Again you are shifting goal post and this is not taking us anywhere. You said Product and I asked abt Product and you talked abt patents which is again bring us back to CS which not in term-of-reference for this discussion. And Patents? You said ur not intrested in "Microsoft is Stupid and Evil discussion " I am not either. But spare me this patents stuff. We know what is the innovation in 90% of patents they are defensive rather than some innovation. Give me the products where innovation has earned them kudos.
Save me the trouble and read my entire response. What part about Bayesian network implementations for speech recognition (Office feature) and Project Natal for Xbox do you not get? These are two small examples I quoted previously. You want us to believe that Microsoft has never innovated despite having some of the brightest people on the planet working at Microsoft Research? We should believe you because you are brighter and more accomplished than Nathan Myrhvold and Rick Rashid... gimme a break!
I will ask again what are the innovation of Big companies. (And leave Apple out. We have yet to see Apple post SJ. Even OS that SJ was working (I think its name was NeXT) was supposed to be ground breaking. Whatever happened to that.)
Biggest innovation in OS is of GUI and mouse. 99.99% of crowd does not even the name who innovated this. (Nope not Apple)
Yes, no big company has ever innovated. DuPont has never invented new materials used by billions. IBM and DEC never pioneered the mainframe industry. Xerox never invented graphical computing.
What sort of ridiculous alternate reality are you living in?
And again why you want to measure somebody on your scale. We all have 24hrs in a day. Any management has limited bandwidth. These companies are growing @ 10-15% per annum. By this time next year top 3 will be adding 1bil/Q. These comp are not on auto pilot. This growth has to be managed. (BTW these companies do have products. But they address the niche market so not many are aware about them.)
If by my scale you mean a repeatable product model with high margins and ability to scale exponentially independent of further similar human capital inputs, and the ability to command massive brand equity beyond anything service companies are able to command, then YES. I am measuring them on my scale. Which also happens to be the scale of better business models.
And central position, emotions??? whoa....wait right there...this is abt money sire.... keep emotion out of this. I am not sure if they still trade the shares of Netscape or if new licenses are getting issued for Lotus notes. Apple OS is more respected but Windows earns the buck. Business is business.
Perhaps you aren't familiar with the notion of brand equity. The most valuable brands are measured by people's emotional affinity for them, which translates into money. Take a look at the most valuable brands and tell me how many product vs. service companies exist on the list.
You are so far from the mark in not getting the point that I tire of responding...
Product earns big bucks but you can become obsolete overnight. Product is not about innovation only. Specially IT products. What you will call Youtube. Google has to buy it and shut its own video service. After doing everything MS is still not able to make dent in search market.
YouTube is a product delivered online. You are confusing SaaS - which is simply a different way of delivering a PRODUCT - with implementation services that require human resources to scale.
Bing was on a $400M revenue trajectory as of July last year and that would translate into a $4-5B market cap were it a standalone company. For Microsoft that's small, but to dismiss it would be foolish.
And I think it's highly disingenuous to quote examples of products that haven't done well in your book. What the heck is that supposed to prove? The fundamental differences between low margin body shop services that require more people to scale, and high margin product companies that can scale almost independent of human resources are glaring and obvious. I am sorry if you can't fathom them.
Frankly you are getting confused between having Product and being innovative. These are 2 different things. Indian IT comps are innovative in what they are doing and they donn't have any big-hit-top-of-mind-recall product.
I understand that you don't get it... I think there's no point you and me discussing this further. If you can't understand that a single product company - take Google, Microsoft, Cisco, HP etc. - has a market cap 5-10 times India's IT industry size, and if you can't understand that product margins are far higher than service margins (Yes, "sire" it is about money - and the bottom line is profitability/margins), or that product companies form the core of the IT industry around which service companies develop their practices, then I can't do anything for you. You are welcome to your views.