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Is it time to give up on Microsoft?

The disappointment of Microsoft's new Windows 8 operating system has rippled its way through the tech community – and investors are opting out.

In this June 2012 file photo, Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer comments on the Windows 8 operating system at Hollywood's Milk Studios in Los Angeles. Microsoft Corp. Tech investors are starting to give up on Microsoft following the disappointment of Windows 8.

Damian Dovarganes/AP

July 27, 2012

This is anecdotal, not empirical, but the two smartest value-oriented investors writing blogs just simultaneously threw in the towel on Microsoft ().  In both cases, the trigger was the new Windows 8 operating system.  The techies seemed to have known for awhile that 8 would be a letdown, it is well documented throughout the tech blogosphere.  But now that dissatisfaction is making its way through the investing community.

First, my pal Vitaliy Katsenelson, the brilliant investor and author of .  In his at Institutional Investor, he begins thusly:

I sang love serenades to Microsoft in the December issue, but a few weeks ago we sold our shares of Microsoft. Because we believe the stock is undervalued, that decision was not easy. What changed? A very important part of my thesis was the success of Windows 8, an operating system that Microsoft made for both PCs and tablets. When I saw Windows 8 demonstrated in early 2011, it looked like a very innovative, un-Microsoft-like product. Windows 8 was very important for Microsoft’s response to Apple’s iPad — a tablet that was deservingly stealing market share from low-end laptops. Windows 8 was supposed to take Microsoft to the next level, leapfrogging Apple and Google.

A few months ago Microsoft released the public Windows 8 beta, and I tested it out. To my shock, I found it to be a very confusing product. The interface was slick and visually very appealing, but I simply could not figure out how to use it...

And then last night I saw John Hempton, legendary blogger and hedge fund manager at Bronte Capital, say that because of the new OS:

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Seldom have I looked at something that is a major long in the portfolio, changed my mind, sold the entire position and continued selling to go short (albeit in a small way).

I just did that on Microsoft. The immediate trigger was Windows 8 - but the thinking has been longer and harder than that.

There are important points made in both articles, I highly suggest you read them - even if you disagree.