West Virginia Joins Massachusetts in MS Appeal Bid
diwolf writes "West Virginia is seeking to join Massachusetts in appealing a U.S. District Court decision that rejected a tough antitrust remedy sought by nine states in the Microsoft Corp. antitrust case. This is also being reported at CNN and ZDNet."
I was hoping someone else would have some balls. #3? Anyone?
While I'm not that sure how much good it is going to do, it is good to see them at least continuing the fight. If more states continue to join in on the appeal, it may gain some weight.
West Virginia and the other non-settling states had argued that Microsoft should be required to sell versions of Windows without a Web browser, music player and other software to make room for competing products.
On the other hand though, how hard would it be for Microsoft to just give the option upon install of not installing these components? Would it be worth MS's time and money (in terms of legal costs, etc) to give this option? Though I'm sure they're more than willing to spend the money to keep their products on as many PC's as possible
WWJD.... for a Klondike bar?
And I know some people hate it when it happens, but I must point out the obvious spelling error in the title. It's one of the first things a reader sees and shouldn't be there. The word is correctly spelled 'Massachusetts'. Thanks timothy.
that Microsoft doesn't have them bought. The wheels of justice are too slow and corrupt. I have heard (no proof, just rumour - you guys might know where this was) that GWB specifically ordered the Justice Dept to not seek splitting the company up. If this is true it shows that GWB was bought (he is bad anyways) and that he has far too much power. A president should have nothing to do with the wheels of justice. Justice should also be a lot swifter than this. That Microsoft case should have been over in at least 6 months.
What we see depends on mainly what we look for. -- John Lubbock Now search for that bug slave!
You'd think that Virginia would want a piece of them too...
Life is the leading cause of death in America.
I have to ask: who would actually be interested in pursuing this case?
It is quite clear that there will be no noteworthy changes to the original settlement, so any interested parties (mostly Microsoft's competitors) don't have anything to gain. It is also quite clear that the main loser is going to be the taxpayer. So who is the winner of this case (other than the army of lawyers)?
The answer is that a bunch of people (e.g. the attorney generals of these states) gain some free press and cheap popularity from the ongoing coverage of the case. The important thing to notice is that the case itself is absolutely irrelevant, these people would attach themselves to any other high-profile case just as quickly.
So don't ever think this is about "freedom" or any other nice ideas, it's only about buying votes and personal agendas.
When men used to be men
we be bein distinguished all up in MA fo shizzle
I feel guilty every time I boot Windows
Of Course, they have confused Free (as is speech) Software with free (as in beer) software, and didn't always realise that Linux is not the only free software out there.
and note: they didn't save the sale for Microsoft.
"It is a greater offense to steal men's labor, than their clothes"
For future reference:
Please use WV when referring to West Virginia. W.Va. has been deprecated, as it makes it seem as if the state is just a section of Virginia.
"Open the pod by doors, Hal" > "I'm afraid I can't do that, Dave" sudo "Open the pod bay doors, Hal" > alright
Remember when a decent PC cost at least $4000 (US)? Then came the clones and we were able to get a PC for about $2000. After the clones came into their own, the prices just started free-falling. The reason was that IBM couldn't keep their own monopoly on PCs and charge whatever THEY wanted too - and you can bet that they wanted too! Look at Apple. They had control of everything to do with their machines and they insisted on gouging their customers. It wasn't until recently that they decided to price their machines in line with the rest of their (PC) market. Yes, they have a superior design, blah, blah, blah,... But when it comes down to it, their design wasn't worth the premium that they used to charge - sorry Mac folks.
MS turned the PC market into a commodity market. Since MS wanted to grow/keep their monopoly, they charged pretty damned cheap in my book.
What I'm trying to say is ... here it comes ... that if it weren't for MS, we would still be paying an arm and a leg for PCs.
For the record, I'm a Linux Luver
There is no spoon or sig.
What if the People rose up and filed their own Pro Se suits against Micro$oft? Crash the Courts! Has somebody a website for this yet? Just a thought.
Well... okay. Isn't that what punishing a company and making an effort to restore competition usually does? How can you accomplish those two goals without bring benefit to the competitors?
--
Runnin' around, robbin' banks all whacked on the Scooby Snacks...
Hear hear (oh hang on this is slashdot - that should be here here).
I completely agree - go fix a bug in mozilla or write some documentation that you think needs to be written. Go to a Linux installfest and help some people install linux on their machine.
"This has got to stop. The anti-Microsoft propaganda and complete disregard for any kind of SOCIAL regularity is pissing me off."
Parent poster has a point. Slashdot's turning into an Anti-MS tabloid. Though this story is legit, some of the recent stories like "Apple Users Hate Microsoft" illustrate how ridiculously low this site can reach.
Remember the good old days when Slashdot was about posting cool geek stuff? I can't believe a site that's so pro-Linux can't help but watch MS's every move.
I'm from MA as well and I have heard that part of the reason we are pursuing the case is that we have already incurred most of the legal costs of the case in the initial stages (according Tom O'Reilly, our attorney general for non massholes). I suppose that makes some sense if you consider how much preparation must go into a case like this; I can see how the research and paperwork might be the most expensive part.
remember, no matter where you go, there you are
Why give up? This is exactly what they want - keep battering for long enough, and cracks will show. A Law Firm here in New Zealand went as far as to lodge a complaint with the Commerce Commission regarding Microsoft's new licensing regime. Although the complaint was rejected, the new scheme has so incensed one of the partners, Craig Horrocks, that he has set up a site here which has a copy of the complaint, an open letter to MS users, and assorted news articles. You can be assured that this law firm is not about to take it lying down, as this site shows.
The Mothership
How about just ignore the whole MS/Anti-MS thing and get on with life? Use the software that works for you and just let it rest. It's soooo old.
Maybe they should spice it up for sweeps with some guest appearances in the courtroom...maybe Larry Lessig, Steve Jobs, and the perennial courtroom favorite, OJ! :-D
The state I have spent most of my career working in does something right!
If MS has proven anything in the many years of settlements with the DOJ over breaking the law, it's that a settlement with them is as worthless as one with Saddam.
Corporatism != Free Market
As anyone will tell you... future monetary decisions should not be made based on how much you have already spent.. but only on the business case for moving forwards.
1. M$ is scared shitless of Linux. They have no real strategy to deal with something that even they know is more stable and secure, and know they can't compete on price.
2. Win XP and M$'s licensing went over with customers even worse than what you read - even here. M$ kept a tight lid on how badly Win XP cratered in the corporate world.
3. M$ rank-and-file are a bunch of arrogant asswipes who think big corporations and gov't have no choice but to buy M$
...I'm proud to say I live in Massachusetts!!!
Go Tom Go Tom Go Tom!!!
(and Doug!)
---
Information wants...you to shut your pie hole.
"The lawsuit was just abuot a lot of pissed off competitors that couldn't keep up. MS won the PC market fair and square."
Though I agree with the 'competitors that couldnt keep up' bit, it has been proven MS has done some illegal stuff.
However, what's never really talked about is that MS needed cooperation from outside sources to pull their stunts. Just as an example, it's in Gateway's best interests to have only 1 (one) O.S. to support. Extra OS's = extra support staff = extra QA testing = extra $$$, passed on to the consumer. You'll notice that the retailers weren't crying foul until long after the charges were filed against MS. You'd think they'd be complaining before Netscape did, afterall they do have demand to fulfill.
Heh. The point I'm making is that if MS gets punished, why not punish the companies that went along with it? The answer is simple: You don't. If you punish everybody that went along with MS's monopoly, you basically punish everybody that's keeping this economy alive. The truth of the matter is that the majority of the market wanted MS to be the standard.
So many say "Why bother? M$ is above the law." What a crock of shit. Even if my tax dollars are going toward a battle which may be lost, I would be more pissed off if there were no appeals, much as I was pissed off about the states who signed the settlement. It is obvious that Bill & Co. think that they are above the law, or rich enough to buy it, so why should we throw our hands up when there is still more that can be done to fight the ruling?
I believe that these states should be congratulated for not stopping. That is what the court of appeals is for. And I hope the other seven decide not to back down either.
Compare WinXP with Win 3.1.
Now compare the progress in price and performance that hard drives, RAM, monitors, CPUs, database software, browsers, word processors (until M$ effectively killed WordPerfect), spreadsheets (until M$ killed Lotus 1-2-3) have made in the same 10 years.
And yet, in the face of all the progress made in the computer industry in those areas with vibrant competition when compared to the absolute stagnation in both price and performance that the arenas monopolized by M$ have shown, we still have fucking morons who think M$ has been good for the computer industry.
West Virginia has a long history of their population getting dispossessed and sold up the river broke-and-naked by rich out-of-state corporations so this warn't that big a surprise. Microsoft is just like any big coal company looking to take buttloads of money out of West Virginia except Microsoft hasn't started having their opponents murdered... yet. That we know of, anyways.
Shut the fuck up, and stop with the Fear, Uncertainty, and Doubt. Because I, and I suspect most of the others who frequent this forum, are just about fucking tired of it.
What do you mean, "this forum"? Slashdot is a news service, with many individual forums on many individual topics. If you don't like article posts about Microsoft and it's illegal business practices (and that's not speculation BTW, CKK's ruling found that Microsoft HAD practiced business illegally) then don't fucking read them!
PCs didn't really get cheap until the internet boom of the mid-90's. Considering the hottest browser at the time was Netscape, shouldn't they be credited with bringing PCs to the masses and the masses credited with lowering prices through demand?
Just about any OS can run a browser, so what did MS do? I mean other than bundle a free browser with their OS. PCs may be 1/4 the price but Microsoft's software sure isn't.
I can understand Microsoft point of view. The browser is part of the operating system... but with all the talk of Internet security...and crackers primarily targeting Windows systems...Why would they want to keep the browser embedded in Windows? Don't you think that they are loosing a major marketing tactic if they keep stubbornly saying "The browser cannot be unattached"....
Of course the browser can be removed...Anyone involved in developing KNOWS that the browser can be removed.... So is Microsoft just stubborn? Or can't they see the bigger picture?
I like your website, but you are completely wrong here. We would all be serfs owned by a Rockefeller if it weren't for antitrust. MS dominated the desktop based on superior marketing. It used its dominance to move into servers. Anybody seriously think MS had a technical advantage over Novell or any of the Unixes? Only a wintroll would say as much. But a half-assed windows tech can manage a windows server about as well as a desktop machine. So it grew. Maybe I'm a luddite, but I don't think a server needs (or should have) a GUI, let alone multimedia. MS used its dominance of the desktop to kill off a shift to web-based computing. Now instead of using the web to free users from pc's, MS was able to pervert and invert the move and the web is now harnessed to pc's. It's as if internal combustion engines have been installed on wagons.
I think you confuse economies of scale (which drive down unit cost, to a point) with network effect. There was an astroturf economist who, based on astroturf product reviews, claimed that MS products were better than their competitors at the time they took over the market. Never mind that the reviews were generally atrocious journalism, the reason Office took over was because of clever bundling. The reason IE took over was because you couldn't get a machine without it, but had to do something extra to get Netscape. Once you start to lose momentum vs. MS, the rest of the world smells blood and the downturn accelerates. If everyone else uses it, you sort of have to as well.
Once you have the power to own everything that can generate the power to own things, it's over. Markets are great. Monopolies are not markets. Libertarians take note! And MS wasn't just a Baby Huey, good-naturedly and inadvertantly squashing competitors. It wasn't just big, it was evil. MS is a sleazy, sociopathic entity. It cheats, it lies, it extorts, it bullies, it bribes.
If you punish everybody that went along with MS's monopoly, you basically punish everybody that's keeping this economy alive
I agree. The gov't may be stupid, but they're not stupid enough to kill one of the last viable, profitable technology companies in the country. The company also happens to have it's products in virtually every sector of American business. So if they break up MS, it would be replaced with what...? OSS alternatives generating $0 tax revenue, and 0 jobs?
Massachusetts is considered a high tech haven, West Virginia a low tech backwater. I wonder what local politics led to these decisions.
One Nation under the Dollar with Liberty and Justice for those who can pay for it.
Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean there isn't an invisible demon about to eat your face
"So if they break up MS, it would be replaced with what...? OSS alternatives generating $0 tax revenue, and 0 jobs?"
Or what happens if they heavily fine MS? Besides making their stock price plummit (bad for economy as other companies would suffer from that as well), what would it really do? I'm hard pressed to imagine that a fine would make them say "well we better prevent that from happening again". At best it'll make them say "huh. We can act like this, and it only costs this much. Let's figure out how efficient we can be!"
Heh.
Bush pardoning a death sentence? Well, that's something you don't see everyday.
That's something you don't see ever. Especially in Texas.
Reality check: No death penalty was in the offing; this isn't even a criminal prosecution; and the only thing really at stake was Bill Gates's shot at becoming the first trillionaire. If Microsoft had been divided into software and OS divisions, does anyone seriously think that either BabySoft would have failed? Or that the quality of their products would have declined? (MS haters: substitute could for would.)
President Bush comes from a political philosophy that is anti-antitrust. It's pretty simple.
We have law makers introducing anti-terorism laws [e.g. patriot act et al.] You have law makers introducing new adjustments to miranda, you have law makers trying to break up a computer firm in a tough economic time.
Are any of these politicians actually working for the good of the public they represent?
Suppose they manage to shut down MS [or severely disrupt it]. What comes of that? 1000s of people lose their jobs.
I've been saying this for a few years now. The best way to "adjust" MSFT "way of business" is to hurt them fairly. Sell a better product. Sure not everyone will jump off the MS boat right away but being impatient and shutting them down via anti-trust is hardly the way to prove a point.
I mean at this stage for the average desktop user the average linux distro is hardly useful. Even RH 8.0 has some severe problems [like installing nvidia drivers can kill your X install just by following the instructions!].
By making MSFT illegal and leaving linux as the only option you'd actually be hurting the industry, not helping it.
When linux distros actually compete with Windows [e.g. in a meaningful sense, having 1500 packages on 3 CD's is not "competition" when installing a GFX driver can kill the install] then we'll see the beginning of the demise of Windows.
Tom
Someday, I'll have a real sig.
IANAL, but there are a number of things that MS did that skirt the edges (at least) of what I heard about in B-School back in the early 70s. Unlawful product tie-ins: Requiring a customer to purchase Product B in order to purchase Product A. To my NAL mind, requiring the purchase of IE in order to purchase a Windows OS violates this anti-trust principle. That MS wiggled out of this by claiming that the "browser" was an integral part of the "OS" is more a reflection on the technical competence of the court, than the technical realities. As *nix and other OSes have demonstrated, the browser need not be an integral part of the OS.
Requiring a vendor to install an OS on every unit sold, even if the customer requests a different, or no, OS, would again appear to be an antitrust violation, but again , IANAL.
Think you got that one backwards chief. :)
very nice
A loss doesn't look good; the attorneys general that are pursuing this case wouldn't waste time on if if they thought they didn't have a chance to win it.
The real question is why the other states aren't pursuing it further. I suspect that's because of heavy lobbying and "campaign donations" by Microsoft, convincing politicians that what's good for Microsoft is good for the country.
If I were to hazard a guess, I would guess that if the state of the economy were better, most, if not all, of the other seven states would join. Nearly every state is broke and have other things that are of a higher priority at this time. I'm sure that the economy is hurting M$ but they can just downsize. Government never finds it easy to downsize so M$ probably has the advantage.
Microsoft dodges yet another possible bankrupting lawsuit by buying the entire state of Massachusetts...
Boies should be attorney General instead of Ashcroft, but is too smart to take the pay cut.
That rotten judge Thomas Penfield Jackson.
His indiscretion cost the whole world global domination for one company.
If he would have kept his mouth shut, none of this would have happened.
Jackson's findings of fact were correct, Bill Gates and other Microsoft execs lied in court, and Microsoft should be broken up--period.
Ken Starr could crucify Gates over his testimony if he could put forth as much effort as he did over Clinton's perjury. Put Gates on trial, that's my solution. I bet Boies would do it pro bono if Ellison and co. sent him a few briefcases full of cash.
Game: Player 'Donald J Trump' now has AI skill level 'experimental'.
Take internet explorer out of windows...and windows ain't windows anymore(wasn't this proved, by accident, during one of the court sessions?)....rofl...everytime my browser crashes on my pc (i'm typing on a mac), my desktop crashes as well....This is gonna be interesting to see how M$ will take the windows out of Windows...
"Some fight for law. Some fight for justice. What will you fight for? One day, you will see."
I think we need to let Microsoft go, eventually people will get so tired of their bloated software that they will switch. This case has taken up several years of the federal courts time, and has been a waste of tax payer money. Now dont get me wrong i Hate Microsoft just as much as everyone else here,. But i am tired of spending money i could be using to buy new hardware and software on a trial that isnt ever going to do me any good. I am sorry, but it needs to die, if we keep it going, microsoft will be around that much longer
---
Microsoft didn't "[need] cooperation from outside sources to pull their stunts". They greenmailed and coerced the vendors to install only Windoze on their machines-- this is a finding by the federal courts that is not in dispute. The notion that "the majority of the market wanted MS to be the standard" presumes that the vendors/retailers could make a choice. No choice == monopoly. As for Gateway, they are a bunch of flueless cucks (translate) who won't build anything but a Wintel box. If they offered Linux or something else on their machines, it would likely be up to the vendor of that OS to support it, not Gateway. BTW, forcing vendors to support Windoze must be a pretty good deal for MS-- they don't have to pay for tech support directly. But I think it's a super bad deal for the typical user.
Always look on the briight side of life! (whistle, whistle)
Comment removed based on user account deletion
Agreed.
It's not so much the application, iexplore.exe, that is the fundamental part of the OS, it's the MSHTML rendering engine that comes in the Internet Explorer backend DLLs.
Most applications, if they want to launch a web session or access HTML content, load an iexplore.exe inside of their own window, instead of rendering the page itself. Easier that way...
IE isn't just the program people use to browse the Internet; the API (seems) to involve quite a bit of talking to the application itself, not just the backend. Designed, no doubt, to make something like that easier -- for my database program to be able to show me the manufactuerer's web site, inside it's own window, while still correctly rendering all the scripts, etc.
(IANA Developer)
Last I heard, the states had $25 million to divvy up. California I believe had the largest share of expenses.
So Microsoft pays. It's a win-win, ha-ha. I doubt the states will be reimbursed more than actual costs. I also assume/hope the law has some safety valve against nonsense prolongation of the litigation, but this appeal sounds meritorious if doomed.
(And, it should be noted, an appeal costs peanuts compared to the $25 million -- tens of thousands, maybe. I'm sure Microsoft doesn't mind, they want to be sure this is done right.)
I wish I had enough mod points to mod you +10 Must Read, size 24, with blinking bold characters.
You are correct in saying that Microsoft should never have bundled Internet Explorer into Windows in the first place...
It does not belong there... I can see them INSTALLING IE if it wasn't required...but them making it so called impossible to remove was a big mistake...
If we can't trust the browser...and its automatically part of the system...It doesn't say much for the system.
Many thanks to the California A.G... now I'm gonna have to revise my biases.
The nice thing about lawyers in this case is that a small mistake made in a lawyers case doesn't really hurt the overal product, however in software that isn't true. I'd rather have a lawyer whine a lot than have to test NxNxNxN... extra test cases myself...
"Not knowing when the dawn will come, I open every door." - Emily Dickinson
2. The old, "but think of the children!!!" argument. Bzzzt more opinion and MS Rhetoric.
3. The "Truth of the matter"? Hehhehe thats rich. The truth of the matter has been clearly documented in court. Got anything else MS troll?
prisoner# msce18xxxxx. Currently planning my escape.
For example, there was never really a decisive victory against IBM, but the decade of ongoing legal scrutiny caused IBM to change their business practices greatly, in many areas. As a specific example, the fact that the PC is a fairly open architecture is a result of such legal efforts: IBM only outsourced the PC operating system to Microsoft because they were afraid that bundling hardware and software would get them dragged into court again.
While this created another monopoly in the form of Microsoft, the overall outcome was still better than the alternative, a closed, all-IBM solution. The fact that the PC software was separate from IBM hardware allowed a third party hardware market to flourish and indirectly made software like Linux possible.
So, nibbling away legally at monopolists like IBM and Microsoft does produce long-term benefits, even if such efforts fail to produce groundbreaking short-term victories. The efforts against IBM opened up the PC hardware/software platform, and similar long-term efforts against Microsoft may kill the Microsoft monopoly as well.
And there are indications that Microsoft is changing subtly under this pressure already. But the point is: the longer the legal pressure is on them, the more they will change. This is not the time to lean back and say "oh, we'll just stick with this little settlement". It is on-going lawsuits, not some signature under a settlement, that ultimately keeps companies like Microsoft in check.
Eventually, we have to get a judge that either sees the sense in all of it, or cannot be bought, or (hopefully) both. How much more can will it take?
Just an interesting though: what if all the money that went in to this trial went into development of Free software instead? (We might be a lot farther along. There can be more than one way to make competition...) Anyone know how much has been spent??
Yes, and you know why MS got the opportunity to do this? Because IBM was subject to the same legal scrutiny as Microsoft is now. IBM outsourced the PC operating system to MS because IBM was afraid of more anti-trust action if they did both the PC hardware and software in-house. Note that influencing IBM in this area wasn't the result of an actual settlement, it was the consequence of on-going legal scrutiny and the threat of lawsuits.
Today, Microsoft is the monopoly that kills innovation and competitiveness. And we can apply the same strategy to Microsoft as we did to IBM decades ago: on-going legal scrutiny and on-going lawsuits. Discovery, legal proceedings, and the threat of legal judgements have the teeth that anti-trust settlements lack. This is what will keep Microsoft in check, just like it did IBM.
One thing that always goes undiscussed is just hos MS took over the server market. Better marketing? To some extent since Novell couldn't market themselves out of a wet paper bag. Better technology? Please. NetWare today is still better as an OS than Win XXX.
No, the real reason MS won the server battle is free software. When you purchased NetWare back in the early days you had to by a license for XX clients (10 -250, typically) with the cost going up per client. The options were 10, 25, 50, 100, of 250 seats. If you needed 40 you still bought and paid for 50.
Then MS came along. You bought one copy with one license then just entered the number of licenses you wanted. 1,000??? No problem. No license check. No large PO to get approval for. You could always catch up with the license police later. Every Windows NT server I know of was initially installed this way.
So MS won the server war by giving away the software - and charging for it later. Please don't look shocked. It's the best game a monopolist can play.
Heh, I'm the troll?
Whatever.
You may resume goosestepping around chanting "Down with Microsoft". You wouldn't want to waste any brainpower actually thinking about the situation.
Comment removed based on user account deletion
hmmm... sounds like you are bitter at being an outcast from the outcasts.
your little rant could be true, or maybe the Anti-MS nature of slashdot just reflects the statistical opinion of the people that post on slashdot? maybe it's their opinion. The pathetic thing is how deep you dig to try to grasp why they don't agree with you.
I say "they", because I'm the opposite of a zealot. I will use any tool that I have time to try out. yet I'm sick and tired of MS -- for good reason.
-pyrrho
What if every government or private entity that disaproved of Micro$oft tactics simply stopped buying their products??? That would punish them far more than anything the courts are going to acheive, and would do much to promote alternatives such as Free/Open Source Software.
"Freedom means freedom for everybody" -- Dick Cheney
Yes, Virginia. There is a West Virginia.
A winner is you!
I've been thinking, we should change IANAL to IANALBIHAOA (I'm Not A Lawyer But I Have An Opinion Anyway). ;-)
Funny thing, the U.S. dropped the tying claim altogether. They stuck to the 2 monopoly claim. This article describes the why and how (caution: may cause blurry vision).
My non-expert opinion is that DOJ sabotaged its own case on a go-easy directive from above. Actually, it may not have needed any such directive, as President Bush appointed people sympathetic to his views and the views of his supporters -- all people I would describe as antagonistic to antitrust generally. More than one conservative has proposed abolishing the department.
If you believe that Microsoft is a great company making great software, and those Linuxheads are just spreading FUD, here is a link just for you!
How ya like dat?
Microsoft could offer a selective install option like, say, Apple does, but it doesn't want to. I refuse to believe there are serious technical obstacles -- even if they can't extirpate all of, say, the browser code, all they have to do it sabotage access to it. Why would anyone do this is they didn't at least save disk space? Well, they wouldn't, but Microsoft doesn't wan to give up even this much control, and worried what vendors who preinstall the OS might do.
MS (correctly) perceives that it is doomed if it does not branch out into newer and different industries from its stalwart OS. It is not enough to keep its OS's on as many machines as possible, because its monopoly will not hold forever, and when it breaks so will their profit margins. The Web caught it off-guard; now it thinks it can conquer it. The easiest and most familiar way to do so is to bootstrap via the OS advantage. Hence its aggressive efforts to slot IE into everyone's desktop including Apple's (which seems to have gone away now).
Also, MS has for years now used a scorched earth policy towards any competitor. It viewed the government as just another opponent. Its recent recent experience appears to be making it less arrogant and more political. There was even an NYT magazine article on the kinder, gentler Steve Ballmer.
But if you ever can't get a date on Saturday night, you might give it a try.
.):t .php? ba=pdtl&product=159
You can get a copy of Mandrake 9.0 delivered to you for under $10 here (shipping is expensive . .
http://www.edmunds-enterprises.com/linux/car
You also might want to try "Knoppix." You can get it from the same site. It boots and runs from your CDROM, so you don't have to install on your hard drive. Everything should detect automatically.
You do us all a favor by keeping up with the alternatives; Linux/Windows users alike.
Thanks for being open minded, I'll try to do the same.
Sdelat' Ameriku velikoy Snova!
A little follow-up -- according to this article reimbursement goes to the states -- the law provindes nothing for Justice -- and was $10 million for the 9 states that quit a year ago.
The root of the problem is the line between applications and operating system is blurred. If you can't say what is and isn't part of an operating system, you can't prevent MS from unfairly bundling its own applications with Windows.
Until somebody comes up with a definitive answer as to what constitutes an operating system, Microsoft will be able to do as it pleases.
I doubt that any such strict boundries can be determined, such is the nature of software. The reality is that Microsoft will continue to steal any financially viable idea and put the originator out of business, until they own the entire industry.
When that day comes they will be forced to open their codebase and MS will be no more. In short, Microsoft will eat itself to death.
Microsoft has a large office in Reston VA now. Obviously, MA and WV are feeling in need of something.
Sleep is for the Weak
If I were to hazard a guess, I would guess that if the state of the economy were better, most, if not all, of the other seven states would join. Nearly every state is broke and have other things that are of a higher priority at this time. I'm sure that the economy is hurting M$ but they can just downsize. Government never finds it easy to downsize so M$ probably has the advantage.
:-)
Now is the time for the states to tax the sale of software (separately from the normal sales tax). Of course, when you're favorite O/S and apps are free, guess which ones everybody will migrate towards
Actually, MS went to great lengths to make the browser not part of the OS. That's the whole point of COM/COM+/DCOM/.Net/flavor-of-the-week. They have an interface called IBrowser that defines a way for applications to ask a component to render HTML pages. Components that provide that interface can be installed on the system, IE being one example. An application can ask the system for a list of all components that provide the IBrowser interface, instantiate an instance of one of them and use it. The whole point was to decouple the IBrowser interface from the component that implements it, so that you could have multiple implementations as the situation demanded.
Of course, what happened along the way was that MS went from the minor player trying to create a way to insure that there wasn't anything special about those big third-party apps that everybody had to have (if they were all just COM components that provided standard interfaces then swapping that Oracle database out for MS SQL Server would be easy) to a company trying to keep everybody else from easily replacing it's aps (if browsers are just COM components that provide a standard IBrowser interface then swapping IE out for Mozilla would be easy).
I get so tired of people talking about Bill Gates doing all this bad stuff for in the computer industry. It's gone from monopolies to just plain complaints about having to pay for software. Bill Gates is a business genius who has given the public everything they want in their operating systems, web browsers, and other important applications such as Excel. Yeah they have taken large portions of the world's computer users under their grasps, but only because they offer the public what they want and what works(for the most part, everythign has bugs). I just think people should lay off Bill Gates and the company he brought to life, government included and let Microsoft continue to provide us software that works.
those people who think they know everything are a great annoyance to those of us who do. -isaac asimov
WV is a great place. Harpers Ferry! Wheeling!
Nice mountains! Great roads!
I guess we can all stop the stereotypical cracks about WV for being a bunch of stupid illiterate hillbillies, huh.
You get those Bastards WV, take them to the cleaners and LEAVE THEM THERE. we're all done with MS now, we don't need or want them anymore.
Rock on WV.
"The Most Fun Possible on 4 wheels" is at SunBuggy in Las Vegas
As a student of law myself, it's kind of a difficult situation for the states to be in. Knowing that taking on MS is really a somewhat losing battle as MS can continue to drag this out means that you have to allocate state funds to pursuing a law suit you are pretty unlikely to win. As against MS as I am, I can't say that at this point I could justify my state of IN to do something like this. I'd just rather see the money spent elsewhere. But what do I know? I'm just a voter.
Why, how much do you pay?
Both AT&T and MCI have pre-paid calling cards that are sub-3.5 cents a minute. You can set them up to autorecharge. No monthly fees, no late fees when you forget to pay your bill, extremely cheap long distance. Use those. Only downside is an extra 20 digits when you want to call somewhere.
Deregulation and competion works. I now get local and long distance service (7 cents a minute, for when I'm feeling especially lazy and the call is going to be short) for $30/month, everything included. That's compared to the combined $50 I was paying Sprint and SBC Ameritech for my service and features before (the vast majority of which was going to Ameritech). Hell, if you do a lot of calling, they have a $50/month plan with UNLIMITTED LONG DISTANCE. Nice.
paintball
Trying to get on with life is exactly what this is about. We want MS to stop restricting what we as consumers and competitors can do.
We want our vendors to have the right to sell us a linux or dual-boot box without losing their right to sell MS.
We want MS to tell the damned truth.
As of Win 3.1, BG was oblivious to the Net/WWW. He figured that the world's computers would all be connected by the MSNetwork, when *he* was ready to do it. 3.1 didn't even have a TCP/IP stack. Suddenly IE is a core component of the OS? Of course not, it was purely an embrace-and-extend tactic.
"It's soooo old."
Yeah, it's old, but not so old that we don't remember the exciting and competetive mini and micro days before the 800 pound gorilla sat on us all. The personal computer revolution was about to happen with or without the kid from Seattle. He jumped aboard the train as it was gaining steam and highjacked it.
Believe it or not, I'm not religiously anti-MS. I was very happy to have Bill's Basic available on many pre-PC machines. I was happy to be able to walk into the store buy a copy of DOS5.0 when I bought a used PC with the drive wiped clean.
What I'm vehemently against is their ability and willingness to stifle and/or steal the fruit of other people's ideas and hard work. If I were still a customer, I'd also be very upset at the way my data was being held hostage.
To think people have no choice between, for example, SQL Server and Oracle
We want the desktop you insensitive, M$ clod! All that stuff you mention is aimed at backend, server type stuff. I know it's a hopeless pipedream, but the Linux zealots (includes me, marginally) want the desktop!
Choice! Ha! I laugh at your idea of "choice".
Seriously, are you going to get your opinion of any company from someone who quit after 3 weeks?
I don't base my opinion on that. My first inklinkgs of a negative opinion of M$ goes back to 1994. When I realized that DOS and the splashy GUI I was using (Win 3.11) were made by the same company, I was at a lose to explain why I couldn't close a DOS window by double clicking the little button on the upper left of the window. After all, it worked for all the Windows programs. But not for the DOS windows. But the programs are made by the same damn compnay.
Then I went away for the summer and heard about the new Win95. I saw it but was not greatly impressed. Then when I got back, some weirdo on campus showed me OS/2 Warp. Then I found that while I'd been gone, M$ had sent me an issue of a magazine that was essencially nothing but a big commercial for M$. I wondered why I'd never heard of OS/2 before. I felt like I'd been betrayed on some deep level by not being told that there was more than one OS in the world. I wonder how many non-computer-savvy people in the world still don't know this basic fact. It's like the people chained up in the cave. They've not seen the light.
Then I started to notice (over time) that not only was M$ a near monopoly, their products sucked, crashed a lot, and, M$ played the game dirty. That was what pissed me off the most. On second thought, no, it was the crappy software that pissed me off the most. The other thing was just a close second.
Now that M$ is all the way up to XP, the crappy software is mostly a thing of the past. M$ apps seem to run pretty solidly now (I'm not saying that XP is the first version to be able to make that claim, I'm just saying that it is that way now).
But I will never forgive them for playing the game dirty. It's not that I have a problem with them competing with other businesses and trying to win and drive other businesses out of business (although, despite what some people say, that's not always the best strategy for a business). It's the way they do it. Do you realize what company you're working for? Can you really look at yourself in the mirror each morning? Really?
If you see a person bleeding to death on the street, will you help them? Because I'm not so sure Ballmer or Gates would.
Yes, yes, I know. I'm a crazy lunatic. Don't worry about it, I'm just venting. :-P
Furry cows moo and decompress.
...they can actually afford it.
While perfectly happy to send people with mental ages of three to the chair, he keeps his very special sparing of life to the really good ones...
One of the few (not even sure if there has been more than one), is one Henry Lee Lucas. Yes. Old hang 'em high Bush will toast simpletons no problem, but when it comes to mass murderers (Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer), he's very merciful...
"On June 27, 1998 Governor George W. Bush spared Henry's life because of overwhelming evidence proving that Henry was not in Texas when "Orange Socks" was murdered. Although Lucas confessed to killing her, work records and a cashed paycheck indicated he was in Florida at the time of the murder. Bush issued the reprieve on the recommendation of the state parole board. "I can only thank them for believing the truth and having guts enough for standing up for what's right," Lucas said from death row."
http://www.houseofhorrors.com/lucas.htm
Mandrake and many other installations are as easy (or difficult) to install as whatever MS offering of MS.
And now, tell me something: how do you customize a corporate install for MS platform and then install it in 20, 200 or 2000 machines?
I would tell you how to do it in Linux, but I guess you would clasify that as MS hate speech.
IANAL but write like a drunk one.
The only difference between a command economy controlled from Moscow and a command economy controlled from Fedmond is one of longitude.
give me a
Slashdot's turning into an Anti-MS tabloid.
:-) Seriously though, you wax fondly about the nascent days of Slashdot, however this has ALWAYS been the breeding grounds for contrarian opinion and behaviour.
Turning into?
Oops, M$ killed them with illegal actions.
What a ridiculous myth. Netscape absolutely monopolized the browser market, but killed themselves when they got so refocused primarily on the web server (where they might make money) that they pretty much gave up on the browser market. I realize that many on here have an absurd revisionist history, but for those who were actually computing through the changes, you know that around version 3 Netscape slowed down, and then 4 was just a bloated minor change. At the same time Microsoft kept steaming along. That's competitive forces at its best. Netscape was NEVER the underdog that everyone likes to romantically pretend they were now.
Maybe BeOS?...Oops, another product killed by illegal M$ actions.
You're being funny here, right? If anything, Linux killed BeOS, not Microsoft, because BeOS generally catered to the same sort of crowd that Linux catered to (just as Linux helped cement the death of OS/2, and keeps Amiga from rising from the ashes. In the interest of obscure operating systems, I hereby proclaim that Linux should be banned by governments worldwide).
but we'd likely get slapped down by M$'s threats of no more Office for Mac.
Wow...so now Microsoft HAS to make successful products otherwise they're abusing their powers. There is just no end to the constraints you believe that they should live under is there?
You don't think the phrase Moron Confused by Sun Equipment came from nowhere, now did you?
Funny, but I've never ever heard this brilliant little gem before. I suggest that you take a peek out of your little zealot cave every now and then and you'll discover a real world of real people looking for cost effective, powerful solutions to their problems. Raving maniac anti-Microsoftarians are just as bad as the most brianwashed pro-Microsoft VB fanatic (they're one and the same).
I used to go to MS sponsored events up there, but I've noticed lately that the MS sign isn't on the building anymore. Can't say for sure whether they're still around or not.
Just buy a Linux box, then. You can buy one from any of the major manufacturers. How they conduct their business shouldn't effect you at all. Buy a linux box and get on with life. If more people just did that, then you'd have the effect you're looking for. And I can tell you that it'd have a much greater effect than whining and bitching on the Web.
What I'm vehemently against is their ability and willingness to stifle and/or steal the fruit of other people's ideas and hard work. If I were still a customer, I'd also be very upset at the way my data was being held hostage.
I've never heard of them stealing anything. That's news to me if they did. What I do read about them is that they trounce the competition in several different areas. That's how business works. If small businesses lose out to MS, that's because they didn't offer a product that was a good value that people wanted, or something as simple as they didn't market themselves well enough. That's business. That's not stealing.
As far as data being held hostage, I have no idea what you're talking about. I can get to all of my data any time I want.
Let's just say that I was "inspired" by your remarks.
Please vote for one of the following:
[ ] Big Industry Patsy/Media Cartel Puppet (R)
[ ] Media Cartel Puppet/Big Industry Patsy (D)
[ ] Piss Away Vote (I)
__
Do ya feel happy-go-lucky, punk?
Let's just say that I was "inspired" by your remarks.
Fair enough. I just don't understand the activism part. There aren't too many other industries where activism is what it is in the software industry. In the ever popular car analogy, I hate american cars. Hate 'em with a passion. Ugly designs, piss-poor quality, hard to maintain, expensive to maintain, etc. Can't stand 'em. Yet, I don't have a website entitled "americancarssuck.com". I just don't buy 'em, and proceed along with my life as if they didn't exist. It's really quite simple.
I hate Microsoft, but WV is a state owned by the trial lawyers. Highest workman's comp claims, high malpractice insurance premiums forcing doctors to leave in droves, etc.
And you sound like the typical hillbilly... it's those big bad corporations fault! The coal industry ruined our state! Yeah... no West Virginian never got rich.
Now... no corporation wants anything to do w/ the backward state. But, there is hope. Once the Eastern Panhandle becomes the most populace area - the politics of the past will be gone.
"There aren't too many other industries where activism is what it is in the software industry. "
There aren't too many other industries controlled by predatory monopolists.
...a judge who agrees with you is a judge who "sees the sense in all of it", right?
Good grief. How many lynch mobs have behaved in precisely the same dull-witted, imbecilic, zombie-like manner? Not knowing, not caring about the "facts," a lynch mob doesn't rest until the noose snaps tight. After that, it takes the time to consider its actions.
Your idea that "nearly the entire computing industry hates Microsoft," is truly one of the most egregiously ridiculous statements I've ever heard. There are literally dozens, if not hundreds, of software and hardware companies world wide which owe their existence--their entire success--to the market Microsoft built with Windows. In fact, Microsoft could never in a million years have built such a market without the aid of all of these companies consciously working to build a market. The idea that Microsoft did it alone is sheer nonsense *chuckle*--the Dells, Gateways, Microns, HPs and all the rest in this world have contributed just as much if not more to the Windows market as Microsoft has.
The kind of thinking which places Microsoft in its current position and forgets all of the other corporations sharing in and assisting in Microsoft's market illustrates the most extreme kind of ignorance.
Frankly, I'm sick of the self-righteousness of deluded people who think the courts, the companies--and anybody else who stands in their way--is wrong. It's really looking like a pathetic viewpoint these days.
Oh, exactly!
Now we are pulling away the veil and peering through the haze of lynchmob fervor--and catching glimpses of the simple truth, aren't we?
Why *are* people still buying Microsoft if they think the company and its products are so rotten?
Hint: Maybe because your sentiment is a minority sentiment--distinctly a minority sentiment? Just a thought...
If it weren't for the monopoly abuses, almost nobody would be using any Microsoft products today. Most of Microsoft's 1987-to-date (approx) revenue should be taken from them.
Microsoft's only legitimate defense against this, would be to attack the morality of anti-trust law itself, and even I with all my hatred for them, have quite a bit of sympathy for that position. But if you don't like a law, repeal it. I don't see Elcomsoft being let off simply because DMCA is immoral.
As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
Hmmm.. retail (any big box store), denim (Cone Mills), soft drinks (Coke & Pepsi), and many other products that you've never even heard of, and also the components of many of the products that you use every day. There are plenty of 'em. You just don't know about any outside of your little geek sphere of influence. Pick up a business magazine or two. You may actually learn something.
Again, you're asuming that A. MS has a monopoly, which they don't, and B. that a monopoly is a bad thing, which I don't think that it necesarily is and C. that they're "predatory", which happens to describe every other for-profit company on the planet.
Why not spend all this money on Linux...!? But, but, isn't that the point of Linux - NOT spending money on it? So you're going to use the same tactic you so obviously egregiously deplore -- giving it away for free until it is locked in; then charge for it?
I think with the interesting people, their lives can't possibly be wrapped up into a nice little package.
I'm afraid my point kind of got lost in there; sorry. The point is that selling a superior product isn't the answer, because they already have a corner on the market. It is no longer possible to really affect Microsoft through the free market system, because there is no free market there. The only recourse we have left is to attempt to punish them for the many illegal actions they have taken, and many other actions that violate the spirit of the law, if not the letter.
Dan Aris
Fun. Free. Online. RPG. BattleMaster.