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September 5, 2008 8:50 AM PDT

Reality Check: The Seinfeld ad was superb

Posted by Don Reisinger
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Everywhere I turn today, I find a story by colleagues or comments by readers saying that the new Microsoft ad with Jerry Seinfeld and Bill Gates fails on almost every level. Some complain that it doesn't mention Vista at all, which makes it useless, while others say that watching Gates' derriere waggle at the end of the commercial was just a bit too much.

Either way, Microsoft is getting killed from all sides by people that think the ad was nothing more than a waste of time and money. "Apple's ads are so much better!" they say until their hearts are content. "Who would want to buy Vista after watching that ad?" they exclaim.

Do me a favor: sit down, put your MacBook Pro away, and be quiet.

"The first phase of this campaign is designed to engage consumers and spark a new conversation about Windows--a conversation that will evolve as the campaign progresses, but will always be marked by humor and humanity," Microsoft Senior Vice President Bill Veghte said in an e-mail to employees.

That logic seems perfectly acceptable to me. The way I see it, Gates & Co. have been looked at for years now as the evil tech company that bullies others and tries to form monopolies. And yet, when it tries to put a human face on, it's heavily criticized in the media?

I don't get it.

It's quite obvious where this commercial was going. It wasn't meant to be a Vista pitch, it was meant to recreate Seinfeld and his "show about nothing" and bring Gates into that world. Sure, he may not have been Kramer, but Gates did an admirable job in a role that doesn't suit his personality all that well.

More importantly, though, this commercial acts as a building block for the rest. Before Microsoft can try to make people want Vista, it needs to repair its image. And what better way to do that than with a commercial with one of the most popular and respected comics in the world?

What does Microsoft need to do to make pundits and Apple fanboys happy? My guess: hire Steve Jobs.

I'm willing to bet that if this commercial was released by Apple, those same people saying the Seinfeld ad was a misstep would be calling it a triumph of "1984" proportions.

Instead of looking at Gates and using that as the vehicle for contempt, maybe everyone should step back for a moment and realize that the Seinfeld ad did exactly what it needed to do: it took the focus off Gates' money, Vista's problems, and Microsoft's poor public image, and started erecting a more positive image of the company, which will eventually allow it to promote its products.

See, what most of the critics don't understand is advertising isn't effective unless the target audience believes that advertiser. Right now, Microsoft's image in the world isn't so hot. And if the company tried to put Seinfeld in its ads and talk about Vista, it wouldn't have gone anywhere.

I'm the first to take Microsoft to task when it's wrong, but in this case, I think all the pundits trying to put this ad down are totally off-base. It may not have been an ad that will sell a ton of Vista copies, but it was an ad that will lay the foundation for doing just that.

Nice work, Microsoft. Keep 'em coming.

Check out Don's Digital Home podcast, Twitter feed, and FriendFeed.

Don Reisinger is a technology columnist who has written about everything from HDTVs to computers to Flowbee Haircut Systems. Don is a member of the CNET Blog Network, and posts at The Digital Home. He is not an employee of CNET. Disclosure.

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Add a Comment (Log in or register) 209 comments
by SkateNY September 5, 2008 9:26 AM PDT
"The way I see it, Gates and Company have been looked at for years now as the evil tech company that bullies others and tries to form monopolies. And yet, when it tries to put a human face on, it's heavily criticized in the media?

I don't get it."

That part is unambiguous. MSFT isn't being criticized, either for trying "to put on a human face' or for being an "evil tech company." It's the ad that's being criticized for being insultingly insipid, dull and uninformative.

"...he may not have been Kramer, but Gates did an admirable job in a role that doesn't suit his personality all that well."

Do me a favor: sit down, put your Steve Ballmer bobble-head doll down, and be quite.

Again: It isn't MSFT or Bill Gates that are being criticized. It's the half-hearted ad that truly is about nothing.

"More importantly, though, this commercial acts as a building block for the rest. Before Microsoft can try to make people want Vista, it needs to repair its image. And what better way to do that than with a commercial with one of the most popular and respected comics in the world?"

How about starting by making better products?

"I'm willing to bet that if this commercial was released by Apple, those same people saying the Seinfeld ad was a misstep would be calling it a triumph of "1984" proportions."

Careful Mr. Costanza, your bias is showing.

"I'm the first to take Microsoft to task when it's wrong, but in this case, I think all the pundits trying to put this ad down are totally off-base. It may not have been an ad that will sell a ton of Vista copies, but it was an ad that will lay the foundation for doing just that."

They're never going to sell a "ton" of Vista copies, no matter how warm and fuzzy their ads. It's much too late for that. Crappy products, no matter how good they're promoted, don't sell in increments based on tonage. Your overreactions are misplaced, just as is the apparent itntent of the ad. In fact, if nothing else, the ad simply mirrors and perpetuates the multiple and manifest problems with Vista: it doesn't work.

"Nice work, Microsoft. Keep 'em coming."

Yes, let's continue to applaud Microsoft for what they do best: promising and showing potential for great products that they have a long history for not delivering. Promises and potential get people's attention; delivering a good, solid product is what sells.
Reply to this comment
by Dreifort September 5, 2008 10:23 AM PDT
I guess you're not a fan of or never watched Seinfeld...
by pjhenry1216 September 5, 2008 10:31 AM PDT
Dude... you attacked vista more than the commercial. Its obvious you have an axe to grind against Microsoft and therefore your opinion is highly biased and to be honest, extremely uninformative. You missed the entire purpose of the ad. It's even gone viral. People *want* to see what the two guys are gonna do from here. This was an introduction. This commercial isn't the high point. This is the jumping off point. Microsoft is making people actually interested in commercials that haven't even come out yet. Its like a tv show and you want to know what happens next. I think they've easily succeeded in making the commercials desirable amongst everyday folks who wouldn't really notice a difference between a mac and a pc... which is mac's main audience. Its humorous. People like funny. Obviously, I guess you don't.
by bubblebathgirl September 5, 2008 12:35 PM PDT
Agreed, M$ products are unoriginal and low quality. It started with Windows (ripoff of Mac OS), then the XBOX (ripoff of Playstation), then the 360 (another Playstation ripoff) and then the Zune.

These are all poorly developed ripoffs that simply compliments Apple for it's original thinking.

M$ supporters are usually those who get jealous when someone things of an idea first or at least has the balls to go after it first. Apple supporters are usually those who appreciate great ideas and great execution wherever it comes from.
by DrtyDogg September 5, 2008 2:26 PM PDT
wow, there wasn't even 1 rational thought or fact in that entire rant.
by csg7 September 5, 2008 2:41 PM PDT
Mr Fanboy, Read this again and do exactly as it says for once !!
"Do me a favor: sit down, put your MacBook Pro away, and be quiet."
by GeneOdyssey September 5, 2008 6:37 PM PDT
Quality products? ever heard of the Windows server architecture (used in most corporations today by a huge margin), along with SQL, Exchange, and others? You consider Windows XP a cheap product? and the xbox 360? Don't generalize! If MSFT made low quality products the corporate sector and the home user would have migrated LONG LONG ago. What market share does MSFT have, 80 something %? Bill has everyone fooled! HA HA HA
by chrisjust98 September 5, 2008 11:08 PM PDT
To bubblebathgirl:
I hate to break it to you but Steve jobs, your inventor of awesomeness, actually stole most of his ideas in the beginning from the xerox company back in the 70's. Don't believe me? Look xerox up on wikipedia. Learn a little more before you say stupid things like you do.
by Kwasiowusu September 5, 2008 11:42 PM PDT
@ SkateNY : "They're never going to sell a "ton" of Vista copies, no matter how warm and fuzzy their ads"

Stop talking nonese.
Vista has ALREADY sold a massive 180 million units. That is more Vista copies sold than ALL Apple Mac sales for the past TWENTY years.
Lemme know when Apple actually manges to see 180 million Mac's in even 10 years will ya?
by wratbatblue September 6, 2008 8:10 AM PDT
Shut down the video of Jobs at WWDC, close your Macbook, wipe the glazed grin off your face, buy your significant other some flowers and a card, and go sign up for anger management. Oh, and be quite (sic).
by twoedgedsword September 7, 2008 5:08 AM PDT
Skate - you completely make Resinger's point for him and it still goes over your head. Also, that cutesie writing style is overbearing. Childish.

You said "Careful Mr Costanza, your bias is showing".

With a straight face? I hope not.
by Thomas, David September 8, 2008 3:16 PM PDT
@bubblebathgirl

Re-writing history, or regurgitating something your heard? Apple stole NOTHING from Xerox, they actually licensed what they used. They weren't hired to work as contractors, then sent ideas back to the home office is in secret. However, another company did just that to Apple AND IBM. That's history, and really is irrelevant, like your comment (except your comment wasn't true).
by Thomas, David September 8, 2008 3:18 PM PDT
@bubblebathgirl *CORRECTION* @chrisjust98

Re-writing history, or regurgitating something your heard? Apple stole NOTHING from Xerox, they actually licensed what they used. They weren't hired to work as contractors, then sent ideas back to the home office is in secret. However, another company did just that to Apple AND IBM. That's history, and really is irrelevant, like your comment (except your comment wasn't true).
by mmagliaro September 5, 2008 9:43 AM PDT
Okay, so I went and watched it on YouTube. It makes for fun entertainment. It paints a funny human face on Bill Gates. If the idea is to make him appear more human, it is a success.
Reply to this comment
by ancalimar September 5, 2008 9:44 AM PDT
Aside from saying that I thought the ad was funny and humanizing, I won't bother replying to the previous poster too much. But I do want to respond to this:

"In fact, if nothing else, the ad simply mirrors and perpetuates the multiple and manifest problems with Vista: it doesn't work."

That's ignorant and wrong. If you want to attack an article for alleged bias or misinformation, don't be so quick to use the same yourself. I'm using Vista right now, and remarkably, it does work. In fact, Office, Firefox, Chrome, IE, Dreamweaver, InDesign, Flash, Reader and every other program I use works just fine on Vista. So yeah, let's applaud Microsoft for providing 90% of the world's computer users with a relatively stable platform on which to create interoperable programs for the last 20 years.

Or should I just join Don, put down my Steve Ballmer bobble-head and be "quite"?

You know, it isn't that Windows is so great. What really bugs me is that so many people who dislike it seem vicious and close-minded when they respond to articles like these.
Reply to this comment
by justint89 September 7, 2008 11:47 AM PDT
well the sad part is they are the ones who keep buying windows computers.
if they dont like it then they should learn how to install linux, or they need to head to the nearest apple store
Heh, likely that would happen, the only apple store i know in my area is downtown in Chicago... lmao
whats that say since u can by a pc at walmart lol or target
by SkateNY September 8, 2008 11:11 AM PDT
"You know, it isn't that Windows is so great. What really bugs me is that so many people who dislike it seem vicious and close-minded when they respond to articles like these."

So, I guess HP and Intel decided to pass on Vista, not because they don't trust the software, but because they're "vivcious and close-minded?"
by ogman September 5, 2008 9:45 AM PDT
SkateNY's comment was far more insightful and interesting than the original article. I don't see how this ad provides a new image. Most people already believe, thanks to Vistard, that Microsoft is a company that cannot pull on it's own shoes. Actually, I found myself both a little queasy, and a little irritated at one more Microsoft produced waste of my time.
Reply to this comment
by dd13reis September 5, 2008 11:47 AM PDT
What was so bad about it? Give me some real examples.

-Don
by JDanMurray September 5, 2008 9:46 AM PDT
"And yet, when it tries to put a human face on, it's heavily criticized in the media?"

The problem is that it is -Microsoft- that is trying to put the human face on. They're doing it far too quickly, and in all the wrong ways. I'd like Microsoft to give me some credit as a consumer, and not make me sit through 90 seconds of... whatever this is. As SkateNY said "How about starting by making better products?"

And here's the thing: The media already knew, well before the ad aired, that this was a $300 million ad campaign. That was the big news: $300 million, and Seinfeld. When I look at the ad I think: "They paid that much money for THAT?" Humanizing Microsoft it is not. I didn't even smile.
Reply to this comment
by Pocololo September 5, 2008 9:46 AM PDT
"Before Microsoft can try to make people want Vista, it needs to repair its image."

No, Before Microsoft can try to make people want Vista, it needs to repair its Operating System.

Real Talk.
Reply to this comment
by CrashPad63 September 5, 2008 12:05 PM PDT
@pocololo read again"Do me a favor: sit down, put your MacBook Pro away, and be quiet"
No back to real the real discussion.
by AintNoSin September 5, 2008 2:59 PM PDT
"No, Before Microsoft can try to make people want Vista, it needs to repair its Operating System."

Please give me a list of ACTUAL problems with Vista, based on your own direct experience, not what you read on "teh internets."

I wonder how many people who believe that Vista is broken have actually used it.
by Penguinisto September 7, 2008 5:54 PM PDT
Actually, OP is right - Vista has some serious architectural problems that need to be addressed. How many other operating systems demand half a GB of RAM just to run itself? OSX and Linux both offer far more eye-candy, yet neither requires massive GPU resources (read: powerful video card) to run. OSX runs all its eye-candy just fine in a simple VESA framebuffer mode (I run a Hackintosh here @ home - ask me how I know that :) ).
by jojowasaman September 5, 2008 9:54 AM PDT
Wow, that was a lot of mac bashing for no apparent reason. I beg to differ with your assertion that the ad was superb. If nobody you spoke to liked it then it is a complete failure as an ad. This article essentially states that the ad was a complete success even though nobody liked it and it didn't promote any products and sales did not increase because of it. Now I understand the concept of an ad campaign...but most of them try to actually sell products. Maybe the next ad will make it all make sense, but for now, I have to say the ad sucks. It seems to me that the writer is just bitter about people liking the mac ads rather than this ad. Why? People like what they like. You can't say that they are all wrong simply because you happened to be the one guy that "gets it".

BTW - I haven't seen the ad myself...I'm merely guiding myself on what the article says. My guess is the ad would have gotten a lot more mileage if it actually tried to accomplish something other than waste screentime with Bill Gates wagging his tail hoping that Seinfeld's popularity will make people forget how badly Vista's launch went. Who knows? Maybe when I actually see the ad I'll understand why the writer likes it so much, but even then, it doesn't really matter if the ad is so universally hated. Oh and if I had actually put away my macbook pro, I wouldn't have seen this stupid article...maybe that would have been for the best.
Reply to this comment
by pjhenry1216 September 5, 2008 10:36 AM PDT
The people who are commenting on it aren't the target audience. The target audience are people who watch tv and will base whether they buy MS over Apple or vice versa on commercials alone... which... well, which is mainly a huge majority of Apple's market. Because honestly, the only thing better about a mac is the marketing. Beyond that, its kind of a tie. They both have advantages and disadvantages and you need to pick one depending on what you want to do.
by Dalkorian September 5, 2008 12:58 PM PDT
by jojowasaman September 5, 2008 9:54 AM PDT
If nobody you spoke to liked it then it is a complete failure as an ad.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
No, we're talking about M$ here. The ad did not fail, the viewer (user) did.
LOL!
by jojowasaman September 5, 2008 9:56 AM PDT
Wow, that was a lot of mac bashing for no apparent reason. I beg to differ with your assertion that the ad was superb. If nobody you spoke to liked it then it is a complete failure as an ad. This article essentially states that the ad was a complete success even though nobody liked it and it didn't promote any products and sales did not increase because of it. Now I understand the concept of an ad campaign...but most of them try to actually sell products. Maybe the next ad will make it all make sense, but for now, I have to say the ad sucks. It seems to me that the writer is just bitter about people liking the mac ads rather than this ad. Why? People like what they like. You can't say that they are all wrong simply because you happened to be the one guy that "gets it".

BTW - I haven't seen the ad myself...I'm merely guiding myself on what the article says. My guess is the ad would have gotten a lot more mileage if it actually tried to accomplish something other than waste screentime with Bill Gates wagging his tail hoping that Seinfeld's popularity will make people forget how badly Vista's launch went. Who knows? Maybe when I actually see the ad I'll understand why the writer likes it so much, but even then, it doesn't really matter if the ad is so universally hated. Oh and if I had actually put away my macbook pro, I wouldn't have seen this stupid article...maybe that would have been for the best.
Reply to this comment
by dd13reis September 5, 2008 11:47 AM PDT
I think you should watch it before you make a call. Then tell us what you think.

-Don
by DarraghHogan September 5, 2008 9:59 AM PDT
GREAT article, thank you for writing it. I couldn't have said it better myself. Put the macbook pro away :P I like it.
Reply to this comment
by David Turner September 6, 2008 12:40 AM PDT
Really ?? So any person that doesn't like the ad must be a Apple user??
Kind of a stupid comment given the number of people that don't like or understand this ad.
In fact I am sure a number of MS fanboys might even be insulted by this.
by Seaspray0 September 10, 2008 4:38 PM PDT
Sorry, Mr Turner, but the bashing in the replies ARE apple fanboys. Not because they bashed, but because I've read other posts by them, and yes they're fanboys. They account for over 90% of all negative posts against microsoft on CNet. Myself and a few others account for the other 10% (some bad, some good posts). Vista has gotten a really bad rap because of a bunch of apple fanboys who haven't even tried it but bad mouth it every chance they get. The mojave experiment is proof. And even now, they're screaming that the first commercial was the worst thing since taxes but the reports show the majority of the public thought it was ok. So you tell me who's right. A small group of fanboys who constantly scream "apple good, microsoft bad!" ??? I don't think so. All I can suggest is you try it for yourself and make up your OWN mind.
by dave_mcconnell September 5, 2008 10:00 AM PDT
Sorry -- while the ad was lightly amusing and does paint a human face on a corporate behomoth, it didn't work for me on a number of levels:

This is a brand ad. If Microsoft wants to issue in the post-Gates era, why is he the star of the commercial? Yes, Gates is intrinsically linked to the brand, but he's not -- and never should have been -- the brand.

People are savvy enough to see beyond such shallow attempts. Just give me software that really runs on my computer. Don't release beta software on an unsuspecting public.

It doesn't really attempt to tell a story or make a point. It would have to be really funny to have serious viral appeal. It's just not.

My two cents.
Reply to this comment
by ModernBlank September 5, 2008 10:01 AM PDT
Most people seem to be thinking and feeling with their hearts rather than their minds.

Yes, it's clearly hip right now to align with the youthful brand with something to prove, but when you strip away the superficiality of image and ego, you're left with two different operating systems. They run software, and regardless of your emotions regarding Windows, PC is not going anywhere soon. Either is Vista.

I'm not a Vista user and I don't plan to be until my preferred suites are available in 64-bit, but I gotta tell ya, as a huge fan of Seinfeld I'm loving every second of the improbable exchange featured herein. That Reisinger can look deeply enough within Microsoft's message and extract not a banal, surface-laden shill of an ad but rather a meticulously crafted campaign is proof that he's paying attention to the big picture - not the purposely shallow distractions of a typical Seinfeld dialogue - and that's both surprising and welcome.

It's entertaining to read so many swipes at a company clearly savvy enough to make a strategic move like this when it has to; more entertaining that these same people purport to understand and continue to underestimate its moxie.

---

Production-wise, it had its moments; Gates lacks the charisma of a natural performer. But so what? He's got better timing than Subway's Jered, and look at their books.
Reply to this comment
by littleM September 5, 2008 10:04 AM PDT
Just watched it on YouTube, not exactly a home run, it looked more like a squeeze bunt. As Rotten Tomatoes would say, definitely not fresh. I suggest they spend their money fixing the product, which I have tried to run and found to be slower that Mr. Gate's saunter.
Reply to this comment
by AverageBob September 5, 2008 10:04 AM PDT
This has nothing to do with Mac vs PC, and not everyone who disliked the ad is a Mac user. For the general consumer, the ad may not work. From my viewpoint the ad is not successful because it *needs* to be explained. Effective advertising should stand on its own.

Most advertising has two goals: (1) identify the product and (2) convey a message to the audience. In the case of this ad by itself may not tell the audience anything. What was the purpose?

Contrast this with Jerry's last ads for American Express. You clearly knew what the ads were doing and who they were supporting. The message was that American Express cards have many advantages. In some cases, a new type of card was being introduced.

Was the ad to introduce Bill Gates? To introduce Jerry Seinfeld? Most people already know who these guys are.

Contrast this to the Bush's Beans commercials. It introduces Jay Bush and his dog to many people didn't know about them. It tells you about their product. The ads were sometimes bland but people recognize the brand more than ever. People already know about MS and Vista's reputation precedes itself.

Now there is a different type of advertising whose goal is just to get audience attention and generate interest. The classic example of these were the Calvin Klein Obsession ads from the 80s. Also the "1984" Mac ad falls under this category. But for this type of ad to be effective, it has to be memorable. Almost 30 years later and people still remember the "1984" ad. At best this MS ad was mediocre and most people are going to forget it in an hour.

So when people complain about the ad, it is because that it doesn't work and not due to anti-MS fervor.
Reply to this comment
by CrashPad63 September 5, 2008 12:09 PM PDT
The only explaining happening is by folks like you who dont like it. You gotta open your yaps and tell us why. I for one dont care for your thoughts, I enjoyed the show.
by WaleDC September 5, 2008 10:06 AM PDT
Seinfeld!!
Reply to this comment
by joedid September 5, 2008 10:08 AM PDT
I thought the ad was a waste of time. I do use Vista and consider myself one of the lucky ones for whom it works, but I have sure heard too many horror stories to say I trust it or would recommend it. Like I said: I feel lucky that it works for me.

Seinfeld? Didn't his 15 minutes run out years ago? I was a huge fan of his show, but I still thought the ad was pointless. A face? Doesn't everyone know what Gates looks like by now?

While creating a lot of buzz, it did nothing to change my mind about Vista or Microsoft's being out of touch. The buzz is not all that positive -- too many burnt Vista users aren't going to buy it, and $300M is a lot of money to spend to generate negativity and a lot of confusion.

One wonders how much more MS will spend before this campaign is over, and wouldn't that money be better spent producing more reliable products?
Reply to this comment
by Dreifort September 5, 2008 10:27 AM PDT
Vista runs great on new machines. The knock on Vista is not that it is unstable on NEW machines (ones that can support it), but the fact Vista didn't release with 1/2 the promises Microsoft made.

I'm sick of ppl knocking Vista for being unstable just because some guy with a PII-667MHZ with 128MB RAM couldn't get it to run on his computer.
by Considerate One September 6, 2008 12:25 AM PDT
Typical strategy of a tech basher is to try to portrait itself as a user (trying to get credibility) and then perpetuating misinformation.
If you are really a happy user of Vista, speak from your own mind and recommend it. Be a person with some guts, for heaven sake!
How could someone base his/her recommendation about Vista more on what someone else says than at his/her own experience?
Pathetic...
I can totally understand why MS pushed the "Project Mojave" campaign. People really talk without knowing.
by Imalittleteapot September 6, 2008 7:06 AM PDT
Dreifort: That's severely overstating it and misleading. Some of the machines that Vista didn't fly with are machines that meet the system requirements printed right on the Vista box and on MS's website. I've seen many computers with 512 meg ram and 1 gig ram even one oddity (possibly somehow broken computer) with 2 gig of ram that just couldn't handle Vista, but XP would fly on. Then on crappier machines Vista would work fine on. Who knows why, but that isn't the point.

If was just some jerk with with 128 meg of RAM nobody would be taking his side even if they hated MS. However, the problem is some of the computers that didn't run Vista well came with Vista. What's a person supposed to do when their computer can't even handle the OS that comes with it? Perhaps you need to Google Vista Capable lawsuit to get some perspective. The situation was far from what you describe, but you are right about one thing.

Vista is a good OS on good hardware. MS should have just said this is good big boy OS, but that means it takes good big boy hardware to run on. Of course they didn't have the courage to do that. They mislead in an attempt to sell more product on lower end units and so Vista got installed on machines it shouldn't have and that's what I say hurt MS's image and they deserved it.
by Evan_H September 5, 2008 10:12 AM PDT
Oh, I understand the whole "putting a face on Microsoft" part, but I still don't think it's a good ad.

Seinfeld was most popular in the '90s, and Gates isn't even running Microsoft anymore. The commercial ends with "the future", but feels like an attempt to rekindle the '90s when Microsoft was at its peak and people cared about Seinfeld. The world has moved on.
Reply to this comment
by chill_zone September 5, 2008 10:13 AM PDT
I see your points. But the ad wasn't funny. I've been watching the complete Seinfeld series in order (I'm almost to season 4). I'm loving it. It's hilarious. This ad is just dumb. Shoe circus? Wear your clothes in the shower? Make our computers moist like cake so we can EAT THEM?! Did you actually laugh at any of that? Let's make an ad that associates Microsoft with a lot of really dumb ideas. Brilliant!
Reply to this comment
by CrashPad63 September 5, 2008 12:11 PM PDT
Chill-zone, just chill. this ad and the subsequent ones are not meant for you I guess.
by ScottRouse September 5, 2008 10:13 AM PDT
You're wrong. It sucked. Bad.
Reply to this comment
by dd13reis September 5, 2008 11:46 AM PDT
Explain to me why that is? I need some actual evidence.

-Don
by themrwhite September 5, 2008 10:14 AM PDT
The ad was stupid, plain and simple. If I the viewer had no idea what MS was or is trying to do, I would look at the ad and say *** was that?! But since I keep up on what's going on in the tech industry, I was pre-warned of this ad weeks in advance. Which is sad that MS has to tell people about an ad coming out.

And I agree, this was nothing but a Mac bash article. I'm also tired of people calling users of Apple Computers fanbois. If you use a PC running windows doesn't that make you a MS fanboi? (which in my opinion is worse) It's an old arguement where the Mac guys prove why the Mac OS is better and the PC guys get mad about it and start throwing cuss words and the whole Macs don't do games thing (which they do, currently playing two at the moment).

The ad was stupid and if the majority of people think so, then it must suck. Period.

Grow up people, ecspecially the writer.
Reply to this comment
by lsands01 September 5, 2008 10:44 AM PDT
I am going to guess that you aren't using any Mac OS to play those games either or they are not real games.
by Seaspray0 September 10, 2008 4:55 PM PDT
The majority of the people thought it was OK, and the mac guys have only proven that mac OS is better for them, NOT for me, and I am not alone... 90% of everyone didn't pick mac OS either. The answer is to get the OS that's best for you and be happy about it. Unfortunately the macboi's won't leave it at that... hence the quote from the author "put your MacBook Pro away, and be quiet".
by scootercode September 5, 2008 10:16 AM PDT
CNet readers associate Gates with MSFT just as easily as they associate Seinfeld with his sitcom. Can anyone claim the same ease of association for the vast majority of PC owners who use Windows by default?

If the attempt of the commercial is to humanize Gates and thus pave the way for an attempt at raising expectations of MSFT product from the masses, who are they really pitching to?

If MSFT wants to lay fears to rest that the company's issues with Vista (and other technologies one-upped / threatened / beat down by Apple or the general tech field --- think Zune, XBox, MS Passport) is it really the best marketing message to send, saying, "Hey, our former Big Cheese is a real person"? Personally, I'd rather see technology that speaks for itself.

Don't get me wrong, MSFT has done a great job in providing a line of OSes that (usually) work across vast combinations of hardware configurations. This is both the cause and effect of having placed themselves strategically well early in the timeline of affordable PC hardware. It just seems that they've lost the focus to maintain effective QA over the years and they now see (though they may not admit that they see) all the criticism from competitors and the techie population that are leaving MS.

Even though they still have a huge market share, how much research has been done on the number of PCs purchased with Windows and then reformatted to run Linux? Not much, and it's certainly not something that MSFT would admit to researching.

MSFT is an incredibly smart business, and I appreciated the humanizing aspect of the ad, but that won't make me want to install Windows on any of my machines. The implied catch phrase of "a day late and a dollar short, but still human" is still not appealing.
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by protagonistic September 5, 2008 3:00 PM PDT
I've watched the ad and all I have to say is that is probably Seinfled at his funniest. Which is such a pity because I am sure that with all that money Bill could have found someone who is truly funny. The funniest part of the whole thing is that with all that money this is all they could come up with.
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