"Initially, panic in the streets," says Tony Meadow, president of Bear River Associates, an ISV focusing on mobile applications. "[Microsoft] didn't establish [its standards] in a nice sort of way, but they are the basis for a lot of things that we use and do with computers."
Today you can send a Word document to anybody in the world and expect them to be able to open it. According to Meadow, it takes forever for people to agree to these kinds of standards.
Josh Greenbaum, principal at Enterprise Applications Consulting, says, "Downloads for [StarOffice] would bring the Internet to a screeching halt."
Hollis Bostick, a multidiscipline consultant to Pratt &Whitney's Rocketdyne Division, notes that there is deep Microsoft penetration from the server side out and that if Microsoft disappeared "we would be going back to specialty buckets." Bostick says that may not be such a bad idea in the long run, because those specialty buckets always delivered more "precise software."
Bostick says that because Microsoft has, over the years, standardized its user interface across its product line, it's easy to find what you need. Compare that to Adobe Premiere Pro for video editing, which has a ton of switches, but you have to know about them and where they are. "Microsoft kind of standardized the place they put stuff so you can find it."