I meant stick around as CEO.
Also whats up with this whole convergence nonsense? What does it mean anyway? That tablets phones and laptops all have blinking floating tiles? That tablets phones and laptops all have touchscreens?
I got a windows 8 laptop. While I am not filled with rage like some, I am not sure if the tile interface and random swiping on the trackpad adds anything at all to the usability. And whats up with these new fetish for flat, featureless full screen apps that you can run only 2 at a time, but can have multiple windows open in the old desktop? I can see why we need flat featureless apps that you can run only 2 at a time in tablet/phone. Switching between them without a keyboard is a pain and given the constraints of power/CPU/RAM/Screen real estate you probably dont want umpteen windows opened and tiled but what is the rationale for having them on a laptop? I am sure I will get used to it, but the UI changes all seem to be pointless. I am sure it came out of a powerpoint strat-e-jee session about how users will buy windows tablets because they see the same tiles on their laptops and tablets and get a warm fuzzy feeling of familiarity.
What is so bad if the laptop/PC have a traditional UI and the phone/tablet have the tile UI? Who will notice or care if emails/music/open browser tabs sync seamlessly? FruitCo does it and people seem to be happy with that.
M$ tried this convergence nonsense once with putting the desktop UI on a tablet and a phone (anyone remember the twist fold laptop-tablet and the windows mobie with a start button and stylus?). Now they are trying the reverse -- putting a phone UI on the tablet and desktop.
Also: remember that I said it first here folks. Marissa for M$ CEO
