In February 1980,
Apple Computer president
Michael Scott wrote a
memo announcing "Effective Immediately!! No more typewriters are to be purchased, leased etc., etc. […] We believe the typewriter is obsolete. Let's prove it inside before we try and convince our customers." He set a goal to remove all typewriters from the company by 1 January 1981. By 1987,
Atari Corp. was in the process of using the
Atari ST throughout the company. The development of
Windows NT at Microsoft involved over 200 developers in small teams, and it was held together by
Dave Cutler's February 1991 insistence on dogfooding. Microsoft developed the operating system on computers running NT daily
builds. The software was initially crash prone, but the immediate feedback of code breaking the build, the loss of pride, and the knowledge of impeding the work of others were all powerful motivators. Windows developers would typically dogfood or
self-host Windows starting from the early (alpha) builds, while the rest of the employees would start from the more stable beta builds that were also available to
MSDN subscribers. In 2005,
InfoWorld reported that a tour of Microsoft's
network operations center "showed pretty much beyond a reasonable doubt that Microsoft does run its 20,000-plus node, international network on 99 percent Windows technology, including servers, workstations, and edge security".
InfoWorld argued that "Microsoft's use of Windows for its high-traffic operations tipped many doubters over to Windows' side of the fence." Microsoft's internal email system initially ran on
Xenix. The only employees using
Microsoft Mail worked on the software itself, and used it as a client for Xenix mail servers. When asked why Microsoft used
Unix, it publicly moved to using
Microsoft Exchange. During the 1993-1996
migration, the internal test environment was codenamed "Dogfood". In 1997, an
email storm known as the Bedlam DL3 incident made Microsoft build more robust features into Microsoft Exchange Server to avoid lost and duplicate emails and network and server down-time, although dogfooding is rarely so dramatic. A second email storm in 2006 was handled perfectly by the system. In 1999,
Hewlett-Packard staff referred to a project using HP's own products as "Project
Alpo" (referring to a brand of dog food). Around the same time,
Mozilla also practised dogfooding under that exact name. Government
green public procurement that allows testing of proposed environmental policies has been compared to dogfooding. On 1 June 2011,
YouTube added a license feature to its video uploading service allowing users to choose between a standard or
Creative Commons license. The license label was followed by the message "(Shh! – Internal Dogfood)" that appeared on all YouTube videos lacking commercial licensing. A YouTube employee confirmed that this referred to products that are tested internally.
Oracle Corporation stated that it "runs
Oracle Linux with more than 42,000 servers [to] support more than 4 million external users and 84,000 internal users. More than 20,000 developers at Oracle use Oracle Linux". After the
CrowdStrike outages in July 2024, CEO Adam Meyers testified before the US Congress that "dogfooding" (increasing its internal testing before deployment) was one measure the company had put in place to prevent future problems. == Criticisms and support ==