Originally posted by Addanc
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Then they suddenly realised that the web landscape beyond the tiny world of corporate intranets had changed, and other browsers were about to eat their lunch: the IE team was bolstered, and we got IE 7 and eventually IE 8.
There was a lot of messy politics within MS relating to all this. Without betraying any confidences, I can say that a certain female Web Standards advocate who was brought in as a consultant for a while now says that she was glad to get out of there, because every time they tried to do what was right (from both a business and technical perspective) they had to fight off an almighty assault based on internal politics: MS is now so big that almost any technical decision threatens some manager's personal fiefdom. (This is one of the main reasons that MS will ultimately fail, BTW.)
I'm not betraying any confidences when I point out that Chris Wilson, who has been the voice crying out in the wilderness of MS about standards for many years, has now moved away from his involvement with the IE Team for the purpose of providing greater advocacy of open web standards within MS. He originally joined from Mosaic back in the 90s, and has a chance to make a difference if he can cut a way through the politics.
At @media back in June, Molly Holzschlag and Bruce Lawson were giving a presentation about HTML 5, immediately after Chris's presentation which should probably have been entitled "How And Why I'm Going To Ensure That Microsoft Aren't Evil Bastards Anymore When It Comes To The Web"; Chris had sat in the front row after leaving the stage, to watch them.
At one point, Molly called down to him: "Hey Chris, are the IE Team planning on implementing <canvas>?" Chris shouted back, "How the fsck should I know what those bastards are up to?"

We can at least conclude that there is now some healthy push'n'shove going on within MS about supporting open standards - may the good guys (i.e. Chris Wilson and those he gathers about him) prevail


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