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October 25, 2011 10:52 pm GMT

Lead Bullets

bulletsEarly in my tenure as product manager for the web servers at Netscape, we faced a terrible crisis. We just got our hands on Microsofts new web server, Internet Information Server (IIS), and benchmarked against our product. Microsofts IIS had every feature that we had, was five times faster and we knew that they were going to give it away for free. This might not sound so bad, but we had just gone public three months earlier with a story to Wall Street that said, Dont worry about Microsoft giving away the browser because we will make money selling servers. Oh snap.I immediately went to work trying to move the playing field and pivot the server product line to something that we could sell for money. The late, great Mike Homer and I worked furiously on a set of partnerships and acquisitions that would broaden the product line and surround the web server with enough functionality that we would be able survive the attack.As I excitedly reviewed the plan with my engineering counterpart, Bill Turpin, he looked at me as though I was a little kid who had much to learn. Bill was a long-time veteran of battling Microsoft from his time at Borland and understood what I was trying to do, but remained unconvinced. He said: Ben, those silver bullets that you and Mike are looking for are fine and good, but our web server is five times slower. There is no silver bullet thats going to fix that. No, we are going to have to use a lot of lead bullets.

Original Link: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/tQOg1EKtmW0/

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