semantisize.com

Semantisize.com is all about semantic technology .

Content Types
Semantic Technology Videos Videos
Semantic Technology Photos Photos
Semantic Technology Blog Posts Blog Posts
Semantic Technology News News
Semantic Technology Websites Websites
Semantic Technology Auctions Auctions
Semantic Technology Events Events
Semantic Technology Quotes Quotes
Semantic Technology Podcasts Podcasts

Entity Types
Semantic Technology Terms Terms
Semantic Technology Companies Companies
Semantic Technology People People
Semantic Technology Organizations Organizations
Semantic Technology Cities Cities
Semantic Technology Countries Countries
Semantic Technology Regions Regions
Semantic Technology Continents Continents

Steve Ballmer

Steve Ballmer News | Wiki
Get Steve Ballmer RDF Validate RDF
More Semantic Technology People More Semantic Technology People
Steve Ballmer News More News
Ballmer May Buy PowerSet Search, Tighten Microsoft Ballmer May Buy PowerSet Search, Tighten Microsoft
As Bill Gates enjoyed his last day as a Microsoft employee Friday, rumors swirled that CEO Steve Ballmer was ready to make a powerful move to improve search capability. An unconfirmed report in VentureBeat said Microsoft will acquire semantic-search...
Tag: investment (ZDNet Australia) Tag: investment (ZDNet Australia)
Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer believes the software giant needs to spend more on marketing in order to sell more copies of Vista and has hinted that sizable increase in its marketing budget is on the horizon.

Steve Ballmer Wiki

Steve Ballmer, Steve Anthony Ballmer Born March 24, 1956 (1956-03-24) (age 51) Detroit, Michigan Occupation CEO, Microsoft Net worth –² $15 billion USD (2007) Website Staff Bio at microsoft.com Steven Anthony Ballmer (born March 24, 1956) is an American businessman and has been the chief executive officer of Microsoft Corporation since January 2000. Ballmer is the first person to become a billionaire in U.S. dollars based on stock options received as an employee of a corporation in which he was neither a founder nor a relative of a founder. In Forbes 2007 World's Richest People ranking, Ballmer was ranked the 31st richest person in the world, with an estimated wealth of $15 billion. Contents 1 Family 2 Pre-Microsoft 3 Microsoft career 4 Public persona 4.1 Viral videos 4.2 On competition 4.2.1 Linux 4.2.2 Lucovsky / Google 4.2.3 iPhone 5 Media Portrayals 6 Notes 7 External links

[edit] Family On October 2, 2006, Ballmer was awarded honorary citizenship of Lausen, Switzerland. His father, Frederick Ballmer, who emigrated to the US at the age of 23, was a citizen of the same municipality.

[1] His father worked as a manager at Ford Motor Co. Ballmer married Connie Snyder, who worked in Microsoft's public relations agency, and has three children. His wife is the aunt of former major league baseball player Ben Petrick.

[edit] Pre-Microsoft Steve Ballmer was born March 24, 1956 and grew up near Detroit, Michigan. In 1973, he graduated from Detroit Country Day School, a high school, and now sits on its board of directors.

[2] In 1977, he graduated from Harvard University

[3]with a bachelor's degree in mathematics and economics. While in college, Ballmer managed the football team, worked on the Harvard Crimson newspaper as well as the Harvard Advocate, and lived down the hall from fellow sophomore Bill Gates. He then

[citation needed] worked for two years as an assistant product manager at Procter &Gamble , where he shared an office with Jeffrey R. Immelt, the future CEO of General Electric. In 1980

[citation needed]he dropped out from the Stanford University Graduate School of Business.

[edit] Microsoft career Steve Ballmer joined Microsoft on June 11, 1980, and later succeeded Bill Gates as CEO.

[4] Ballmer is currently the longest-serving employee of Microsoft after Gates

[citation needed] and has headed several divisions within Microsoft including "Operating Systems Development", "Operations", and "Sales and Support". In July 1998, he was promoted to president.

[citation needed] On January 13, 2000, he was named chief executive officer when Bill Gates stepped down from that position. As CEO Ballmer handles company finances, however Gates still retains control of the "technological vision" In 2003, Ballmer sold 8.3% of his shareholdings, leaving him with a 4% stake in the company.

[citation needed] The same year, Ballmer replaced Microsoft's employee stock options program, which had been instrumental in making early employees millionaires,

[citation needed]

[5]

[edit] Public persona

[edit] Viral videos Footage featuring Ballmer's flamboyant stage appearances at Microsoft events have been widely circulated on the Internet, becoming what are known as "viral videos". The most famous of these is commonly titled "Dance Monkeyboy", it features Ballmer dancing and hopping around while verbally screeching and screaming erratically on a stage for about 45 seconds after being introduced at a Microsoft employee convention. Another video, captured at a developers' conference just days later

[citation needed], featured a visibly sweat-drenched Ballmer chanting and shouting the word "developers" fourteen times in front of a gathering of Microsoft associates.

[edit] On competition

[edit] Linux Ballmer is also known as a vocal critic of competing companies and their products. He has referred to the free Linux software system as a "

[€¦] cancer that attaches itself in an intellectual property sense to everything it touches."

[6] and earlier described it as having "

[€¦] characteristics of communism that people love so very, very much about it."

[7]

[edit] Lucovsky / Google In 2005, Mark Lucovsky alleged in a sworn statement to a Washington state court that Ballmer became highly enraged upon hearing that Lucovsky was about to leave Microsoft for Google, picked up his chair and threw it across his office. Referring to Google CEO Eric Schmidt (who previously worked for competitors Sun and Novell), Ballmer allegedly said, "Fucking Eric Schmidt is a fucking pussy. I'm going to fucking bury that guy, I have done it before, and I will do it again. I'm going to fucking kill Google," then resumed trying to persuade Lucovsky to stay at Microsoft.

[8]

[9] Ballmer has described this as a "gross exaggeration of what actually took place."

[edit] iPhone In April 2007, he predicted Apple's iPhone would have no chance of gaining significant market share

[10]: "There's no chance that the iPhone is going to get any significant market share. No chance."

[edit] Media Portrayals Bad Boy Ballmer : The Man Who Rules Microsoft (2002), Fredric Alan Maxwell, ISBN 0-06-621014-3 (unauthorized biography) The 1999 docudrama Pirates of Silicon Valley features Ballmer as a major character; he is played by actor John Di Maggio. Michael Maccoby qualified him as a "productive obsessive" and the one keeping Microsoft's "show on the road" so Bill Gates could think about the big picture.

[11]

[edit] Notes ^ Galli, Hans. "Die Zukunft von PC und Internet", Der Bund, Der Bund, 2007-10-05. Retrieved on 2007-10-12. (German)  ^ Board of Trustees of Detroit County Day School. Retrieved on November 14, 2007. ^ "Microsoft's Ballmer Makes His Pitch", Harvard Business School Alumni Bulletin.  ^ Information for Students: Key Events In Microsoft History (doc). Microsoft Visitor Center Student Information. Retrieved on 1 October 2005. ^ Fried, Ina. "Microsoft to award stock, nix options", CNet, 2003-07-08. Retrieved on 2006-12-03.  ^ Wilcox, Joe; Stephen Shankland. "Why Microsoft is wary of open source", CNet, June 18, 2001. Retrieved on 2007-01-26.  ^ Lea, Graham. "MS' Ballmer: Linux is communism", The Register, 31 July 2000. Retrieved on 2007-01-26.  ^ John Battelle (September 2, 2005). Ballmer Throws A Chair At "F*ing Google". John Battelle's Searchblog. Retrieved on 2008-01-06. ^ "Microsoft CEO: 'I'm going to f---ing kill Google'", Sydney Morning Herald, September 3, 2005. Retrieved on 2007-02-01.  ^ "CEO Forum: Microsoft's Ballmer having a 'great time'".  ^ Bill Gates can think about the future from the stratosphere because Steve Ballmer, a tough obsessive president, keeps the show on the road." Pg 76 "Narcissistic Leaders: The Incredible Pros, the Inevitable Cons" by Michael Maccoby, Harvard Business Review January-February 2000

[edit] External links Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to: Steve Ballmer Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Steve Ballmer Corporate biography Forbes World's Richest People listing South China Morning Post audio interview "Monkey Boy" video Ballmer's Speech In Sixth Annual Avenue A | Razorfish Client Summit "Advertisers, advertisers, advertisers" video Developers Developers remix Ballmer bursting out of a cake at Microsoft's 25th anniversary celebration Steve Ballmer in a self-parody "ad" for Windows 1.0 Part of Business 2.0's List of "10 people who don't matter" Show us the code campaign Steve Ballmer inaugurates the Microsoft Innovation Center, Kuwait (April 25, 2007) v €¢ d €¢ e Executive officers of Microsoft Chairman of the Board of Directors Gates Chief Officers Ballmer · Brod · Crozier · Huston · Klein · Liddell · Mount · Mundie · Ozzie · Turner · Zinn Presidents Bach · Curtois · Huston · Johnson · Raikes · Youngjohns Senior vice-presidents Ayala · Steve Berkowitz · Brummel · DeVaan · Flessner · Knook · Mathews · Mattrick · McAndrews · Mehdi · Muglia · Rashid · Rudder · Sinofsky · Smith · Vaskevitch · Vigil Corporate vice-presidents Allard · Andersen · Anderson · Arbogast · Béjar · Belfiore · Bell · Bradford · Brod · Burt · Button · Capossela · Charney · Chrapaty · Crozier · DelBene · Delman · Elliot · Ben Fathi · George · Gibbons · Gounares · Gupta · Hey · Hogan · Holmdahl · Irving · Jaffe · Jha · Jones · Kelly · Khaki · Kim · Klein · Koch · Kummert · Larson-Green · Leblond · Lees · Levin · Lewin · Lichtman · Liffick · Majidimehr · Martinez · Matz · McAniff · Minervino · Mitchell · Moberg · Mount · Nadella · Nash · Neupert · Pall · Park · Paolucci · Passman · Parthasarathy · Peracca · Peterson · Phelps · Poole · Reller · Rodriguez · Rosini · Roskill · Schiro · Sheldon · Short · Shum · Sievert · Snapp · Somasegar · Srivastava · Tatarinov · Teper · D. Thompson · R. Thompson · Treadwell · Veghte · Wahbe · Warren · Watson · Westlake · Witts · Zhang · Zinn v €¢ d €¢ e Microsoft Desktop software Windows (components) · Office · Visual Studio · Expression · Silverlight · Dynamics · Money · Encarta · Student · Works Server software Windows Server · SQL Server · IIS · Exchange · BizTalk · Commerce · ISA Server · Systems Management · System Center · Licensing Services Technology Active Directory · DirectX · .NET · Windows Media · PlaysForSure · Microsoft Application Virtualization Web properties Windows Live · Office Live · MSNBC · msnbc.com · ninemsn · MSN · Hotmail · Live Messenger · Spaces · Groups · Live ID · Ignition · CodePlex · HealthVault Gaming Microsoft Game Studios · Zone · XNA · Xbox · Xbox 360 · Xbox Live (Arcade, Marketplace) · Games for Windows (LIVE, Tray and Play) · Live Anywhere Hardware Surface · Zune (4, 8, 30, 80) · MSN TV · Natural Keyboard · Keyboard · Mouse · LifeCam · LifeChat · SideWinder · Ultra-Mobile PC · Fingerprint · Audio System · Cordless Phone · Pocket PC · RoundTable · Response Point Education and recognition MCPs · MSDN · MSDNAA · MSCA · Microsoft Press · Microsoft MVP · Microsoft Student Partners · Studies related to Microsoft Licensing Client Access License · Shared Source Legal issues United States v. Microsoft · European Union v. Microsoft Board of directors Ballmer · Cash · Dublon · Gates · Gilmartin · Hastings · Marquardt · Noski · Panke · Shirley Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steve_Ballmer" Categories: All articles with unsourced statements | Articles with unsourced statements since November 2007 | 1956 births | Living people | American chief executives | Microsoft employees | Businesspeople in software | American businesspeople | American billionaires | American Jews | Belarusian Americans | Harvard University alumni | Swiss-Americans | Jewish businesspeople | Swiss Jews


Connect
RSS Feed for semantisize.com Site Feed
©2008 semantisize.com

Powered By
Powered By TopicTastic.com