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Microsoft Trial Wends Onward

Sinistar2k writes: "Showing remarkable restraint and an unwillingness to shout 'Give it up for me!', Steve Ballmer comes across as a poor, beat down soul in the video deposition (Windows Media or RealPlayer required) released today by US District Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly. Also available are text depositions of Ballmer and Allchin." gouldtj adds: "Here is a timeline on the Microsoft trial. It is pretty complete, and it goes back to 1990. It is nice to see all of this in one place, I'd almost forgotten about the old stuff. It just reminds you how long this stuff can take." Finally, ackthpt writes: "The nine non-settling states have modified their requirements, rather than Microsoft having to sell various versions of Windows, they would have Microsoft Windows sold as a modular platform, where the user could opt for different vendors software for different uses. Just days ago the nine settling states were rattled by Microsoft's end-around, challenging state attorneys' general participation in anti-trust procedings." And if your own computing (or career) depends on a Microsoft operating system, Roblimo suggests that you stop using it, because Steve Ballmer says Microsoft may take it away.

5 of 446 comments (clear)

  1. Ballmer on Software Design by Serpentine · · Score: 5, Interesting
    From the Reuters article: "That's the way good software gets designed. So if you pull out a piece it won't run"

    cf. "Last November, Allchin presided over the launch of Windows XP Embedded, which consists of about 10,000 components that can be assembled into custom products..."

    Can't, won't or don't?

    --
    .:the truth is a lie undiscovered:.
    1. Re:Ballmer on Software Design by sl3xd · · Score: 3, Interesting

      The documentation process alone would amount to something truly revolutionary coming from Microsoft.

      It's not that Free & Open-Source Software haven't done API documentation; it's just that the size of Microsoft's entire API would be a rather complex and daunting task.

      --
      -- Sometimes you have to turn the lights off in order to see.
  2. Consider This by johnthorensen · · Score: 4, Interesting
    In comparing their respective timelines, it can be found that the amount of time taken to date to resolve the Microsoft anti-trust case is:

    • Approximately as long as the American Revolution
    • Approximately as long as the Russian Revolution
    • 1 1/4 times as long as the time from the date the IC was invented to the date of the first handheld electronic calculator
    • 1 1/2 times as long as it took the U.S. to put a man on the moon
    • Nearly twice as long as WWII
    • More than twice as long as the Civil War
    • 36 times as long as Desert Storm/Desert Shield


    And I don't even want to start thinking about the $$$'s involved... -JT
  3. Re:No more windows?... by Brian+Kendig · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Ballmer may just have flubbed up.

    There are two possible responses to the threat of Microsoft pulling Windows form the marketplace:

    (1) "Oh my god! Windows is far too important, losing it would ruin the American economy!"

    ... which would be proof that Windows *is* too powerful, and that this extreme dependence on one operating system and one vendor who provides it must be broken -- for the same reason that America can't rely solely on one country for its oil, and the same reason that American farmers can't all grow the same identical strain of corn lest one virus wipe it all out.

    (2) "Who cares? Linux can easily fill the void left by the loss of Windows."

    ... which is a thought Microsoft doesn't want to have cross *anyone's* mind. Can you imagine what would happen if Microsoft pulled Windows and the fallout lasted for a few months and then it was over and people found alternatives and nobody cared any more?

    So I really have no idea what Ballmer hopes to achieve by threatening to pull Windows from the market.

  4. Re:At least read the relevant material by Malcontent · · Score: 4, Interesting

    "The Internet Browser shouldn't be a product bought and sold in the marketplace. It's a very basic product at its heart, and should be included with PCs to begin with."

    you know what? That's just what I feel about operating systems.

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    War is necrophilia.