> However, Google controls a popular web server (Google search) and client (Google Chrome), so for web-things, they can create "widespread adoption" for whatever they standardize.
Google's innovation is to make http faster over a slow unreliable network (e.g. a wireless device). They solved a real world problem, proved it using their own users and now are going to standardize. Their innovation is driving their standardization efforts.
If google didn't solve a real world problem then even with their platform they couldn't impact widespread adoption. Their innovations (SPDY and now QUIC) solve real world problems, so adoption will become widespread.
MSFT with Office XML was solving a political problem, not a real world problem. Ie. Office was taking a hit because DOC/XLS were proprietary formats, and governments were concerned about archiving documents in a proprietary format and were therefore threatening to move to open standards (ie. OSS office suites). MSFT fought back by pushing through a standard document format to offer their sales staff with a rebuttal to customers threatening to move to an open standard. Ie. The 'standard' only has traction due to MSFTs monopoly on office and serves no real benefit to anyway except for MSFTs salesforce.
Google's innovation is to make http faster over a slow unreliable network (e.g. a wireless device). They solved a real world problem, proved it using their own users and now are going to standardize. Their innovation is driving their standardization efforts.
If google didn't solve a real world problem then even with their platform they couldn't impact widespread adoption. Their innovations (SPDY and now QUIC) solve real world problems, so adoption will become widespread.
MSFT with Office XML was solving a political problem, not a real world problem. Ie. Office was taking a hit because DOC/XLS were proprietary formats, and governments were concerned about archiving documents in a proprietary format and were therefore threatening to move to open standards (ie. OSS office suites). MSFT fought back by pushing through a standard document format to offer their sales staff with a rebuttal to customers threatening to move to an open standard. Ie. The 'standard' only has traction due to MSFTs monopoly on office and serves no real benefit to anyway except for MSFTs salesforce.