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Microsoft to Continue Mac Support

rakeswell writes "Though Microsoft's five-year agreement to support some Microsoft applications on the Mac has come to a close, Microsoft announces that it will continue its support of the platform. This means that new versions of Office, IE, ODBC, and Palm synchronization will be made available for Mac OS X. Also, they intend to build in .NET support for the Mac, though Microsoft says that they do not intend to push .NET for Mac developers."

5 of 261 comments (clear)

  1. Palm? by Sc00ter · · Score: 2, Flamebait
    "Palm synchronization"

    MS did this for OSX? I did not know that..

  2. M$ by theVitViper · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Sometimes, I just do not understand these ppl! They go out of their way to steal technology (http://be.com) and rule the market, yet they continue to support their greatest competitor in the desktop market? Let's face it, no M$ Office on the Mac, and it is dead!

  3. Re:Obvious (?) reasons by tswinzig · · Score: 2, Flamebait

    Besides, this is ammo for their argument that they're not a monopoly - they're nice and work with everyone.

    Uhhh... so their argument that they're not a monopoly is, according to you, that they not only have their software running on 95% of x86, but also on ppc computers as well?

    --

    "And like that ... he's gone."
  4. Re:Misinterpretation. by andcal · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    I think that the reason that Macintoshes are dismissed out of hand is because your average computer user would not know where to find the "Start" Button on the Macintosh.(no, not the power button).




    In other words, 99% of the people who know how to use a computer know how to use a pc. One of the reasons for this is because anyone can buy a >1gHz PC with Windows installed for around $400.



    And this doesn't mention the added headaches that would be introduced when Mac people and PC people need to share resources. Yes, admittedly, I am a PC person. I once had a mac friend burn a CD for me of .mp3 music.



    I don't know if he had to use some converter utility or not to make it where my PC could even read the disk, but the result was that many of the resulting files didn't even have file extensions, and the ones that were there used an bizarre naming scheme with all caps, names only 8 characters or less, etc. I had to spend hours renaming the songs and then re-burn the disk, just so I could tell what the songs were. It doesn't matter which OS was at "fault" what matters is that if I own a company in the normal business world, then I would want my employees to use the business-standard pc, so sidestep this sort of headache. If my business were in the art or music world, then perhaps it would make sense for them to use the mac standard.

    --
    --something witty
  5. Re:Support? by madenosine · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    What I meant was anything about any SDK, not basic programming concepts.

    You obviously have never used either.