All Quotes by Steve Ballmer
βI come back to the same thing: We've got the greatest pipeline in the company's history in the next 12 months, and we've had the most amazing financial results possible over the last five years, and we're predicting being back at double-digit revenue growth in fiscal year '06.β
βThere's no chance that the iPhone is going to get any significant market share.β
βWe don't have a monopoly. We have market share. There's a difference.β
βWhat we've gone through in the last several years has caused some people to question 'Can we trust Microsoft?'β
βWhen we tell the story about what's happening today with browsers ten years from now, I want the thing that replaces Windows to be Windows. I don't want to wake up in a position one day where the guys at Netscape say, "Isn't Windows just that little thing that we use to put up menus and draw lines? Let's just write our own and suck it up into our client."β
βI think it would be absolutely reckless and irresponsible for anyone to try and break up Microsoft.β
βWhoo! Whoo! Whoo! Come on! Get up, get up! Come on! Come on, give it up for me! Whoo! Whoo! Come on! Who said 'sit down'? I have four words for you. I. Love. This. Company. Yes!β
βWe've had DRM in Windows for years. The most common format of music on an iPod is "stolen".β
βMost people still steal music.β
βI've got my kids brainwashed: You don't use Google, and you don't use an iPod.β
βI don't really know that anybody's proven that a random collection of people doing their own thing actually creates value.β
βThere's no chance that the iPhone is going to get any significant market share. No chance.β
βGreat companies in the way they work, start with great leaders.β
β[Apple and RIM] are probably restricted, in some sense, to a certain maximum. β¦ If you want to reach more people than that, you sort-of have to separate the hardware and the software issue.β
βAll the consumer market mojo is with Apple and to a lesser extent BlackBerry. And yet, the real market momentum with operators and the real market momentum with device manufacturers seems to primarily be with Windows Mobile and Android.β
βYou can have an Apple in the phone business, or a RIM, and they can do very well, but when 1.3 billion phones a year are all smart, the software that's gonna be most popular in those phones is gonna be software that's sold by somebody who doesn't make their own phones.β
βLet's face it, the Internet was designed for the PC. The Internet is not designed for the iPhone. That's why they've got 75,000 applications β they're all trying to make the Internet look decent on the iPhone.β
βWhatever device you use... Windows will be there. β¦ Windows will be everywhere on every device without compromise.β
βWe are in the Windows era β we were, we are, and we always will be.β
βI don't think anyone has done a [tablet] product that I see customers wanting.β
βWe like our model, as we are evolving it. In every category Apple competes, it's the low-volume player, except in tablets. In the PC market, obviously the advantage of diversity has mattered since 90-something percent of PCs that get sold are Windows PCs. We'll see what winds up mattering in tablets.β
βNot the consumer cloud. Not hardware-software innovation. We are not leaving any of that to Apple by itself. Not going to happen. Not on our watch.β
βI think fully accepting that things are not the way they need to be, and going to work on those issues in a way that people understand you are serious about, as opposed to the tech industry generally appearing arrogant, I understand that.β
βMy dad said, "What the heck is software?" and my mom said, "Why would a person ever need a computer?" They said, "OK, OK, we hear you, but if it doesn't work out, you'll go back to business school right?" And I said "Right," and I never came back.β
βI think our leadership team is a highly accountable leadership team.β