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Comments on ‘Microsoft fires CIO for 'violation' of policy’

Hello highway

Published Wednesday 7th November 2007 01:27 GMT

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violation of policy? 

By Steven Knox
Posted Wednesday 7th November 2007 02:57 GMT
Coat

Perhaps he refused to use Vista?

Inner workings 

By David Dever
Posted Wednesday 7th November 2007 04:14 GMT
Gates Horns

...wouldn't have to do with the Computerworld article in which he defends the use of SAP and Siebel CRM in-house at MS, now, would it?!?

They probably caught him using a GMail account. =)P 

By Shadow Systems
Posted Wednesday 7th November 2007 07:38 GMT
Happy

Either that, or a Google search, or checking his Yahoo email, or...

(Amused cough)

Violation of policy, AKA... 

By Barry
Posted Wednesday 7th November 2007 08:31 GMT

...he probably shagged the wrong person.

The IT Angle on that would be horizontal, of course.

Internal systems 

By Giles Jones
Posted Wednesday 7th November 2007 09:30 GMT

It is well known that Microsoft doesn't eat its own dog food. They used to produce all their own internal software for their day to day running, but found that it was cheaper and easier to buy software for these tasks (what does that tell you about their products?).

You seriously think for one minute that they store the Windows source code in SourceSafe? of course not, Perforce is the tool of choice here.

Email retention/autodestruct policy? 

By Anonymous Coward
Posted Wednesday 7th November 2007 09:45 GMT

Wasn't there an MS policy on retention of email? Something like it had to be deleted within 3 days (maybe a teensy bit more but not much). Presumably they can't afford the storage space, 'cos it couldn't possibly be because they got scared that the next round of toothless anti-trust investigators might actually find undeniable evidence of a smoking gun sometime, right?

http://www.theregister.co.uk/2004/10/11/ms_legal_mail_autodestruct/

re: violation of policy? 

By Anonymous Coward
Posted Wednesday 7th November 2007 09:54 GMT

"Perhaps he refused to use Vista?"

I was going to say he was caught smuggling a MacBook in to use as an office machine... ;-)

I heard he was ... 

By Kenny Millar
Posted Wednesday 7th November 2007 10:00 GMT

... found using an iPod.

violation of policy? 

By Steven Walker
Posted Wednesday 7th November 2007 10:17 GMT

More likely he did use Vista. Surely no serious company permits its staff to use it.

Told you.. 

By Peter
Posted Wednesday 7th November 2007 10:19 GMT

He should have kept those 'Linux inside' stickers at home..

Violation of policy? 

By Neil
Posted Wednesday 7th November 2007 11:09 GMT

You mean he installed Linux on a work PC?

<Waits to see how many other people said the same thing>

I'm available.. 

By Steve B
Posted Wednesday 7th November 2007 11:32 GMT

Due to restructuring and not violation of policy, I find myself unexpectedly conveniently available. Of course I would have to commute from South Dorset - using public transport.

Come to think of it that may go against me.

Maybe he owns a Mac 

By Gulfie
Posted Wednesday 7th November 2007 11:42 GMT
Pirate

I hear that MS employees have been told that anyone running Windows on a Mac will be disciplined... maybe that was the problem...

Violate what ? 

By Robert Lee
Posted Wednesday 7th November 2007 13:12 GMT
Alert

Bill : We MUST sell more Vista even though no one like to use it, its slow, buggy and most difficult to use

CIO : I disagree, if Vista is crap, we should extend XP for another 10 years and keep updating it until Vista is ready

Bill : You are fired !!!!

ps, I installed Office 2007 on a new workstation yesterday, and boy, it took me a while just to find where the PRINT icon or File/Print is, is this progress ? the bars were full of colorful icons, but all I really wanted is the print option.

Perhaps... 

By Anonymous Coward
Posted Wednesday 7th November 2007 13:50 GMT

...he was honest???

Worse than that, 

By Pascal Monett
Posted Wednesday 7th November 2007 15:13 GMT

Maybe he was caught actually SAYING that he didn't use Vista.

No tech angle... 

By Anonymous Coward
Posted Wednesday 7th November 2007 15:42 GMT

He just lost interest in the baby-eating and puppy-stomping. That, or he ran out of bullshit and inadvertently released actual information - not the role of a CIO!

Or (horrors) FreeBSD 

By Curtis W. Rendon
Posted Wednesday 7th November 2007 15:52 GMT
Joke

smilie included to make comment poster happy ;-)

Linux 

By Robert Moore
Posted Wednesday 7th November 2007 16:37 GMT
Coat

I heard from a reliable source that they found a linux box in his house.

@Linux 

By Anonymous Coward
Posted Wednesday 7th November 2007 18:28 GMT
Coat

no no no, he was caught checking his gmail while he had his laptop booted of a ubuntu live cd

Linux at Microsoft 

By Brian Miller
Posted Wednesday 7th November 2007 20:20 GMT

Actually, there's a lot of Linux that is supported at Microsoft. Yes, believe it or not, Linux is an actual test platform for some of the products.

What did he do? If Microsoft isn't saying and he isn't saying, there's no way to know. Anyways, it wasn't for open source or using a Mac or anything like that.

It's worse than that... 

By Anonymous Coward
Posted Wednesday 7th November 2007 20:54 GMT
Joke

... he released a software product that didn't have bugs, was fast and efficient instead of bloated and slow, and actually worked really quite well.

Inconceivable!

violation of policy? 

By Anonymous Coward
Posted Wednesday 7th November 2007 22:43 GMT
Joke

group policy of course!

/hat/coat/scarf/gloves

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