a way that the returns will cover more than you spend on a daily basis at least. This easily develops a certain sense of carelessness.
Are they stupid or do they optimize for different constraints? MS could have introduced AI for surveillance and not for growth.
Ubisoft stock prices plummeted down and nearing the historical minimum.
Microsoft’s trust in ai is akin walking a bridge across a chasm, while building the said bridge on the go. Considering that linux share actively grows in later years, they’re doing a bad job with that bridge. EUs latest concerns about US and reliance on the US technologies don’t help either.
The quality of their product also depleeted, thanks to the reliance on aformentioned ai hype train, and usage of inapropriate technologies to build their OS companents (i.e. using react native for the start menu). All of that tops of with dubious investments, be it OpenAI, or bying Activision a few years prior. Not even mentioning the smaller game studios like Tango Gameworks that they bought only to close off immediately. Everything listed can be summarized as poor management decisions.
You might argue that they’re rich enough to spare a billion or two on such mistakes, but those mistaces appear to be systematic, rather than one-offs. To me it seems like a start of a slow and very painful fall.
plyth@feddit.org 3 days ago
Which other systemic goals could they have?
CheesyFox@lemmy.sdf.org 2 days ago
please elaborate on your question
plyth@feddit.org 2 days ago
If the mistakes appear to be systematic they can be intentional to achieve other goals.
CheesyFox@lemmy.sdf.org 1 day ago
And what goal you suppose one could achieve by laying off a studio which latest release was both financially successful and praised by the community, despite the fact that microsoft haven’t even bothered to promote the title beforehand?
What goals might be achieved by breaking your flagship product (Windows 11) by making AI write its code, despite the problems with hallucinations and unreliability of the latter, obvious to anyone, who ever used it for any task more complicated than writing an email?
You’re greatly overestimating corporate ability to strategize, while seaking for some hidden meaning where it simply absent.