Interview: Steve Ballmer
After Bill Gates, Steve Ballmer is the person most closely associated with Microsoft Corp. in users' minds. A Harvard University graduate, Ballmer was an assistant product manager at Procter & Gamble Co. before joining Microsoft in 1980. He became president in 1998 after serving as executive vice president of sales and support.

After Bill Gates, Steve Ballmer is the person most closely associated with Microsoft Corp. in users' minds. A Harvard University graduate, Ballmer was an assistant product manager at Procter & Gamble Co. before joining Microsoft in 1980. He became president in 1998 after serving as executive vice president of sales and support.
Ballmer is credited with bringing discipline and drive to Microsoft's sales force. He is known for his fiery speeches to the company troops. Anyone who spends a couple of minutes with him becomes aware of his level of energy, focus and intensity.
GCN editorial director Thomas R. Temin interviewed Ballmer in Montgomery, Ala., during the recent Air Force Information Technology Conference, where Ballmer gave the keynote speech.
GCN:'Lots of users have complained about the susceptibility of Microsoft Corp. applications, particularly Word and Excel, to macro viruses. Why should agencies such as the Defense Department have to spend time dealing with the Melissa virus, for example?
BALLMER:
GCN:'Another security question: IBM Corp. claims the version of Kerberos you're putting in Windows 2000 isn't compatible or won't interoperate with current versions of Kerberos.
BALLMER:
GCN:'What about server proliferation under Windows NT? Under Windows 2000's symmetrical multiprocessing, will information technology staffs get the results they want, running multiple applications on a multiple-processor server or server cluster?
BALLMER:
GCN:'How well does time-sharing work under Windows 2000 Advanced Server or Data Center Server?
BALLMER:
GCN:'Can you explain what BizTalk is all about?
BALLMER:
GCN:'Will people say it's just a proprietary Microsoft version of XML?
BALLMER:
GCN:'You were quoted as saying Microsoft would consider releasing the source code for Windows NT if it became necessary. How threatened does the company feel by the Linux movement?
BALLMER:
GCN:'Does that mean you are pondering showing users the source code?
BALLMER:
What's More
- Family: Married with small children
- Drives: Lincoln Continental
- Favorite Web site: www.espn.com
- Last book read: Green Eggs and Ham by Dr. Seuss
- Hobbies: Jogging and playing basketball
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