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Appeals Court Denies Microsoft Request for Rehearing

An anonymous reader writes "CNN is reporting that Microsoft's request for a rehearing has been denied. The court will not reconsider if Microsoft acted illegally by commingling its software. The appeals court also rejected the government's request to speed up the hearing." I love the word "Commingling". I wish it meant something cooler then it does.

221 comments

  1. Re:Some action finally? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Funny how /. failed to also inform it's readers that the goverment got smacked down for trying to railroad the case as the same time! SO once again the governments attempts to thwart justice have also failed.

  2. Precisely why an injuction is needed. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    > Microsoft is actually the one who wanted this to be revisited and not fast-tracked. They want this to go on as long as possible. It's the government on the other hand that wanted this case to be fast-tracked.

    And that's why an injuction against delivery of XP is needed. To eliminate the incentive to drag out the process until any remedies would be moot.

    In the light of the outcome so far, the Win98 injunction that Jackson tried to order makes a hell of a lot of sense (even to the Appeals court that overruled it at the time). And XP's just a lot more of the same. So hold it off until these issues are resolved once and for all. And slap some of the behavioral remedies on at the same time. This case'll be settled within the month.

    1. Re:Precisely why an injuction is needed. by Chagrin · · Score: 1
      • And that's why an injuction against delivery of XP is needed. To eliminate the incentive to drag out the process until any remedies would be moot.
      You should really post non-anonymously so that good comments like this don't sit at "0" score.
      --

      I/O Error G-17: Aborting Installation

  3. Re:I can't stand it anymore. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Jesus, I hope I'm just missing the joke here.

    Yeah, you did. If you will notice, no one has been able too use grammer correctly in this thread. Maybe it's comedic genius at work hear!

  4. Back to the punishment phase by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2

    Microsft has been convicted of committing a crime. The conviction is upheld by the court of appeals. MS *is* now a convicted criminal. Part of the punishment should be that any and all government organizations should cease doing any further business with MS. For the govt to continue financial support of a convicted criminal is an insult to the dignity of law and order. Maybe we'll also be lucky anough that the next lower court judge that gets the case shall deem that MS be broken up into 3 different companies and not 2 like the first judge ordered.

    1. Re:Back to the punishment phase by bungalow · · Score: 2

      Back to the punishment phase (Score:0)
      by Anonymous Coward on 11:19 AM August 2nd, 2001 CST (#106)

      Microsft has been convicted of committing a crime. The conviction is upheld by the court of appeals. MS *is* now a convicted criminal. Part of the punishment should be that any and all government organizations should cease doing any further business with MS. For the govt to continue financial support of a convicted criminal is an insult to the dignity of law and order. Maybe we'll also be lucky anough that the next lower court judge that gets the case shall deem that MS be broken up into 3 different companies and not 2 like the first judge ordered.


      Moderate this (the original) up, please. While the orders in sentences 1 and 2 would never happen, they are worth reading.

  5. Re:You must be using Internet Explorer by drwiii · · Score: 2

    It's based on the old Bill of Borg spoof. Bill Gates reportedly went after the guy that did it and he wasn't able to sell t-shirts with that picture on it any more.

  6. Re:New York Times Link by Phroggy · · Score: 1
    Look at Netscape for a recent example of this. If the remedy is not soon, it will not matter for any of the competitors as they will be DEAD!

    Netscape is now a part of Microsoft's largest competitor, AOL Time Warner. They're hardly dead.

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  7. Re:PR weasles, etc. by Phroggy · · Score: 2
    You've hit the nail on the head here. Microsoft honestly has no idea why everyone hates them. I've had several long discussions online with a Microsoft programmer; he honestly doesn't see any problem with the company's actions, and has an uncanny way of explaining away any negative points I bring up. Microsoft does very evil things, but the impression that I get is that they're not evil on purpose. Very weird.

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    $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
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  8. Re:PR weasles, etc. by Phroggy · · Score: 2
    The solution here has already been reached once. There needs to be a breakup. Preferably one that splits applications, OS and .NET among at least three separate entities. If MS is smart, they'll do it voluntarily once [if] they know they're beaten.

    Microsoft can't do it voluntarily. They're too intertwined internally. They have teams of engineers that, for example, work on both Windows and Office. They can't split the two and move the team over to Office, because that means Windows would lose those developers, which would hurt Windows development in addition to killing morale. Microsoft was deathly afraid of that breakup; they didn't know how they were going to do it without completely falling apart.

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    $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
    $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
  9. Re:Remedy suggestions? by Have+Blue · · Score: 2

    7). Enforced openness. Force MS to publish all their file formats, APIs, protocols, etc, and forbid MS to break compatibility with or deprecate any existing ones. This would destroy the embrace-and-extend strategy, make Office vulernable to real competition since your documents are no longer hostage (anyone can download the specs and write a converter, or add that support to their competing apps), remove a huge number of problems plaguing mixed networks, and so on.

  10. Re:Some action finally? by phil+reed · · Score: 1
    Funny how /. failed to also inform it's readers that the goverment got smacked down for trying to railroad the case as the same time!

    Uh, then what exactly does

    The appeals court also rejected the government's request to speed up the hearing.
    mean? (copied from the article)

    If you're looking for something to bash Slashdot about, look a little harder.


    ...phil

    --

    ...phil
    "For a list of the ways which technology has failed to improve our quality of life, press 3."
  11. What are you talking about??? by Danse · · Score: 2

    The government wants to see a hasty end to this whole mess and M$ would probably get off with a slap on the wrist. The courts, however, see it differently and want to pursue the illegalities surrounding M$'s business practices.

    After Microsoft bent the government over after the last settlement (read: slap on the wrist) and violated the spirit, if not the letter, of the agreement, the DOJ looked like a pack of morons. They didn't like looking like morons and were out for blood this time around. If it were up to the DOJ, Microsoft would be at least 2 separate corporations by now. The only reason Microsoft hasn't been broken up yet is because the courts haven't allowed it.

    --
    It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
  12. Re: OT: OT: Code Red Paranoia conspiracy theory by pod · · Score: 1
    Uh, and why not just do what they wanted from the start, if they were planning it, instead of leaving all their servers with an open security hole for anyone to exploit?

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    --
    "Hot lesbian witches! It's fucking genius!"
  13. Re:I wonder if the injunction on XP is behind it a by Masem · · Score: 2
    Unless otherwise changed, you will not be able to go to a store and buy XP until October (27th?). However, OEMs like Dell and Compaq need to determine how work with XP for new installs, including using what they can of MS's slight laxing of the initial desktop requirements. Those OEMs will have access to the necesssary files to do this in mid-August so that by October (and more importantly to their bottom lines, before Christmas), they can ship XP-enabled machines.

    While the various parties could still seek an injunction after these files/CDs have been shipped to OEMs, the injunction would most likely only limit the direct sale of the software from that point and would not affect what the OEMs try to do (unless, then, the companies go for the gusto and get an injunction on every OEM that's committed to go XP).

    --
    "Pinky, you've left the lens cap of your mind on again." - P&TB
    "I can see my house from here!" - ST:
  14. Re:I wonder if the injunction on XP is behind it a by Masem · · Score: 5
    There is as of yet no injunction for XP's release. Both the DOJ, the remaining 18 states, and EPIC are trying to get one placed before mid-late August, at which point MS is due to ship the XP master disks off to the OEMs for inclusions on new machines. No word yet on if any of these injunctions have been granted or denied yet.

    --
    "Pinky, you've left the lens cap of your mind on again." - P&TB
    "I can see my house from here!" - ST:
  15. Re:Remedy suggestions? by miniver · · Score: 2
    Postscript for printing

    Your comments about Solaris vs Linux are a complete non sequitor -- Sun has a lot of reasons to keep what they've been using for 10 years instead of switching to CUPS or one of the newer printing APIs that are being developed for Linux. Either way, it isn't relevant to the "what you lose when you leave Windows for Linux" question.

    I'll admit that Windows has a wider variety of available printer drivers, but you're ignoring the realities of the printing world -- there are really only a couple of page display languages for modern printers: HPGL and Postscript cover 99.99% of printers manufactured in the last 5 years. Since ghostscript ships with Linux, printing to Postscript and having ghostscript translate to the printer makes perfect sense. And of course you can send the Postscript output to any number of devices directly. There aren't *any* printers that use Microsoft's internal page layout APIs. I'd score this one as even.

    GUI APIs

    You're going to complain about rapid development of the GUI APIs for Linux, and then claim that Microsoft (Win30/ Win31/ Win32S/ Win95/ Win98/ WinNT/ Win2K/ WinME) is *better*? Microsoft, who merrily breaks applications left and right everytime it creates a new version of MSVCRT.DLL is *better*? I don't think so. At least with GNOME, I can have multiple versions of libraries installed without crashing the entire system. Just try running two seperate Windows apps which were built for different versions of MSVCRT. Sorry, Linux wins this one.

    Etcetera, etcetera...

    You say COM, I say CORBA, RPC, Sockets, and even Bonobo. COM does a lot of things, but one thing it doesn't do is it doesn't check objects against interfaces. Thus it is perfectly acceptable to COM to try and open a spreadsheet when what you passed in was a Word document. And of course, COM is only for a single machine -- it can't handle distributed applications. DCOM can, sort of, but DCOM has its own problems as well.

    You want to talk about installers? Hell, Microsoft never bothered to write an installer -- they bought Installshield (and the braindead version at that). You should have a look at Red Carpet, the installer that Ximian wrote to handle all of those Gnome libraries that you're complaining about. While I won't claim it's perfect, it's a damn sight better than what I've experienced with Windows.

    Ultimately it comes down to perspective -- all of those faults you see with Linux look like desirable features to me, and vice versa. As I mentioned in a previous post, I've been building and deploying business applications for 20 years, on CP/M, MSDOS, Windows, NT, Unix, VMS, Primos, and Pick. I have found the Red Hat Linux environment to be the most reliable environment for deploying applications of all of those I've worked with. I'm not claiming perfection, but I do think that it's a lot better than anything Microsoft has ever delivered, and definitely sufficient for deploying business applications.


    Are you moderating this down because you disagree with it,
    --
    We call it art because we have names for the things we understand.
  16. Re:Remedy suggestions? by miniver · · Score: 3
    Microsoft will be happy to put Office on linux when:
    1) Linux is as easy to develop business-class software for as Windows
    2) When a Linux user is willing to pay for a peice of software
    People often assume that if you break apart OS+Apps, then immediately everything gets ported to linux. Nothing could be further from the truth. So much that the OS provodies is just not there at all in linux.

    Let's think about this. What exactly does Windows provide as an OS-service that is (1) necessary for developing business-class software, and (2) isn't available for Linux? Presumably you mean standard APIs ... but what standards, and who gets to define them? If what you mean is the Win32 APIs, then you need to think again -- those are merely Microsoft's take, and not the only way to do something. So you must mean general APIs for OS services:

    • Device Independent Printing. Win32 has a set of print services APIs that comprise two parts: (1) device independent print rendering, and (2) print job management. On the other hand, Linux has APIs to do both of these as well: Postscript and LPR.
    • GUI APIs. Well, I'd say that Linux is even more flexible than Win32 in this regard, since X-Windows doesn't tie an application to running on a single machine.
    • Database-independent data access. But wait, Linux can use ODBC as well as the next guy.
    • Networked File Services? Uh ... NFS & Samba & AFS, just for starters.
    • Etcetera, etcetera, etcetera ...

    You'd better back up your assertion with some facts, because I just don't see what's missing. Oh, and BTW, I've been a business application developer for over 20 years, so I *do* know what I'm talking about.

    I think what you mean is that you want development tools that make it truly easy to churn out software without having to understand the low-level APIs. You want Visual Basic and Visual C/C++ for Linux, and you don't want to have to learn a whole new set of APIs either. Well, then have you looked at Wine lately? What about Kylix?

    But seriously, porting an application from one OS to another is hard work, regardless of the tools ... there's no economic incentive to do that if there aren't enough users who are willing to buy what you're selling. While I'll admit that many Linux users aren't interested in paying a lot for software, I would suggest that that's because they're more interested in paying what the software is worth to them. There are plenty of users out there who are willing to pay for software that solves a problem that they can't solve any other way. Sound card drivers, Word processing software, games -- there have been plenty of people who have purchased these products because they needed them.

    I think the difference is that the Linux marketplace has such a wide variety of solutions available, that people tend to purchase only as much software as they actually need, instead of going for the all-in-one-high-priced-bundle packages that are popular in the PC marketplace.


    Are you moderating this down because you disagree with it,
    --
    We call it art because we have names for the things we understand.
  17. Re:Limits on corporatism by Jason+Earl · · Score: 3

    The funny thing about the concept of corporatism is that it almost doesn't matter what government does, some corporation is going to benefit, and some others are going to be hurt. Katz writes about "evil" corporatism because it is easy copy to write. Katz's apathetic non-voting listeners want someone to blame for their inability to cope with the system, and so they flock to demogogues criticizing the nebulous "establishment."

    Microsoft gets busted and that gets labeled as anti-corporatism because no one here likes Microsoft. But the reality of the matter is that many more corporations will benefit from this decision than will be hurt by it. AOL, IBM, Sun, Oracle, Apple, Novell, and a host of other companies are almost certainly ecstatic over the news.

    In fact, that's part of the reason that Microsoft is doomed to fail eventually. They have made to many enemies. It doesn't matter how big you are, you can't stay king of the hill forever, especially if you are aggressively pushing your former allies off of the hill. Microsoft has rigged the deck so that they are the only ones that are able to develop for Windows and make money. Which only guarantees that they former allies will start looking for other platforms on which to develop their new cool toys. Microsoft might be chuck full of talented individuals, but if they alienate everyone else, they will find that they are unable to compete with the combined intellect of everyone else.

    Or, as in this case, even Microsoft's tremendous economic power does not allow them to buy up politicians fast enough to outpace the political maneuverings of their enemies. Especially when their enemies have busted out their checkbooks as well.

  18. Re:Remedy suggestions? by Jason+Earl · · Score: 3

    Oh yeah, it's impossible to develop desktop software for Linux, after all Linux wasn't even written in America.

    Whatever...

    The fact of the matter is that it is unlikely that MS Office would get ported to Linux (even if MS was broken up) for three very important reasons.

    1. It would be hard. MS Office is quite Windows specific, not because it had to be, but because it made sense for Microsoft to tie their office suite to their OS. In fact, if the OS and Apps split did happen my guess is that the Apps company might seriously rethink it's investment in MS Office for the Macintosh. It's almost certainly a significant investment for such a small market.
    2. Linux has very little market share, and most Linuxers who are interested in running Office already have a copy of Windows laying around.
    3. Open Office, Gnome Office, and KDE Office, are all getting pretty darn good, and all are free. Corel's Perfect Office is also available for Linux, and it is quite a bit less expensive than MS Office. Chances are good that if you are already running Linux, you are also evaluating an alternative office suite, and MS Office is far more expensive than their competitors, with very little added functionality.

    The reasons why desktop companies are interested in Linux have nothing to do with Linux's technology. Heck, porting from Windows to Winelib is really quite straight forward. Instead they have everything to do with simple economics. They know that Linux is a very limited desktop market, and they don't believe that it would be worth the effort to build and support software for such a small market.

    Unfortunately for commercial software companies, their reluctance to port to Linux has not stopped the Free Software developers from creating Free Software equivalents to their commercial products. Even now it is pretty amazing how much useful desktop software is available for free with Linux, and this software is only going to improve. When Linux does start making inroads on the desktop for many companies it will be too late. They won't be able to port to Linux in time to compete with the freely available software.

  19. My prefered penalties: by mfterman · · Score: 2

    1. Fully document all existing API's, protocols and file formats down to any compression/encryption algorithms used for media formats, and document six months in advance of release all new API's, protocols and file formats.
    2. Force Microsoft to allow use by competitors of any patented algorithsm used the reading or writing of said data formats above.
    3. Forbid Microsoft from writing any API, protocol or file format that prohibits anyone from writing software to interact with those API's, protocols or reading and writing those file formats.
    4. Restrict Microsoft only to only charging for each license sold for a given computer rather than offering a cheaper rate that charges the company for every computer sold. And that rate must be the same for all computer manufacturers.
    5. Related to that, no exclusionary rules about what can be bundled on a PC.

    The first three points hits Microsoft in its embrace and extend strategy. It opens up the field to fair competition and allows other people to produce software that interoperates with Microsoft software.

    The last two points prohibit Microsoft from punishing any companies that try to push non-Microsoft software.

  20. If it's in violation, they can't ship it. by Svartalf · · Score: 2

    The commingling was deemed to be in violation of the law. If the injunction is awarded, they can't ship XP- and they willingly did the commingling, there's little reason to do so (really, there isn't...). I seriously doubt that they'll get any sympathy from the courts if an injunction's handed down that doesn't let them ship an even further violating product.

    --
    I am not merely a "consumer" or a "taxpayer". I am a Citizen of the State of Texas
    1. Re:If it's in violation, they can't ship it. by _xeno_ · · Score: 2
      I'm not contesting that - I was trying to point out (poorly, I'll admit) that Microsoft has basically forced themselves into a corner. I see two possible outcomes if they are forced to remove IE from their operating systems:
      1. Practically every Windows application under the sun will require you to install IE for some reason. (It should be noted that the HTML help is a vast improvement over previous help systems, and I for one would not like to return to the old Win3.1 style help system. This might force applications that otherwise wouldn't require IE to require it. It's easier than a custom help system, after all.)
      2. Practically every OEM under the sun bundles IE for Microsoft anyway - either by MS giving them discounts to do so (which would probably be illegal) or by simply forcing IE via typically bundled software - like word processors and the like.

      The fight isn't over IE anymore - they won, even if they lose the court battle. The new fight will be over bundling other features - an HTML viewer has just become too useful.

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      You are in a maze of twisty little relative jumps, all alike.
    2. Re:If it's in violation, they can't ship it. by ednopantz · · Score: 1

      A third possibility is that MS just obeys the "Penfield-Jackson test." He deleted the IE icon and then announced that he had removed IE from his system. They could ship a version without the icons if you like. Given the tech savvy of the courts, that might end up being the most they demand of MS in reference to the bundling issue.

  21. There's a couple of thingsthat they can't dodge... by Svartalf · · Score: 5

    Being required to ship a functional version of Windows without IE commingled would be one.

    They can't evade an injunction if the appeals court upholds it. It appears that the appeals court feels that MS is as guilty as a cat caught in a goldfish bowl and if Jackson hadn't acted the way he did and didn't hand down such an extreme remedy we'd be seeing them uphold all of the decision.

    If they attempt to ship Windows with any injunctions against that act in place, the parties that did the act (from the decision makers all the way to the people carrying out the act) could face, at minimum, Contempt of Court charges, winning at least several months in Club Fed.

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    I am not merely a "consumer" or a "taxpayer". I am a Citizen of the State of Texas
  22. Re:So now what? by Perrin-GoldenEyes · · Score: 1

    Okay, but I still don't see how splitting Office and Windows into 2 companies will help the situation. Unless the courts severely limit the degree to which Microsoft is allowed to "innovate" the OS. And I think that would be dangerous because it probably would stifle true innovation. So you can't include IE with Windows? Fine...what about Media Player? Or the photo stuff? What happens if this gets to a point where the courts really are cutting things out that really do have a legitimate place in the OS.
    -Perrin.

    --
    -Perrin.
    Now I want you to go in that bag and find my lightsaber. It's the one that says bad mother-fscker on it.
  23. Re:So now what? by Perrin-GoldenEyes · · Score: 3

    I'm not really sure why everybody seems so keen on Jackson's idea of splitting Microsoft. If memory serves, it would have been split into Windows and Office. And that is supposed to help how? Last I checked, Exploiter was not a part of Office (except on the Mac, but the Mac Business Unit seems to be pretty independent). And I'm pretty sure Media Player and the photo stuff aren't part of office either. So they'd just be back up to their old tricks again. The only exception is that competing office products might have a little more of a chance. On the other hand, probably not. My experience with MS Office is that it's actually of reasonably good quality, and it seems unlikely that the masses of corporate users are going to switch to something else now unless Office really takes a crap.

    The point here shouldn't be simply "Punish Microsoft!!!" The point should be to prevent them from doing it again. And I think that's a pretty great danger. I actually don't much buy into the argument that IE beat Netscape because of the bundling. My experience is that IE is and was (at least by the time bundling started) simply better. Netscape 4.x is, IMHO, pretty much a POS. Hopefully Mozilla will manage to make a bit of a comeback, but I'm still waiting on maturity there too. The environment has changed, though. I think these days people are more likely to just go with what's included with the OS. From a certain perspective (especially that of the fairly computer illiterate consumer) the included (commingled) products are a pretty good added value. My mom doesn't really want to go out and download Winamp over her carrier pidgeon modem, but if there's a music player included with windows, she might actually use it. It genuinely does make it easier for the "idiot" end user. So it's pretty easy for Microsoft to make a strong argument to justify it. The problem is that it IS using the OS monopoly in an anti-competitive manner.

    -Perrin.

    --
    -Perrin.
    Now I want you to go in that bag and find my lightsaber. It's the one that says bad mother-fscker on it.
  24. Unenforcible by RelliK · · Score: 2

    Sounds good, but it is unenforcible. How do you know they released all the specs? "You changed your file formats!" "No we didn't. Fuck off."
    Also, I doubt this remedy would ever be ordered.
    BTW, I would also add to the list the right of OEMs to customize the desktop (not the current crap of install MSN if you are installing AOL).

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  25. Favorite Quote: by Bilbo · · Score: 1
    My favorite quote from the article:
    Microsoft has expressed its willingness to settle the case out of court, taking steps including changing its contracts with computer makers to allow them to remove Internet Explorer from the versions of Windows they install on new PCs.
    Gee... You'd think the court actually found a way to make MS remove IE, not just hide the icon on the desktop!

    --
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    Your Servant, B. Baggins
  26. Re:PR weasles, etc. by t · · Score: 1
    I believe the quote is more like

    ..how they could distinguish the infidel from the faithful among the captives. He commanded; "Kill them all. God will know his own."

    http://www.atheistsunited.org/html/pamphlets/Antiw oman.html

    t.

  27. Re:I can't stand it anymore. by t · · Score: 1
    Perhaps that should have been "sought after" or something similar. Personally I had to read it several times to make sense of it.

  28. Re:I can't stand it anymore. by t · · Score: 1

    God I hope you meant to intentionally misuse "too" in addition to "grammer" & "hear".

  29. Re:OT: Code Red Paranoia by gorgon · · Score: 1

    Its not "virii". If you wanted to use the Latin plural as an excuse, you'd say "viri" not "virii". See this rant on the subject for a better explanation than I could hope to give.
    And I'd be a Libertarian, if they weren't all a bunch of tax-dodging professional whiners.

    --

    And I'd be a Libertarian, if they weren't all a bunch of tax-dodging professional whiners.
    Berke Breathed
  30. Re:"Commingling" by ethereal · · Score: 1

    This is like that guy in debate club who always wanted to define "and" and "is". Wait, those were the Prez. and Mr. Gates. Never mind :)

    --

    Your right to not believe: Americans United for Separation of Church and

  31. Re:OT: Code Red Paranoia by Jeremi · · Score: 2
    a rallying cry for Microsoft to take patching/updating out of the sysadmins hands and into XP, where it will be handled automatically?

    And in about a week, we'll be overrun by worms disguised as "automatic security updates"... fun

    --


    I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
  32. Re:There's a couple of thingsthat they can't dodge by mcc · · Score: 1

    (Personally, I believe that modern GUI kits should have an HTML control, but that it should be as tied down as possible - no JavaScript, image loading only via the app, etc. so as to make it that much more "secure.")

    Here's a better idea:

    Opendoc/Cyberdog.

    Make it so there's a single standard html-rendering function throughout the entire system, but that the software component that provides the html services is hot-swappable. Therefore microsoft can ship some boxes with MSIE built in at the system level like you describe they just have, but if Compaq wants their machines to come with Opera or Mozilla or some kind of minimal no-frills browser (like you want) serving as the html component in place of MSIE, they can do that, and the system will be MSIE free despite the login screen and everything still behing html. (I'm not sure how easy this would be with the Windows XP architecture. I know that if apple's management hadn't completely fallen apart in the mid-90s, the mac os would have had this capability for years. I also know that in the current mac os x architecture, the same thing can be easily done using the Services component API.)

    That aside, unless i'm wrong (and i usually am) if the courts have decided that the commingling of MSIE and Windows is illegal, and tells MS that the two has to be seperated, then Microsoft's "But look! It's impossible to remove MSIE from windows!" will be greeted with "That's your problem." It isn't the government's business to determine how microsoft fixes the messes they've made; it's only the government's business to determine which messes and which fixes are illegal anticompetitive actions.

    I hope i'm right about this. It would be so wonderful to see microsoft's attempt to intertwine Windows with IE in random inextricable ways in an attempt to thwart government attempts to seperate the two backfire.. and result in instead of the government giving up and letting the two be one executable, Microsoft having to delay the XP launch for two months while they either build in an architecture for a Cyberdog-style plug-in-html-component (and convert MSIE into one) or remove MSIE, thus resulting in a lower-quality product..

    -mcc, master of the run-on sentence.

  33. Re:OT: Code Red Paranoia by mcc · · Score: 1

    How long would it take you to make such a fake?

    About 90 seconds. 50 seconds if i had a working windows box handy to grab screenshots from.

    I really want to know if this happened or not. I can't honestly say it did. I'm just bothered as all get out that i can't find any hard confirmation one way or the other, and REALLY alarmed that *no one seems to care much*.

    Honestly, the one thing i was hoping more than anything else in posting that comment you responded to was it would start some kind of discussion along the lines of "did this happen". Or that i'd have about 10 people jumping on me questioning the events (which i did not personally witness). Except, um, instead i've been modded up to 4, and you're my only reply.

    Either way, umm, this is important. No? If it happened, we need to get proof set in stone (get handles on the non-AC people making the allegations, try to find some kind of records..) so MS can't claim later it didn't happen. But if it DIDN'T happen, then the comments scattered throughout the earlier code red threads on this subject (all of which claimed personal involvement, none of which i saw were left uncontradicted) were libel, and need to be responded to in their original threads and corrected before it's too late, the slashdot discussions are converted to static html pages, and hundreds of people like me are left walking away believing a rather elaborate hoax.

    The record needs to be set straight, one way or the other. What happened?

    *Is* this not a big deal as i seem to think it is? *Should* i just sit back and assume that if something serious happened, the news will eventually get record of it?

    ..oh whatever..
    blah.

  34. Re:OT: Code Red Paranoia by mcc · · Score: 4
    take patching/updating out of the sysadmins hands and into XP, where it will be handled automatically?

    Isn't this the basic argument for the use of debian? (apt-get)

    Personally, i think that having windows update or apt-get or Apple Software Update handle all security patches is a *good* thing. Keeping track of tiny constant security patches the instant they come out is something that should not really be a requirement of running a web server.

    However, the thing is that the Code Red incident is not an argument for automatic patch installs in microsoft products. It is a very, very strong argument against it. Why?

    About ten or twenty people in earlier slashdot threads alleged that they personally signed onto the Windows Update website the morning before the code red worm hit the White House to see the hacked by chinese worm message. Some even got screenshots.

    In other words, THE MICROSOFT UPDATE SERVER HAD NOT BEEN PATCHED FOR THE DEFAULT.IDA BUFFER OVERFLOW. You could argue that there is no single server anywhere on the internet where security is more important than windows update, and yet an automated worm was actually able to execute arbitrary code on their server remotely.

    Meaning that had an alert black-hat gotten there before Code Red had, they could have done some REALLY SCARY STUFF. For example, they could have taken the default.ida patch that everyone was downloading to defeat code red, and inserted some kind of backorifice-like trojan into every sixteenth download of it, or something, and if they were careful it's possible no one would have ever noticed. No? Is there any reason i'm overreacting, or wrong? Can anyone at this point justify EVER trusting Microsoft as a customer on ANYTHING, EVER AGAIN, after seeing *windows update taken infected* by a worm that could be protected against by an already-old patch??

    I see three lessons to be learned from the whole code red thing:
    • Operating systems like RedHat and NT need to have services off by DEFAULT, and the interface by which users turn those services on and off needs to be clear and simple so that A) "Off by default" doesn't mean "the users don't benefit and B) Users know what they're enabling, and don't enable things they don't need. (The default.ida thingy that Code Red exploits DID NOT need to be on by default. It is as far as i can gather only useful for people hosting sites with search engines, which i would suspect an absolutely minimal number of the infected sites did. If default.ida had remained non-web-accessable until such time as the sysadmin actually knew they wanted it installed and switched it on, Code Red would not have been even a MINOR problem, because few sites would be using it, and most of those few sites would have capable sysadpeople.) However, more relevantly to this thread:
    • Services like apt-get and Windows Update are absolutely necessary, because without them worms like Code Red can always thrive on the few inexperienced sysadmins left out there-- potentially causing harm to many others besides just the unpatched servers.
    • Microsoft does not place the kind of priority it NEEDS to on the security of its central Windows Update servers, and Microsoft Windows Update is not a completely trustable entity. Therefore if you are a small company that cannot afford a top-of-the-line sysadmin, and you want an OS with automatic patching mechanisms that you can set-and-forget and actually trust with the security of your server (as you suggest microsoft would like people to do), Windows XP is not an acceptable choice.
    Is ANYTHING i have said above that is at all inaccurate or unreasonable?
  35. Re:Some action finally? by tsa · · Score: 1

    I think Microsoft will really be punished if they are forced to make all their 'standards' open. That will open up the market for real competition, not competition in Microsoft's terms.

    --

    -- Cheers!

  36. Re:OT: Code Red Paranoia by cygnus · · Score: 2
    "Save hundreds of man-hours and millions of dollars by freeing your SysAdmins of the responsibility of constantly monitoring security lists and keeping up with the latest patches."
    isn't that what RedHat is selling now?
    * Save time -- let Red Hat keep your systems current
    Connect your systems to the Linux and open source experts at Red Hat, who keep you informed and your systems up to date.
    --
    Just raise the taxes on crack.
  37. Re:Commingling? by Soko · · Score: 2
    "I'll love it too when the Justice Dept. forces me to pay an extra $49 for the "Microsoft Bonus Pack" featuring IE and Windows Media Player.

    Seriously, IE is so far ahead of other browsers MS could charge for it, but they don't.

    Does anyone really think justice would be served forcing millions of Windows users to pay for the extras that you now get for free?"



    Geez, you're a Windoze user, so brush up on the 1337 VV1nd0VVz ski11z Lord Billy gave you and use Windows Update fercryinoutloud.

    Seriously, IE is a killer browser. Making it free to download is OK - that would be my choice. Forced on to my system? Not OK, since I can't even get rid of it if I want to.

    We're talking about freedom to choose, bud, not freedom from effort (or giving MS a little more profit.)

    Soko
    --
    "Depression is merely anger without enthusiasm." - Anonymous
  38. But didn't they already win? by augustz · · Score: 4
    I thought Microsoft had already hailed the ruling as a victory. Here's BillG's quote:

    "BILL GATES: Thank you for coming today. We're still reviewing the details of the ruling from the Court of Appeals, but it's clear that it reverses and significantly narrows the District Court's decision. The ruling lifts the cloud of breakup over the company, reverses the tying claim and says clearly that we did not attempt to monopolize the browser market."

  39. Re:"Commingling" by Nightpaw · · Score: 1

    Your point?

  40. Re:Remedy suggestions? by Shadow+Knight · · Score: 1
    >* In fact, if the OS and Apps split did happen my
    >guess is that the Apps company might seriously
    >rethink it's investment in MS Office for the
    >Macintosh. It's almost certainly a significant
    >investment for such a small market.

    The Macintosh Business Unit is the most profitable unit in Microsoft, in terms of return on investment. Office for Mac isn't going anywhere anytime soon (and please, remember that the Macintosh market as a whole is still many, many, many times larger than the Linux desktop market!). It has been said (by people at MS) that the MacBU is subsidising a great deal of the rest of MS (such as the X-Box...). So, I think they'd be rethinking their commitment to Office on Windows before Office on Mac (if MS was broken up).

    later,
    Shadow Knight

    Supreme Lord High Commander of the Interstellar Task Force for the Eradication of Stupidity

    --

  41. weasel by cpeterso · · Score: 1


    not "weasle"

  42. More competition is needed by The+Cat · · Score: 2

    The decision that the "bundling" actually took place will be important, because it will allow for more competition. Here's a good example:

    Last weekend we were building an install program for a demo of our current project.

    Anyway, the first "install" program was built with the included VB "Toolkit" It produced a broken, unstable mess of an install program that did everything wrong and complained about "compatibility" every step of the way. It also produced complaints from potential customers, which is a real problem.

    Then I remembered that Installshield Express was included on the Borland C++ Builder disk, but I was having trouble finding it. So I went to Installshield's site. The purchase price: $350 (not an option) After an hour of looking, I finally found it and installed it.

    Ten minutes later, we had an excellent setup program. No dialogs, errors, warnings, or problems of any kind. No further complaints from customers. It was awesome. It was without doubt, the best Windows program I have ever used.

    Without good competition, programs like this would never be written. Hopefully the MS case can lead to more competition and benefits for everyone.

  43. Take us seriously! by cthrall · · Score: 1
    I love the word "Commingling". I wish it meant something cooler then it does.

    Wonder why more people don't take Slashdot and open source seriously...

    1. Re:Take us seriously! by NSupremo · · Score: 1

      It would help the slashdot reputation if its users, and its moderators didnt do things like MOD-UP 25 virtually identical ""Commingling"" comments.

      --
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2004_U.S._Election_co ntroversies_and_irregularities
  44. Re:"Commingling" by MindStalker · · Score: 1

    Isn't that last definition the definition to Cunnilingus, where did you find that def? I'm curious?

  45. m$ pr by djinn87 · · Score: 1

    microsoft's pr department was quick to point out that, "we didn't want a rehearing anyways," and stated further, "this is a huge win for innovation, consumers, and, of course, microsoft."

  46. Re:Remedy suggestions? by Webmonger · · Score: 2

    You make the dangerous assumption that Microsoft file formats, APIs and protocols are comprehensible and reimplementable . . . :)

  47. Re:So now what? by SuperKendall · · Score: 3

    The point is not so much that they couldn't bundle IE with windows (they could), but that since a seperate company would be developing IE other browser (or any other app) makers would have access to the same API's. Additionally while they could bundle IE, they couldn't stop anyone from not bundling IE and including something else instead (like Mozilla).

    So the basic theory behind a breakup (which I'm not sure is the best idea either) is to give more opportunity for competitors to comete equally in any application space.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  48. Re:Strategy by Ozric · · Score: 1

    Who says they cant take it back? Did you ever hear of a product recall? It would cost MSFT millions to do, but who cares. They should know better by now.

  49. They have no grounds for a rehearing by Ozric · · Score: 2

    The FOF was never in question. The MSFT just tried to spin the last battle. It was a bad day for MSFT and they are just getting what they deserve.

    Now, open the API's and file formats, put them on the same diet as IBM. And fine the hell out of them. No more preloading only MSFT products on PCs and Servers. Give the consumers choice, and make the OEM's buy back unused Licenses like the EULA states or declare it null and void.

  50. Re:Some action finally? by Flower · · Score: 1

    The article was updated. The first one I saw only talked about the MS setback.

    --
    I don't want knowledge. I want certainty. - Law, David Bowie
  51. Re:Cool by melevitt · · Score: 2

    No, it's not "business people," it's Microsoft. By trying to generalize this to all businesses, you are missing the point of monopoly laws and the ruling of the court.

    The laws restraining the practices of a monopoly are designed to ensure free markets and to foster competition. Microsoft is a monopoly that acted to restrict free competition. That is what a court of law, and now an appeals court, have decided.

    Microsoft was not found guilty because they were "successful."

  52. Favorite use of the word "commingling" by Allen+Akin · · Score: 1

    How long has it been since you've seen "Harold and Maude?" Check out the scene in which Harold is given advice by the family clergyman...

    1. Re:Favorite use of the word "commingling" by Dr.+Smeegee · · Score: 1

      "The thought of your firm, young..... body... c-c-c-comingling with the withered flesh, sagging....breasts and drooping.........BUHtocks....
      *choke*
      Makes me want to vomit."

      One of the funniest scenes in cinema. It was the first thing I thought of too! :-)

  53. Re:I wonder if the injunction on XP is behind it a by paitre · · Score: 1

    I don't believe there's an injunction in place yet, although one has been requested by several parties, incl the DOJ.
    There's also been a similar request in a -different- antitrust suit that MS is now balttling with.

  54. Re:Some action finally? by jmauro · · Score: 2

    Except they're allowing the case to proceed a normal speed. It's still going to take a good long time to actually get a remedy. I feel it will be sometime after the release of Windows ZR or something silly like that. XP won't be blocked at the speed they're going.

  55. Re:PR weasles, etc. by mcfiddish · · Score: 2
    We need to drive home that they screwed up. They need the thousand watt lightbulb experience on this. They need to get it. Wrist slap penalties do not do this.

    That's exactly why Jackson was viewed as biased! He said something to the effect of "if you need to get a mule's attention, whack him on the head with a 2-by-4". Hence the break-up order.

    If the DOJ isn't careful here (and I think they won't be), MS will get off with a wrist-slap, declare a victory for apple pie and the American way, and go back to "innovating".

  56. Re:PR weasles, etc. by mpe · · Score: 2

    I doubt that any cash penalty is going to be big enough to stop Microsoft (particularly after it's been reduced by appeals.)

    One thing which really needs to happen is for any action to take place before an appeal is heard.

    Furthermore, an attempt to prevent them from releasing future versions of Windows would be pretty flimsy and easily appealed (putting a company out of business isn't a fair penalty, nor is it necessarily good for consumers.)

    There comes a point where putting Microsoft out of business is the only option...
    As for it hurting customers should The Mafia not be punished because it is likely to hurt other businesses?

  57. Corporate Death Penalty (Re:Remedy suggestions?) by jamesc · · Score: 1
    How about:

    5) Discorporate MSFT - corporations are a legal construct after all, so when one oversteps the bounds of law as repeatedly, aggressively, and unashamedly as Microsoft, revoke its charter. Force an auction of all MSFT assets, including source code, to the highest bidder. Split the assets into small portions and sell them separately. Current MSFT executives and major stockholders will be prohibited from buying these assets.

    6) Charge Microsoft's executives in criminal court - The evidence presented was fairly damning. It showed that the anti-competetive behavior was initiated and encouraged at the very top of the corporate hierarchy. Put Gates, Ballmer, Alchin, etc, on trial for racketeering. If found guilty, throw their @$$es into jail -- no probation allowed.

    And, what about those who submitted the doctored video tapes of rigged demos in the first phase of the trial? I'm still waiting for perjury charges to be filed against them....

    Hey, I can dream can't I? ;^)
    --

    --
    "You've crossed my Line of Death!" "What? No! Where is it?" "Here in the fine print...."
  58. Re:Corporate Death Penalty (Re:Remedy suggestions? by jamesc · · Score: 1
    And a two-hundred billion dollar corporation goes *poof*, along with 195 billion dollars worth of stock. Stock owned by voters, or retirement funds (in turn owned by voters.)

    As others have posted, the proceeds would go to the existing stockholders in amounts that are proportional to the number of shares held. This has the ironic side effect of making Gates and Ballmer even richer than they are now. Oh well....
    --

    --
    "You've crossed my Line of Death!" "What? No! Where is it?" "Here in the fine print...."
  59. "Commingling" by macdaddy · · Score: 2
    commingle(kö-mïngg&#2 46;l)
    v. commingled, commingling, commingles
    v. intr.
    To become blended.
    v. tr.
    To cause to blend together; mix.

    --

    1. Re:"Commingling" by dynoman7 · · Score: 1
      From Dictionary.com search for Cumming

      Cumming, GA (city, FIPS 20932) Location: 34.20876 N, 84.13513 W Population (1990): 2828 (1031 housing units) Area: 12.3 sq km (land), 0.1 sq km (water) Zip code(s): 30130 Cumming, IA (city, FIPS 17850) Location: 41.48469 N, 93.76176 W Population (1990): 132 (49 housing units) Area: 1.4 sq km (land), 0.0 sq km (water) Zip code(s): 50061



      If the only tool you have is a hammer, you tend to see every problem as a nail.
      --
      Blarf.
    2. Re:"Commingling" by evanbd · · Score: 4
      If knowledge is power, and power is sexy, then why am I still single??

      Because your concept of knowledge involves copy/pasting from dictionaries.

    3. Re:"Commingling" by Bobo+the+Space+Chimp · · Score: 1

      Because knowledge of how to rocket jump or where the best soloing area for a level 23-38 shadow knight troll with rubicite breastplate doesn't count.

      --
      I am for the complete Trantorization of Earth.
  60. Re:who's next? by BAKup · · Score: 1

    Well, my 2001 Chevy Caviler radio controls the door chime, the AIRBAGS and THE FRIGGIN IGNITION SYSTEM!!!! It cost me $250 to have a radio installed, and what they had to do was run wire harness to the trunk, so they could keep the radio in the circut so that my car could run. Now if that's not trying to tie up a market, I don't know what is.

  61. Re:peering into my crystal ball by Malcontent · · Score: 2

    They already did. Go read John Ashcroft's resume and then read his daughters resume.

    You can then start crying about how our justice system is bought and sold like so many brussel sprouts.

    --

    War is necrophilia.

  62. Re:Remedy suggestions? by greenrd · · Score: 1
    True - but if we strike that, I think what's left is the best scenario we can reasonably hope for.

  63. Re:Remedy suggestions? by Hard_Code · · Score: 2

    "forbid MS to break compatibility with or deprecate any existing ones."

    No. This is a death even Microsoft does not deserve.

    --

    It's 10 PM. Do you know if you're un-American?
  64. Remedy suggestions? by bungalow · · Score: 5

    Now that we have had some of the findings validated, but TPJ's remedies thrown out, What should the Remedy / Punishment be?

    1) Big whoppin' fine. It'll be paid, there may be shareholder lawsuits, and the lesser - paid (and lesser-empowered) MS employees will be laid off. Executives' current holdings will be impacted somewhat, but the greatest pain will be felt on their wrist. Any further Econonic Downturns will be blamed on that Evil Justice Department's clearly misguded antagonistic attitude regarding the Freedom to Innovate.

    2) Limitations on future behavior, (consent decrees) - we all know how well they worked the last time.

    3) Strict government oversight - this sounds a bit too Big - Brotherish to me, even if Microsoft wants to become Big Brother.

    4) Require MS to open - Source Hailstorm - MS will respond by killing it in favor of MS - Tornado, a similar, but Legally Different Innovation, with identical, transparent, but unstated goals.

    1. Re:Remedy suggestions? by medcalf · · Score: 1

      I like the idea of baby-bills, but there is a problem. Each company will have a base API, and each will create their own "better" APIs on top of this. Of course, all app developers will then write to the basic API, because they can run their apps on all three (or however many) versions of Windows. This means that:

      1) The API will be effectively frozen, unless all of the players involved agree to extending it in a certain way. This limits certain possibilities for supporting new hardware and applications, because such agreement is virtually impossible.
      2) The support costs for app developers will go up dramatically (why does this work on Win-A but not Win-B?).
      3) Any chance for using Linux or MacOS as desktop alternatives will begin to disappear, since there will be little incentive to app developers to port when there are multiple vendors for Win*. Unless UNIX converges into a common code base (or at least library/API base), there would not be a large enough market to justify the effort of porting when you are already supporting the three largest OSs on the market. As a Mac and Linux user, this would be bad.

      All of that said, though, it's not a bad idea.

      --
      -- Two men say they're Jesus. One of them must be wrong. - Dire Straits
    2. Re:Remedy suggestions? by stomv · · Score: 2

      6) Break MS up into smaller companies - perhaps hardware, OS, and apps. This way Windows wouldn't be able to coattail on the office suite. The apps company would make its software work just as well for Mac as Win, as well as Linux perhaps. The OS would be forced to survive on its own merits, which means it would either become better (good for consumers) or it would vanish (if it couldn't hack it on its own, well, extinction can be a good thing).

    3. Re:Remedy suggestions? by keytoe · · Score: 2

      Now that we have had some of the findings validated, but TPJ's remedies thrown out...

      When exactly did The Perl Journal get involved? Oh, wait... I get it. He meant Texans for Public Justice. Or maybe The Tube and Pipe Journal...

    4. Re:Remedy suggestions? by bmajik · · Score: 2

      Microsoft will be happy to put Office on linux when:

      1) Linux is as easy to develop business-class software for as Windows

      2) When a Linux user is willing to pay for a peice of software

      People often assume that if you break apart OS+Apps, then immediately everything gets ported to linux. Nothing could be further from the truth. So much that the OS provodies is just not there at all in linux.

      --
      My opinions are my own, and do not necessarily represent those of my employer.
    5. Re:Remedy suggestions? by bmajik · · Score: 2

      1) PostScript is great, but most printers dont speak postscript natively. So now you're talking about some filtering system that does something with the postscript. Which may or may not work right with everything you're trying to print. And where is the standard "Printer Prefs" panel for Linux postscript printers ? If Linux/UNIX has printing down so well, why does WP/Solaris (btw, Solaris _does_ have a tightly integrated PS printing system) still use its own custom printer config system ? Why have I never seen any two UNIX programs print the same way ?

      The level of functionality in UNIX printing is similar to what you had dos - you shat stuff at LPT1, well, in UNIX you shat stuff (even if its as elegant as Postscript) at the parallel port, or maybe if you're like most people, at some filters that turn PS into device-dependant printer languages.

      So, commong Office Printing
      Linux 0: MS: 1

      Next, GUI APIs:
      Well, so part of the problem here is that you're basically talking about Win32 vs Xwindows. There have been lots of attempts at coming up with a good X based desktop environment. None have really universally caught on...but lets look at a few of ths most common:

      CDE - people bitch about it being too bloated, yet its the most consistantly designed and implemented of the available envs. Even so, since it builds on Motif+Xt, you get the usual "where the FUCK are those stupid Xresources coming from" problems. Note that I dont have these problems, but I typically dont try and do anything special/interesting with my Xresources. However, try running an X program like Knews under CDE, and see how awful the CDE colorschemes look. You'll need to screw with Xt settings to fix that.

      The ridiculousness of setting per-app preferences (in different files, according to different systems, etc) makes it difficult to have consistant feel and configuration.

      This is just CDE. Of CDE, KDE, and Gnome, only CDE isn't a moving target (Gnome is the worst offender here).

      Gnome - What minor revision of GTK are you running ? What about Glib ? What about imlib/gdkpixbuf/whoknows. Forget that, im not interested. And all that time you spent learning how Xt worked so you could _try_ and debug the resources for 90% of all X programs ? Forget it, GTK throws your time/knowledge investments away. Maybe rightfully so, but its just more shit for app developers and users to keep track of.

      Linux: 0 MS: 2

      Database-independant data access:
      Not much to say here. Having done Sybase programming from C/C++ under IRIX, I can say that its not especially pretty, but I dont imagine its any different under W32 C. That said, php makes mysql lovely to access, but on the other hand mysql from C isn't as hot. as far as using ODBC under UNIX, i've never tried it.

      Conclusion: I'm not qualified to judge

      Networked File Services:
      Well, NFS on linux _sucks_. Samba on linux is a great connectivity tool when compared with "not connecting", but its always going to be a 2nd class citizen in the CIFS world. I don't necessarily see what NFS or CIFS has to do with porting MS Office though..

      As far as "etc etc"...

      well yes, lets see what you get with MS. Oh, COM! Like, basically anything anyone has released is COM. So you can run it just about anywhere. What about a common installer framework (MSI) ? Dont say RPM - it barely works right on redhat, much less all the other linux distros. What about library versioning.. Kernel versioning.. multiple interfaces coexisting correctly ?

      These are things that are probably possible, but no one seems to ship systems that way. Is it even possible to ship a large complex component based peice of software for Linux, given all the library churn ?

      Antying is possible - its just software. When you take Office as designed for windows, and try to port to linux - you lose a lot of the thigns windows give you for free. Some of which that do NOT have equal counterparts on Linux. A port of Office would be damn hard, and as I said earlier, its not clear anyone would buy it.

      --
      My opinions are my own, and do not necessarily represent those of my employer.
    6. Re:Remedy suggestions? by jea6 · · Score: 1

      How big a fine should it be? I don't think they'll go that high.

      --

      sarchasm: The gulf between the author of sarcastic wit and the person who doesn't get it.
    7. Re:Remedy suggestions? by DickBreath · · Score: 2

      I believe the only correct way to break up MS is NOT to break them up along product lines.

      Instead, break them up into several baby-Bills. Each with ALL of their products. Now you'll have true competition. Several companies selling the same OS, Office, etc. The products will fork, because each company will want to differentiate and improve it's product over the competition.

      If an OEM can't get a good deal from Microsoft-A, then they can try going to Microsoft-B, or Microsoft-C for more favorable terms. Microsoft-B would want to compete against Microsoft-A and Microsoft-C, so would have some incentive to try to acquire that screwed over OEM from Microsoft-A. Microsoft-B has an obligation to it's shareholders to try to beat out Microsoft-A and Microsoft-C.
      --
      "Linux is a cancer" -- Steve Ballmer, CEO Microsoft.

      --

      I'll see your senator, and I'll raise you two judges.
    8. Re:Remedy suggestions? by DickBreath · · Score: 2

      The support costs for app developers will go up dramatically (why does this work on Win-A but not Win-B?).

      It would be in the intrest of all three baby-bills to make this not happen.

      The API will be effectively frozen, unless all of the players involved agree to extending it in a certain way. This limits certain possibilities for supporting new hardware and applications, because such agreement is virtually impossible.

      It would be in their economic interest to agree. But other OSes couldn't be excluded from helping to set standards. Standards settings groups of industry leaders could be formed, as sometimes happens right now.



      Another thought I had. What of one of the baby-bills had a revelation and saw the Open Source light? Hmmmm. :-)
      --
      "Linux is a cancer" -- Steve Ballmer, CEO Microsoft.

      --

      I'll see your senator, and I'll raise you two judges.
  65. Re:PR weasles, etc. by ScumBiker · · Score: 1

    That's weasels.
    Thank You.



    Dive Gear

    --
    --- Think of it as evolution in action ---
  66. Re:I've said it before by Knobby · · Score: 1

    Dresses won't necessarily stop anything.. They'll just increase the applications from Scottish programmers. Seriously, dresses could be very comfortable..

  67. Limits on corporatism by diablovision · · Score: 3

    Yo jigga, you don't wanna be around when Big bad DOJ comes busting down on yo ass like an 800 pound gorilla...

    Seriously tho, as much as Katz complains about corporatism in America, it is good to see our government wield the power to punish greedy corporatism severely when it is clear it has overstepped its bounds. The examples may be few of government versus big business, but their are illustrative: the judicial branch is by no means in the pocket of corporate America.

    Welcome to checks and balances, limited government sphere of influence, and this is a good example of the benefits those separations bring.

    --
    120 characters isn't enough to explain it.
    1. Re:Limits on corporatism by GungaDan · · Score: 1
      "the judicial branch is by no means in the pocket of corporate America."

      Right on! From the looks of Fat Tony and the Coke Can Man, they've moved right out of the pocket and are now firmly implanted in the rectal cavity of said corporate 'murka. Just 'cause these judges occassionaly twitch and seize like a gerbil dying from "ass"phyxiation and bother their corporate hosts, we shouldn't leap to the assumption that they're any less the property of their masters.

      --
      Eloi are stupid, throw morlocks at them!
    2. Re:Limits on corporatism by spookyfluke · · Score: 1

      Ever stop to consider that they may be in the pockets of those who would like to see MS go down?

      --
      you.bases.each{|base|base.are_belong_to=us}
    3. Re:Limits on corporatism by electroniceric · · Score: 1

      Very well put.

      You're right that Microsoft has many enemies who are pushing to unseat them. History won't ever tell us whether Sun would have done the same thing. I still think it's good thing to do some agitating about all this power over technology being consolidated into one set of hands.

      I'm still struggling to reconcile the personality of the considerable number of Microsoft employees I call friends with the substantially more unpleasant corporate personality of the organization as a whole.

      Thanks again for the perspective.

  68. Dan Gilmore's comment - stop XP by hey · · Score: 1

    Dan Gilmore writes that now is the time to stop WinXP. Darn good points - every one.

  69. Wow... by Moonshadow · · Score: 2

    ...that's a suprise. I had almost reached the point where I believed Microsoft could buy as many appeals as they wanted.

    Chalk one up for the remaining shreds of sanity in the justice system.

  70. Re:So now what? by Darby · · Score: 1

    My experience is that IE is and was (at least by the time bundling started) simply better.

    Your memory is faulty.
    IE was bundled when people would still rather pay for Netscape then to use IE for free.
    This doesn't necessarily have anything to do with the current state of the browsers, but at the time that was the reason.
    IE was a complete and utter piece of crap until very recently.

    ---CONFLICT!!---

  71. Re:PR weasles, etc. by fanatic · · Score: 2

    The result is that the Dev crew maintains its loyalty, and doesn't realize their inadvertant complicity

    Not quite: from http://www.vcnet.com/bms/departments/dirtytricks.s html: On November 18, 1998 the digital greeting card company Blue Mountain Arts discovered that beta versions of Microsoft's Outlook Express (which comes free with Internet Explorer) were automatically filing Blue Mountain's e-mail greeting cards into the "junk" folder rather than the "inbox"...It turns out that after an unsuccessful attempt to purchase Blue Mountain Arts, Microsoft started its own electronic greeting card service.

    So the developers are in on it too. This shows that the corruption spans the company hoizontally (the part that owns their own greeting card company can influence the part that produces software) and also vertically (the higher ups will get the guys who actually write the code to do sleazy stuff like this). In other words, they are rotten through and through. Kill 'em all and let god sort it out.

    --

    --
    "that's not encryption - it's a new perl script that I'm working on..." - from some Matrix parody
  72. You must be using Internet Explorer by sg3000 · · Score: 2

    > Why has this story got a `compaq` icon?

    Mine's showing the standard Microsoft/Borg icon. An icon which was funny when I first saw it, but becomes more appropriate with each passing day.

    --
    Insert simplistic political, ideological, or personal proselytization here.
    1. Re:You must be using Internet Explorer by jeffy124 · · Score: 1

      Out of curiosity of my own - I've noticed other sites using slashcode use the windows 4-color flag logo as MS's icon. Did /. at one time use that too? Or did MS cite tm and (c) violations, hence the reason we now have a lovely picture of Bill Gates? Basically I'm asking how did the MS/Borg icon become the icon for MS stories?

      --
      The One Rule Of Chess You'll Ever Need: Don't play someone who carries a kit in their bookbag.
  73. Re:I wonder if the injunction on XP is behind it a by donutello · · Score: 5

    I remember reading here (correct me if I'm wrong) that M.S. has an injunction placed on their XP release of Windows.

    There is currently no injunction on the XP release. Certain senators and state attorneys want one but it isn't there yet.

    Suddenly, they seem willing to settle out of court or at least want to hurry the process. Looks like they are getting to know what it feels like when you get dragged through court. I'm just wondering if all this effort to end this case on M.S.'s end is because they are afraid they won't be able to release XP as it is or when they want.

    Huhh?? Maybe you're in a different world from the rest of us. Microsoft is actually the one who wanted this to be revisited and not fast-tracked. They want this to go on as long as possible. It's the government on the other hand that wanted this case to be fast-tracked.

    "Insightful"? How about "Totally Wrong"

    --
    Mmmm.. Donuts
  74. Re:This Whole Thing... by krmt · · Score: 2

    You could always send a telegraph or write a letter rather than use AT&T. No one is forcing you to make that call, the same way no one is forcing you to have windows. Sure, there are alternatives, but are they truly valid?

    Most people are locked in to Windows. Be was (is?) a great OS, but it didn't go anywhere even though it was easy to use as Windows and more stable than *NIX (from all accounts that I've heard). The fact that it failed should tell you something about the power MS has over vendors. Even Intel was backing Be for a while.

    "I may not have morals, but I have standards."

    --

    "I may not have morals, but I have standards."

  75. Re:This Whole Thing... by krmt · · Score: 2

    MS does have a monopoly by my standard as well, because they have a strong lock on an entire form of communication. Granted, you can do computing with a Mac or Linux, but it's not nearly as good an option any more because of MS's disgusting practice of holding everyone else hostage via Windows or Office.

    They do have a monopoly in Office suites, whether or not you care to admit it, and it's not because Office was always a better product, but because they were able to bundle it with Windows and place everyone else out of the game through their ownership of the OS. Lotus had a good office suite, as did Corel, and they were on par with MS's suite when they faded out. Same thing happened with the browser. You can't really do Office work on a Mac without MS Office, and it's a major reason why people say Linux isn't ready for the desktop. MS does have a monopoly on both the browser and Office, both as a result of their near complete dominance of the desktop marketplace.

    It's actually a lot like the whole Ticketmaster debacle of a few years back. Sure, there was a competitor or two (which probably makes them not a monopoly by your definition) but they weren't realistic competitors, and the overwhelming power of Ticketmaster prevented them from really competing. You don't have to be the only game in town to be a monopoly, you just have to be the only one that people are forced to use.

    "I may not have morals, but I have standards."

    --

    "I may not have morals, but I have standards."

  76. Court Denies Microsoft Request for Rehearing by NTSwerver · · Score: 5


    Was it anything to do with this?

    ------------------------

    --
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    Moderator's essentials
  77. Commingling? by Zaphod+B · · Score: 2

    Ya know, where I come from, "commingling" is what you do with various parts of a recycling system (tin, steel, aluminium, etc.) before putting it out with the trash to be collected.

    Now that I think about it...


    Zaphod B
    --
    Zaphod B
    When duplication is outlawed, only outlaws will have /bin/cp
    1. Re:Commingling? by dfenstrate · · Score: 1
      1. Why should you be forced to pay for IE when I buy a copy of windows?

      This isn't the US government or anything. Once you give your money to microsoft, it's theirs to do with as they please. Comingling aside, if they want to give away something they developed with their hard earned money, thats their business alone. Unless you're a stockholder, which I doubt.

      Why should I be forced to use it at work, despite my perception of it's inferiority?

      Because at work, it's not your computer. If you don't like your company's IT policies, attacking microsofts business practices is an awfully roundabout way to effect change.

      I'm not defending microsoft, I just thought I'd point a few things out.

      --
      Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms should be the name of a store, not a government agency.
    2. Re:Commingling? by CrackElf · · Score: 2

      You missed the point. I am going to assume that you are not some random troll.
      1) you do pay for ie. all windows users do, wether they use it or not. tanstaafl. Paying for ms*, you pay for their 'free' products. Now, my opinion of IE is that it is inferior, and in fact dangerous (in terms of viri and other malicious code) to run on your computer. Why should I 1) be forced to pay for ie when i buy a copy of windows to play diabloii? and why should i 2) be forced to use it at work, despite my perception of it's inferiority? (this happens because the boss ppl want to 'standardize' the office, and because of the convenience of the software already being set up on the machine and the fact that they will do the thing that takes the least effort and standardize, ie is their choice.)
      The issue is not which browser is better, it is the being denied the freedom to chose which browser you like and want to support.
      Would you not be a little miffed if the situation were reversed, and you were forced to select / pay for / a browser that you did not have any desire to use?
      -CrackElf

      --
      "Blake is an idealist, Jenna. He cannot afford to think." - Kerr Avon, Star One, Blakes 7
    3. Re:Commingling? by CrackElf · · Score: 2

      This isn't the US government or anything. Once you give your money to microsoft, it's theirs to do with as they please. Comingling aside, if they want to give away something they developed with their hard earned money, thats their business alone. Unless you're a stockholder, which I doubt.

      I was arguing against the deception that you do not pay for windows. Someone pays those programmers to do their job. The money comes from the profit that they make (and they make a lot of it ... saying things like hard earned money is slightly misleading ... they make a *lot* of money ... it is not like we are talking about starving minimum wage lifestyles for the stockholders.) The idea behind the capitalist economic model is that a person 'votes' or 'supports' the things that they feel are valid. But dominance in one market (operating systems) should not give them the right to dictate another market (browsers). That is illegal. They are not giving anything away. It is like when a department store lowers its book prices to undersell used book stores in order to corner the market in a specific geographical area, and then, once the other stores are out of business, raising the prices to the normal price. It is both illegal and immoral, and it leads to less freedom of choice for individuals. And personally, I do not care about the freedom of choice for dirty unwashed masses. I care about the freedom of choice for me. Netscape was not forced out of the market because they built an inferior product. They were forced out because microsoft lowered the price of the browser below the cost of production using the money from another enterprise.

      Because at work, it's not your computer. If you don't like your company's IT policies, attacking microsofts business practices is an awfully roundabout way to effect change.

      The problem with the IT policies (and it happens at many companies) is that they are not driven by what product is *best* but by what product comes prebundled. Thus, microsoft prebundling 'free' software unfairly inhibits the normal selection of software based on perceived quality. I would not have a problem with them choosing ie if they came to that decision through a process other than 'well, it came pre bundled, so that is what we will use'. And while yes, in an ideal world it policy would be driven by something other than laziness, this is not an ideal world, and microsoft knows that and takes advantage of it. Then they cross into the illegal realm by forcing businesses to *only* bundle ms products (or products ms gives them permission to bundle).

      I try not to be a raving anti-microsoft techie, but it is hard when ms-pplz do not take the time to try and see things from the other side's point of view. Well, that is my 2c, I have to get back to work or I will be here all night.

      -CrackElf

      --
      "Blake is an idealist, Jenna. He cannot afford to think." - Kerr Avon, Star One, Blakes 7
  78. Re:OT: Code Red Paranoia by 4of12 · · Score: 3

    are going to be used as a rallying cry for Microsoft to take patching/updating out of the sysadmins hands and into XP, where it will be handled automatically

    Whaddya mean?

    I thought that (ZAW) Zero Administration Windows was already long since a reality!

    I'm puzzled by all this talk of "system administration" for Windows.

    Shows how "out of it" I am. ZAW must have been superseded by Something Better.

    --
    "Provided by the management for your protection."
  79. Re:difference =... by Christianfreak · · Score: 3
    Now if KDE came built directly into the Kernal and you could not uninstall it and use Gnome, that would be illegal.

    Not exactly. The problem is that MS is a monopoly, Thus bundling in this way is illegal because it is an abuse of their monopoly power. If KDE were to create their own distro with the GUI in the kernal where you couldn't take it out it would still be legal because they don't have a monopoly.


    "One World, one Web, one Program" - Microsoft promotional ad

  80. Stocks by awarlaw · · Score: 1

    is this why Gates filed to sell some of his shares a few days ago??

    --
    TIME is the Aether...
    1. Re:Stocks by MaxwellStreet · · Score: 1
      Actually, when reading an article profiling Gates' personal financial manager in Fortune(?) some time ago, the manager said that one of his daily tasks was to sell about 80K shares of MSFT from Gates' portfolio in an attempt to diversify it.

      I think I remember that correctly.

      Anyway, the point is that I'm sure he's selling MSFT stock almost constantly.

  81. OT: Code Red Paranoia by the+Man+in+Black · · Score: 3

    (Well maybe not) Speaking of that...

    Am I the only one who takes the COMPLETE paranoid view that Code Red (and all the other IIS virii) are going to be used as a rallying cry for Microsoft to take patching/updating out of the sysadmins hands and into XP, where it will be handled automatically? I can almost hear the marketroids..."Save hundreds of man-hours and millions of dollars by freeing your SysAdmins of the responsibility of constantly monitoring security lists and keeping up with the latest patches." Jeez.

  82. huh? by twitter · · Score: 1
    Last time I looked at a newspaper, about four months ago, the sections were clearly seperable though poorly written. Though software is nothing like printed work, the newspapers will get it. Heh, all you have to do is try to remove MSIE to understand that Billy G made the entire OS dependent on it. Poor Mr. Com - pooter won't work.

    Oh yeah, last time I check the news stands the specialty mags for sports, weather and horoscopes were doing very well. None of them should be, dead trees is a dead medium.

    The harm windoze does is measured directly at $250/per person in US. That's how much MS rakes in each year for it's crappy wares. The indirect cost, from lost work, user stress and sysadmin nervous breakdowns must be an order of magnitude greater. The judgement will be irrelevant by delivery time.

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

  83. Hmm, had'nt thought about that by twitter · · Score: 1
    Games, I forgot about that. It used to be a big driving force in hardware development. That's changed, hasn't it? Isn't the current IT downturn part due to gamer saturation?

    Got Quake on Linux, haven't tried it out but I will. Windows box fails to boot these days, so I have not been playing many games lately. I imagine more people will start developing games for Linux as MS flunks itself out and continues to screw everyone it associated with them.

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

  84. OK, here's why I hate it. by twitter · · Score: 1
    It bugs me that MSIE is used for all kinds of junk the OS or GUI should handle. Passing the info back and forth makes for instability, not to mention resource shortages. Loading up large parts of a large browser fills up your RAM. It's more objectionable still if you never use that browser because it is loaded with security holes, and lacks control of content. Ever try to surf with IE and no images to avoid adverts? I did, but some kind of default preference brought them back up every time I started the stupid thing. It's slow and bloaty for no reason other than to push adverts on you.

    Get this, my 150MHz cyrix Media GX with 64MB of RAM gives me good control over what I surf with Mozilla, runs it's own email and ftp servers without problems. It runs about as fast as a 450 AMD K6/2 with nothing but a browser does. Starting to see it now?

    Oh yeah, I to pay for and use this crap at work. Why of why does IT here mean MS?

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

  85. Easy response by twitter · · Score: 2
    All they have to do is continue to use the word "bundeling" and rely on ignorance of what they did. "Bundle" completely hides the comingiling by implying that MSIE is a free gift and removable part of the OS. Who doesn't like ham sandwiches?

    It seems to be falling apart, though. The NYT article did not get it, but they are closer to seeing. They used the term "mingeling" to describe the MSIE dependence of the OS. The CNN article, if it did use the term "comingiling" shows a greater understanding. Sooner or later a reporter at one of the larger news houses is going to understand that the MS way of passing all sorts of low level crap therough the GUI and browser funcion calls is an ineficient and destabilizing, technique with the sole purpose of exerting inapropriate control over developers and users. When he convinces his editor of this you will see the word comingle togeter with relavant examples of unrelated functions that should not be mixed. They might even catch on to means by wich MS exerts control over hardware makers so they don't release drivers for any but MS OS (larger threat, fight DCMA and UnAmerican reverse engineering restrictions!).

    Of course, by then enough people may have realized they don't need MS BS to make their computers work that it won't be news. Who cares what happens to MS's soon to be bankrupt corpse?

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

    1. Re:Easy response by Bobo+the+Space+Chimp · · Score: 1

      Newspapers will never understand this.

      They've been comingling news, sports, weather, and horoscopes for a century now, putting mom and pop specialty newspapers out of business.

      I want a judgement! Why should they be able to comingle this stuff when clearly it hurts the consumer?

      --
      I am for the complete Trantorization of Earth.
  86. OT: Re:Easy response by AsbestosRush · · Score: 1

    Who cares what happens to MS's soon to be bankrupt corpse?

    Ohh... lemme think... just *90%* of the people who use their boxen to play *VIDEO GAMES*!

    I know that Wine has made some great steps in supporting DirectX, but unless a completly open alternative to D-X exists that can play nice on all platforms, video games will be Windows primarily, with ports by someone else or as an afterthought.
    Almost every (if not every) mainstream game house is firmly entrenched in Windows and D-X. A bankrupt MicroSoft would eventually do one of two things... 1.) Games become written specific to the hardware like they were in the 80's and early 90's. Or, 2.) A D-X like standard comes into play. Neither of these will happen before the gaming industry grinds to a shuttering halt. I'm all for open standards, and playing nice, but let's look at the entire picture here.

    --
    EveryDNS. Use it. It works.
    AC's need not reply
  87. Commingling by Zordak · · Score: 1

    I think it sounds kind of like fraternizing with the enemy. Who has that cool .sig about nobody ever winning the battle of the sexes because there's too much fraternization with the enemy? I think this is the perfect word for that, ala

    Nobody will ever win the war of the sexes because there is too much commingling.


    Today's Sesame Street was brought to you by the number e

    --

    Today's Sesame Street was brought to you by the number e.
  88. Compaq? by pallex · · Score: 2

    Why has this story got a `compaq` icon?

  89. Re:who's next? by frknfrk · · Score: 2

    Well, GM has more than a handful of real competitors. Microsoft's commingling is only illegal because they are... wait for it... a monopoly. That is what this suit is all about, Microsoft is a monopoly, and they are using their monopoly power in Operating Systems to enfore a monopoly in browsers, office suites, .net, etc, etc. If they were just a monopoly and not abusing their market position, this case simply would not exist. Don't like GM bundling power windows? By a Ford.

    --
    The REAL sam_at_caveman_dot_org is user ID 13833.
  90. Re:This Whole Thing... by frknfrk · · Score: 2
    I use Windows for my desktop because it is much simplier to get it to work with all of my devices, Printers, ORB Drive, Sound Card, etc.
    Of course you seem to be missing the point that it is simpler to get your devices to work with Windows because Microsoft's monopoly position basically means that all your devices, printers, sound card, etc, come with windows drivers only :) If all those devices came with Linux drivers instead, and NO windows drivers were available... well, I'll assume we are all able to make inferences.
    --
    The REAL sam_at_caveman_dot_org is user ID 13833.
  91. Re:breaking them up would be a headache by frknfrk · · Score: 2

    Before I say what I'm going to say, please read my other responses and realise that I am not a pro-MS zealot, etc, etc. But we have no right to the source code to Windows, and it would be a shame for the government to force them to open the source. A much better remedy, IMHO, would be to break the OS portion of the company into 3 (or more) competing entities. Then, if one of those fragments chose to open source their code for market advantage, so be it. But with competing 'Baby Bills' (not my name for it, but I've seen it enough that it has caught), you'll find things like more open interfaces and lower licensing costs naturally evolve.

    --
    The REAL sam_at_caveman_dot_org is user ID 13833.
  92. Re:breaking them up would be a headache by frknfrk · · Score: 2

    We don't have to. That is what the market is for. They are responsible to their shareholders. Then again, the shareholders don't seem to mind the 'commingling' going on between Sony, RCA, and the rest of the big labels, etc.

    --
    The REAL sam_at_caveman_dot_org is user ID 13833.
  93. Re:Corporate Death Penalty (Re:Remedy suggestions? by rgmoore · · Score: 1

    Well, the proceeds from the sale of their assets would be divided among the shareholders. It's about the only plausible way of disposing of the money.

    --
    Karma down to 50 again. Thanks Karma Kap.

    --

    There's no point in questioning authority if you aren't going to listen to the answers.

  94. Re:wow (OT - Sorry, I'll keep it short) by bendude · · Score: 1

    you don't have too much experience with the moderators do you?

    --


    Get the Hell off my planet, you slimy mobster Bush!
  95. Re:PR weasles, etc. by Rimbo · · Score: 2

    Actually, it's the other way around. Chile had been under democratic rule for nearly one hundred years; when the people chose a president who was a Communist, that's when the CIA gave Pinochet assistance.

    But it's faulty to think the CIA had everything to do with it. The richest 10% of the Chilean population wanted nothing to do with Salvador Allende, and were the primary driving force behind the takeover.

  96. Re:Pinochet was popular by Rimbo · · Score: 2

    Pinochet had strong support from the richest 10% of Chile's population and the military -- which is how he gained power -- but the fact of the matter is that he gained that power by overthrowing a popularly elected president. At no time did he ever enjoy what you and I would call "popularity." Just because he had many supporters doesn't make him popular.

  97. Re:PR weasles, etc. by Rimbo · · Score: 4

    I don't think that most of the folks at Microsoft even realize why they are hated so badly. They may even think it's just sour grapes.

    It reminds me of the Chilean dictator, Augusto Pinochet. He held on to power through absolute totalitarian measures for two decades. His brutes were known to gang-rape the wives of dissidents -- and God forbid you ever dissented and you were a woman!

    But after twenty years of power, he actually believed his own bull. He actually believed that if he allowed the people to speak their minds, they would choose him. So he opened up free elections. Unfortunately for him, Chile had a long history of democracy, and so people took advantage of the chance, and he was defeated.

    He absolutely couldn't understand why anyone wouldn't want him in power.

    Microsoft is the same way. They use strong-arm tactics to force companies to bundle their software, and their software, with a couple of exceptions, is generally poor quality. Gates & Co. are actually naive enough to believe the marketshare they've bullied out of companies and customers is our willing choice.

    But in a capitalist economy with a democratic government, such a reign cannot last forever. If customers can't choose otherwise, the government typically intervenes. Their very complacency and need to be a bully will be their undoing.

  98. Re:OT: Code Red Paranoia by Andrewkov · · Score: 2
    Code Red is a worm, not a virus.
    The plural of "virus" is "viruses", not "virii".

    Thank you!!! These people are driving me nuts!

    The other thing that bugs me is that main stream media is not mentioning that Code Red only affects Microsoft operating systems. They mever mention that Unix and other OS's are immune.

    ---

  99. Re:can't take it back by Fishstick · · Score: 1
    >grated me more than a block of mozzarella at a pizza convention.

    ..except the block of mozzarella is the one that _gets_ grated.

    would make more sense to say:

    "but this one was so grating, I felt like a block of parmesan in an Italian restaurant!"

    ---
    Hi! How are you?
    I send you this .sig in order to have your advice

    --

    There is much cruelty in the universe, John.
    Yeah, we seem to have the tour map.

  100. RE: Your love of Words CmdrT by Zero__Kelvin · · Score: 4


    CmdrTaco says:

    "I love the word 'Commingling'. I wish it meant something cooler then it does."

    Perhaps this is so, but he likes the word 'then' even more, since he should be writing 'cooler than it does.' CT continues to do this. I pointed it out last time too, which goes to show that CmdrTaco doesn't 'waste his time' reading Slashdot, anyways 8^}

    --
    Guns don't kill people; Physics kills people! - John Lithgow as Dick Solomon on Third Rock From The Sun
  101. Re:There's a couple of thingsthat they can't dodge by _xeno_ · · Score: 5
    Yeah, right. They can't remove Internet Explorer anymore - that would break WinAmp, the lasted AOL Instant Messenger, the help system...

    The latest versions of WinAmp include a "minibrowser" that is... the IE HTML control. All the latest "help" files (think texinfo pages, man pages, what have you) are done via HTML ... rendered in ... the IE HTML control. The latest IM, released today, starts up with this "AIM Today" screen... which is a webpage... rendered via the IE HTML control.

    For added fun, the home addition of WinXP contains at least the following functions handled via the IE HTML control (at least as of the last beta before RC1 - I'll be able to test RC1 later this month, but not now):

    • The Login Screen (no, really)
    • Windows Explorer (the file manager - it would seem that the "web view" is now permentantly part of the thing and can't be disabled, but I haven't played around with it much)
    • User Control Panel (really! you control it via an HTML page, although it's set up like a control pane)

    The bottom line is that while it could be demonstrated that IE wasn't really comminglinged with Windows 98, it is so throughly mixed up in WinXP (and in many apps that run on Win98+), that it can no longer effectively be removed. It wouldn't just break Microsoft software, it would break third party software.

    (Personally, I believe that modern GUI kits should have an HTML control, but that it should be as tied down as possible - no JavaScript, image loading only via the app, etc. so as to make it that much more "secure.")

    (And I most point out the irony that IM, which is currently bundled with Navigator (I kid you not), apparently now uses IE to render it's little "IM Today" screen.)

    --

    --
    You are in a maze of twisty little relative jumps, all alike.
  102. Re:Taco, Taco.... by DeeKayWon · · Score: 2

    Quicktime? Ack. Here's an MPEG link for everyone.

  103. Re:peering into my crystal ball by Lord+Ender · · Score: 2
    First stop MSNBC, next stop MSUSA. Finally Microsoft will be able to innovate the judicial system.

    --
    A slashdotter who didn't build his own computer is like a Jedi who didn't build his own lightsaber.
  104. Cat in a goldfish bowl...? by Amon+CMB · · Score: 1

    My cat desperately wants to gobble down my goldfish but she happens to be afraid of the water.

    --


    Men believe what they want. - Caesar
  105. Re:Possible Remedy by NSupremo · · Score: 1

    The only things Windows would have to gain by going open source: Security. Reliability. Quality.

    Apparently no one in their organization can offer these features.

    --
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2004_U.S._Election_co ntroversies_and_irregularities
  106. Commingling? by Pinball+Wizard · · Score: 2
    I love the word "Commingling"

    I'll love it too when the Justice Dept. forces me to pay an extra $49 for the "Microsoft Bonus Pack" featuring IE and Windows Media Player.

    Seriously, IE is so far ahead of other browsers MS could charge for it, but they don't.

    Does anyone really think justice would be served forcing millions of Windows users to pay for the extras that you now get for free?

    Intelligence: Finding an error in a Knuth text.

    --

    No, Thursday's out. How about never - is never good for you?

  107. Re:OT: Code Red Paranoia by 51M02 · · Score: 1

    Well I have to see this before I die: Microsoft never invented products so innovative, we will never see something so cool... one reason: you can setup your box on a network to act like windowsupdate.microsoft.com and deliver all the viirii updates to all the networked windows box... Euh... I have seen crazier things like that like Javacript in mail...

    Disclaimer: "I am the sole owner of this comment I will open its source soon."

    --
    --- Bouh !!! ---
  108. Moderate this up by Slashdolt · · Score: 2

    Let's force him to start using proper Enlish. It's not as if it's a typo.

    The thing that is especially discouraging to me as a programmer, is that "then" is a programmatical term that should never be confused with "than".

    What a hoser.

  109. Re:Taco, Taco.... by NewbieSpaz · · Score: 1
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    Random, useless fact: I type in startx entirely with my left hand.
  110. Re:So now what? by MrBogus · · Score: 1

    Well, at this point IE is in the OS and there's no taking it out. Any breakup would have to grant the OS Corp a licence for at least part of the current version of IE. The Netscape situation will never be rectified (although I suppose AOL could sue in civil court).

    The key would be to prevent this sort of thing in the future, or even in the present.

    --

    When I hear the word 'innovation', I reach for my pistol.
  111. Re:So now what? by MrBogus · · Score: 2

    The point of the Windows/Applications breakup plan was that Microsoft uses it's OEM contracts for Windows to push application or 'middleware' software (IE, MediaPlayer, MSN, .NET) in a monopolistic manner.

    The trial wasn't about whether Microsoft has a monopoly in the Office software market (they probably do), so it pretty much leaves their methods of marketing Office (including tieing it to IE) untouched, except to the extent Office is sold through OEM contract bundles.

    Even though Office has a huge marketshare, it's not a very effective method of software distribution. I read that over 50% of the market is on Office 97 or earlier, where OEMs don't have much choice but to ship the latest and greatest version of Windows on new machines.

    So, basically, you can forget about all of Microsoft's other crimes, both real and imagined -- the trial is pretty much only about how Microsoft packaged and sold Windows to OEMs (with some supporting bits about Java and Apple).

    --

    When I hear the word 'innovation', I reach for my pistol.
  112. Re:So now what? by MrBogus · · Score: 2

    Not ignoring my sig for the moment, the point of the trial is that Microsoft committed criminal actions, and therefore are suspect to certain penaties, including legally limiting their future behavior.

    The break up plan wouldn't prohibit the OS company from introducing APIs that do useful things like rendering HTML or playing MP3/WMA music. They might be able to tie those things into the shell, even. It however would prohibit them from shipping a fully-formed web-browser or media player at the same time those APIs are released to the public, and then using OEM contract leverage to enforce shipping those applications in a certain configuration. The idea is that the MS application group should be the exact same competitive situation as anyone else.

    --

    When I hear the word 'innovation', I reach for my pistol.
  113. Re:BAD MICROSOFT! by Diego_27182818 · · Score: 1

    It's not that they want equal integration with windows. No one is saying "unbundle everything." What we want is the ability to choose to remove an app altogether, or to replace it with something else. Maybe I'm on a non-networked computer with limited drive space, and I see no need to have IE installed - I should be able to uninstall it. Or maybe I wrote my own "Super Calculator of Massive Computing Power" and want to remove the default calculator because it's mere presence belittles the wonderful code I wrote.

    --

    --
    Warning, cape does not enable user to fly
  114. Re:PR weasles, etc. by jeko · · Score: 1

    Not weird at all. Your friend is just drinking the kool-aid, that's all.

    --
    He put his boots up on the table and made a face. "The sig," he smirked. "You can waste your life in search of the sig."
  115. Re:PR weasles[sic], etc. by Alien54 · · Score: 1
    What have you got against weasels, or any other organic life forms right down to manure eating maggots, to analogize them to the Redmond Reich?

    The misspelling was semi-deliberate, to distinguish the PR Weasles from other far more noble life forms.

    ;-)

    --
    "It is a greater offense to steal men's labor, than their clothes"
  116. PR weasles, etc. by Alien54 · · Score: 5
    It is going to be interesting to see how the PR Weasles at MS worm out of this one.

    This decision is consistent with the reuling that the original judge screwed up badly by mouthing off. The original findings of FACT remain, and someone else has to redo the penalities.

    In this case, if there is no breakup, then a huge fine, say equal to most of their cash reserves, and a prohibition from releasing any new versions of Windows or other similar platform programs, such as their .NET effort for 4 or 5 years should be adequate. (one or two would not be enough) I might include Passport in this as well.

    We need to drive home that they screwed up. They need the thousand watt lightbulb experience on this. They need to get it. Wrist slap penalties do not do this.

    The primary target has to be the PR weasles, who have promoted a certain vision and way of doing business. The dev crew buys off on the vision, but they are kept in the dark on the PR wealse inner secrets on how to do business. The result is that the Dev crew maintains its loyalty, and doesn't realize their inadvertant complicity with the destructiveness of the PR Weasles.

    The PR Weasles have grown a destructive culture in Microsoft.

    They don't know you have to let your competitors breath.

    --
    "It is a greater offense to steal men's labor, than their clothes"
    1. Re:PR weasles, etc. by pkesel · · Score: 1

      Chile's 'long history of democracy' was quite well funded and pushed by the CIA as well.

      --
      - Sig this!
    2. Re:PR weasles, etc. by dachshund · · Score: 1
      In this case, if there is no breakup, then a huge fine, say equal to most of their cash reserves, and a prohibition from releasing any new versions of Windows or other similar platform programs, such as their .NET effort for 4 or 5 years should be adequate.

      I doubt that any cash penalty is going to be big enough to stop Microsoft (particularly after it's been reduced by appeals.) Furthermore, an attempt to prevent them from releasing future versions of Windows would be pretty flimsy and easily appealed (putting a company out of business isn't a fair penalty, nor is it necessarily good for consumers.) It would also be political suicide-- the DOJ wouldn't ask for any such thing, even if Bush wasn't in the White House. If you're looking for a way to make MS into the victim here, that's it.

      The solution here has already been reached once. There needs to be a breakup. Preferably one that splits applications, OS and .NET among at least three separate entities. If MS is smart, they'll do it voluntarily once [if] they know they're beaten.

    3. Re:PR weasles, etc. by dachshund · · Score: 1
      As for it hurting customers should The Mafia not be punished because it is likely to hurt other businesses?

      Yes, but the Mafia isn't the exclusive provider of a product that 90+% of Americans (or at least, those who use computers) are addicted to. Of course, once upon a time the Mafia did have a monopoly on such a widely used product. Remember what happened? The only way the government prevailed was by widening production of said product (in many cases, by distributing it themselves.) Attempts to get rid of it altogether met with severe displeasure from the very citizens they were trying to protect.

      My point is, as unpopular as Microsoft is, Windows is popular (largely for silly reasons, but I digress.) If you put MS out of business, or restrict them from producing Windows, the public is going to feel that they're being punished for Microsoft's transgressions. You really need a solution that allows Microsoft to exist, but limits their ability to do damage.

  117. Re:Angry at WinXP by fajoli · · Score: 2
    Actually Kodak was upset because Window XP ignored the Kodak software when Kodak's customer plugged Kodak's camera into the customer's PC. Instead, Microsoft's photo software with built-in links to Microsoft's business partner's would come up. One shortcoming of this is that Kodak would then be responsible for handling customer support for their camera with Microsoft's software.

    Or would the Kodak customer expect Microsoft to help them get their camera working with Windows.

    Admittedly, I am a little biased in that I am a very happy Kodak customer (DC250). And the Kodak software worked perfectly for me right out of the box.

  118. in case anyone else wanted to know... by hex1848 · · Score: 3
    Main Entry: commingle

    Pronunciation: k&-'mi[ng]-g&l, kä-
    Date: circa 1626
    transitive senses

    1 : to blend thoroughly into a harmonious whole
    2 : to combine (funds or properties) into a common fund or stock

    www.m-w.com

  119. peering into my crystal ball by Chundra · · Score: 5
    The appeals court also rejected the government's request to speed up the hearing.

    It is believed that the issue should be resolved by 2025, when the United States of Microsoft Supreme Court dismisses the case.
    --

    1. Re:peering into my crystal ball by banshee2000 · · Score: 1

      I think it's a good thing that the courts rejected the government's request to speed up the hearings. The courts have handled this affair very well and have not backed down to M$ or government pressure to get back to business-as-usual.

      Whether we like it or not, M$ still has the lion's share of the market and this court case hurts the economy. The government wants to see a hasty end to this whole mess and M$ would probably get off with a slap on the wrist. The courts, however, see it differently and want to pursue the illegalities surrounding M$'s business practices.

      Hammering M$ for anti-trust violations will rightfully send a clear message to the AOL/TM's, the GE's and other huge mergers-to-acquire-monopoly corporations. Look how many huge corporations followed M$'s business strategies. Hell even our government has jumped on that bandwagon with their recent draconian legislations.

      It would not be in anyone's interest to let government speed up the courts ... least of all the consumers' interests. I'm sure the courts realize this and if they don't then we'd all better move to Russia where they now have a democracy.

  120. Just a minor point of information.. by popoutman · · Score: 1
    at which point MS is due to ship the XP master disks

    I used to work for one of the largest OEM manufacturers (the one with sites in Texas and Ireland etc..) in the validation labs. I was testing the beta WinME code on various golden configs..
    IIRC, Microsoft didn't ship master disks, they just made available the necessary files.
    After the code had gone gold, there were many revisions to the code, to address some of the issues that we found with the OEM-specific hardware configurations... and patch files to suit. Part of the programme that MS runs with the top-tier OEM builders would be to do an OEM-specific reinstall cd, with the necessary patches on it. I was not sure whether the patches were included in the final retail boxed sets...

    --
    - This sig deliberately left blank. Nothing to see, move along.
  121. Taco, Taco.... by 11223 · · Score: 4
    I love the word "Commingling". I wish it meant something cooler then it does.

    Do you mean something cooler or something hornier?

    1. Re:Taco, Taco.... by JasonSkywalker · · Score: 3
      I think he means this.

      --
      I have Unix underpants.
    2. Re:Taco, Taco.... by eander315 · · Score: 1
      How about "Commingling of fluids" or "Commingling of DNA" or "Commingling of interfaces"???

      Those are all really horny comments, especially for the Slashdot crowd, who associate an iPAQ running Linux with sex...

  122. New York Times Link by cbowland · · Score: 1
    is here

    Wasn't there a maxim from the civil rights era that justice too long delayed was justice denied?

    Look at Netscape for a recent example of this. If the remedy is not soon, it will not matter for any of the competitors as they will be DEAD!

    Give a man a fish and he will eat for a day.

    --

    Give a man a fish and he will eat for a day.
    Teach him to eat and he will fish forever.

  123. Re:I wonder if the injunction on XP is behind it a by marcop · · Score: 2

    Did MS up the release date of XP? Seems like RC2 came out awefully close to the release of RC1. I thought the final version was to be released in the Fall. Is this for retail or for OEMs (which you said the OEM version will be shipped mid-August)?

  124. More bad news for the rest of us by abe+ferlman · · Score: 2
    Microsoft is just playing the game to prevent the gov. from stopping the release of XP. Once XP is out there, it can't be taken back. If Mircrosoft is forced to play fairly only after XP is released, it's more bad news for the rest of us.

    Unfortunately, deciding on issues only after they have become moot seems to be the habit of this Supreme Court. I had an example, but I can't seem to recall- maybe I"m still in denial...

    Bryguy

    --
    microsoftword.mp3 - it doesn't care that they're not words...
    1. Re:More bad news for the rest of us by p_trinli · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, deciding on issues only after they have become moot seems to be the habit of this Supreme Court. I had an example, but I can't seem to recall

      You'll come up with the example after the point becomes moot. ;-)

      --
      Aaron J. Shaver
      http://aaronshaver.com/

  125. Re:So now what? by Godwin+O'Hitler · · Score: 2
    If splitting is out of consideration, does anyone have any guess as to the other likely remedy options?

    I did hear some talk of hanging Bill Gates by his testicles gripped in a vice.


    --
    No, your children are not the special ones. Nor are your pets.
  126. commingling by Bender+Unit+22 · · Score: 1

    commingling
    I have absolutely no idea about what that word means.
    But it sound like something at troll would to like in:"The trolls were gathered in the heart of the forest, commingling around the camp fire, thinking of good times past."
    But then again, English bist not my native luggage. :)

    --------
    For sale: Rhesus-Monkey-Torture-Kit 40$

  127. Re:PR weasles[sic], etc. by ackthpt · · Score: 1
    What have you got against weasels, or any other organic life forms right down to manure eating maggots, to analogize them to the Redmond Reich?

    --
    All your .sig are belong to us!

    --

    A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
  128. Re:Wow... Yeah! by ackthpt · · Score: 2
    That's pulling out the big 'D'!

    Not 'D' as in Defense, but 'D' as in deeee-NIED!

    It's certainly a happy thing to see it go back to the penalty phase, considering the imminent release of XP, and mid-August isn't like hearing "until Mid-April, 2002" which seems the pace of too many of these things. Possible court injunction against XP? That'd really wake them up (Hint: Bill, you're buying the House, but you gotta buy the President, too, if you want to name your own judges.)

    Various segments, words or ideas contained in this post may have been routed through Microsoft Passport® in the past, to be on the safe side, this entire post ©Microsoft Corporation, 2001 in pur-pet-tooo-itty.

    --
    All your .sig are belong to us!

    --

    A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
  129. Re:Angry at WinXP by ackthpt · · Score: 2
    Welcome to the new Business Model for the internet.

    In case you haven't noticed, a grillion dotcoms (some with actually good products) have failed due to hyped expectations and the fallout. The new business model for internet technologies is to make a profit by directing users through services which they will have to pay for, unlike expecting advertising to pick up the tab. Microsoft just wants the kingpin position. Their so ruthless they make the mafia look like pikers. (Hey, Ballmer, this guy doesn't want to play ball with us, take him out back and mess up his revenue stream.)

    --
    All your .sig are belong to us!

    --

    A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
  130. Re:Strategy - Strategy, who's got the best? by ackthpt · · Score: 3
    Of course the lower court could initially enjoin Microsoft from shipping XP, which they'd have to appeal, thus the waiting game works against M$. With so much ammo about M$ dirty tactics to help their partners and themselves, (CNet news: Microsoft, Kodak face off over Windows XP, July 31, 2001) it's conceivable that M$ could get slapped where it hurts the most, product rollout. Particularly after dumping a lot of money into preparing the media blitz and rollout party.

    --
    All your .sig are belong to us!

    --

    A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
  131. Re:Possible Remedy by praedor · · Score: 1

    There is NO valid reason that applications and the core OS should be pasted together. Apps are apps and the kernel/os is the kernel os. Multimedia, web browsing/file browsing, etc, do not an OS make. They are APPS that an OS mediates with for the hardware. Simply require that M$ make their offering modular - do NOT intertwine/commingle applications with your kernel, period. Make them so they can be removed, not just erasing the icon but REMOVED and/or replaced by a third party's equivalent and competing app.

    There is no reason why any of the crap that M$ sticks in their so-called OS should be there. It is ONLY for the sake of forcing out competitors. There really is no other reason for doing things this way.

    They should sell everything in modular fashion and be required to FULLY open up their APIs (NO secret APIs, period). Anyone who wants should be able to make use of the core OS functionality without hindrance or without disadvantage to the equivalent M$ app. A computer distributor should be able to install the windows kernel, if they wish, and then add on distributor-specific apps (realplayer instead of windoze media, for instance, or mozilla instead of IE if they wish). The core functionality between distributor x and y would be equivalent since the core OS would be the same but the user experience and user options would be wider and based PURELY on freedom of choice rather than lowest-common-denominator and path-of-least-resistance as it is now.

    --
    In Bushworld, they struggle to keep church and state separate in Iraq as they increasingly merge the two in America.
  132. Re:Possible Remedy by praedor · · Score: 1

    Are YOU clueless? Redhat doesn't create/make all the stuff that comes with Redhat anymore than Mandrake does. They do create some of it and add it but the bulk is from "out there".

    This situation would be similar with the windoze situation ONLY if windoze came with not only the doze media player, notepad, etc, but ALSO realplayer, quicktime player, nedit, etc, etc.

    Redhat, Suse, Debian, Mandrake, etc, etc, ALL give you a separate kernel (the os) plus a bunch of DIFFERENT apps and tools that they do not themselves create. They may work on some of the tools along with a bunch of others but the overall situation is TOTALLY different than with M$ and windoze.

    --
    In Bushworld, they struggle to keep church and state separate in Iraq as they increasingly merge the two in America.
  133. Re:Some action finally? by cboscari · · Score: 1

    I have to agree on this one- and it's a tactic that's worked for them before. If I recall, when the justice dept investigation was going on they delayed until the release of windows was past. Chris

  134. Re:Cool by KarmaBlackballed · · Score: 1

    You have a good point, it is probably a stretch to suggest this sets a precedent for all business people. Of course, it only applies to those which produce hyper-popular products.

    Should the government deny Sun the option of integrating URL functionality into its file system or disallow them the option of including a browser with Solaris? They are the only ones selling Solaris. (In fact, they have laid exclusive claim to their entire hardware architecture too.) Of course, not as many people buy it.

    Reasonable people can all agree that there are big $$$ benefits to M$ in bundling more and more useful features into their products. We all understand it is good for them because it is bad for the other vendors. That is the nature of capitalism. Putting a government imposed leash on the extent to which a company can blend it's products is a socialist concept.

    Clearly in the USA we are living in a hybrid socialist/capitalist quasi-democratic republic. Reasonable people will argue how much socialism is too much and how much is too little/how much raw capitalism is too much, etc. Discussing these details is a good thing. Getting caught up in the hype as we give up rights and privileges to the government is a bad thing.

    PS -- Little known fact, prior to the government action against MS, SUN and Netscape spent far more on wooing legislators and paying lobbyist than M$.


    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    ~~ the real world is much simpler ~~

    --

    --- -- - -
    Give me LIBERTY, or give me a check.
  135. Cool by KarmaBlackballed · · Score: 2

    Not only can we not talk about technology freely in the USA because someone may already own those thoughts ... eg., Dmitry Sklyarov's arrest.

    Now it is also clear that, in the USA, business people need government approval before proceeding with product convergence ... eg., not ok for M$ to bundle their browser as part of their OS.

    Very cool if you are a foreign country with an eye to lure talent and successful companies. (e.g., Such a country could advertise a "freedom of speech" and "freedom to innovate" policies.)


    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    ~~ the real world is much simpler ~~

    --

    --- -- - -
    Give me LIBERTY, or give me a check.
  136. I've said it before by Bob+Abooey · · Score: 1

    And I'll say it again. I have the perfect solution for this mess. All the courts have to do is throw the whole case out of the courts. Yep, throw it out and stop wasting money, money that should rightfully be wasted on some other nonsense.

    Then, instead of breaking them up or imposing minor fines all they have to do is come out with this order:

    From this point, until the end of time, all male employees, with no exeption, will be forced to wear a dress during the working hours or while they are at work for Microsoft.

    That'll calm em down a bit. Think about it, who is going to be afraid to negotiate with Bill and Steve when they see them in a cople of flowery sun dresses. I think that's just the thing to take the edge off and remove the barriers of entry.


    Yours,
    Bob

    --

    All the best,
    --Bob

  137. Re:Some action finally? by Melantha_Bacchae · · Score: 1

    An AC wrote:

    > Since the government's request was also denied,
    > this is a victory for MS. As a result, there
    > won't be an injunction against the release of
    > Windows XP in October.

    Since the case is going to be remanded on August 12, it isn't that long of a delay for MS. If the DOJ's lawyers have half a brain between them, they'll no doubt be presenting a request for some sort of XP injuction, especially since EPIC typed up that nice 20 page complaint to the FTC, detailing in depth (and legalese) just what is wrong with XP. The antitrust case is not our only hope in stopping XP. We still have the FTC, the US Senate, and the EU (who have their own antitrust issues with MS). The US antitrust rulings also make MS a big, bright target for lawsuits. MS also has several very large and angry corporations (capable of throwing lobbists, lawyers, and campain contributions about) that are getting more angry at MS by the day. MS might be able to take most of them individually, but can they really fight against AOL/Time Warner, Kodak, AT&T, etc., all at the same time they are trying to fight several governments for their continued existance? Add to all that the continuing embarassment of Code Red (a worm attacking MS web servers that has the US government rather alarmed), and Sircam (a nasty Outlook worm), and the fear and anger MS is stiring up in their customers by their latest anti-piracy witchhunt/marketing ploy, and you have the PR blunder of the century!

    Even if all the above can't stop the release of XP, there is still hope. Back in 1996, Linux was still pretty much a free OS found in the backs of computer books, and Apple was nearly dead, ashes and blacked stumps all that was left of a once mighty tree. Now Linux commands 27% of the new server market, powerful enough that it can counter MS with the help of its fellow versions of Unix. Apple is back, better than ever, with a beautiful and powerful infant OS X that in its first two months managed to outsell Windows 2000 upgrade and earn a place for itself in the top 10 selling business software packages in March and April. Its applications are on the way, and in September, its faster, more polished version 10.1 will be out. If and when XP is released, it *will* have real competition! MS is so busy scheming, fighting off legal action, breaking into new markets, terrorizing its customers, etc., that it doesn't see the danger its precious desktop monopoly is in.

    BTW, one of the groups that are going to be hurt by XP (regardless of whether it comes out or not) is the PC makers. You guys are counting on XP to come and save you, but it is not likely to be well received. You need an alternative desktop OS, and you need it quick. Much as I love Apple, if OS X isn't ported to x86, it isn't going to be much help to you. Get together and make a cute little alliance (as in "save our jobs", not "nice PR photo shoot"). Work with the Linux, KDE, and Gnome people to develop one commercial grade, easy to use, desktop GUI. Go en masse to the commercial PC software developers (except for MS) and sit on them until they port their apps. Appoint a body to oversee continued development, and plop the results on your respective PC's (with extra goodies and whatever icons you care to negotiate for) and sell them. Compete based on added value (without breaking the ability to run programs), but nicely cooperate with the development of the common OS. Short of OS X on x86 PC's or MS coming to their senses, I think it is probably the only way you are going to be able to make a PC that actually (gasp) sells.

    "The only thing we have to worry about is to slay King Ghidora."
    Shouta, "Mothra 3: King Ghidora Attacks"

  138. breaking them up would be a headache by BroadbandBradley · · Score: 2

    because we'd then have to hire someone to stand over them to make sure the companies aren't covertly working together to squash competition.
    GIVE US YOUR CODEBASE
    ALL OF IT!!!
    while most of it is garbage as proven by the reliability of MS product, this will remove any barrier to entry and we can finish projects like WINE to be able to use windows code on other platforms, thereby destroying the monopoly power of the evil empire. This is the only way to take away the leverage MS has on the PC market, give us the source, and then let them do what they want after that.
    Given equal footing, MS will never be able to catch up with the awsome power of the open source development model and would be forced into working with the rest of the industry to survive, instead of writing rules for everyone else to play by.

    1. Re:breaking them up would be a headache by BroadbandBradley · · Score: 2

      do you want to be the guy standing over the baby bills making sure they're playing fair?
      just because they're "seperate" won't keep them from scheming to take over the world.
      I believe that the price they should pay is to give up what they have developed to control the market and this is the ONLY solution that would put us all on a competitive level. they can go ahead and release win Xwhatever in closed source in the future, but the existing codebase that's been used to rape competitors would no longer be the exclusive property of MS.

  139. Re:Appeals by ClosedSource · · Score: 1

    "They can and probably will appeal the new penalties phase of the trial, whenever a judgement comes about. But this right here? This is done."

    MS can still appeal the original Court of Appeals ruling to the Supreme Court before it goes back to the district court.

  140. Re:Strategy - Strategy, who's got the best? by ClosedSource · · Score: 1

    "Of course the lower court could initially enjoin Microsoft from shipping XP, which they'd have to appeal, thus the waiting game works against M$."

    Well, the lower court could block XP in response to a new cause of action, but they can't do it as part of the original case until the Court of Appeals sends it back to them. The DOJ etc wanted this to happen faster, but the Appeals Court turned them down.

    Usually the criteria for an injunction would be that the court has a fair expectation that they might eventually rule the same way. In other words, the replacement district court judge is unlikely to block XP unless he thinks there's a reasonable chance that he would come to the same conclusion after hearing the full evidence. Since a judge hasn't even been selected yet, I wouldn't count on an injunction any time soon.

  141. Re:This Whole Thing... by ClosedSource · · Score: 1

    You still haven't refuted the original point, MS can't make you buy their product. Compare this with a real mononoply, AT&T in their glory days. You had to rent the phone and you couldn't make a call without using them.

  142. Re:This Whole Thing... by ClosedSource · · Score: 1

    "Do I have any choice about using MS's products? No, my job effectively requires it."

    As an employee, I'm sure there's lots of things you have to do that you don't want to do. But the buyer of the software (your company), was not forced to buy it.

  143. Re:This Whole Thing... by ClosedSource · · Score: 1

    "You could always send a telegraph or write a letter rather than use AT&T. No one is forcing you to make that call, the same way no one is forcing you to have windows. "

    Your analogy is flawed. You couldn't make a phone call without AT&T, but you can do a lot of computing without MS. By your standard MS doesn't have a monopoly because people can do calculations with a calculator, draw using paper, and order products by catalog instead of using the internet.

  144. So now what? by kriemar · · Score: 2

    Can someone explain what will be the focus of the next round of court hearings--i.e., those that the Justice Department wanted to speed up?

    Does this mean that splitting MS in two is off the table, or that the remedy merely has to be reconsidered from a blank slate, so to speak? If splitting is out of consideration, does anyone have any guess as to the other likely remedy options?

    And what are the other aspects of the judge's decision that have to be reconsidered, according to CNN? Are they of any practical significance?

    I suppose I could look for this somewhere, but I'm lazy and thought I'd ask in case someone already knew.

    1. Re:So now what? by c0l245 · · Score: 2

      Can someone explain what will be the focus of the next round of court hearings--i.e., those that the Justice Department wanted to speed up?
      Basically what happens next is that it's referred back down to the origional District court for a re-hearing on remedies. There will be a process by which one of 12 judges that operate in the court are selected with Jackson being excluded for his "out of bounds" remarks.
      Any appeal to the supreme court of this most recent decision will 99% chance be denied due to the fact that the appeal was heard in front of a full panel (7) of judges.

    2. Re:So now what? by pmz · · Score: 1
      Splitting Micro$oft up really does help. Cutting Office loose puts it out among other companies producing office suites: Corel, Lotus, Claris, Sun, Applix, etc. In this wider field, there is real competition. Competion that used to produce truly superior products relative to Office.

      I remember when I was still using Lotus Ami Pro. It was really an excellent program--better than Word for my purposes. But somehow, Office became the only thing taken seriously by everyone else. I felt shut out. The injustice, here, is that Word really was inferior to Ami Pro in ease of use and relevant features. Word was so damn clunky! Word would never have won out on merit alone--it is like the proverbial boss' son getting promoted ahead of you.

      It isn't just Ami Pro: I bet many thousands of you have similar "I remember when...before Office" stories. The fact that all of these stores are in the past tense is pretty good proof of the current monopoly.

  145. Re:Oh well.. by erroneus · · Score: 1

    I don't understand why people believe that MS will not be split up. There is STILL a chance. If you understand what has happened, stop reading here...

    The appeals court threw out the remedy to be "re-remedied." They didn't throw out the finding of fact so they don't have to repeat that process. What happens next is a re-evaluation of remedies. If the courts find that splitting up MS is still an appropriate remedy, they will issue that order AGAIN. The appeals court did not rule that remedy out forever and ever, they just didn't like the way the judge behaved when rendering his judgement...and THAT's ALL!

    So can MS be split up? Hell yeah! Is it likely? One can only hope.

    In related questions, has the injunction against XP be put into place? I haven't heard that yet. I've heard that it is before the courts, but I haven't heard that the injunction was approved.

  146. Re:This Whole Thing... by hobit · · Score: 1
    I'm not quite sure what your argument is. It seems to be ``MS is not a monopoly as you have other OSes to choose from.'' Although it could also be ``so what if it is a monopoly, why should that restrict what they can bundle?'' I'll try to address both.

    Do I have any choice about using MS's products? No, my job effectively requires it. Mainly the ability to read and edit MS word documents, but also, quite frankly, the ability to edit them. No non-MS editor I know of can do that. Why is this a requirement? Because so many people send me these .doc files (and .ppt files). So my employeer had to spend some $400. Including an OS I don't want or use or need.

    Because of their market position, I must have MS-office. This is true for all of my co-workers. We have no choice but to give money to MS. Lots of money.

    Now, IE has become the defacto web browser. My wife, who hates MS, is a web developer. She hates having to deal with anything other than IE because the other browswers (mainly Netscape) suck. Netscape has effectively been forced out of the market by the bundling of IE to Windows. They did't get the revenue (and there is money made by controlling the (free!) browswer market) that comes with a large market share even when they had the better product. Because people had to work to get something other than IE.

    Thus, MS used its OS domanance to push its browser. They control the browsers now. At one time it was thought that browsers (and Java) would actulally be compitition for MS windows. Instead it is just a part of windows. And don't get me started on how it killed Java.

    MS uses its market power to kill competition in the OS arena and to extend its domanace into other markets. This extended domanance, in turn, can be used to maintain its monopoly.

    Face it, if you wrote a wonderful free OS, and paid people to use it, they would still have to use Windows because of MS office. To get mainstream acceptance of a new OS you would have to include:

    • An office suite
    • A UI which is somehow easier for people to use than Windows (which they have probably been using for years!)
    • A development enviornment
    • A set of networking and admin tools which are easier for an MSCE to use than those for Windows (Which they have been trained on)
    Quite frankly no one can afford to try this.

    From the above I claim that MS is an effective monopoly. And further that regulation is needed to prevent them from becoming even more entrenched in the OS market and from using that OS monopoly to gain control of other markets. Those conserns don't exist for Linux, or Mac OS, or really anything else.

    Futher, I claim such a monopoly is bad. In the end, if Microsoft doesn't do it in the markets they control, it won't happen. Having Java as the defacto language might have been a good thing. But it went against MS's interests and so is dead. MS's interests cannot be the determing factor as to which features the users get...

    To sum up. MS is a monopoly. Monopoly's need to be regulated. Therefor MS needs to be regulated.

    --
    As Nietsche famously said, "If you stare too long into the Abyss, 1d4 Tanar'ri of random type will attack you."
  147. Re:This Whole Thing... by Rande · · Score: 2

    The problem with your argument is that : a) You wouldn't be able to sell your OS to the OEMs because M$ has an agreement with them not to sell other OSes or else fear the wrath of having to pay full price for Windoze. b) Linux comes with several browsers, several word processors, a couple of GUIs, all made by different people/companies. You don't have to pay Red Hat to put it in, just make a half decent product and it'll get in. But they aren't tied to the OS. You can uninstall any or all of the bundled applications at any time. It's only under great pressure that they have given an uninstall option for IE in WinXP...strangely enough, something they said was impossible not so long ago. And enuf for now....changing opinion on /. is like a peaceful march achieving change in govt policy - unheard of, but technically not impossible.

  148. Re:This Whole Thing... by AnotherBlackHat · · Score: 2
    Microsoft makes a product, Microsoft charges some amount of money for said product. If you don't like the product, or the way it is produced, then don't buy it.

    Nope, sorry but that just doesn't work. (let the stoning begin)
    Operating systems are more like fax machines than bread. I.e. it's hard to imagine what incompatible bread would be, much less how it would effect anyone besides the purchaser, but an incompatible fax would be a problem for everyone who owns a fax machine - even people without incompatible brands. In the case of Microsoft, they aren't just selling something incompatible, they are actually making it incompatible after the fact.

    What's more, Microsoft actually does have some power to force us to buy their browser, simply by being the biggest OS. If all they did was suceed by suceeding, then it wouldn't be so bad. But they are trying to destroy the competition in ways that are illegal. This isn't the first time they've been found guilty of violating law, and unless the courts apply a structuaral remedy of some sort,it probably won't be the last. Not buying the product isn't enough, because Microsoft is messing with the alternatives.

  149. Re:Oh well.. by Bobo+the+Space+Chimp · · Score: 1

    > ...looks like the only real spanking Bill will
    > get is a fine. Oh no! Not that! Bill could pay
    > whatever fine with the change in his pocket.

    Dr. Evil: Your fine, Mr. Gates, shall be...

    (Da-daaaaa music crescendos)

    Dr. Evil: ...one million dollars!

    (puts pinky in mouth)

    --
    I am for the complete Trantorization of Earth.
  150. Re:can't take it back by Bobo+the+Space+Chimp · · Score: 1

    > by enlarge

    Normally I don't get into grammar and spelling nitpicking, but this one grated me more than a block of mozzarella at a pizza convention.

    I think you mean "by and large."

    --
    I am for the complete Trantorization of Earth.
  151. Re:Angry at WinXP by Bobo+the+Space+Chimp · · Score: 1

    I would expect Kodak to get off their behind and write a proper one-click installer that made sure Kodak's software came up.

    From the old article description, it just seemed like Kodak couldn't figure out how to do this, not that Microsoft had actually hard-coded their own stuff into the OS.

    --
    I am for the complete Trantorization of Earth.
  152. Re:Corporate Death Penalty (Re:Remedy suggestions? by Bobo+the+Space+Chimp · · Score: 1

    > 5) Discorporate MSFT

    And a two-hundred billion dollar corporation goes *poof*, along with 195 billion dollars worth of stock. Stock owned by voters, or retirement funds (in turn owned by voters.)

    Not too many politicians want their head handed to them on a platter. "We're from the government. We're here to help you!" Uh, thanks for the help.

    --
    I am for the complete Trantorization of Earth.
  153. Re:Corporate Death Penalty (Re:Remedy suggestions? by Bobo+the+Space+Chimp · · Score: 1

    My point, that both of you have missed, was the $195 out of $200 billion going *poof*.

    $5 billion isn't much to spread around what was once a highly profitable corporation, and won't sit too well with millions of voting investors.

    --
    I am for the complete Trantorization of Earth.
  154. Re:geez.... by tbone1 · · Score: 1

    Maybe he shouldn't have offered them all that cut-price Apple stock ...

    --

    The Independent: Reverend Spooner Arrested in Friar Tuck Incident - ISIHAC, Historical Headlines
  155. Re:There's a couple of thingsthat they can't dodge by tbone1 · · Score: 1
    Also sprach Svartalf:
    Being required to ship a functional version of Windows without IE commingled would be one.

    Forget the browser, when was the last time MS shipped a functional version of Windows, period?

    --

    The Independent: Reverend Spooner Arrested in Friar Tuck Incident - ISIHAC, Historical Headlines
  156. Some action finally? by Compulawyer · · Score: 2

    Now maybe the Court can get down to business and consider the remedies to be imposed. Finally, a Microsoft delay tactic has failed.

    --

    Laws affecting technology will always be bad until enough techies become lawyers.

    1. Re:Some action finally? by Compulawyer · · Score: 2
      I REALLY wish that non-lawyers (especially ACs) would stop spreading misinformation about legal issues. This is NOT a Microsoft victory. The trial court gets the case back on August 12 instead of the case staying with the Appeals Court for reconsideration of appeals issues.

      The Gov't's loss means that they have to wait until Aug. 12 (10 days - big whoop) for the trial court to get it back - they had asked for it immediately.

      As for WinXP, that is a separate suit entirely. It has nothing to do with the Gov't's antitrust suit, although many of the same actions and laws are involved. MS may get seriously burned there because a private company is suing them alleging WinXP infringes 4 of its patents. A federal court may not like the antitrust issues against MS, but patents are a whole different area. Courts have no problems preventing the sale of allegedly infringing products.

      --

      Laws affecting technology will always be bad until enough techies become lawyers.

  157. a shame that the real issues get clouded out... by mickeyreznor · · Score: 2
    I've been kind of irked by this whole Microsoft anti-trust thing. I think this whole "bundling" thing is really just irrelevant to how they've abused their monopoly power. Unfortunately, there are some misdeeds that just never seemed to get addressed. People just talk about the bundling over and over again and forget about...

    MS buttfucking spyglass, or the conjuring of Steve Barkto, or maybe even vaporware

    I know this stuff was touched upon in the suit, but during the whole trial it was just a big argument over whether or not MS could bundle IE with its OS.

    And the senators who want an XP junction, unfortunatley, have missed the point as well, stating the bundling is the problem, but neglecting to address the issues of not letting people legitamately use the products they paid for.

  158. So what is going to happen? by Uttles · · Score: 1

    OK so the court said that Microsoft acted illegally yet they denied requests to speed up the proceedings. What happens to Microsoft now?
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    --

    ~ now you know
  159. AYCBABTU: AKA give me a sledge I'll do it by CrazyJim0 · · Score: 1

    I could just imagine walking into Microsoft's headquarters with a sledge hammer. "Hello Gentelmen. All your coder base are belong to us. You have no chance to survive, make your time." At which point, I'd go after the nearest monitors and boxes I saw. I bet Microsoft has alot of computers to smash up.

  160. who's next? by Richthofen80 · · Score: 1
    This is great. Now we should definetly bust GM for including power windows in it's cars. Commingling electronics with mechanics! how greedy!

    The evil of microsoft is not, and never was, the ability to package products. It's done in every industry. If you're going to attack microsoft, at least do it on the grounds that it's insecure. I can vouch for that. I had to remove the SirCam worm seven times this week. My users refused to believe that the e-mails were virulent, because they came as "Fax cover letter to Pat Osbourne.doc.pif" files. *sigh*

    But really, all I see antitrust doing is punishing companies based on how much market share they have or how much money they have. both market share and money are measures of success, and therefore we're punishing success.

    --
    Reason, free market capitalism, and individualism
    1. Re:who's next? by Richthofen80 · · Score: 1
      I think my beef is with the concept of a monopoly.

      Microsoft aquired it's market position, called a monopoly by some, by acting on ideas and marketing them well and selling a sh*tload of software.

      Monopolies not created by force are not monopolies. At any time the monopoly can cease to exist by someone who has a better idea and who can back it with enough money, marketing, etc. Now, if the gov't did what it did with railroads in the 1860 - 1900 and grants a company the exclusive right to operate a business, and blocks others from entry, now that's a monopoly. However, when a company uses its leverage as a good business with solid financing and good investment and marketing strategy, well, that's called "being good at what you do".

      Other examples of monopolies like utilities were "granted" the right to operate via government recognition and even government *fostering* their existence. Some people just couldn't fathom that telephone lines were owned by some company, and that company can chose to do what it pleases with it, under the principle of private property.

      Microsoft is using it's private property (market share, money, products) to further expand its business. It does not force anyone to do anything, it merely says "this product / idea / source is ours, and we will decide the conditions and limitations of its use". Requiring I.E. on the operating system is the same as Subaru making all their cars All Wheel Drive. You can't remove the all wheel drive, you can't change the option, you can't demand otherwise. Even if Subaru were the only car company on the face of the earth, their principle of design and style are theirs, and they can't be forced or legislated into some box that consumers demand.

      I mean you can always get the Linux of cars (the kia).

      --
      Reason, free market capitalism, and individualism
    2. Re:who's next? by banshee2000 · · Score: 1

      I sure as hell hope your emmissions shit don't go. Like the catalitic converter for example. At 80K miles on our 1996 Grand Am, our catalitic converter went. We called around to parts/junkyard dealers to see if we could get one cheaper than the dealership price.

      NO parts/junkyard dealers are permitted to sell the catalitic converter. It's restricted to GM dealerships only. The oxygen sensor price used to be $20.00 when it was placed before the converter. Now it's place after the catalitic converter and it's $90.00 for the part alone.

      I guess you can say that GM dealerships have got consumers by the [censored]. We all know how prices are extremely inflated at car dealerships. Is this not a form of monopoly practices that hurt consumers as well?

  161. Re:The Coward notes.. by Richthofen80 · · Score: 1

    Microsoft's browser is a sales tool and allows people to use passport / hotmail etc. Some software people will pay for, some software people will get for free. Microsoft knows which is which. They include the web browser because it helps them sell products and services. It's a smart business model. (not only that, but how does one easily download a browser? FTP is out of the range of most novice computer users. Most people who didn't like IE used IE to download Netscape.

    --
    Reason, free market capitalism, and individualism
  162. Re: OT: OT: Code Red Paranoia conspiracy theory by masoncooper · · Score: 2

    My mind wanders from day to day, and a plausable conspiracy theory popped into my mind:
    Not true but could be: Microsoft releases IIS4.0 with future plans, implements overflow bug on purpose. Releases IIS 5.0 w/ same bug. The time comes to implement their plan. Distribute a worm that appears to come from china that causes no damage to the servers(memory-resident) and then force everyone to install the newest security patch. This patch then fixes the hole, but opens another that doesn't log any activity coming from M$'s subnet so that they now have access to millions of web servers to do whatever they please. Their new trojan horse then lets them check for license compliance on every machine and then ultimately plant a self-destruct timer that forces an upgrade to M$ Windows $upreme Server(monthly lease of course).

    obviously not true, but hey, it could happen!

  163. Re:Oh well.. by timekepr · · Score: 1
    So... If the government imposes a fine big enough for Bill to feel, say $25 Billion, there would then be a huge surplus of money at the fed. Our 'friend' Dub-ya will give a tax refund to the American people which would effectivly give Americans a free "copy" of Windows.

    At this point wouldn't the American government be a violation of the DMCA?

    --
    Contractual Obligation .sig -- To send me e-mail read between the lines.
  164. Possible Remedy by jes94 · · Score: 1
    I saw the outline for this on a site last year and developed it myself a bit...

    Why not force Microsoft to open source their software? They could license the source to a series of distributors who could compile and sell the binaries. Prohibit Microsoft from selling the binaries directly for any platform.

    Microsoft could retain control of the software and therefore still have the 'freedom to innovate' but at the same time, the distributors would be able to edit out any kind of problems such as forcing IE onto 98.

    This would need to be applied to all Microsoft products so that they do not just change the product name and go about business as usual. The NSA might not appreciate having the world know how they were ferreting away encryption keys, but oh well.

    Does anyone know how to suggest remedies to these federal judges and/or the prosecutors involved in these cases?

  165. bankrupcy? by sylentprofet · · Score: 1

    i have a friend that thinks if Microsoft went bankrupt, it would cause an economic collapse.. i don't know if i agree with him or not.... not really, but *shrug*. where does microsoft go from here?

    --
    - = S y L e N T P R o F e T = -
  166. What we need by absurd_spork · · Score: 1
    I know that this is slightly offtopic, but it occured me on reading this submission. What we need is a moderating system for stories. If this story could be moderated (+2, Informative), (-1, Spelling) then I'd be quite happy. Imagine how you could customize Slashdot!

    For example, one could moderate stories like this:

    • Interesting
    • Informative
    • Funny
    • Generates Intelligent Replies
    or like this:
    • Wrong
    • Spelling mistakes
    • Not "News for Nerds, Stuff that Matters"
    • Read it on kuro5hin a year ago
    • Troll quota too high
    What would you think of this?
  167. Re:This Whole Thing... by banshee2000 · · Score: 1

    through my computer science genious

    Not to nitpick or anything like that, but it's spelled genius ... not genious.

    It's been said hundreds of times on slashdot and it's getting old ... they are GIVING AWAY their product, and it comes bundled with web browsers, office programs, paint programs, everything under the sun.

    With Linux you are given the choice to install these products or not. Not so with M$. You cannot completely uninstall IE in Windows whether you want to or not. You cannot say to the OEM don't install Windows on my machine, I prefer Linux. It's not going to happen and even if you /deltree windows and install Linux on your new PC, you cannot get a refund for the windows o/s you'll never use.

    They should be forced to not give away anything with the OS, right?

    Wrong. It doesn't... the kernel is just that ... a kernel. You're getting distributions mixed up with bundling. I've heard (could be wrong) that under Wine you can run M$ Office97, but I don't know how stable it is. Of course, I don't have it here to test anyway .. I typed /deltree windows in Nov. 99. Anything not DirectX seems to work fine on Linux using Wine.

  168. Weeeeellll... by Enigma23 · · Score: 1
    As it happens...

    "Commingling" does sound rather kinky! :-)

    I think I can speak for the majority of posters who will enjoy watching Microshaft getting stuffed...

    --
    Ceci n'est pas une .sig
  169. Appeals by mrvis · · Score: 1

    You can't appeal a denial for an appeal. You appeal decisions. When the court says, "You lose, Bill Gates you cocksuckermotherfucker!" then you appeal.

    They can and probably will appeal the new penalties phase of the trial, whenever a judgement comes about. But this right here? This is done. They co-mingled.

    I'm smiling because I co-mingled this morning too.

  170. Commingling DOES mean sex! by NeoTomba · · Score: 1
    Why the hell doesn't anyone else seem to know this?!?!

    From a review for "101 Great Quickies":

    101 Great Quickies by Laura Corn is a novel twist on the standard sex guides that fill bookstore shelves. The pages of this book are actually sealed envelopes, 101 of them, each containing a separate suggestion for a short, spicy commingling. With such curiosity-provoking titles as "Delicious Torture" and "Lickity Splits," the possibilities are obvious.

    See? Dammit, commingling is a dirty word!

    -NeoTomba likes to commingle with girls

  171. Re:OT: Code Red Paranoia by pmz · · Score: 1
    Well, in Latin, it really is "virii" or something better (my Latin is quite rusty). "es" is the English plural suffix.

    So, the dilemma is: do English speaking people honor the grammar of the language from which the word was taken or do they just apply English rules? Someone must know the real answer to this. For once and for all, the language experts out there should take a stand and set us straight!

  172. Re:OT: Code Red Paranoia by pmz · · Score: 1
    Thank you. Your link just about settles this whole mess:

    There isn't a Latin plural form of "virus", so "viruses" it is!

  173. Re:can't take it back by Derkec · · Score: 1

    I doubt home users or IT departments, by enlarge, will cooperate with an unenthusiastic recall from Microsoft. The products won't be defective (well.. more than normal) and would be a pain to uninstall. Recalls are generally reserved for when a company ships a dangerous or unacceptably defective product and folks would want their money back. So perhaps, 'can't' was too strong, but I think 'won't' is appropriate.

  174. grammar by Derkec · · Score: 1

    thnx, I get to the point where I type like I talk. Thanks for keeping me honest.

  175. Strategy by Derkec · · Score: 5

    I'm willing to bet that Mircrosoft will appeal this to the Supremem Court, if only to slow down the process. Microsoft won the browser with the tactics no being declared illegal and is looking to win instant messanging, multimedia delivery and a few other items this way as well. WinXP is the key to this, and it has to ship soon, and with all the 'features' in place. Microsoft is just playing the game to prevent the gov. from stopping the release of XP. Once XP is out there, it can't be taken back. If Mircrosoft is forced to play fairly only after XP is released, it's more bad news for the rest of us.

  176. New Court System by telbij · · Score: 2

    Our court system is simply too inefficient to deal with big technology firms. Market conditions don't stay the same for 3 months, let alone the years it takes to resolve big cases like this. By the time any final sanctions are made, the underlying issue is no longer applicable.

  177. I wonder if the injunction on XP is behind it all by Angel+of+Mirana · · Score: 1

    I remember reading here (correct me if I'm wrong) that M.S. has an injunction placed on their XP release of Windows. Suddenly, they seem willing to settle out of court or at least want to hurry the process. Looks like they are getting to know what it feels like when you get dragged through court. I'm just wondering if all this effort to end this case on M.S.'s end is because they are afraid they won't be able to release XP as it is or when they want.

    At any rate, you have to love the irony. Big companies usually drag little companies through court, refusing to settle until the little company's budget is in the red. Now, M.S. is squirming to get the proceedings over with because they are interrupting its process of screwing people over.

    Gotta love the irony.

    Phoenix

    --
    I am me. Insightful, isn't it?
  178. wow by 4n0nym0u$+C0w4rd · · Score: 1

    wow, I must be the only /.er who ever posted a comment that was funny, redundant, and a troll all at the same time :)

    --

    "
  179. geez.... by 4n0nym0u$+C0w4rd · · Score: 2

    Bills check must have bounced.

    --

    "
  180. difference =... by 4n0nym0u$+C0w4rd · · Score: 2

    OK, I've explained te difference several times already, but what the hell I'll say it again. the difference is that the linux kernal and the distrobution are not connected in the business sense. With Linux you can get the plain kernal if you want it, or you can choose to use distrobution with software pre-installed, with Windows you can not. Windows is made by M$, Internet Explorer is made by Microsoft, Microsoft is using it's monopoly powers to force people to have Internet Explorer (which for most people means they use IE). If IE was made by company X and company X payed M$ to put IE in windows, then that would not be illegal because Netscape could also pay M$ to include Navigator. As for KDE, KDE is a GUI not an OS. You do not need KDE to run Linux, if you want another GUI you can install it, try running Windows without the GUI (impossible) or replacing the GUI with another (impossible). The problem with MSs tactics is that it is integrating its own sofware with its own OS, thus giving their product an unfair advantage over competitiors. Since the Linux Kernal is completely different from the Linux Distro and any GUIs that might be used, it is a completely different subject. Now if KDE came built directly into the Kernal and you could not uninstall it and use Gnome, that would be illegal.

    --

    "
  181. This Whole Thing... by FakePlasticDubya · · Score: 1
    I don't know about this, it smells kind of rotten. However, I am sure to be stoned by the open source people if I say that I think the government shouldn't step in. Well, I will anyway.

    As we all know, as much as we say it or not, Microsoft has no power of force to make us purchase Windows. In fact, there are people, while a minority, who purchase comuters/build computers that use other operating systems. So that being said, there are still people who choose to use the Microsoft products, because it's eaiser. Right now I have 2 linux machines at my house, one doing DNS/Web and SETI@HOME, and another one I play around with. Yet, I still use Windows for my main desktop. I use Windows for my desktop because it is much simplier to get it to work with all of my devices, Printers, ORB Drive, Sound Card, etc. Microsoft doesn't force me to buy Windows, I chose to.

    Microsoft makes a product, Microsoft charges some amount of money for said product. If you don't like the product, or the way it is produced, then don't buy it. OR better yet, develop a BETTER product. You always have the choice not to purchase something. You could buy a Mac for example, if you are not so linux inclined. So what if Microsoft bundles IE with Windows, they made the product, they should be able to put whatever they want in it.

    Ok, so I'm sure you don't agree with me. How about this. I decide to make an alternative operating system, and through my computer science genious I create one that is more stable than *NIX and much eaiser to use than Windows. I want to sell it to compete with Microsoft.

    I look at Red Hat, or Mandrake or whatever. WOAH, they are GIVING AWAY their product, and it comes bundled with web browsers, office programs, paint programs, everything under the sun. Now, how in the world can I compete with that. It's just not fair, they are giving it away for free, and it comes with everything that someone would want. How's the little guy ever going to be able to compete with that. They should be forced to not give away anything with the OS, right?

    Oh, wait, nevermind they can give it all away, because they aren't Microsoft.

    --

    "We shall show mercy, but we shall not ask for it" -- Winston Churchill
  182. Alternate Remedy by bama_shine · · Score: 1

    I have an alternate solution as to the punishment that should be levied against Microsoft. Since the violations took place leveraging Windows 95/98/ME, simply force them to spin out the code base for Windows 95/98/ME into a new company. Allow them to keep all of their other intellectual property including Window NT/2000/XP.

    This would immediately create choice in the market for consumer operating systems. The established player would be the new company and Microsoft would have an uphill fight to get their OS (Microsoft XP) accepted. Presto! Instant competition in the consumer operating system market.