Reviewed: The Microsoft File

Let me get something straight right off the bat: I own just about everybook about Microsoft ever written and consider myself an amateur historianof the PC era. While many books about the Gates empire attempt to provide asimple history of the

Paul Thurrott

September 8, 1998

3 Min Read
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Let me get something straight right off the bat: I own just about everybook about Microsoft ever written and consider myself an amateur historianof the PC era. While many books about the Gates empire attempt to provide asimple history of the company (and some are quite effective at this), other, more recent titles present themselves more as an expose of the innerworkings of Microsoft. This is such a book, and it is easily the mostcontroversial and despicable of the bunch.

I cannot recommend it to anyone.

It's not because the author, Wendy Goldman Rohm, can't write well. She mostdefinitely cannot. As a writer and editor, I'm disgusted by her attempts athigh prose, and perhaps even more disgusted that Random House chose to publisher her writing as is. Consider the following passage, where Rohm is attempting to set the mood of a near-empty plane, at night, where MicrosoftCEO Bill Gates sleeps:

"Sleeping, a low hum in the chest, skin reddened by sun, head tight, seamsof the skull traced like an etching across the crown taut with the monotonyof time. It seemed he'd traveled farther than his thirty-nine years. Feetcrossed at the ankles, lower lip slack as if having given up: all havingbeen spoken. Echo in the sleeping brain. Traveling across water. Miles ofit. Air like water filling his lungs, dreams billowing like balloons grasped in a fierce wind."

Uh-huh.

And no, I have no idea where she's going with that. The book is liberallysprinkled with such writing, causing me to sigh out loud as I read it. It'sthat bad.

But that's not the problem, though it is certainly a problem.

The problem with this book, unfortunately, is that none of her wild claimsabout Microsoft--and there are numerous claims made in the book--can besubstantiated. I'm sure that many of the stories in this book are true andhad the author stuck to a simple telling of these stories, with evidenceto back her claims, the book would have been fantastic. Instead, the readeris presented with incredible tales of dubious origin. For example, in a wild leap of faith, Rohm asks the reader to believe that Microsoft bugged IBM's hotel rooms at Fall Comdex in 1989, despite the fact that IBM's own executives and security team still don't feel that Microsoft was responsible. The fact that many major computer companies had executives staying at the same hotel (including Microsoft, by the way) suggests that any number of suspects could have bugged IBM's rooms. In fact, only IBM would have been paranoid enough to scan their rooms for bugs. It is possible--and likely--that other computer companies, including Microsoft, were bugged as well. We, like Rohm, will never really know for sure.

The book is full of such drivel, and it gets pretty hard to take after thefirst few chapters. There will always be a place in my heart for Microsoftinsider information, but this book seems more like a deliberate--anddishonest--smear campaign than an attempt at revealing insight. Rohm saysthat Microsoft has embarked on its own campaign to belittle the book andits author and while I would normally be shocked by such events, in thiscase, I can only say "more power to them." She deserves all the dirt shegets and then some.

The view from the gutter, they say, offers an interesting perspective. Justask Wendy Rohm. She knows all about it.

--

The Microsoft Fileby Wendy Goldman RohmRandom House, 1998ISBN: 0-8129-2716-

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About the Author

Paul Thurrott

Paul Thurrott is senior technical analyst for Windows IT Pro. He writes the SuperSite for Windows, a weekly editorial for Windows IT Pro UPDATE, and a daily Windows news and information newsletter called WinInfo Daily UPDATE.

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