Microsoft Bob

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Microsoft Bob
Developed by Microsoft
OS Windows 3.1 and 95
Development status Discontinued
Genre GUI
License Proprietary
Website http://www.microsoft.com

Microsoft Bob was a Microsoft software product, released in March 1995, which provided a new, nontechnical interface to desktop computing operations. Despite its ambitious nature, Bob failed to penetrate the market and was one of Microsoft's more visible product failures. Microsoft's Steve Ballmer named Bob as one project "we [had] undertaken ... where we decided that we have not succeeded and let's stop."[1]

Contents

[edit] Origins

Microsoft Bob was designed for Windows 3.1x and Windows 95 and intended to be a user-friendly interface for Microsoft Windows, replacing the Program Manager. At one point, the project was managed by Melinda French, who at the time was Bill Gates' girlfriend (the two later married).[2] At the time French left Microsoft, she was Product Unit Manager for a group which included Bob and three other Microsoft titles. The project leader for Bob was Karen Fries, a Microsoft researcher. Microsoft originally owned the domain name bob.com, but traded it to Bob Kerstein for the windows2000.com domain.[3]

[edit] Features

Bob included various office suite programs such as a finance application and a word processor. The user interface was designed to be helpful to novice computer users, but many saw its methods of assistance as too cute and involved. Each action, such as creating a new text document, featured the step-by-step tutorials no matter how many times the user had been through the process; some users considered this to be condescending. Users were assisted by cartoon characters whose appearance was usually vaguely related to the task. These characteristics earned Bob the 7th place in PC World Magazine's list of the 25 worst products of all time[4] and worst product of the decade by CNET.com.[5]

[edit] Legacy

Despite being discontinued before Windows 98 was released, Microsoft Bob continued to be widely panned in reviews and popular media.[6]

Some designs of the Bob cartoons are still used in other Microsoft products:

  • Bob's face is used in Windows Live Messenger as a "Nerd Smiley"
  • Will and The Dot are now Office Assistants (Will was only in Office 97).
  • The yellow dog "Rover" can be found in the search function of Windows XP
  • Rover's animations (like typing on a computer) inspired the Office Assistant "Rex"
  • Rover appears in the Microsoft program Greetings Workshop.
  • Bob is referred to in the humorous spoof, "Bill Gates' Last Day at Microsoft".

[edit] See also

[edit] References

[edit] External links