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Colleges Signing Secret MS License Agreements

David Gerard writes "As seen on Yale LawMeme: Microsoft is requiring colleges wanting cheap licenses to keep their license terms secret (e.g. Ohio State, University of Michigan) ... in direct contravention of state public records and Freedom of Information laws." Many FOI laws have loopholes permitting state agencies not to disclose information when it would harm business interests, so what the colleges and Microsoft are doing may not actually be illegal (or could be argued not to be, anyway), but it certainly is shady.

343 comments

  1. Wait, why is this bad again? by ProtonMotiveForce · · Score: 2, Insightful

    You mention the FOI law, but that has nothing to do with Microsoft. That's completely the responsibility of the college - if they don't like it or it's not legal they can't sign the contract. End of story.

    Microsoft isn't doing anything wrong, and it sounds like the college isn't either. I've pulled more interesting, and bloody, things out of my nose.

    1. Re:Wait, why is this bad again? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Microsoft has two objectives in eduction: (1) mindshare and (2) revenue (one digit and nine zeros). What occurs is a mixture of the two.

      Colleges can band together and form consortiums to negotiate competitive pricing with select resellers. It is their choice. Ohio State is a huge institution and will drive the lowest possible rates. Yale is high in the "mindshare" category.

      It is up to the individual colleges and university systems to share information and negotiate as a collective group. Microsoft has a soft side for Eduction. Accept, and approach the beast carefully.

    2. Re:Wait, why is this bad again? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > You mention the FOI law, but that has nothing to do with Microsoft. That's completely the responsibility of the college...

      Wrong.

      If the colleges are violating the Freedom of Information act, then the colleges are breaking the law.

      But if Microsoft is pressuring them into doing it, i.e. if Microsoft is soliciting the colleges to break the law, then Microsoft is also guilty of breaking the law.

    3. Re:Wait, why is this bad again? by euphline · · Score: 2
      [T]hat has nothing to do with Microsoft. That's completely the responsibility of the college ... Microsoft isn't doing anything wrong, and it sounds like the college isn't either.

      On the other hand, asking a customer to do something illegal is in the shady category. The open records / freedom of information rules vary from state to state (and IANAL), so it's hard to say what's legal and illegal.

      In the words of Thomas Jefferson,

      I know of no safe depository of the ultimate powers of the society but the people themselves; and if we think them not enlightened enough to exercise their control with a wholesome discretion, the remedy is not to take it from them, but to inform their discretion by education.
      To not disclose the terms of large financial deals in an educational institution brings to mind questions of financial propriety and of academic independence. (Is this "deal" encouraging the insitutions to teach with these products?) Of course, I can't even make a full list of questions this raises... because I can't see the deal.

      Transparency in government is necessary for an effective democracy. Public colleges and universities must be transparent. Private ones must be transparent enough to assure academic integrity...

      -jbn

  2. Fuck this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Microsoft needs to be dissolved and Gates needs to live in a cardboard box! 20 second delay....bite my ass, penalized for fast typing. Niggahs!

  3. I don't care by Apreche · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I really don't care what kind of agreement my college (RIT) has with MS. I got a legal and free copy of Visual Studio.NET. And I don't care what you say about Microsoft's evil business practices. But I don't see any developement environments that are that amazing for linux. I mean KDevelop is good and all, but it doesn't even come close. I already pay my school thousands of dollars every year, and if some shady agreement with MS puts Win2k in the labs and Visual Studio on my PC I got no problem with it.

    --
    The GeekNights podcast is going strong. Listen!
    1. Re:I don't care by MrEd · · Score: 2, Insightful
      if some shady agreement with MS puts Win2k in the labs and Visual Studio on my PC I got no problem with it


      You want some bread and circuses too? ;-)

      --

      Wah!

    2. Re:I don't care by dillon_rinker · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I really don't care what kind of energy policy Bush has with Iraq. I get legal and cheap oil. And I don't care what you say about capitalism's evil business practices. But I don't see fuels that are amazing in the USA. I mean biodiesel is good and all but it doesn't even come close. I already pay the IRS thousands of dollars every year and if some kind of energy policy with Iraq puts cheap gas in my car I got no problem with it.

      (Naturally the people who see no problem in the original poster's statements will see no problem in mine...sigh. See other less cerebral post.)

    3. Re:I don't care by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The same way you don't have a problem with only being able to buy Pepsi from all the campus' vending machines because RIT also has a deal with Pepsi? Can't you see that this model is crap? Besides, what the article critizes is the fact that the deal is made in secret, away from public scrutiny. Fucking grow up. There's more to life than just the bottom line.

    4. Re:I don't care by MAXOMENOS · · Score: 2

      VS.NET obviously won't work on Linux, but SharpDevelop is on the way...

    5. Re:I don't care by dillon_rinker · · Score: 3, Funny

      More succinctly:

      "Me no care if thing evil or not if me get thing CHEAP!"

    6. Re:I don't care by MonTemplar · · Score: 3, Funny

      if some shady agreement with MS puts Win2k in the labs and Visual Studio on my PC I got no problem with it.

      Be careful at the graduation ceremony - I bet the Microserfs will be there waiting to assimilate you into the Collective... :)

      --
      -MT.
    7. Re:I don't care by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > and if some shady agreement with MS puts Win2k in the labs and Visual Studio on my PC I got no problem with it.

      One thing you're forgetting: that agreement is paid for with OTHER PEOPLE'S TAX DOLLARS. That gives them (the public) the right to know what happens to the money.

      You don't like that, try paying for a private school. Yeah, you may get a FREE COPY of Visual Studio, which will make the $30,000 a year a great deal!

    8. Re:I don't care by buswolley · · Score: 1, Redundant

      greedy troll bastard. As long as the evil in the world doesn't affect your pocketbook, it is ok, huh? Fuck off corporate lackey.

      --

      A Good Troll is better than a Bad Human.

    9. Re:I don't care by buswolley · · Score: 2

      Cant wait to become an official corporate lackey, ehh? Can't wait to stomp the face of the poor some more? stomp the face of freedom and right from wrong?

      --

      A Good Troll is better than a Bad Human.

    10. Re:I don't care by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Frankly, I don't give a damn what private insitutions do with Microsoft and licensing agreements. They can sign agreements that state Ballmer must dance on campus weekly for all I care.

      If people wish to get ripped off by private institutions, let them. However, if Microsoft is forcing public (IE, directly state/federal funded) schools to keep details private, frankly, that isn't right.

      This isn't a question about Microsoft or Linux or any other opinion little foaming zealots might have - this is about taxes. My taxes help pay for government sponsored institutions of learning. (Again, 'public', not private colleges.)

      Since that is the case, I damned well want to know what colleges are doing with that money. ..As for RIT, feh, all you get is Win2k in the labs and Visual Studio? You think for their price, they'd give you a full set of Knuth. :p

    11. Re:I don't care by buswolley · · Score: 2

      I officialy declare this thread to be a legitimate FLAME WAR>>>let the flaming begin.

      --

      A Good Troll is better than a Bad Human.

    12. Re:I don't care by sporty · · Score: 2

      Your comment reminds me when "I am weasle" spun off. They had the red butt baboon running around in circles: "I R spinning off! I R spinnning off!" to the toon of "neener-neener-neener".

      Gives me the same laugh as well.

      --

      -
      ping -f 255.255.255.255 # if only

    13. Re:I don't care by rmohr02 · · Score: 2

      or FREE!

    14. Re:I don't care by accessdeniednsp · · Score: 1

      Development environment for Linux/Unix:

      1) vi
      2) man man
      3) groups.google.com
      4) a clue

    15. Re:I don't care by The+Dobber · · Score: 2


      And if he gets a good paying job, bully for him !!

    16. Re:I don't care by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If theres a steady paycheck in it, then yeah, I'll be a lackey.

      Try it, beats living in Mom & Dad's basement.

    17. Re:I don't care by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Can't tell sarcasm when it slaps you in the face, eh?

    18. Re:I don't care by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I declare you to be tonites official Basement Dwelling Linux Fanboy & Harry Potter Fan Club PooBah.

      Woot! Woot! Let's all praise BusWolley! He's l33t! Woot! Woot!

    19. Re:I don't care by orcrist · · Score: 1

      Dude, you need to take Sarcasm 101. He even gave you an extra hint at the end of his post:

      (Naturally the people who see no problem in the original poster's statements will see no problem in mine...sigh. See other less cerebral post.)

      --
      San Francisco values: compassion, tolerance, respect, intelligence
    20. Re:I don't care by Herkum01 · · Score: 2

      CHEAP!

      What type of American are you!!! What you really mean is FREE!!!(as in beer)

    21. Re:I don't care by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who said anything about Linux?

      This is about backroom deals on an institution that's partially maintaned with the people's money. You're welcome to use Microsoft products if you want. I do. But the public should have the right to know what's the price for your shiny "free" Visual Studio .Net.

      The point is:

      What exactly did your college promise Microsoft? You'll never know.

      Did someone get "paid-off" to sign the deal? You'll never know.

      And, more importantly: are they breaking the law? Possibly. Because you have the right to know the answer to the first two questions, but they are denying you that very right.

      I thought you would like to know how much of your tuition money is directly or indirectly involved in this shady deal. How much of your (or your parents', or the people's) money went to Microsoft. I know I would.

    22. Re:I don't care by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      yah, 'cos eclipse is just a piece of shite, bah...

    23. Re:I don't care by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Evil? Are you saying that it is OBJECTIVELY evil and wrong for everyone? That's not the slashdot *I* know.

    24. Re:I don't care by BarrettAnderson · · Score: 1

      neither can you - he was being sarcastic. ever watch the simpsons?

    25. Re:I don't care by kilonad · · Score: 2
      I go to RIT too. I'm not majoring in CS though (choosing instead to major in Imaging Science). Does this mean that I too can get a free copy of VS .NET? Or does this mean that I'm helping to subsidize you? You're not the only one paying RIT thousands of dollars a year -- it'd be nice if we could all share in the perks. There's no such thing as a free lunch.

      This is what you sound like: "Hey, say what you want about slavery, but I got my chains for free!"

    26. Re:I don't care by plague3106 · · Score: 1

      Ugh. As an alumni of RIT, your attitude makes me sick. You must be an IT major though, since all the CS labs are (or were) running SunOS.

      Maybe you should take Carithers' Privacy and Security class, or just go talk to him about MS. I'm sure he can tell you why MS is generally a bad thing.

    27. Re:I don't care by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What about the Eight Megabyte enviroment?

    28. Re:I don't care by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      #1-#3 are exactly the reasons noone wants to develop for Linux.

      #4 is what ppl thinking of writing code for linux should get.

    29. Re:I don't care by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Are you being sarcastic now?"

      "I don't even know anymore."

    30. Re:I don't care by vlad_petric · · Score: 2
      But I don't see any developement environments that are that amazing for linux.

      I'm sorry, but I think you haven't looked enough ... How about Eclipse ?

      --

      The Raven

    31. Re:I don't care by Malcontent · · Score: 2

      obviously ethics are not being taught in your university. Which school do you go to anyway? I would be interested in knowing which school is cranking out graduates with no sense of ethics or morals.

      --

      War is necrophilia.

    32. Re:I don't care by Oliver+Defacszio · · Score: 2
      Oh, so your ethics are also supposed to be his ethics? I see. Well, aren't you objective? Son, some of us feel that it is morally right to become skilled in an area that can actually provide for a family or, at the least, pay the bills. There are others in addition to Microsoft, but few that are as sure of a bet. Oh, but that's not what you believe and is, thus, clearly wrong.

      I have a hunch that the real world will come as quite the shock to fanboys like yourself and most of the other respondants in this thread.

      --

      -
      Inventor of the term 'pardon my French'.
    33. Re:I don't care by Imperial+Tacohead · · Score: 1

      To hell with what the rest of the posters are saying...the whole tone of your post is really ignorant and arrogant, but what really bothers me is that you're stupid enough to quote yourself for your sig, and do it badly, too. And the quote is bad of itself; aphorisms are supposed to be self-evident, but that line makes no sense. Under what circumstances is the smart (i.e., rational) thing to do not the right thing to do? For a convincing argument against the sentiment expressed in your sig, check Plato's Republic.

    34. Re:I don't care by Apreche · · Score: 1

      yes, you can get a free copy of Visual Studio.NET. TECHNICALLY only people in SE can get it, but if you ask an SE major they can get you unlimited free licenses with their login and password you can just download isoz of XP, 2k, VS.NET, and just about everythign except office. It's pretty sweet.

      --
      The GeekNights podcast is going strong. Listen!
    35. Re:I don't care by Apreche · · Score: 1

      Oh man. You are what's wrong with this world. I will give you the most basic example of when the smart (i.e: rational) thing to do is the wrong thing to do.

      Let's say someone is in mortal danger. They will definitely die unless you act. Your action may or may not save them, and if you act you may or may not kill yourself. Smart thing? let them die. Right thing? save them.

      Let's try again, in case you don't think saving lives is the right thing to do. Let's look at a more selfish situation. Someone has a gun to your head. And tells you to push a button. Pushing that button will kill your friend. If you don't push it you die. Smart thing? kill your friend. Right thing? attempt to beat up the guy with a gun to your head.

      And according to most of the people here it seems they don't think Microsoft or the RIAA have been doign the right thing, or the government either for that matter. But I doubt you could argue they weren't doing what was smart.

      --
      The GeekNights podcast is going strong. Listen!
    36. Re:I don't care by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I go to RIT as well, and I know that if you are a Eng Technology major you can get free copies of this MS software by logging onto an FTP server with your DCE user name.

      Anyone complaining about this software being a cause of the high price of the school must not use all of the resources of the school. It's a private school and with that you get alot of perks that you would not get otherwise.

      Finally, to the person who wrote that they will be doing less work and getting paid more. Fat chance. Starting pay (you can look this up on the RIT site, true numbers) for most of our majors are much much higher than any other school in the country. It pays to go to a good school

      PS. I'm an EEEE major.

    37. Re:I don't care by FireBreathingDog · · Score: 1
      > Naturally the people who see no problem in the original poster's statements will see no problem in mine...sigh.

      But that doesn't mean that someone who does see a problem with the original statements must also see a problem with yours.

    38. Re:I don't care by mgblst · · Score: 2

      I really don't care if MS absorb me into the collective. They would take care of me real well, and I wouldn't have to worry too much about the stress of modern life. People are always focusing on the bad side.

    39. Re:I don't care by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But ripping CDs and posting the MP3s is OK? Oh wait - that's not evil because YOU do it.

    40. Re:I don't care by MonTemplar · · Score: 2

      I really don't care if MS absorb me into the collective. They would take care of me real well, and I wouldn't have to worry too much about the stress of modern life. People are always focusing on the bad side.

      You're right - they could instead be focussing on getting free software out of MS for fun and PROFIT! :)

      --
      -MT.
    41. Re:I don't care by Malcontent · · Score: 2

      If you want to make money get an MBA. Code monkeys get paid less then MBAs, lawyers, doctors, and a whole host of other professions. In fact not only do those professions pay more they often work less hours then code monkeys. In my company programmers (especially MS programmers) are dime a dozen. As soon as times get tough they are the first ones to get canned. This is because there are millions of VB programmers that you can hire for 30 to 40K. Most MS programers get paid less then tenured teachers! If you want to make money in the tech world get an MBA, get your PMI certification, learn oracle, J2EE, SAP, smalltalk, unix system administration, DB/2 hell anything but VB or C#. There is no significant difference between a VB or a C# programmer and a burger fipper.

      So you have a choice. In the end it's better to sleep with a clean conscience. Of course I realize that most people don't even have a conscience and are able sleep perfectly well while advancing the cause of evil.

      --

      War is necrophilia.

    42. Re:I don't care by Imperial+Tacohead · · Score: 2

      But all that shows is that you have a skewed view of what's smart. Since when is self-preservation the highest calling of all rational beings?

    43. Re:I don't care by thaylin · · Score: 1

      Personaly to me saving the other person is the smart thing, not saving myself. Dieing to allow another to live is the greatest thing someone can do, my opinion.

      --
      When you cant win, ad hominem.
    44. Re:I don't care by (H)elix1 · · Score: 2

      Be careful at the graduation ceremony - I bet the Microserfs will be there waiting to assimilate you into the Collective... :)

      Or waiting with the BSA to do an audit...

      (stroking cat and adjusting monocle) I see you are no longer a student as of Thursday. Your 'navi' reported in and informed us you are no longer in compliance. The upgrade to your $10 office/xp/vs will cost you dearly and we want to check for MP3's while we are auditing - or you can buy this 'universal' subscription and renew it every couple years for only a couple thousand.

      Everyone did read the fine print, right?

    45. Re:I don't care by lousyd · · Score: 1

      I don't think what Microsoft is doing is necessarily illegal or shady, but I do think you'd better care.

      --
      If aspiration is a virtue, achievement cannot be a vice.
    46. Re:I don't care by iggly_iguana · · Score: 1

      You think Visual Studio.NET is good? You must still be in school!

    47. Re:I don't care by 5KVGhost · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Yes, because signing a contract with Microsoft allowing schools and students to buy useful software at prices they can afford is exactly the same as making a (non existent) deal with a genocidal dictator. Right-o.

      Nonsense. And the fact that your post was moderated up only serves to demonstrate the sad lack of perspective in the Slashdot community when anything related to Microsoft is mentioned. Consider, if the schools had signed a similar deal with Red Hat, Sun, or Apple (and I bet some of them have) would this even be an issue?

    48. Re:I don't care by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If analogies as tortured and brain damaged as this (comparing bloody international war to operating systems) get modded up as "insightful", well, ah, who cares... There's not a single thinking person left in the world. :-(

    49. Re:I don't care by muzthe42nd · · Score: 1

      wow, how sad am i, i recognize your name from the tinews.net forums....

      --
      Pfft - Sorry, what?
    50. Re:I don't care by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think you all suck.

    51. Re:I don't care by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      [...] is exactly the same as making a (non existent) deal with a genocidal dictator.
      [...]
      the sad lack of perspective [...]
      First off, let's illuminate the structure of the comparison. Primarily, that congruence is irrespective of scale. The argument was not that the deals are exactly the same, but that they are similar in (moral) form/shape/organization. In the same way, the paperweight model of the Eiffel Tower on my desk is congruent to the 1/3 scale model standing at an amusement park elsewhere in my state, and they both are congruent to the real thing as it stands in Paris, France. Any fool knows they are not exactly the same, but they share enough important details (though size is not one of them) to be considered in the light of one another.

      The comment to which you replied was merely pointing out the similarities in moral structure between two well know situations, in the hopes of shedding light on each. Of course they are not exactly the same.

      And regarding the "(non existent) deal", you may recall (if you are old enough) that the US government had a strong hand in providing Saddam with weapons back when there was a war between Iran and Iraq. See the first Reagan administration.

    52. Re:I don't care by tgrigsby · · Score: 1

      Two words, baby:

      Kylix.

      JBuilder.

      Four more words:

      Have a nice day.

      --
      *** *** You're just jealous 'cause the voices talk to me... ***
  4. heh by Slashdotess · · Score: 2, Funny

    in direct contravention of Someone's been using their word of the day calendar.

  5. How? by robbyjo · · Score: 1

    Microsoft are doing may not actually be illegal (or could be argued not to be, anyway)

    How can this be legal? This kind of action is basically violating the settlement. Can someone explain, please?

    --

    --
    Error 500: Internal sig error
    1. Re:How? by swschrad · · Score: 1

      it's easy. M$ is the AntiChrist and those Packets of Death that sneak in on the broadband and reboot your box are your warning of doom.

      either that, or they don't care as long as they separate fools from their money.

      --
      if this is supposed to be a new economy, how come they still want my old fashioned money?
    2. Re:How? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      this doesn't breach the settlement for several reasons other than it being a voluntary choice for these schools, and it is simply a choice of technical preference; rather than technical detail of what is installed on the OS. These aren't different products, only the price is concealed. Most OEMs don't disclose how much they pay per windows license either, so there is no reason why this could be even remotely in red.

    3. Re:How? by marauder404 · · Score: 2

      Please explain why you think it's illegal.

    4. Re:How? by kcbrown · · Score: 2
      How can this be legal? This kind of action is basically violating the settlement. Can someone explain, please?

      Since when has Microsoft ever cared about any of these "settlements"? They'll do whatever they damned well please until someone literally points a gun to their heads and tells them to stop or die. Since nobody (certainly not the U.S. government) seems to have both the ability and the cajones to do that, we can expect them to continue to violate these "settlements" into the far future.

      --
      Use 'slashdot stuff' in the subject line in any email you send me if you want to get past the spam filter.
    5. Re:How? by faaaz · · Score: 1

      I think he did just that when he said "This kind of action is basically violating the settlement". Please explain why you didn't get that.

      --
      we come in peace / shoot to kill
  6. Standard stuff? by darco · · Score: 1

    While it smells fishy the way it was posted, I don't see what harm comes from this. Just seems like standard barganing stuff...

    --
    — darco
  7. That's why by archeopterix · · Score: 4, Informative
    That's completely the responsibility of the college - if they don't like it or it's not legal they can't sign the contract.
    Aren't the colleges (at least partially) funded by taxpayers money? Hiding contract details is hiding information on how public money is spent. Visit Transparency International to find out why this is bad.
    1. Re:That's why by angle_slam · · Score: 1

      I think the point of the other poster was that it is the responsibility of the college to sign a contract that comports with state disclosure laws, not the responsibility of MS. It is trivially easy (and required by law) for the college to say, "hey, we like your deal, but are required by state law to disclose our contracts." It is not the responsibility of MS to be aware of the laws of each of the 50 states, it is the responsibility of the state colleges to obey the law and make MS aware of the law.

    2. Re:That's why by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actualy it *is* the responsibility of MS to know the laws of the states in which they do business.

      And please don't try and throw out the old "they didn't know what they were doing was shaddy/illegal" argument, that's just bullshit. Microsoft knows exactly what they're doing, and even if they don't, they are still responsible for it. Ignorance for the law is not an excuse in this.

    3. Re:That's why by fermion · · Score: 1
      I would say the issue is even more broad. When we talk about investment in non-western countries, one of the prime criteria is how transparently the business and government is run. Over the past year we have seen families destroyed by deceptive and opaque business practices.

      We do not know what Microsoft is doing with it's money. We have had some indication that they use non-transparent financial vehicles to manage earnings and exactly meet investor expectation. Likewise, there was some noise about secret deals with the stock brokers that managed employee owned stock. We don't really know what is going on. Right now the company appears to be doing well, can meet all it's debt, and shows growth, so no one wants to look too hard. Nevertheless opaque company management of a publicly traded company is not acceptable.

      --
      "She's a scientist and a lesbian. She's not going to let it slide." Orphan Black
    4. Re:That's why by Valar · · Score: 2

      Yes, we all agree that is why it is illegal. However, what the poster above was saying is that is the university's responsibility and not Microsoft's. This is true, the institution to which the FOI law applies to this case is the university. And before you suspect an overarching conspiracy, realize that Microsoft just wants more bargining power with other universities. They don't want other institutions to be able to say, "Well, you gave $SU a lower price, why can't you give us this deal?"

    5. Re:That's why by Adam_Weishaupt · · Score: 2, Interesting

      It is not the responsibility of MS to be aware of the laws of each of the 50 states,

      You are wrong, it is Microsofts responsibility to know the laws of the states it does business in, just as you are required to know the laws of the state you live in. I am sure you have heard the old saying "Ignorance of the law is no excuse".

      --
      "You don't need a weatherman/ To know which way the wind blows" -Bob Dylan: Subterranean Homesick Blues
  8. Yet Chinese oppression using Linux is OK. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I find it funny that the Linuxista doesn't mind the PRC for using Linux to aid in the continuing oppression of their citizens. In fact they encourage it! OSS would rather have evil uses of Linux, than benevolent use of Windows. And you know damn well this is true.

    1. Re:Yet Chinese oppression using Linux is OK. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nope, it isn't. That's to basically everything you said

    2. Re:Yet Chinese oppression using Linux is OK. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I find it funny that the Linuxista doesn't mind the PRC for using Linux to aid in the continuing oppression of their citizens. In fact they encourage it! OSS would rather have evil uses of Linux, than benevolent use of Windows. And you know damn well this is true.
      We offer Linux up to everybody to use. We do not go out of our way to send it there and to be used for any pupose.
      MS sells XP to them for $5.00 USD, suggest that they steal it, and they buy their way in. I would also suspect that unofficial bribes are being used to help out. Does MS know who they are dealing with ? oh yea. Do they know that their stuff is going to help inprison and tortue ppl? oh yeah. After all it is not just being used by china, but by the texas state prison system and heavily now, by the USA federal government.

  9. You troll by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Because these are state, rather than privately, funded colleges the citizens are entitled to know what they (through the schools) have agreed to.

  10. Good for them by kannibal_klown · · Score: 1, Troll

    I say good for them . If they can get a discount on MS licenses, I say "power to them." While I understand the need for access to information regarding public facilities, I think schools having to pay less outweighs the .02% of the population that cares or even looks through the records. While some of you will probably be saying "they'd be better of switching to linux," that isn't always the answer. Sure, students looking for some sort of computing degree may benefit slightly but architects, engineers, doctors, etc all use tools primarily in windows. While there are "similar if not better" products for linux, they are NOT the industry standard. Students need to be exposed to what's in the real world. Sure, an architect might be able to develop a building in some obscure package in linux. But the firms want you to know AUTOCAD. Sure, StarOffice is great (I use it), but most companies require MS Word for a reason. And EXCEL MACROS are a must in most research places. Linux is good, but Schools need to be realistic. I say, "good for them."

    1. Re:Good for them by MegaHamsterX · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Ok, on this one I will bite.

      College is for learning why not how, if you are going to school for how there are many fine vocational schools.

      If you manage to graduate from College and are unable to apply your skills on a new software package used in real life your education is useless.

      Isn't this why people Intern????

    2. Re:Good for them by Danse · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Probably a troll, but on the off chance that anyone thinks he's making sense, I'll respond. If MS wants to give the school a good deal, fine. Why do they need to keep it a secret from the taxpayers that are paying the bills? How is it good for me as a taxpayer to not know what kind of terms the schools I'm helping to pay for are agreeing to? How will I know if they've agreed to some horrible terms? If MS wants to deal with publicly funded schools, then it needs to be above the board and not try to hide anything from the public.

      --
      It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
    3. Re:Good for them by ender81b · · Score: 2

      Recently MS has started offering *substantial* discounts to students at major universities. At my school we can get a copy of Windows XP for 9.95$, office XP for $7.95, and Office X for 7.95$. Of course the student council or whatever has to pay MS 400,000$ a year or so to do this and there are some restrictions on how you can use the software (have to return the software if you don't graduate, only for personal use,etc) but over all it is a very, very nice deal for students.

      I mean really when Windows XP professional and office XP costs you a combined total of about 20$ there is no point in pirating them.

    4. Re:Good for them by Kurt+Russell · · Score: 1
      "While there are "similar if not better" products for linux, they are NOT the industry standard."

      If Microsoft wasn't dumping products and forcing pc makers to install only windows/office that might not be the case.
      But I do see your point.

    5. Re:Good for them by Monkelectric · · Score: 4, Insightful
      If they can get a discount on MS licenses

      Um that's exactly the point. You don't *know* if you're getting a discount because nobody knows what anyone else is paying. There's no reference or baseline other then the (ridiculous) list price.

      It reminds me of something a friend said to me. I was purchasing sun servers for the university I worked at, about 100k worth. The list price was 180k and I got them down to 95k... I was telling my friend that I had negotiated almost a 50% discount, and he said (sarcastically) "Gee, next time we should ask them to raise the list price even more so we get a better discount!"

      Point being that ... if you have *no clue* what other universities are paying, how can you negotiate a good deal for yourself? I also suspect they want to hide draconian and quite possibly anti-competitive terms like "we'll give you 20% off if you teach your courses in visual studio"

      --

      Religion is a gateway psychosis. -- Dave Foley

    6. Re:Good for them by AvantLegion · · Score: 1

      Here at Fresno State, we CompSci majors are required to have Visual Studio .NET.

      We're also required to have Linux.

      Thanks to the cheap availability of Microsoft software (via a deal with the school) and the free availability of Linux software, we learn to develop software on multiple platforms.

    7. Re:Good for them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You don't really know how much they paid or how much they had to give up, do you? So how can you possibly know if it was a good deal at all?

    8. Re:Good for them by zabieru · · Score: 1

      On the other hand, you can make a pretty good guess by looking at the University budget. It may not tell you the contract terms, but since you know basically the amount of Windows etc a university uses, and you know how much they're spending on it, it allows you to make a pretty good estimation of the kind of deal they have. At the very least, how it compares with other colleges. That's why there's a very complex apparatus in m\place to make sure that only specially-chosen Congressmen get to see CIA/NSA/NRO budgets.

    9. Re:Good for them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I can get a good "discount" too, by just copying off my friends or downloading off KaZaa.

      Only, when I break the law, I don't get a bunch of idiots saying "more power to ya". I guess it pays to be a large state university.

      (Well, of course it pays. If it didn't, we wouldn't need those pesky disclosure laws, now, would we?)

    10. Re:Good for them by inepom01 · · Score: 1

      This is not good for them... MS is probably making schools sign agreements not to sell or provide Linux or something, thereby eliminating choice. This is what most of these agreements are about anyway... ever notice how some places only have Pepsi, and some only have Coke ? Fact is MS is making sure all CS people learn to code on and for MS software, rather than giving them a choice to code on and for other stuff. So while poeple who know they want XP may get it cheap, people who may want other stuff will never be able to get it and will be forced to try XP. This, of course, is a huge problem since if people don't learn Linux in college, they won't have much of a chance to learn it later on in life when they are used to something and have a lot less time. The popular distros should aggressively try to get shrink wrapped copies of Linux on school store shelves. Maybe when they will try, they will suddenly realize that the agreements schools sigend with a MS prohibit the school stores from selling it. Alas, then it will be too late. The whole problem with schools doing shady stuff to get cheap MS products for students is exactly that we don't know what the shady stuff is.

    11. Re:Good for them by Raiford · · Score: 2
      And as for the Universities mentioned in the headline: The terms of the licensing agreement are only known to Woody Hayes and Bo Schembechler ...

      --
      "player 4 hit player 1 with 0 stroms"
    12. Re:Good for them by John+Hasler · · Score: 2

      > If they can get a discount on MS licenses, I say
      > "power to them."

      How do you know they are getting a discount when the contract is secret?

      > I think schools having to pay less outweighs the
      > .02% of the population that cares or even looks
      > through the records.

      Only one person has to look through the records to blow the whistle on corruption and/or incompetence. That's the point of such laws.

      > Sure, an architect might be able to develop a
      > building in some obscure package in linux. But
      > the firms want you to know AUTOCAD.

      These are universities, not vo-techs.

      > Sure, StarOffice is great (I use it), but most
      > companies require MS Word for a reason. And
      > EXCEL MACROS are a must in most research places.

      So you are saying that even after using it in grade school and high school students need four years of college to learn Microsoft's wonderfully "intuitive" software?

      --
      Warning: this article may contain humor, sarcasm, parody, and perhaps even irony. Read at your own risk.
    13. Re:Good for them by Stealthey · · Score: 1

      Ugh!! Correct me if I am, there is Autocad for *nix..I don't know about linux, but I remember when I was in uni, I was using autocad on Sun Station. Either way, something that really needs a thought is, do you go to college to learn how to use already made or standard stuff, or do you go to college to refine and enhance your *ability to learn and comprehend*. Arguements on how End-user only use windows in their day to day jobs on windows, and therefore only need to use windows is baseless too, end-user will use any tool provided to him/her. Typically Doctors' job is to take care of patients, not write letters and reports, so it doesn't matter to them if they are typing their reports using staroffice, msoffice or koffice.

      --
      I am at loss with words...
    14. Re:Good for them by AvantLegion · · Score: 1

      > How do you know they are getting a discount when the contract is secret? Well, the other two options are: (1) Making a deal to pay what they could pay without any deal. (2) Making a deal for the privilage to spend MORE than what it costs to get off the shelf. HMMMM.

    15. Re:Good for them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How much are you being paid to spew this, now? Just curious, mind.

    16. Re:Good for them by Loonacy · · Score: 1

      While there are "similar if not better" products for linux, they are NOT the industry standard. Students need to be exposed to what's in the real world.

      The real world, and industry standards, are only what people accept them to be. Suppose, for a moment, that someone wrote a worm. This worm infected different operating systems, then propogated to other computers. If the computer were MicroSoft Windows based, the worm would propogate, then wreak havoc on it's system. Suppose also that this is a very powerful virus, like that Goodtimes one that spread a while back, and it destroys all media containing MS Windows. AutoCAD, medical software, and all the rest would quickly be ported to another operating system, such as Mac OSX, and life would go on. Then MS comes back and releases a new version of Windows, but nobody buys it because it's not the "industry standard" anymore.

      Even if people could look past the recent SuperDeadlyWorm attack, it wouldn't matter that MS has a "superior product" if everything ran on a different architecture.
      My problem with this isn't that MS is the standard, it's that a company who is known to abuse monopoly status is the standard.
      If we had a government of tyrants who had an iron grip on all civilization, wouldn't you want a change from the "standard?"
      I'm not saying I believe MS to be a conglomerate of tyrants. I just believe that MS has proven itself unworthy of holding the position of power it now has, and that a change is far overdue.
      I hate namecalling, but if you think Microsoft is just fine where it is, then I have a name for you.
      Ostrich.

    17. Re:Good for them by 0x0d0a · · Score: 2

      Okay, I'll buy most of that, but WTF is this?

      And EXCEL MACROS are a must in most research places.

      I dunno what kind of "research place" *you've* worked in, but that does not resound here. The two researchers I've talked to about tools were (a) CS research, which did not use Excel and (b) some guy that did years of economic analysis and used a bunch of high end statistical analysis software, not some crappy little spreadsheet.

      Researchers are the *least* likely set of people I can think of to want to use Excel -- they're the most likely to have massive data sets and the least likely to have conventional computing needs that can be solved easily with premade functionality (which is where Excel excels).

    18. Re:Good for them by kannibal_klown · · Score: 1

      I'm a software developer for the research area of a LARGE PHARMECUTICAL company (one of the biggest) for a couple of years. Since day one, all of the researchers I've worked with use EXCEL MACROS to help calculate/parse/summarize the data obtained from the devices (and I was told this was the case since 1997 or 1998). And it's not only in our place... I've talked to developers at other pharmecutical companies, and it's the same. While normal applications are still the norm, it's unbelievable how many different macros are in use in our company. So, yes, I do know what I'm talking about.

    19. Re:Good for them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You sound like the promoter for Spinal Tap's Smell the Glove tour.

    20. Re:Good for them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I'm a software developer for the research area of a LARGE PHARMECUTICAL company (one of the biggest)"

      Now we know why drugs cost so much more in the US they are having to pay for the M$ software :) And don't give the line about other research cost. I have worked in the medical field for 20 years

    21. Re:Good for them by SoftwareJanitor · · Score: 2

      There aren't current versions of AutoCAD for non-Windows platforms since MS put the pressure on AutoDesk to stop supporting *nix and MacOS several years ago. I believe that R13 was the last version that was available on *nix and R12 the last that was available on MacOS. I also think that there is a reason that PTC's Pro-E and Bentley's Microstation have grabbed up a chunk of AutoCAD's market share over the past 5 or 6 years...

  11. I can see the New York Post Headline now... by Cheviot · · Score: 1

    Microsoft says phooey to foi

  12. Finally reason to riot at OSU. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Forget the buckeye football team and their dream 13 and 0 season. OSU selling out to M$ is reason enough to riot. Lets burn down baker systems. Fuck the office of OIT. They are nothing but a buck of id10ts.

  13. No, it's not just fine by zachlipton · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Many are saying "well good for them, it doesn't matter if it is secret" or "having a cheap license is the important part." However, the entire purpose of these Public-Disclosure laws is that citizens (who pay for these Universities with tax money) should have the right to know what is being done with their money. A private University can sign whatever contract they want with Microsoft, but a publicly-owner organization has an obligation to _us_ (the people paying the bill) to tell us what they are doing.

    Having secret contracts with a monopoly to use taxpayer-paid dollars in unknown ways is a dangerous business. For all we know, these contracts could ablige these universities to use exchange-server or block access to filesharing networks in exchange for getting and selling their software at a low price. For that matter, it could be a high price, no-one knows!

    The beauty of the public-disclosure laws comes where any citizen can complain about the use of their tax dollars.

    1. Re:No, it's not just fine by angle_slam · · Score: 2, Insightful
      However, the entire purpose of these Public-Disclosure laws is that citizens (who pay for these Universities with tax money) should have the right to know what is being done with their money.

      How often do you actually check your local university to see how much they spent on:

      • soap
      • towels
      • name tags on doors
      • electricity
      • parking structures
      • salaries
      • perks
      • etc.
    2. Re:No, it's not just fine by kien · · Score: 1

      I agree with your sentiments, however I think it's important to point out that state universities aren't fully subsidized by tax dollars. If they were, there would be no need for tuitions. That being said, I agree that Joe_Taxpayer should have a voice in decisions like these (even though that voice would likely be in favor of cheaper MS software).

      What's more interesting to me is that college students themselves aren't questioning the practice. Maybe they are. Maybe that's how that post came to be on LawMeme in the first place. I mean, if I'm paying my own way through college and the college can do ANYTHING to make my tuition cheaper, I'd be pestering them to do so and this kind of hidden agreement would certainly make me start to ask some questions.

      NDA agreements aren't new and they aren't evil. Most likely, MS is just offering different discounts and terms to different universities and doesn't want the other universities to know about them so that they won't say "Hey you're giving OSU X% off, I want X+10% off because I'm bigger/better/whatever". But given MS's proven track record with OEMs, it's certainly understandable why people are asking questions.

      --K.

      --
      Sig: Bad people happen. Try to avoid being one of them.
    3. Re:No, it's not just fine by Zachary+Kessin · · Score: 3, Interesting

      And in general these License are for a year and have to be renewed at that point. So If Microsoft decides to up the price by 300% after a year or two, its a monopoly so you are stuck.

      If you cancel your licence you can be sure that they will audit you and if you don't have oiginal media for each and every piece of software that you have installed you can bet they will slam your but. doing this once or twice will ensure that Microsoft does not have to do it very often.

      --
      Erlang Developer and podcaster
    4. Re:No, it's not just fine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Many publicly owned and taxpayer supported institutions also charge for their services. If you can't think of any such, let me give you a couple: museums, parks, and universities are the property of the state and still charge the taxpayers for access thereby having some aspects of a private business. That doesn't free them from FOI disclosures regarding their business practices.

    5. Re:No, it's not just fine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Isn't it nice to know that if you did ask, they'd have to tell you?

    6. Re:No, it's not just fine by Spock+the+Baptist · · Score: 2

      "Isn't it nice to know that if you did ask, they'd have to tell you?"

      Somebody mode this one way up.

      --
      "Oh drat these computers, they're so naughty and so complex, I could pinch them." --Marvin the Martian
    7. Re:No, it's not just fine by arkanes · · Score: 2

      I actually can't think of a single reason why, if you're negotiating open, above board buisness deals, why the terms of that agreement shouldn't be public information. In any industry. However, in the case of a college, which is spending both taxpayer and it's student's money (on thier behalf), the people providing that money most certainly have the right to investigate whats being done with it. Just like how you have the right to investigate whats being done with your 401k or your retirment account.

    8. Re:No, it's not just fine by Cyno · · Score: 2

      But you have to admit, this is what tax paying Americans deserve. We don't have any freedom and we're lied to all the time. Why now just accept the truth that they know what's best for us. I think we should be taxed but never given any information about how that money is divided up or handed out, so long as it goes to pay for schools and roads, etc. I wouldn't even mind a little higher tax if they could make the stuff on TV entertaining again. Maybe have the Olympics 2 times a year. And when is Pizza Hut gonna finally put its logo on ISS, they need the money y'know?
      If we really want to live this cheap outsourced commercial lifestyle then I say more power to them. I hope we pay more taxes to these secret closed source deals than we did originally. Personally I want our actions to one day finally bite us in the butt where there's no denying our unethical and/or immoral behaviors. Until we let the system eat itself alive people will go on believing its a perfectly good and healthy system to work in. Given modern technology I think there are better options.

    9. Re:No, it's not just fine by John+Hasler · · Score: 3

      > How often do you actually check your local
      > university to see how much they spent on:
      > ...
      > ...

      Someone _will_ check on the contracts for these things, usually one or more of the losing bidders or some private watchdog organization. And if they see something suspicious, they _will_ bring it to the attention of the press and the legislature.

      --
      Warning: this article may contain humor, sarcasm, parody, and perhaps even irony. Read at your own risk.
    10. Re:No, it's not just fine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, with our contract, only licenses installed after the agreement expires are subject to audit, so the SPA won't be knocking right away.

    11. Re:No, it's not just fine by Zachary+Kessin · · Score: 2

      Prove when they were installed. Interestingly where I got to school (Brandeis) the Cosi department is almost all Linux and Mac. (One prof uses windows) and the physics department is largly the same.

      --
      Erlang Developer and podcaster
    12. Re:No, it's not just fine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If public universities didn't spend so much on software licenses, perhaps they could afford to teach you how to spell.

    13. Re:No, it's not just fine by Daniel+Phillips · · Score: 2

      If you cancel your licence you can be sure that they will audit you and if you don't have oiginal media for each and every piece of software that you have installed you can bet they will slam your but.

      Well it seems to me that this is likely to backfire quite seriously. Basically, it gives the school a clear year to plan and evaluate a complete switchover, then provides plenty of motivation for the school to make efforts to ensure that not a single piece of Microsoft software remains in use by the campus, as any remaining Microsoft software would create a risk of copyright infringement.

      Of course it only works this way now because they don't need Microsoft Office any more, they can use OpenOffice instead. Maybe the school's datacenter will need to keep a few copies of MS SQL around for legacy application, but even there... SQL, it's not that hard to port. And it will run faster on Postgres as a bonus.

      The words "hoist by one's own petard" come to mind.

      --
      Have you got your LWN subscription yet?
  14. Paging Trent Lott by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't care if "slavery" is an evil business practice, if it gets me cheaper cotton, I got no problem with it...

  15. Not again slashdot! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You got to check the authors links slashdot! First the goatse.cx mirror on the NaSa briging unix story and now anonorexic porn! You make me SICK! Youll end up like Something Awful if you dont watch out!

  16. Umm... is this always good? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I go to one of the universities listed above, so I'll post anonymously on this topic. People here ask "Why does it matter what is in these agreements?" I'll tell you why it matters. My speculation is that courses are being changed as a result of these agreements.

    For example, my school has a "Microsoft.NET laboratory". This literally is an entire room of a building dedicated to working on Microsoft.NET products. A course I am taking next semester that historically has been done in Java all of the sudden is now including C#; without seeing the syllabus, I cannot say which one is being emphasized more.

    Secret agreements may be nice, but it makes me wonder what is going on. I wish I had a good compromise answer here; it's nice to let students get $1,000+ worth of software for less than $200 (which we can then keep after we leave school), but if the curriculums are being compromised in response, academic integrity and independance are going down the drain.

    1. Re:Umm... is this always good? by Junior+J.+Junior+III · · Score: 2

      So you get MS Whatever 2002 for peanuts. Big deal. Think it'll be useful -- or even compatible -- with MS Whatever 2007? Guess again. But now that they've sucked you in, they'll be sucking on your wallet for a good, long time. Your MS Wallet! Bwa-ha-ha-ha-hahahahahaaaaa!!!

      --
      You see? You see? Your stupid minds! Stupid! Stupid!
    2. Re:Umm... is this always good? by berzerke · · Score: 2

      ...if the curriculums are being compromised in response, academic integrity and independance are going down the drain.



      Excuse me, what makes you think they haven't already been flushed?

    3. Re:Umm... is this always good? by Hodr · · Score: 1

      Ohh come now, just because you have a .net class does not mean your school has been compromised, especially if there is an alternative course that can be taken (go ahead, tell me the .net class is 300 level and below, and that there are no alternatives.)

      Besides which, I didn't bitch about the fact that I was REQUIRED to take classes on C++, Java, Pearl, Spark Assembly, Verilog, OpenGl (why not Direct3D eh?), MIPS, and a whole slew of other languages that probably will not benefit me 1/10 as much as learning C# would.

      Or is it that we should never change the corriculum, and still be teaching only fortran and cobol?

      Furthermore, why is it that I should have to use Linux (on every friggin computer in the entire csci department) when all my teachers ask for word documents. Guess what, MSWord is the standard (even if you dont agree with it) and if Microsoft wants to sell their software to me under some shady clandestine program geared towards commiting my soul to their evil products, for $10 I am gonna jump all over it.

      And big f'in deal if they have an ENTIRE ROOM for Microsoft.NET programming. My crummy ass school has several ENTIRE ROOMS dedicated to MACINTOSH development and LINUX development, and holy crap SPARK development, but not one for the OS that they are almost assuredly going to be using when they graduate... Which is a huge mistake if you ask me.

    4. Re:Umm... is this always good? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Pearl

      Perl?


      Spark

      Sparc?


      OpenGl (why not Direct3D eh?)

      OpenGL is a standard. Direct3D is an implementation without any standard. OpenGL has been (and even 2.0 will continue to be) backwards compatible (for more than 10 years). Every year-and-a-half Direct3D is completely rewritten. OpenGL has implementations on many hardware platforms and in many operating systems. Direct3D currently works on IA-32 systems in Windows, only.
    5. Re:Umm... is this always good? by jred · · Score: 2

      I'll add:

      corriculum = curriculum?

      Maybe he *needs* to be in a c# class. He definitely won't be contributing anything to open source, or the community as a whole. Excuse me, I forgot about Mickey D's... Just remember, no pickle does not mean no onion.

      --

      jred
      I'm not a mechanic but I play one in my garage...
    6. Re:Umm... is this always good? by FreshFunk510 · · Score: 1

      Interesting.

      I'm doing some research on Microsoft technologies (more specifically C#/.Net) being used in universities and colleges. Could you email me (or give me your email) or just tell me which school you're going to and which course is offering this? Thanks.

      --


      "Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere." - Martin Luther King, Jr.
    7. Re:Umm... is this always good? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Ohh come now, just because you have a .net class does not mean your school has been compromised

      Prove it.

      All you have to do is point to the relevant sections of the agreement.

      Oh wait, you can't! The agreement is secret!!!

    8. Re:Umm... is this always good? by Hodr · · Score: 1

      Well I never claimed they taught grammer or spelling.

  17. MS Lawyer Team by 3seas · · Score: 2

    To have a team of lawyers looking for loopholes and ways to manipulate the law is by some viewed as competition. Others view it as cheating the intent of the law.

    1. Re:MS Lawyer Team by Dark+Lord+Seth · · Score: 2
      To have a team of lawyers looking for loopholes and ways to manipulate the law is by some viewed as competition. Others view it as cheating the intent of the law.

      Oh, you mean the MS marketing department?

  18. short sighted by Kunta+Kinte · · Score: 3, Insightful
    I say good for them . If they can get a discount on MS licenses, I say "power to them."

    Sorry to be blunt, but I believe your stance, though popular, is short-sighted.

    Microsoft technology is the dominant tech today, who's to say what will be in highest demand tommorrow?

    They're paying less to a known monopolist. What if they opened the information, allowing other companies to bid, and thus lower the price of software due to competition over the long term?

    Microsoft is trying it's hardest to keep competition out of its markets, and I think decisions like that help them considerablely. Too bad so many IT directors can't think past the next budget cycle.

    --
    Based on upvotes, Ageism is the only "-ism" Slashdotters care about and think isn't SJW
    1. Re:short sighted by Florian+Weimer · · Score: 2

      Microsoft technology is the dominant tech today, who's to say what will be in highest demand tommorrow?

      As long as the Windows brand is advertized on almost all college computers, all over the place, this won't change. So what?

    2. Re:short sighted by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > who's to say what will be in highest demand tommorrow?

      Or more appropriate, who's to say the pile-of-poo they are pushing to today will be in demand tomorrow? Think back 4 years (supposedly the time required to get a degree from one of these institutions). What was the producer-of-dung pushing onto it's minions? I would guess it would bear little resemblance to the current round of offal^h^Herings (Off hand I don't know, as the last disk I had with a format understandable by their crap-ware corrupted itself in '97).

  19. Yes, it's true by I+Want+GNU! · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I go to CMU. MS Office XP costs $10. MS Windows XP costs $10. MS Visual Studio.NET costs $15. All these are without manuals, in tiny packages with a license for installing it one time (actually, the license is separate, and it claims it's illegal without a license, but the people at the computer store say it's a one time install).

    Anyways, this cuts down on piracy on one hand. On the other hand, I'm seriously bothered by the fact that they are using MY highly priced college tuition to support a convicted felon.

    What's really sad is that there is a Microsoft club at my university called MSImpact, supported by MS (and the girl who runs it is paid by MS to do this, she interned there one summer and has some sort of deal right now).

    1. Re:Yes, it's true by I+Want+GNU! · · Score: 2

      Also, if I didn't make this clear, the reason that the prices are so low is because CMU has a special agreement with Microsoft to provide it at these prices. I mention the prices of the software to people and they say "oh cool, that's cheap" and decide not to pirate it. I don't think they realize that the reason the prices are so low is because the campus is probably paying the other $90 (or however much it is).

    2. Re:Yes, it's true by markov_chain · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Even if MS didn't charge the university at all, and gave every student free copies of all those products, the college and its students would still pay a price in giving away their mindshare to a peddler of proprietary, canned-solution development tools. Especially at an elite university like CMU, this is particularly worrisome.

      --
      Tsunami -- You can't bring a good wave down!
    3. Re:Yes, it's true by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm seriously bothered by the fact that they are using MY highly priced college tuition to support a convicted felon.


      Antitrust violation is not a felony. Please try and understand what you are saying before saying it.

    4. Re:Yes, it's true by angle_slam · · Score: 1
      Anyways, this cuts down on piracy on one hand. On the other hand, I'm seriously bothered by the fact that they are using MY highly priced college tuition to support a convicted felon.

      The term "convicted felon" can only apply to a person, not a corporation. MS was not convicted of a crime, it was found in violation of various anti-trust laws.

    5. Re:Yes, it's true by jez9999 · · Score: 2

      s/convicted felon/corporation convicted of felonies/

    6. Re:Yes, it's true by rmohr02 · · Score: 2

      Ohio State has that, but it's called osuNTsig (new technologies student interest group). We also have an open source club, but it doesn't do anything, so I joined NTsig as well. NTsig has a lab that they will allow me to use and have numerous manuals for Office, .NET and other M$ products. I like GCC and all, but .NET is a better environment.

      So if I want to be in a CS club that does something, I don't have much of a choice but to join the MS one.

      O, and I got .NET for free from them.

    7. Re:Yes, it's true by mcowger · · Score: 3, Insightful
      A convicted felon?!? Who?

      Microsoft was convicted of abusing its monopoly. Thats not a felony. I dont even think its a criminal case. MS isn't even a person. A felon is someone who does something very bad and goes to jail for it and can no longer vote. You are mixing up your terms.

      Its fine if you dont want to support MS, but at least sound intelligent when you choose to advocate that point of view in public.

    8. Re:Yes, it's true by margaret · · Score: 2

      I'm a grad student at the University of Cincinnati, and we have the exact same deal, as mentioned on the Ohio State link. In addition to the low prices, the software does not employ the same anti piracy methods as the consumer software. No product activation codes on the xp software, and my copy of office x doesn't even require a serial number. (I would link to the UC page with the details, but you can't view it from outside the local network.)

      Also, Microsoft is not the only company doing this sort of thing. Our university recently signed a similar deal with Adobe. Unfortunately, the students are the only group who are NOT eligible to participate. thppppppppt!

      Merry xmas!

    9. Re:Yes, it's true by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are a moron. Antitrust violation is not a felony. It's not even a criminal offense. You sound like an idiot when you use words you don't understand.

    10. Re:Yes, it's true by sheldon · · Score: 3, Insightful

      "MY highly priced college tuition to support a convicted felon."

      Convicted felon?

      Good thing you aren't going for a law degree... You can't be convicted of a felony under civil law.

    11. Re:Yes, it's true by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Some felonies are worse than others, some ain't so bad at all, and in the grand scheme of things relatively few are worse than the crimes which Microsoft has perpetrated.

      Not all felons do time.

      There is no federal statute mandating that convicted felons lose voting privileges.

      It's fine if you want to support MS, but at least sound intelligent when you chose to advocate that point of view in public.

    12. Re:Yes, it's true by Zppr · · Score: 2, Interesting

      And CMU's agreement sucks compared to Pitt's...

      Pitt students get everything free (inluding Visual Studio.NET which is $119 at the CMU computer store). They can even download the stuff from the web!

      Why CMU is too cheap to pay for a better agreement, I'll never understand! I guess they figure people willing to put out $32,000/year for school can pay $25 for MS office.

    13. Re:Yes, it's true by Cerlyn · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Umm... As a member of the Ohio State University open-source group, I can say we do an awful lot! It might all be a matter of opinion, but we definitely already have a number of events planned for next quarter.

      And don't think we're lightweight open source users either; if you haven't noticed, at least OSU OSS one member, Colin Walters, has been mentioned on Slashdot twice. And he's not the only person in the group with high-level access to a major open-source project; we also have at least one other Debian developer, as well as a Gnome one.

      The problem with OSU clubs in general is finding out what they're up to; I, for instance, don't get any IEEE event information, and hence thought for a long time that they were doing nothing as well.

      If you want to see what the group is up to; subscribe to our mailing list (general or announcements only), and/or come to a meeting. We do not list meetings on the web site's front page, but every meeting has been listed in the events section, flyered around Dresse, and sent out to both email lists.

      Granted, NTsig can give you free Microsoft software, so if you're into MS, you're better off with them (although you can join both). Rumor has it that many NTsig members think the opensource group is more into their cause, although that may just be rumor.

      (The preceding was written by an OSU OSS member; not an officer.)

    14. Re:Yes, it's true by MillionthMonkey · · Score: 4, Funny

      A felon is someone who does something very bad and goes to jail for it and can no longer vote.

      Bzzt, wrong. A felon is a black voter in Florida.

    15. Re:Yes, it's true by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When I was at CMU a few years ago you could check out MS CDs like Visual Studio from the library.

    16. Re:Yes, it's true by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      s/felonies/civil offenses/
      s/Jez/Clueless/g

    17. Re:Yes, it's true by rmohr02 · · Score: 2

      I stand corrected. For some reason I just got the email saying I had a reply to this comment. I had found out about the club near then end of the last quarter, and would have gone to the last two meetings, but I had a 3:30 class.

      As far as the open source club not doing much, I didn't necessarily mean meetings, but projects. NTsig has a big contest for the end of the year and they're giving out huge prizes (I'll take an XBox for free, but I won't pay for it). AFAIK the open source club doesn't have that many projects. Individual members doing things for international projects is not the same thing.

      Also, I'm only a freshman, so I don't get into Dreese very often, and I'm in FEH, so I'll take ENGR H192 instead of CIS 201 (which means I won't be in Dreese much next quarter).

      Also, I do not like M$ much, but .NET is a good IDE. I use Mozilla, OpenOffice, gAIM, etc., but there isn't an IDE for Windows that comes anywhere near .NET (I know GCC will work for Windows, but only under cygwin, and that doesn't really count).

      One more thing: assuming you lived on campus last quarter, did your emails seem to arrive much more promptly than they do when off campus? I just received the email about you replying to this fifteen minutes before I posted this comment. That's a three day lag, and on campus it would be only five to ten minutes.

    18. Re:Yes, it's true by Cerlyn · · Score: 2

      1. I didn't live on campus last quarter; rather, I found out about the opensource group when they made headlines earlier this year. I then visited them at the activities fair.

      2. I agree that no single-user development IDE I know of matches Microsoft's Visual Studio. It's great in that it looks up possible function parameters, but there are a number of things about it I find annoying as well (at least as of VS 6).

      3. The opensource group is thinking about doing a project themselves, but where that is a good guess. Given that OSU is a big IP school, and the club is funded by OSU, it becomes a question as to who owns the resulting code.

      4. NTsig also likely gets some OSU funding, and as you can guess, an awful lot from Microsoft (if NTsig is like some other school's, I wouldn't be surprised if certain NTsig members were paid, especially with a Columbus MS office). It's a bit of an apples and oranges comparison; one has minimal support funding, the other gets tons (although not as much as the religious groups; at least one goes through over a million dollars per year!).

      Any development MS software or the Xbox costs more if it was not donated than what the opensource group gets funded to do in a year. With nearly weekly meetings, we have to ration when we get pizza, etc., and when we don't.

      5. I can tell you a group opensource software install day is planned for Saturday, January 18th. That is, unless someone changed it behind my back :)

      6. Yes, the campus email system can seem funky. Sometimes, mail clears quickly, but sometimes it does not.

      As a grad student (with quota on the ECE mail system), I have the OSU EE mail server forward to the ECE department's one so I can use IMAP and access it in various places. This past weekend, several of us noticed we didn't get any messages since Friday. I sent myself an email directly to the main OSU mail system Sunday morning, and didn't get it for over 24 hours (although the timestamps suggested otherwise). Why this happened is anyone's question.

    19. Re:Yes, it's true by rmohr02 · · Score: 2

      2 - I agree.

      3 - That's a good question.

      4 - I know for a fact that the guy who runs NTsig is paid by M$. I don't think the other officers are, but they're probably just waiting for the guy who does get paid to die or graduate.

      The aforementioned NTsig contest prizes are given by M$ because the contest is only for .NET-created software.

      5 - Interesting.

      6 - Maybe they're having problems over the break with less people monitoring the equipment or something.

  20. FOI laws enacted to prevent exactly this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Freedom of Information laws were enacted to prevent EXACTLY this sort of crap: a public institution and a private company enter into an agreement which may not benefit the public and then try to keep it secret. Without knowing what the contract stipulates and at what prices, it is impossible to know if or how badly the public is getting screwed.

    I'd be interested in seeing how far a taxpayer-funded institution is willing to go to protect a vendor. In my experience, not very far at all.

    That being said, the OSU agreement (according to the Yale article) seems to be with the OSU bookstore and something called COP-EZ. If OSU is like most other institutions, the bookstore is a private corporation owned by the university and probably not subject to FOI requests. The Michigan agreement doesn't say much of anything re: who negotiated the deal.

  21. Michigan State University FOIA officer by Animats · · Score: 5, Informative

    Here's who you make a FOIA request to and here's MSU's FOIA price list. Here's a summary of Michigan's Public Records Act. There's no exemption that would cover a signed contract. Somebody in Michigan should ask.

    1. Re:Michigan State University FOIA officer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you learn nothing else from your institution of higher education, please let it be this: Why use the front door which leads to a long and winding staircase when you can use the backdoor and take the elevator? Why waste years and thousands of dollars in legal fees messing with FOIA when for a hundred dollars you can walk out with a copy of the MS contract tomorrow by bribing an administrator in the university intellectual property office. Those saps are facing wage freezes; you could probably dicker them down to parting with it for a fifty. Don't they teach you anything at Eli Broad, Cooley, Detroit School of Law, or UM School of Law? Get an education in the real world!

      > Somebody in Michigan should ask.

      BTW, (Not that I recommend this.) You don't have to be a Michigan resident to utilize the Michigan FOIA. The FOIA applies to public institutions regardless of the requestor's citizenship! Friggin' Saddam Hussein can submit a lawful request on MSU!

  22. What Microsoft might be doing? by sammy.lost-angel.com · · Score: 3, Interesting

    >so what the colleges and Microsoft are doing may not actually be illegal (or could be argued not to be, anyway), but it certainly is shady.

    What they might be doing is offering different universities packages at different prices.

    1. Re:What Microsoft might be doing? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      that's right , despite what the topic implies this isn't an unusual practice. Licensing packages are often custom tailored and account for a range of factors - volume , previous sales, existing infrastructure , financing etc..
      Would if be preferable if MS said - ok you can either pay full price and tell everyone what you've paid , or agree not to disclose the terms of the sale and get a substantial discount ?

  23. time for slashdot to go offline by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I really think that slashdot's comment system need to be take offline for a bit. This used to be a great community , but now it's too dominated by cranks and smart-ass newbies.

    this topic is a case in point - eeewwww ! evil Gates is forcing colleges to sign evil license agreements and it's all sooo EVIL. I bet it's illegal too > insert bogus legal theory .

    I think that the real reason that OSS and linux haven't caught on more is evident in the forum - most of the advocates that the public encounters are irrational pricks. Would you get into either of these areas if your first contact were through slashdot ??

    1. Re:time for slashdot to go offline by dracocat · · Score: 1
      I doubt people wanting to get a glimpse of what Linux is/does will be reading slashdot. Slashdot is more of a community of people already using linux/mac/OSS.

      Yes, the forum is picking apart MS and coming up with a plethora of bogus legal theories as to how MS can be liable.

      Yes, it is childish and repetative.

      But, you have to try and understand how frustrated we are in our inability to compete with MS on even footing.

    2. Re:time for slashdot to go offline by fantastic · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I often wonder how many Microsoft employees/interns frequent this forum.

      See something you don't like about a beloved company and you want to restrict freedom of speech now!

  24. Remember the Public School flap earlier this year? by bubbha · · Score: 3, Interesting

    When the terms of the contract MS was pushing on public schools was brought to everyones attention, there was a pretty big uproar. Remember - MS forced the schools to pay them for licenses for ALL PC's in the district whether they actually ran Windows or not. The effect of this practice is to hinder the ability to buy Mac's for - say the graphic arts department or even use donated PC's to run Linux or anything else. Makes you wonder just what kind of "deal" these schools are getting and if they are possibly anti-competitive.

    --
    I want to be alone with the sandwich
  25. Another Michael Sims anti-Microsoft Post by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just in time for the holidays. Good job, Mike!

  26. NOT Good for them by Fefe · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Excuse me? How can you be so blind?

    The student council is paying them, and you actually believe that somehow that bill is not paid by yourself?

    This deal actually makes everyone pay for the Windows licenses. It's just another way to pull money out of the Linux and Mac crowd by having them foot the bill for discounts that "benefit everyone". You know, crack dealers also give great discounts to poor college people to make them dependant on it.

    Of course, if you think it through, you will notice that there is only one who benefits here -- Microsoft. Because people like yourself will now learn to use Windows and Windows based software. That in turn will lead businesses to use Windows, because that's all the new guys from college know. That in turn leeds to people believing that you have to use Windows because "that's what businesses use".

    Oh, and I just love how you imply that everyone who has not bought a copy of Windows and Office is a pirate. I don't have a copy of Office. I wouldn't even own a Windows license if I could have bought my notebook without one.

    1. Re:NOT Good for them by ender81b · · Score: 1

      Wow boy settle down. They have as similar agreement with Red Hat and with Sun for Star Office. Yes we foot the bill with 400,00$ a year but split up between 28,000 students that comes to - oh - 15$ or so a person.

    2. Re:NOT Good for them by PacMan · · Score: 1
      Yes we foot the bill with 400,000$ a year but split up between 28,000 students that comes to - oh - 15$ or so a person.

      I think that is the whole point. The cost is split between everyone, even those who don't use Microsoft software because they run Linux or *BSD or even Mac OS X.

      Forcing unwilling people to subsidise your purchases seems a little unfair to me.
  27. You post should be entitled . . . by Idou · · Score: 1

    "how I have started life as a drone." If you are a CS major, get ready for a life of flipping code as an employee for MsDonalds.

    I've posted before here about why IT is NOT a profession since its standards are owned by a self-serving corp. (in contrast to CPAs, Lawyers, and doctors). I think this post rests my case . . .

    Enjoy your life kid . . .. btw, I will be making more than you, working less, and if we happen to work on the same project in the same company in the future, I will tell you EXACTLY what you are required to do, or you will be replaced by another drone (flipping VS.net, no less). And it has nothing to do with smarts or hard work, just the fact that I picked a real "profession" run on "OPEN" standards, governed by an organization looking in the best intrests of its professionals (AICPA), rather than its own revenue.

    You can either change professions or TRY changing your current quasi-profession (but I doubt enough of you "get it" to accomplish that), just don't come back here 10 years from now complaining that you can't get a job, while the rest of us "non-geeks" are getting by just fine (thanks to financial reports written on Lamp, unsupported by my company's incompetent IS staff, which didn't slow me down a bit).

    I know this is hard medicine to take, but if you are smart, you will take this to heart, otherwise enjoy your pathetic drone life, Chrismas came early.

    --
    Sdelat' Ameriku velikoy Snova!
    1. Re:You post should be entitled . . . by dieman · · Score: 3, Insightful

      People with real CS degrees go on to form neat companies with technologies like Tivo and Google.

      What your mistaking for CS majors are not "Scientists" but more like "Technologists" as a field. There is a difference. IMO, if it turns into a profession where your doing *exactly* what people tell you to design without using your expertise, you better only have one of those 2 year 'programming' degrees from a community college.

      CS is what you make of it. Remember that.

      Same applies to system administrators, but not in the same fashion.

      In any profession, I think, you need to come up with goals early that you are working for someone and trying to gain as much freedom to do the best things for your employer under minimal supervision. If your employer won't let you do that on your own, theres a problem. Micromanaged workplaces suck.

      --
      -- dieman - Scott Dier
  28. Your new computer must be purchased with an os by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0



    From the faq at the university:

    Your new computer must be purchased with an operating system

    1. Re:Your new computer must be purchased with an os by Stonehead · · Score: 2

      Strange, false and off-topic for such a FAQ, indeed. Mod the parent up.

    2. Re:Your new computer must be purchased with an os by dracocat · · Score: 1
      They only bought upgrade licenses. Although, you can upgrade from any previous version of windows.

      Perhaps we will be seeing a demand for Dos 3.3 and Win 3.1 licenses on ebay now.

    3. Re:Your new computer must be purchased with an os by rsidd · · Score: 2

      If you read the full paragraph, it makes it clear that "your new computer must be purchased with an OS" for the upgrade to apply. That is, you can't buy an OS-free computer and then have the univ give you a cheap Windows XP.

    4. Re:Your new computer must be purchased with an os by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've bought Windows 3.1 and DOS 6.x liscences cheap for precisely that purpose in the past. It's definatately cheaper than buying the full ver when some idiot shop gives a friend the upgrade CD with his PC

  29. what? by BarrettAnderson · · Score: 1

    how is this news? there's nothing wrong with telling them to keep licenses a secret. keep your propaganda to yourself.

    1. Re:what? by ocelotbob · · Score: 1

      Yes there is something wrong. I'm paying taxes, so they're negotiating with my money. If the school is getting the short end of the stick in this deal, you're damn right I want to know about it so I can raise a fuss, so I can yell at the right people, so I can try to change things. I don't want my money being thrown down the drain in a deal that's worse off for the taxpayers, the schools, and the students, and I don't want deals like this being made if it means that students will only be taught programming for MS operating systems, and not the diverse range of systems out there. MS is not always going to be this big, and if we hobble college students, the future of the tech/IT industry, with lousy license agreements, we've failed them.

      --

      Marxism is the opiate of dumbasses

    2. Re:what? by BarrettAnderson · · Score: 1

      i still don't see where your tax dollars come in. These are Universities. They get their money from the students. And this doesn't effect your tax dollars at all. Schools get a certain amount of money, what they spend it on is their own decision.

    3. Re:what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Only a portion of the total monies needed to run a University are gathered from student tuition, the rest is payed by the taxpayers. These are public schools, they are taxpayer funded and therefore any and all monies spent must be accounted for and a public record of such be kept. There is no reason for any school tyo have to sign these agreements. In the end Microsoft is only having them sign these agreements because somewhere they are shafting someone and this is the only way to keep them from finding out.

    4. Re:what? by BarrettAnderson · · Score: 1

      some schools pay $10,000 for a bathroom accessories, others do not. some schools pay $100,000 for computer stuff, others do not. I'm sure, in the "how money was spent" publications that these colleges publish, it will say "$however much was spent on computer software", so you don't have to worry. What's wrong with buying licenses? i don't know anyone who would care, even if they knew how much they were spending.

    5. Re:what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      jackass, he is talking about public universities which are supported mostly by taxes. jesus, slashnewb strikes again.

    6. Re:what? by ocelotbob · · Score: 1

      RTFA. These are public universities, partially funded with taxpayer dollars. If these were private universities, I'd have no problem, MS could have as many secret agreements as they want. These schools, on the other hand, are government run/controlled universities, and I trust them to act like any other government institution.

      --

      Marxism is the opiate of dumbasses

    7. Re:what? by BarrettAnderson · · Score: 1

      consider this scenario:

      Small internet hosting service/company. Gives away custom deals based on the user's needs. You go on AIM, get to know the owner, he gets to know you, finds out you're a highschool student. Then you ask him for the price of 20 GB bandwidth, 1 GB storage. He, knowing you're a student, gives you a good deal. He then tells you "keep the price i gave you confidential, i don't want people who can afford more to ask for that price".

      back in the day when winamp was wannabe shareware (yes, wannabe shareware, you didn't HAVE to pay, but they wanted you to), a personal registration was $10, and a business one was $15 (or something), because businesses can afford to pay more.

      the same thing goes for universities. Some universities put more money in to computer software/licenses or whatever they're buying, hence, some can afford to pay more, but microsoft doesn't want to go out of business, so they need to make as reasonable a profit as they can.

      reread the article, and replace the word "secret" with "confidential" and then tell me that they're evil.

    8. Re:what? by ocelotbob · · Score: 1
      You're comparing apples and oranges here. Once again, these are government agencies. The rules are different from private companies, but they are still straightforward, and have been in place for a long time, longer than MS has been in business. The reason these deals are in place is so that deals based on things other than cost benefit analyses cannot take place; government contracts and back room deals don't mix. They are in place for everything, too - essentially any requisition/purchase order can be requested under the FOIA.

      Even if you do replace the word secret with confidential, it's still a bad thing. I want to know whose feet I should hold to the fire if they made a bad deal, who is to blame for wasting taxpayer money. Everyone knows that software vendors sell to academia at a substatial discount; it's pretty much a given. All that making these agreements public does is it makes MS have to formalize, and standardize their site license policies for when dealing with academia. Not with the business world, not with individual consumers, just academia.

      --

      Marxism is the opiate of dumbasses

    9. Re:what? by BarrettAnderson · · Score: 1

      without looking it up, tell me exactly how much money these schools purchased on toilet paper. you don't know. and you DON'T CARE. NO ONE CARES. THEY'RE NOT GONNA SPEND $50,000,000 on these licenses so it doesn't effect anything.

    10. Re:what? by BarrettAnderson · · Score: 1

      and wait, MICROSOFT is a government agency??? you're a freeking moron. Microsoft is a private company, they can do whatever the heck they want, even if they are dealing with the government. as far as they, or anyone else is concerned, it's just another customer. You're trying to take this out on microsoft by getting mad at the government, please, use your head.

    11. Re:what? by ocelotbob · · Score: 1

      I know microsoft isn't a fucking government agency. However, the schools are. Thus the requirement for open contracts.

      --

      Marxism is the opiate of dumbasses

    12. Re:what? by BarrettAnderson · · Score: 1

      the company doing the contracts is MICROSOFT. the government doesn't have any special say in making private companies changing their privacy issues.

    13. Re:what? by ocelotbob · · Score: 1

      read the laws in question. they say that any contract must be public. So yes, the government does have special say in these matters. once again, these laws have been in place for longer than microsoft has been a company. If MS doesn't like it, then there's no one forcing them to do business with the government.

      --

      Marxism is the opiate of dumbasses

    14. Re:what? by BarrettAnderson · · Score: 1

      the GOVERNMENT is doing business with MICROSOFT. if THEY DON'T like THEIR POLICIES, then THEY can BUY from MACINTOSH. don't use so many caps, don't use so many caps, don't use so many caps, don't use so many caps. I'm trying to yell!

    15. Re:what? by ocelotbob · · Score: 1

      Personally, I think that's probably the best solution. Dump MS's crapware and move to platforms and companies that know and understand that FOI laws are in place to protect the public from unscrupulous entities.

      --

      Marxism is the opiate of dumbasses

    16. Re:what? by BarrettAnderson · · Score: 1

      so what the heck did microsoft do wrong here??? you've been bashing microsoft for "forcing" the colleges to keep it confidential if they signed, but they were NOT forced! if they HAD to publish what they were buying, then they can buy different licenses.

      obviously microsoft DOES know these laws moron, otherwise they wouldn't have gotten away with it cus it would have been illegal.

      can you please just agree that microsoft did nothing wrong here? PLEASE. the motive behind microsoft's decision here was to give different deals to different colleges who are willing to pay different amounts. there's nothing wrong with that - it's called making as much money as possible! - and you say "yeah, that's micro$oft", well, you're a freeking moron! don't you want to make as much money as possible? well you say "they're ripping people off", i say "live with it! that's capitalism for you! and if the colleges can't afford it, then what are they doing buying it? obviously they're NOT ripping anybody off."

    17. Re:what? by ocelotbob · · Score: 1

      In some places what they're doing is not legal. Michigan's foia law, for example, seems to put their agreement in a a very grey area, legally. I can't say that MS did nothing wrong, because the facts don't seem to support that.

      --

      Marxism is the opiate of dumbasses

    18. Re:what? by BarrettAnderson · · Score: 1

      lol.... you failed to read it buddy.

      However, the law specifically excludes computer software from the definition of public record.

      ...it seems that you are an idiot.

    19. Re:what? by ocelotbob · · Score: 1

      Software as in computer programs written by university staff, not contracts on software, dumbass.

      --

      Marxism is the opiate of dumbasses

    20. Re:what? by BarrettAnderson · · Score: 1

      read the rest of the thing. it's talking about purchases.

    21. Re:what? by BarrettAnderson · · Score: 1

      even if you're right, it's not microsoft's problem - it's the universities, AGAIN, they can buy from someone else. Microsoft knows that making the price public will hurt their profits

    22. Re:what? by ocelotbob · · Score: 2
      Once again, I said it was a grey area. The law seems to have some contradictory statements as to what's allowed and what's not allowed. I personally think that regardless of the actions, contracts like these are sleezy and unethical, regardless of what the law says.

      And no, it's not solely the university's problem. An illegal contract is unenforcable, no exceptions. If the non-disclosure clause of this contract is found to be illegal then one of two things will happen: a) The pricing will be made public or b) They'll nullify the contract and renegotiate, in public.

      --

      Marxism is the opiate of dumbasses

  30. What's the Problem? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What's wrong with a public institution, who's receiving public funds, signing secret deals with a monopoly company? I also think it should be ok to offer the police some cash to forget about writing me that ticket. Since I'm on the subject of whores, what's wrong with a woman offering a little love in exchange for reasonable compensation? Why is it illegal to kick retards wearing Microsoft "dot anything" t-shirts in the balls? What the hell is up with these assault and battery laws anyway? Why can't I carry a concealed weapon, what's so wrong with me? I just don't understand this world Charlie Brown.

    Merry Freakin Christmas

    1. Re:What's the Problem? by BarrettAnderson · · Score: 1

      there's nothing wrong with the first one. All colleges have different needs, wants, and necessities. One will be willing to spend $100 for a toilet, another won't. So in order for MS to get a reasonable profit (NOTHING wrong with wanting a profit, don't say M$ or anything), they need to keep the cheapter licenses a secret so that other colleges don't ask for the same price.

  31. large-scale EULAs are the heart of MS by jtotheh · · Score: 3, Informative
    MS's whole business is driven by large-scale EULAs, often cloaked in secrecy. Look at the Windows Laptop Refund people, they went to great efforts to get back the added cost of "bundled" Windows and I don't think anyone has gotten a dime.

    They don't care about Joe Sixpack buying WinXP Home at ChumpUSA, they are after bigger fish. Like the country of India or China. Or every customer of Dell, Gateway, IBM, etc.

    I think the budget items of a state university should be subject to some sort of FOIA inquiry, perhaps using state laws not federal. This is a really bad trend because when it becomes impossible to avoid paying Microsoft the "gratis" / free aspect of open source is nullified. If anyone in the states mentioned has the motivation they should pursue this with their state representative to bring these charges and their amounts to light.

    An added bonus they have with their "free" Front Page copies (at one of the FAQs for the universities) is that they generate bad code for non-IIS servers * . Gee, I'll have to go download IIS for Linux once I'm done with this post.

    http://www.oit.ohio-state.edu/site_license/mslic ense/answers.html*Is FrontPage recommended for use with my environment? Before purchasing or developing your web pages with Microsoft FrontPage, ensure the web server for your pages will be the Microsoft Internet Information Server (IIS) running on Windows NT. FrontPage embeds proprietary and/or non-protocol-compliant features within HTML code, many of which are incompatible with many non-Microsoft web servers, including those utilized in OSU's OpenVMS and Novell architectures. The implications are twofold: o Web page creators can't just place FrontPage-generated HTML files in their OpenVMS accounts or in their Universal Disk Space and expect the web pages to work correctly. o Even if the pages are served successfully, they may only be fully readable by certain versions of Microsoft's Internet Explorer (IE) web browser.

    1. Re:large-scale EULAs are the heart of MS by dracocat · · Score: 1
      This is a really bad trend because when it becomes impossible to avoid paying Microsoft the "gratis" / free aspect of open source is nullified.

      While this is a valid fear, you need not worry yet. Ohio State is charging their students $99 for the right to use all the software. So those that use it will be paying for it.

      Although I do not know if other universities pass the fees along in similar ways.

  32. Cost Shifting at it's best by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In the Health Csre Industry, this is how it happens. Someone can't pay for the X-ray that the doctor wants, so the hospital charges everyone else more to cover their costs. It all washes out on the back side, but that is how they stay in business.

    In the software industry, this is how it works. Discount to the beginning users, charge the renewal users. Give the University a bargan, you will make it up in industry. Now if every big company squeezes Microsoft for a deep discount, then make it up on the comsumer. Have you ever seen someone haggle with CompUSA to get 90% off the price for Windows XP Pro? I didn't think so.

    The part that fumes me is the poor consumer is the one bearing the burden on their backs, rather than it being uniform.

    And how about this, you should pay for what you use, if you write legal contracts all day, or account for megabucks all day, do you think the tool should be worth more than someone who writes up a flyer for a lost dog or a yard sale on the weekend?

  33. the real issue by bromoseltzer · · Score: 5, Informative
    Until recently, I was responsible for software licensing for a number of university departments. The facts of life:
    • Nobody is in full compliance without an institutional license (like these) and probably nobody is in compliance even with such a license program.
    • The cost of full (a la carte) compliance would be enormous. How do you track 20,000 licenses among many departments, research groups, students, etc.?
    • Anyone who thinks about legal exposure is running scared.
    License administration is exceedingly unproductive work that everyone hates. So we had a pretty strong reason to pay MS's "protection money" and sign up for the blanket license. Even under the program, there are a lot of onerous provisions, as the FAQs cited at Ohio & Michigan show.

    A courageous administrator (more courageous than I) would add up all the costs and risks and conclude that the rational thing is to go Open Source. Microsoft's strategy seems to be to extract all the cash from universities that the market will bear, without starting a rebellion.

    All this has nothing to do with FOIA and everything to do with monopolists, institutional inertia and risk avoidance.

    --
    Fiat Lux.
    1. Re:the real issue by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 2

      I really think these licesne agreements and their legal implications should be the motivation that propels large orginations to adopt open source software.

      When xyz consulting publishes a study showing that Windows desktop TCO is less than Linux, I seriously doubt that they are calculating the potential liabiliites and costs associated with a raid from the BSA, or the costs associated with administering a license program that would actually pass BSA muster..

    2. Re:the real issue by josh+crawley · · Score: 1

      How about instead of running like pussies and letting the BSA beat you in the balls, tell them to "Fuck off" if they come for 'license checks'. If they don't leave, call the cops.

      It's not like you get out of anything in any situation... You pay through the nose for site license, you pay through nose for "non-compliance", or you pay "through the nose" going to court. Then again, that might stop their bullying.

    3. Re:the real issue by 0x0d0a · · Score: 2

      Microsoft's strategy seems to be to extract all the cash from universities that the market will bear, without starting a rebellion.

      So they're operating correctly for a company in a free-market environment?

    4. Re:the real issue by Daniel+Phillips · · Score: 2

      "Microsoft's strategy seems to be to extract all the cash from universities that the market will bear, without starting a rebellion."

      So they're operating correctly for a company in a free-market environment?

      They're operating correctly for a company that has a monopoly and doesn't mind breaking the law.

      --
      Have you got your LWN subscription yet?
  34. Don't forget Kodak. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    At least when I was there, you'd be damned to find any other film but Kodak. *chuckle*

    Well, you *could* find petitions and literature sprawled across the campus about a certain Kodak plant which was reputedly belching toxins into Rochester's air(*1).

    Oh, and you forgot to mention - the Pepsi deal wasn't just for the vending machines. They couldn't sell any Coca Cola soda product *anywhere* on campus, and they could only sell a limited percentage of non-soda products in the stores and food places. (IE, Snapple, etc.)

    I do miss that crazy bastard who would stand by the Student Union and attempt to pawn socialist newspapers off on passing students.

    Heh heh. "Hey, would you like to read a Socialist newspaper?" "Nyet, tovarisch, nyet!"

    Ahh, so many memories.

    (*1) Disclaimer: The fact that various students constantly whined about chemicals being forced down their throats in no way constitutes any evidence that said chemicals existed or polluted the air.

  35. Does it matter? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Honestly, if the colleges are agreeing to it (and colleges are not made up of stupid people, afaik), it's probably equitable. Microsoft is making money to continue development of their product, and the schools are getting the software they want.

    Considering how many posts I've seen recently about how schools and governments are switching to open source, doesn't it seem reasonable to assume that if the colleges really felt that they couldn't get a good deal, they would switch to open source or require students to have their own software - up here in Seattle, Cornish requires you provide your own Powerbook G4!

  36. The terms in the agreement are ... by Skapare · · Score: 2

    The terms in the agreement are probably meant to provide Microsoft with information about the students, possibly including things like when they graduate (making them eligible for Microsoft to begin marketing more software products to them). Notice the registration requirements. They may also include a requirement to provide to Microsoft a detailed accounting of all computers on campus and what OS they are running. Almost certainly these terms are intended to give Microsoft some special advantage in the post-academic commercial market, and perhaps to some extent to head off more deployment of Linux on campus, especially in areas exposed to the general student population (e.g. the labs of rows of computers for students to use). Financially, the university will be gaining, not losing. The question is what non-financial issue is lost that the university leadership doesn't care about.

    --
    now we need to go OSS in diesel cars
  37. Microsoft Paranoia by dskoll · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Microsoft had an agreement with Industry Canada's
    Computers for Schools program. It was also secret. I got a copy under Canada's Access to Information law, though no-one was very cooperative.

    There was nothing particularly disturbing about the agreement, although there was one funny part:

    5. VIRUSES --- you acknowledge that the SOFTWARE may contain viruses and you accept any risks associated with using the SOFTWARE without recourse to Microsoft, Microsoft Canada Co. or the Government of Canada.

    I think M$ is just plain paranoid.

  38. MS Agreements with lehigh by philipgar · · Score: 2, Informative

    I know Lehigh University recently (last year) signed an agreement with MS which granted a liscence of MS office and Windows XP to all the students. I found it completely wrong that I'm forced to pay tons of extra money to buy software I don't even use (as I'm a linux user). Microsoft loves the deals because most of the students either have their own copy of that software already, or would have pirated a copy from the guy down the hall from them. I imagine the main reason the universities agree not to give out the information is they don't want people to see how much they're paying to get copies of MS products. I imagine MS probably uses the threat of "stopping piracy on campus" as part of the reasoning to get the university to cough over the money for the liscencing. I hate it as much as the next guy. Whats particularly ridiculous is that I know people with 3 legitimate windows copies now. The one that came with their computer, the one the school paid for, and the one that they get from the CSE departments subscription to the MSDN (which is a great deal for both the department and MS as we get free software, and they get their software to be used educationally). Hopefully some day our administration will come to its senses regarding this. Philip Garcia Computer Engineer Lehigh University '03/4

    1. Re:MS Agreements with lehigh by Radical+Rad · · Score: 2
      Whats particularly ridiculous is that I know people with 3 legitimate windows copies now. The one that came with their computer, the one the school paid for, and the one that they get from the CSE departments subscription to the MSDN

      Most medium size companies are paying for multiple copies for each PC they own. The licenses have been written so that you have to buy Windows when you buy the computer and then buy it again under the MOLP in order to reload the system with an image containing the company's standard business tools such as an office suite, CRM package, groupware, etc. even when the same version OS is put back on the system. Next time you call for quotes on PC's, ask if you can get the systems bare with no software so you only have to pay once. They will say they can't do that, but if enough people make the request maybe some responsive person in their organization will push for it so they can lower their advertised price by a hundred bucks or so.

  39. 1600lb Gorilla Sitting Anywhere it Wants by burgburgburg · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It's bad because MS is using it's unfettered Monopoly power to force (yes, force) publicly funded institutions to hide important contract points, despite legal prohibitions on doing this. MS says sign this agreement and break the law or you and your poor students will not only be buying all this software at retail +, and We and the BSA will also be by to do a full and comprehensive audit of every computer in this institution. And then we'll do another one. We'll let you know when. Or not.

    1. Re:1600lb Gorilla Sitting Anywhere it Wants by IIRCAFAIKIANAL · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Wrong. If all colleges have to deal with this (as MS is a monopoly, as you put forward) then all colleges are in this position and have to pay the same amount.

      Now, if MS tells them to buy the software at greater than retail cost or picks certain colleges to give a price break to (with the same licensing as all the others) then you might have a case.

      And, of course, why can't a college use Linux or Macintosh? These are students, not gamers. I run Windows because I am a gamer and windows programmer but when I was in college I had a Linux partition and it suited me just fine.

      --
      Robots are everywhere, and they eat old people's medicine for fuel.
    2. Re:1600lb Gorilla Sitting Anywhere it Wants by MindStalker · · Score: 1

      Most colleges pay different amounts in their site licenses. Mainly based on how long the college has been dealing with the company. For example FSU pays $5.56 per computer per year for SPSS (generally half a major version behind) While most colleges pay 50-100 bucks per year for it.

    3. Re:1600lb Gorilla Sitting Anywhere it Wants by reallocate · · Score: 2

      Not to be pedantic, but if Microsoft was as pure a monopoly as everyone says they are, then they'd have no interest in offering discount deals to anyone. As they only game in town, they could set their prices arbitrarily.

      --
      -- Slashdot: When Public Access TV Says "No"
    4. Re:1600lb Gorilla Sitting Anywhere it Wants by eclectro · · Score: 1

      I think that a cogent arguement has been made in other posts that the end goal of Microsoft discount deals is to more effectively control market share.

      Make a user pay a little now to get hooked, charge alot later down the road when he has to make another buying decision. Crack dealers operate the same way.

      Also, by forcing all computers to have a microsoft os on them, there will be no incentive to pay for another operating system (even if it is linux).

      Microsoft does not want to see linux make inroads in the educational arena, because then those same linux people take linux with them when they go to work for big business.

      We will know not what other manipulative goals microsoft has as long as these contracts are allowed to remain secret.

      I am sure that they are pulling the same stunts that they pulled with the OEM contracts when they were allowed to be secret too.

      To review what that was, look at the lawsuit that Caldera had against microsoft (and microsoft paid somewhere between 150 - 450 million to settle. Probably a good deal to avoid all of the bad publicity and spotlight they were headed for).

      --
      Take the cheese to sickbay, the doctor should see it as soon as possible - B'Elanna Torres, "Learning Curve"
    5. Re:1600lb Gorilla Sitting Anywhere it Wants by greenrd · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Not to be pedantic, but if Microsoft was as pure a monopoly as everyone says they are, then they'd have no interest in offering discount deals to anyone. As they only game in town, they could set their prices arbitrarily.

      That's not logically sound. Even a monopoly like Microsoft has to compete with older versions of its own products. (In principle, they also have to compete with non-computerised solutions to problems).

    6. Re:1600lb Gorilla Sitting Anywhere it Wants by Nightlight3 · · Score: 2
      if Microsoft was as pure a monopoly as everyone says they are, then they'd have no interest in offering discount deals


      They'are monoply for the OS. But they can (and do) use that as a foot in the door to establish or expand their presence in all other areas. For example they may wish to displace Java with C# in CS courses. Or they may wish to get the first byte at hiring the best of the best, before other companies snatch them.

      The only reason Microsoft doesn't want the taxpayer to see what their money is buying is that on the whole, the flashy wrappers plus the secret warts, the taxpayer wouldn't like what he is getting.

    7. Re:1600lb Gorilla Sitting Anywhere it Wants by reallocate · · Score: 2

      Working for increased sales and larger market share is normal and legitimate behavior for any business, as is enticing customers with an initial low price.

      Because consumers do, in fact, have the option to acquire other other non-Microsoft operating systems and applications, Microsoft is not a pure monopoly, but they obviously engatge in illegal monopolistic practices. They are supported in this by the almost universal belief among non-technical consumers that Windows is synonymous with computing. I.e., many people think a Mac can only run Apple software, and most people, I'm sure, have never heard of Linux.

      I have no idea if there's a legal requirement for Microsoft to expose the terms of its contracts with these schools, but I'm sure that if there isn't, they won't. That upsets some people who expect businesses to behave as altruistic individuals. I don't expect that: Businesses are intended to make money, and are motivated to place their profit above the public's good.

      --
      -- Slashdot: When Public Access TV Says "No"
    8. Re:1600lb Gorilla Sitting Anywhere it Wants by yuri+benjamin · · Score: 1

      Also, by forcing all computers to have a microsoft os on them, there will be no incentive to pay for another operating system (even if it is linux).

      From the Ohio FAQ:

      The contract with Microsoft is not an exclusive contract. Some OSU departments will continue to purchase other competing vendors' software products because they have determined these other products meet their needs more completely than the Microsoft product suite.

      I couldn't find a similar comment in the Michigan FAQ , which may or may not mean that the Michigan Uni has a more exclusive deal.

      --
      You make the mistake of thinking you can educate the fundamental stupidity out of people. You can't.
  40. So ms gets our social security numbers now? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting


    Students: Students must be currently enrolled in at least one class that, when completed, will result in the awarding of credit hours verifiable through the Office of the Registrar . To purchase the software at the Bookstore, you must provide your OSU Buck ID card or other OSU picture ID. Your current enrollment will be verified when you go to purchase the software. You must be enrolled at the time you purchase the software. Enrollment in a previous quarter does not authorize you to purchase the software.


    Uhhhm, since most colleges still use social security numbers as identification, and that number is on id cards and schedules, bursar receipts, school records, the borg now get our social security numbers when they audit? If not, how else will they verify that everyone getting the software at a deep discount is authorized to get it? I'll bet the phrase above was lifted straight out of the contract.

    Nice.

  41. Secret contracts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Are we talking about some secret dealings related to organized crime, or respected pillars of society?

    If the power can be shut off to an entire state to profit a handfull of men, it's probably easy to cut a secret deal like this. Not that the two incidents are related directly, just another part of the current crimewave.

  42. In a parallel universe, far, far away ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    SANDAGE
    This is nonsense! We have no choice but to approve the Treaty. If there is war, the Empire will destroy our entire System with a snap of the finger.


    Coincidence? I think not!

  43. GOOD!! by goldorak_dan · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Lazy-ass-ckeck-box-clicking-dumbfounded-by-cli MS junkies graduating from college = more work for me!

    1. Re:GOOD!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is only flamebait if >50% of slashdot is in school right now. if that's the case, i'm out.

  44. "I pay my school thousands" and "I got it free" by burgburgburg · · Score: 3, Insightful

    And if RIT didn't have the shady deal with MS, maybe you'd only be paying hundreds every year, and you'd learn all about other amazing development environments that MS has now contractually forbidden you to see (on school time at least).

  45. A reason not yet considered for secret contract by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0



    Maybe the borg are afraid that investors and the analysts will see how deeply ms is discounting the software to maintain market share?

    What would happen to the stock price if investors realize that market share is starting to seriously erode in a very important market, together with further erosion in foreign markets? Schools are the key. The borg knew this from the beginning. Apple caught this early. Red Hat understands this. Outside the US, schools are becoming the early adopters of Gnu/Linux. Once the students are trained on Gnu/Linux, there is no retraining costs involved in any tco considerations.

    Once investors finally wake up, borg stock price will implode. The borg are simply delaying the inevitable. This also explains their interest now in attacking adobe's market share, in macromedia, etc. They have to diversify now or they're dead. xbox is a loser. Just about all of their operations are a loser except the os and the office application. Once investors realize that the borg are deeply discounting their bread and butter...what's that sound? tick...tick...tick...

  46. Here's another link to the article. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  47. No Apache? by Tim+Colgate · · Score: 2
    The Ohio FAQ has the following section in. I'm not sure if they're warning against Apache, or saying FrontPage is so hopelessly non-standards-compliant you shouldn't use it. A similar clause is in the Michigan Acknowledgement of Conditions and Notices form.

    Is FrontPage recommended for use with my environment?

    Before purchasing or developing your web pages with Microsoft FrontPage, ensure the web server for your pages will be the Microsoft Internet Information Server (IIS) running on Windows NT. FrontPage embeds proprietary and/or non-protocol-compliant features within HTML code, many of which are incompatible with many non-Microsoft web servers, including those utilized in OSU's OpenVMS and Novell architectures. The implications are twofold:

    Web page creators can't just place FrontPage-generated HTML files in their OpenVMS accounts or in their Universal Disk Space and expect the web pages to work correctly.

    Even if the pages are served successfully, they may only be fully readable by certain versions of Microsoft's Internet Explorer (IE) web browser.

  48. What's that word again? Oh, yeah. Monopoly! by burgburgburg · · Score: 2

    This is a Monopoly exercising it's unfettered powers. We, the public, have no way of knowing just how one-sided, destructive, restrictive and/or ill-priced these contracts are. And considering that Microsoft is a convicted Monopoly that has made breaking state laws a precondition of licensing (what the schools think of as) essential software, I'll believe the worst about them until the opposite is explicitly proven.

    1. Re:What's that word again? Oh, yeah. Monopoly! by r0xah · · Score: 1

      Microsoft is not doing anything horrible here. You speak of how destructive, restrictive or ill-priced these contracts might be, but that makes little to no sense whatsoever. If the contracts were so bad and overcharged the school could just buy licenses like any other mass computer distributor. They are bargaaining to give the schools a chance at a better price, but not give every school the same price. Say school X with 30,000 students may end up with a cheaper price/unit than school Y with 2,000 students because microsoft can make more profit total off of school X. Don't knock Microsoft for doing legitimate business. The real question is if the schools should be accepting the terms of the deals based on their legal responsibility to disclose information to the public... since it is the public who is buying a large portion of the schools suplies.

      --
      those people who think they know everything are a great annoyance to those of us who do. -isaac asimov
    2. Re:What's that word again? Oh, yeah. Monopoly! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Every customer should pay the same price for a service... It is wrong and undemocratic to charge some people more than others.

    3. Re:What's that word again? Oh, yeah. Monopoly! by r0xah · · Score: 1

      Undemocratic? So it's undemocratic for a car salesperson to make a better deal with one customer than another? It is wrong for a business to negotiate with another on price even though it's different from other deals? You are for one using democracy out of context. To have same prices for everything and nothing changes is more of a comunist idea than democracy. Go back to school little boy and study harder.

      --
      those people who think they know everything are a great annoyance to those of us who do. -isaac asimov
  49. PARENT IS A GOATSE REDIRECTOR by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Linux is teh gay

  50. NO IT ISN'T by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The parent is a lying cock.

  51. Why the need for secrecy? by goodie · · Score: 1

    I think one would have to assume it was a bad deal for the taxpayer - otherwise, why would they need to keep it secret?

    1. Re:Why the need for secrecy? by BarrettAnderson · · Score: 1

      they keep it a secret so that other schools don't ask for the same low price. nothing wrong with that.

  52. MS? In a shady licensing deal? by Wampus+Aurelius · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Inconceivable!

  53. Barganing Position by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Even money says that these clauses don't have anything to do with evil practices as much as it does with barganing with other unis. MS will want to get the best terms for themselves when selling to universities, so as soon as all their deals are public, all their sales will more or less have to default to the lowest sale price, and then likely end up going even lower.

  54. Violate the Settlement agreement? by Araxen · · Score: 1

    Wouldn't this violate the settlement agreement MS has with the States?

    1. Re:Violate the Settlement agreement? by eclectro · · Score: 1

      Earlier post asks this same question. The settlement only affects OEMs, doesn't apply to anyone else. Needless to say MS would take advantage of that.

      --
      Take the cheese to sickbay, the doctor should see it as soon as possible - B'Elanna Torres, "Learning Curve"
  55. Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    no flamebait, just a question. Do you guys seriously dont get tired of your MS-bashing?

    1. Re:Question by too_bad · · Score: 2, Insightful

      No anonymous coward, we never get tired of defending our
      freedom.

      --
      DO NOT PANIC
    2. Re:Question by greenchilies · · Score: 1

      A better question might be "dosent microsoft ever get ashamed of its highly questionable business practices?" Or "will microsoft ever do the right thing?"

    3. Re:Question by lenski · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Remember this: Microsoft executives have a legally defined fiduciary responsiblity to their stockholders. This responsiblity informs essentially all of their marketing, technology and business decisions. They know the rules (exceptionally well!). Their resonsibility is to use the rules of the and manipulate the process to macimize their profits.

      It's up to us, as citizens in a (theoretically) representative democracy to participate in the establishment of rules to prevent such indecent treatment of their customers and competitors. If we don't like their masterful use of monopoly in one business to destroy all hope of honest competition in another business, then it's our job to speak up. Thoughtfully.

      And we'd also better be prepared to compete too. (As a very happy Linux user and developer, I believe this is actually being done successfully.)

    4. Re:Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      dosent

      After seeing the quality of spelling on slashdot, I think MS software is the least of our worries. How about teaching kids to fxxking spell first?

  56. Oracle is doing this too by jfrumkin · · Score: 3, Informative

    Oracle uses the same dir^h^h^h tactic with universities as well (and not just with states named California). At the University of Arizona, we purchased a site license for their product line at an enourmous price - during the process, they would not divulge (nor were we able to find out) their deals with other universities. However, I found out from my Dad, who is a dean at a university in the northwest, that Oracle tried to sell them the very same deal, but they turned it down.

    --

    "What we have here, is a failure to communicate." - Cool Hand Luke
    1. Re:Oracle is doing this too by jcoy42 · · Score: 2
      At the University of Arizona, we purchased a site license for their product line at an enourmous price

      Actually, the price wasn't that enourmous. And it was actually a really good deal. Heck- just ask Face about the RDBMS deal sometime. He typically can't stop giggling.

      What makes it look enourmous is it was a blanket package for *everything*, and we probably really only needed the base product (oracle 8i/9i) and portal/9iAS.

      But now any student/staff/faculty member can have and keep the software for the cost of media, or just download it.
      --
      Never trust an atom. They make up everything.
    2. Re:Oracle is doing this too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      "same dir^h^h^h tactic"

      You left two spaces between same and tactic. I notice this automatically by reflex, scary.

  57. idea - win-win situation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think this is a great opportunity for Schools to capitalize on the whole thing... Since schools are the seeding grounds for Microsoft, instead of paying Microsoft for the OS and apps, reverse the situation and tell Microsoft to give the school money to standardize on MS OSes and apps. If MS say no, you standardize on Linux and do it very cheaply... if they would reluctantly agree, the schools get some much needed money in exchange for letting MS give free OS and apps for school use... may be even get them to pay for the hardware as well... with the money MS has to pay the school to get their software into schools, may be you can open a Linux and Macintosh lab ;-) sounds like a win-win situation for schools.

    1. Re:idea - win-win situation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh Yeah, the student should also be given a few bucks, in exchange for forcing him to use the free MS OS and apps as well. Everybody wins this way, including MS ;-)

  58. get over it people by f00zbll · · Score: 1
    big business has never considered the law important. At best, it's an annoyance they have to get around with sneaky tricks.

    every body grow up. Don't like what the university is doing, then go to another school. The universities will eventually get the picture and change their tune.

    1. Re:get over it people by An+Onerous+Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Don't like what your country is doing? Go to another country. Don't like what your ISP is doing? Switch to a different ISP. Don't like your college's software licensing agreements? Go to a different college.

      This is about the most useless advice you could possibly give. First, there are few people who are likely to take it, because the proposed solution requires so much effort. Second, if you don't tell the college precisely why you decided to make the move, you haven't contributed at all to the solution. The administration will most likely decide that the best way to increase sagging attendance is to redesign the college logo. Finally, by leaving the college, you stop being one of their students, so they really don't have any reason to listen to you anymore.

      There is a solution: It's called feedback, and you can do it without finding a new apartment.

      --

      You want the truthiness? You can't handle the truthiness!

    2. Re:get over it people by FurryFeet · · Score: 2

      Don't like what your country is doing? Go to another country. Don't like what your ISP is doing? Switch to a different ISP. Don't like your college's software licensing agreements? Go to a different college.

      Yup. God forbids we try to change anything. You know, it never works, and nobody likes the guy making waves.

  59. I know I have not had much sleep lately, but... by circusnews · · Score: 1

    Umm, wasn't this kind of agreement prohibited by the anti trust agreement?

    1. Re:I know I have not had much sleep lately, but... by eclectro · · Score: 1

      dude, get some sleep. This has been asked and answered in at least two other posts already.
      (No, the agreement covers OEMs only)

      --
      Take the cheese to sickbay, the doctor should see it as soon as possible - B'Elanna Torres, "Learning Curve"
  60. Summary of Secret License Terms by ispel · · Score: 1

    1. Anti-compete clause naming specific companies not to offer software or hardware from (Sun, Redhat, Corel)

    2.Terms requiring the school to purchase Microsoft software for every computer they purchase

    3.A clause that specifically precludes any use of software with "identified licenses"

    4. Required promotions for new Microsoft products by Microsoft sales and marketing representatives

    5.All faculty must use Powerpoint to distribute class materials, no matter what.

  61. If I paid that much I'd learn real computers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Not this toy crap.

    Four CPUs? "Terminal server" where, get this - more than one person can use the computer at the same time!!!

    Wow and golly gee! What ground-breaking massively-scalable technology will Gates's boys think up next!

  62. Law has no intent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    When you get sent to the cross-bar hotel, it's the letter of the law that gets you sent there - not the intent.

    Sure, we read big stories about the "intent" of the law, but that's the rarity, and it's only where the letter of the law isn't clear.

    If the authorities are going to use the letter of the DMCA to bust me, damn straight I'm going to use the letter of the tax code to keep for my family as much of what I earn with my labor as I can.

  63. How is this troll? by thasmudyan · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Parent is a valid, on-topic post. Don't mod something down just because you don't agree, stupid moderators...

  64. And????? by ONOIML8 · · Score: 2

    Like I said in another post in another thread this morning......

    And?????

    This is news how?

    Like anything would ever be done about it. This doesn't suprise anyone and nothing will ever be done about it.

    We all know that Microsoft does shady deals. We know that they break the law in the open. This has been proven in court.

    Since nothing will ever be done about any of it, why waste time dwelling on it?

    Come on people, just get on with replacing them.

    --
    . Quit playing Monopoly with Bill. Switch to one of many non-Microsoft products today.
  65. DOD is funded by taxpayer money... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But they have lots of secret contract deals, many of which are such that it would be bad if they were not secret.

  66. agreed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    microsoft is not always the devil, get over it

  67. Infrastructure Requirements by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    Since I'm employeed by an institution that has one of these contracts, I'm going to post as an AC. When we signed our Microsoft Campus Agreement, there were (substantiated) rumors that the contract required a certain percentage of our University-owned computing infrastructure to use Microsoft OSs. That doesn't seem too bad, until you realize that they were counting intelligent switches, Cisco firewalls, etc, it as non-MS products for that calculation. Of course, once the IT populace started getting hot about this requirement, the web-site was pulled are replaced with an MS-sanctioned page like those listed in the blurb.

  68. Don't see the problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I guess someone is just a little biased cause I counted well over 20 software/hardware contracts I manage for my company that I am not allowed via contract to disclose the sum paid for the services.

    This is typically business as usual

  69. Secret licensing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I am an adjunct C.S. professor at a local college. I teach "Unnix (Linux) and C++. I do not use ANY MS technology whatsoever. I do have to run Turbotax on my wife's computer because of this. Perhaps I should test it under wine :)? The college I teach at has entered into one of these "secret" deals. Frankly, I pretty much know the terms and M$ is virtually giving their tools away to ensure that the students use them. It's quite effective - free it very effective I would say. This makes grading C++ assignments a bit more challenging, but that's my choice. Frankly, it's an effective strategy and I can't blame them. I use my soapbox to push Linux, but that is the best I can do.

  70. I see a lot of people... by foxtrot · · Score: 3, Insightful

    commenting on the Microsoft monopoly.

    Microsoft doesn't give good deals to colleges so they can raise the price on them two years later.

    Microsoft gives good deals to colleges (as do Sun Microsystems, Apple, Hewlett-Packard, and IBM...) because they want their stuff in front of the people who will be making the decisions in ten years. Microsoft doesn't give software to colleges (or discount the heck out of it) because they want to leverage a monopoly-- they do it because they fear not being a monopoly in 10 years.

    Microsoft often goes one step further: They'll foot the bill for some percentage of PC hardware if the college in question will promise to run Microsoft OSes on it.

    -JDF

    1. Re:I see a lot of people... by anonymous+cupboard · · Score: 2
      Microsoft gives good deals to colleges (as do Sun Microsystems, Apple, Hewlett-Packard, and IBM...) because they want their stuff in front of the people who will be making the decisions in ten years.
      Charge the SOBs then!!!!

      This is the same as product placement. You want this Uni to place MS products in front of their students (and future decision makers), well pay the Uni for the privilege!!!

  71. McVisual C# 101 required reading by gelfling · · Score: 2

    "Programming the McVisual C# Way"
    "McVisual Debugging for Dummies"
    "Would you like fries with that object?"
    "H1B - What is it how it can work for your company"

  72. RIT & Free MS Software by Merk00 · · Score: 1

    What your refering to, I believe Microsoft provided free of charge. They basically are donating copies of certain software to those who have taken Software Engineering classes (as best I can tell) so that students will become familiar with Microsoft tools. So this isn't really relevant to the discussion here.

    1. Re:RIT & Free MS Software by sconeu · · Score: 2

      But the point of a University education isn't to become familiar with a particular vendor's tools. That's what DeVry and ITT Tech are for. University is so you can learn how to learn to use any tool!

      --
      General Relativity: Space-time tells matter where to go; Matter tells space-time what shape to be.
  73. Mindshare? Geez now we're getting metaphysical. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What next, psychic imprinting? It seems MS just can't win, no matter how they price. If they sell at normal prices, you scream that they are robber barons, being usurious, that they should sell the wares at it true value, which is almost nothing. Yet when they sell at "almost nothing" prices, you still scream that this is "dumping". Yet even them GIVING it away is still evil to you. Man, you can't have it all three ways. Either their prices are too high or too low. Pick one and stick with it.

    1. Re:Mindshare? Geez now we're getting metaphysical. by markov_chain · · Score: 1

      Many people who post here have picked one of those options and stuck with it. Unfortunately, they picked different ones :)

      I think it is good strategy for MS to give away their products for free, or cheaply. Even piracy probably helps them in the long run. It is more than dumping though; by getting more users they increase the utility of the product.

      I didn't state that what they do is evil. It would be hard to characterize anything they do as evil; for all I know, without them, we wouldn't have cheap and fast PCs today to run our software on.

      --
      Tsunami -- You can't bring a good wave down!
    2. Re:Mindshare? Geez now we're getting metaphysical. by shepd · · Score: 1

      >without them, we wouldn't have cheap and fast PCs today to run our software on.

      I disagree. My C64 was much cheaper than my current PC, even after inflation conversion.

      --
      If you could be told what you can see or read, then it follows that you could be told what to say or think - BoC
    3. Re:Mindshare? Geez now we're getting metaphysical. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The C-64 booted into Microsoft BASIC.

    4. Re:Mindshare? Geez now we're getting metaphysical. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You spent way too much money on your current PC! My current computer cost less than my first computer without accounting for inflation. Of course maybe you got your C64 used. I sold my first computer for $5.

    5. Re:Mindshare? Geez now we're getting metaphysical. by Daniel+Phillips · · Score: 2

      What next, psychic imprinting? It seems MS just can't win, no matter how they price. If they sell at normal prices, you scream that they are robber barons, being usurious, that they should sell the wares at it true value, which is almost nothing. Yet when they sell at "almost nothing" prices, you still scream that this is "dumping". Yet even them GIVING it away is still evil to you. Man, you can't have it all three ways. Either their prices are too high or too low. Pick one and stick with it.

      You are a little confused about how predatory business practices work. The name of the game is to subsidize sales when necessary to undercut your competition, and thus distort the market so you can eventually charge above-market prices, as MS does now.

      --
      Have you got your LWN subscription yet?
  74. Microsoft taking a page from Sun? by sheldon · · Score: 2, Troll

    Why do you think Java is all through out the University systems? Sun gave away class materials and set up Java Universities at various colleges to promote the language.

    If you think it's less evil to use Java in a curriculuum you've got some serious morality problems.

    1. Re:Microsoft taking a page from Sun? by Jason+Earl · · Score: 5, Insightful

      And if Microsoft did the same that would be fine. However, Microsoft is tying the price of their operating system and office suite to the acceptance of their development tools as part of the curriculum. Sun gave away their development tools and class materials, to pretty much anyone that wanted them, with no strings attached.

      That's a fairly substantial difference.

      If Microsoft were to give their development tools away to all takers then I wouldn't be surprised if some Universities used the language. However, that's not what this is about. This is about giving the entire University access to cheap Windows and MS Office licenses if the University will make sure that their CS students learn only MS technologies. That's pretty much exactly the reason that MS got into all of that trouble with the DOJ.

    2. Re:Microsoft taking a page from Sun? by sheldon · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      "That's a fairly substantial difference. "

      It'd only be a substantial difference if it was true.

      The fact that you have to make stuff up so that you can justify your hatred of Microsoft is the real story here.

    3. Re:Microsoft taking a page from Sun? by sheldon · · Score: 2

      Wow, I must have hit close to the truth again and struck a nerve. I see someone wasted their moderator points on my last three posts.

      It would have been more entertaining if they'd simply responded with why they thought I was wrong.

    4. Re:Microsoft taking a page from Sun? by Jason+Earl · · Score: 2

      It'd only be a substantial difference if it was true.

      The Freedom of Information Act was passed for exactly this type of situation. If the tax payer can not see what government officials (and this certainly includes the management of State Universities) is doing with their money then it leads to all sorts of possible abuses. This is why the terms of the contracts with public institutions are available to the public. That's the real story. Microsoft is a convicted monopolist, and yet somehow they are able to sign deals with a tax-funded institution and keep the terms of the contract secret. If the terms of this contract aren't publicly available then there could be all sorts of kickbacks involved and the public wouldn't be the wiser.

      Personally, I think that this would be just as big a story if Sun, IBM, Apple, or even the Free Software Foundation tried to negotiate "secret" deals any government sponsored institution. If Microsoft's deal with these institutions is so great then what do they have to hide?

      I don't hate Microsoft. Heck, I even own some of their stock, but just because I like Microsoft does not mean that I want them to be able to sign "secret" deals with government institutions.

      That's the real story.

  75. Re:Question - The l33t Are Repressing Me!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Re:Question (Score:-1, Troll)
    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 24, @08:23PM (#4955285)
    What a fsuking ass-clown you are. Freedom. You don't even know the meaning of the word.

    Clue #1, Freedom does not mean staying up late to watch the latest ep of Farscape on a school nite.

    Grow the fsuk up and go get a job.

    God I pity your ilk. So wrapped up in the little l33t world of Linux, thinking your challenging the "man", leading the revolution.

    Clue #2, your not Martin Luther King and this ain't Selma Alabama.

    Turd-burglin ass

  76. Word is not a standard by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    MSWord is the standard

    How can something which isn't even documented be a standard? Doesn't something first have to be known before it can be called a standard? The whole point of a standard is to facilitate interoperability of different implementations. If anything, MS Word tries to accomplish the exact opposite.

    What you're thinking of is popularity. It doesn't really matter how popular something is, that won't make it a standard.

  77. My only question is... by dpete4552 · · Score: 1

    What do they have to hide?

    --
    http://www.archive.org/details/ThePowerOfNightmares
  78. Not the responsibility of MS by V.P. · · Score: 1
    You're right, ignorance of the law is no excuse, but Microsoft is not the one breaking the law here. The publicly funded college/university is.

    Worst case for Microsoft is that the "cheap licenses" contract is no longer binding. The university still has to obtain licenses for the software it's already using.

    1. Re:Not the responsibility of MS by miu · · Score: 1
      Worst case for Microsoft is that the "cheap licenses" contract is no longer binding. The university still has to obtain licenses for the software it's already using.

      Worst case for Microsoft is losing the chance to get students to accept Windows as a standard. If funds are low, the college stops using that software and goes with something less expensive. The budget is not always mutable.

      --

      [Set Cain on fire and steal his lute.]
  79. from an Ohio State sysadmin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative
    I'm a sysadmin at Ohio State.

    Here's a link to the official OSU Microsoft Buckeye Bundle web site - quite different from the QA site linked to above.

    One point to highlight is that if OSU sysadmins want to use the Buckeye Bundle software, we must also purchase an OEM Microsoft OS license - it isn't sufficient to purchase just the Buckeye Bundle. Of course many in the university believe this means we're paying for the OS license twice.

    All of you who think this is a "great deal"... well, due to the OEM licensing requirements, unless you really need lots of Visual Studio .NET licenses, it doesn't amount to all that much less expense.

  80. Concerning Ohio State by MicroBerto · · Score: 1, Flamebait
    Never, EVER, try to point out similarities between Ohio State and Michigan. Michigan is a foul wasteland, and their football program is quite mediocre these days.

    Go Bucks! Miami's goin down!

    --
    Berto
    1. Re:Concerning Ohio State by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Scenario 1 (Lets agree on a safeword): Microsoft negotiators get so ticked off after finishing contract negotiations with School 1, that they offer the exact same deal to School 2.

      Scenario 2 (Lube me up): Most schools with similar contracts have their contracts expire this year, though two schools due to their size and clout are able to add a contract extension, and manage avoiding (the much more expensive) licensing 6.0 this year.

      Scenario 3 (Save us Icaza!): Most Schools bend over and let Microsoft ___, while they ALL hope that there are viable Outlook & Word compatible office suite options to push switching to in the next several years.

    2. Re:Concerning Ohio State by RabidOverYou · · Score: 0, Troll

      Foul wasteland? Who's burning cars, Riot Boy?

    3. Re:Concerning Ohio State by MicroBerto · · Score: 2

      Students that go to other Ohio schools and come to visit ours because we are the premier party spot, to be exact. It's not my fault they can't handle themselves.

      --
      Berto
    4. Re:Concerning Ohio State by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I went to Ohio State. It had a nice CIS department but the school itself is a shithole.

      I was a fan of Resolve.

    5. Re:Concerning Ohio State by MicroBerto · · Score: 2
      I went through the resolve sequence (I am an ECE), but have yet to experience whether or not it will be good for me in the future. I think it will be.

      OSU's administration definitely makes it a shithole, and you don't even want to see south high street anymore (barren wasteland waiting for builders to come set something up), and crime is the same as usual.. but you still won't find a better party school or overall education in Ohio.

      --
      Berto
  81. Felon... by PrimeNumber · · Score: 2

    Strictly speaking Bill Gates IS a convicted felon.

    However if I personally chose not to associate with convicted felons there would be alot fewer people I could associate with.

    That and the simple fact that life being what it is in West Virginia would also leave me with few family members to associate with, or TX where I live now for that matter... :)

  82. Freedom of Speech by i_luv_linux · · Score: 1

    Why should Microsoft not allowed to support a club, whereas you can have your linux club. You are saying that, businesses which had legal problems shouldn't have any right to do anything in this world. That's your restricted view of democracy.

  83. Universities are not technology schools by xtal · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I've said this before, and I'll say it again. You could teach a CS course with any functionally complete language that allows real pointers. You can even use Java, I guess, but you need to teach students about the machine that the code runs on then - the JVM. The concepts are all the same, or very framiliar. The problem is that the universities have sold out to people wanting to learn technology to make a quick buck, and not interested in the theory and operating principles of a computer. Things like interprocess communications, memory management, network theory..

    If you have a solid grounding in your fundamentals, learning a new language is easy. Mastering a language takes years, but once you've mastered one, moving between them is not a problem. Unless, of course, you don't have a solid grounding in the basics. When I was in school, we used Modula-2 for all of the intro programming courses. You could use C or modula for the software engineering courses (2nd/3rd year). Most of the higher level courses let you use what you wanted. I didn't expect the school to teach me to be a Java programmer. Now, the school uses Java in those intro courses. This is very confusing to newbies, and has resulted in a pile of engineers (who take the CS courses in 1st/2nd year) that need to be taught what pointers are in another course.

    Universities should be ashamed for selling out like this, because the focus on theory and fundamentals is what differentiates University from a technical school. There is nothing wrong with a technical/hands on approach, but the two are designed to accomplish different things.

    The above nonsense with Microsoft is why I took engineering in University and not computer science. The hordes of people looking to make a quick buck and the adminstration catering to them was a turnoff. Nobody survives dynamics, analog design, digital systems and electromagnetic fields & waves and the like without understanding the fundamentals at some level.

    Nothing against microsoft, but there's something to be said about teaching age-old information and not what corporation XYZ thinks is best for you, this month.

    The title of this message is referring to a College, but most of the comments are directed at Universities, so I hope I have the distinction correct.

    --
    ..don't panic
  84. I hope OSU didn't shoot themselves in the foot. by DeVilla · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I went to Ohio State as a CIS student and worked as a sys admin there. They had a great program and I feel one of the best parts was that it was very UNIX centric. You got a better feel for the technical details of how the system and the software would interact as well as how flexable software can be. I can't believe they will be able to conveniently setup all of the tools on an MS client for the students to play with. Varients of any programming language you could dream of, code libraries and research code all accessable and usable from any client.

    We also has a pretty slick setup to manage the desktops and servers in a fairly stable and efficient manner while still proving researchers the flexibility they needed.

    I heard about MS software creeping into the evenironment more after I left, and they kept having problems with grads getting (and abusing) more authority than they knew what to do with on the NT machines. They will never be able to come up with anything as slick as the diskless client setup we had for UNIX. If a workstation did get hosed, we could rebuild it remotely and have the user reboot and up in under 5 minutes. Hardware could be swapped just as easily without changing the client's software, but it took long since someone had to carry the machine to the office.

    I hope OSU isn't going to kill their CIS dept. I had been considering going back for another degree.

  85. Enjoy the Lemon Party by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  86. All State FOI Laws by Bob9113 · · Score: 3, Informative
  87. How else does a convicted felon keep its monopoly? by alchemist68 · · Score: 1

    I attended the University of Akron (http://www.uakron.edu/) a while back. M$ Office for Windows was $10/student, M$ Office for Mac OS X was $20/student. No manuals or box, just a CD in a plastic sleeve. That's right folks, M$ can sell Office for this price and still make a profit to continue it's monopoly. Give the POOR students a break, get them locked into M$ habbits and worries about "compatibility" and it'll sustain the monopoly. Regretably I use M$ Office, mostly for compatibility with the business world. Though I've written my resume using TextEdit and saved it in Adobe PDF format from that built-in feature of Mac OS X, I still get recruiters requesting my resume in M$ Word format. Damned mindless M$ drone bastards.

    And while we're on the subject of secret M$ licensing agreetments, the University of Akron removed ALL Apple Macintoshes from EVERY computer lab on campus during the summer of 2001 and went with Gateway running Windows ME. Apple still sells Macs on campus, but the university REFUSES to support Macintosh. Need help connecting your Mac to the University servers? You're SOL. The computer help center simply refuses all questions related to Apple Macintosh. Sounds like some wierd politics going on. I wonder which university administrator got paid a healthy bonus for pushing Apple out.

    One of the few joys I had rubbing Mac OS X in my advisor's face was beeing able to print research articles to the laboratory laser printer from my apartment over a dial-up connection. All I needed was the laser printer's IP address and Mac OS X was happy. Pissed him off to no end (LMAO).

    C'mon, it's Xmas, keep that good'ol Scrooge and Grinch spirit and mod me down as Score:-5, Troll.

  88. Good luck by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Good luck finding a job when you get out of school, kid.

    I'm serious about that, you need to open your eyes if you want to make it easier to get hired. If you're just another .Net monkey in the crowd, well then...

    Posting anon 'cause I know this will be flamed for being cold-hearted. But someone had to say it.

  89. M$ has a website to find out how much it costs. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Somewhere on M$'s website they have a calculator that will find out how much a site costs. It asks for how many full time faculty you have and how many full time students you have if you want a student license as well. I downloaded a list of faculty phone numbers from my colleges website and found out how many full time faculty I had. I also added in the students. I came to an annual price of about 40K this makes M$ software very cheap since the price of a UNIX admin is probably higher than 40k. Point and click administration makes M$ easy to admin and you don't need to pay an M$ Certified guy as much.

  90. Full Compliance by Monkelectric · · Score: 2
    Being in full compliance isnt that hard really ... just takes a little record keeping and a little dilligence. Lemme tell you who makes it impossible to *be* in compliance.

    Managers. I was a sysadmin at a university for a little under 3 years, and every time there was a problem it was because a manager didn't *want* to pay for software, not because it slipped our minds. Usually it would happen like this, boss walks up to me at 3:00pm "We need to have such and such capability." me, "when and whats my budget." boss, "We need it by tommorow, and your budget is nothing." I seriously had this exact conversation wiith my boss about once a month.

    Once, my boss walked up to me at 4:30pm and said "We need a webmail system before you go home tonight." So under these circumstances, if I could find a free/Open Source solution, I would go with it ... but more often then not you just did what you had to do.

    This is an extreme example, but generally compliance issues are willful ignorance.

    --

    Religion is a gateway psychosis. -- Dave Foley

  91. Apples to Oranges by MillionthMonkey · · Score: 5, Interesting

    If you think it's less evil to use Java in a curriculuum you've got some serious morality problems.

    I've seen this argument many times. ALL PROPRIETARY SOFTWARE IS NOT EQUIVALENTLY EVIL.

    LESS EVIL: Here, have all the Java crap you want.

    MORE EVIL: Here, have all the .NET crap you want, and we better see this entering your curriculum or else you lose your discounts and we audit your asses.

    Do you see the difference?

  92. Re:How else does a convicted felon keep its monopo by shepd · · Score: 1

    >Though I've written my resume using TextEdit and saved it in Adobe PDF format from that built-in feature of Mac OS X, I still get recruiters requesting my resume in M$ Word format

    Choices, choices, choices!. So many choices! What will I do? I know, I'll click here and make those recruiters happy! (Warning, some solutions may require wine!)

    >The computer help center simply refuses all questions related to Apple Macintosh. Sounds like some wierd politics going on.

    Makes sense to me... they have about 90% of all computer users covered by supporting PCs with Windows/Linux and Unix boxes. Welcome to the world of Linux users 5 years ago. Sorry... Sometimes thinking differently and thinking outside the box means you're thinking outside your realm of support.

    >I wonder which university administrator got paid a healthy bonus for pushing Apple out.

    Seriously, he doubt he got the bonus for pushing Apple out. He got the bonus for satisfying more customers with fewer resources. Unless your course mandates your use of Apple, I really don't think you can expect the Uni. to help you with it. Now, if it does, that's another story...

    >One of the few joys I had rubbing Mac OS X in my advisor's face

    You see, this is why I'm anti-Mac. Well, one of the reasons. Mac people pretend to be better than me. That really pisses me off.

    >All I needed was the laser printer's IP address and Mac OS X was happy. Pissed him off to no end (LMAO).

    You're sorta lucky he was nice enough not to care after your earlier bout... If he was nasty he'd just lock down the routable nets to the printer, like he should have in the first place, but hey, he was nice. Anyways, you can do this with any OS (including windows, all the way back to 3.0 if you made/found a DOS print redirector that would let you access an lp spool). Maybe he wanted it this way so he could do it at home too?

    Hey, don't take it too hard. I just hope you were taking some literary license with those comments there...

    --
    If you could be told what you can see or read, then it follows that you could be told what to say or think - BoC
  93. Visual Studio really that great? by 0x0d0a · · Score: 2

    Have the people that dote on VS actually *used* etags, fume-mode, or any of the other rather important-to-development features in xemacs, or are they just deciding that plain Jane xemacs is no good for development?

    I have a couple of friends that use VS. Pretty much what I've heard is that it's not bad, that the interface isn't perfect, but it's pretty easy to use. However, the only feature that I could see using as justification for being married to it is the compiler/debugger's support for modifying running code at the source level.

    Is there any other reason to like VS versus gcc, with xemacs?

    1. Re:Visual Studio really that great? by Vegard · · Score: 1

      I do not know if this is really relevant, but:

      I once worked on a larger software project, where we (a team of 3 persons) were developing a curses-based client, developed in a standard editor. At the same time, someone developed a windows-based client, in visual studio. Ok, the Windows-based client had more bells and whistles, of course. But ours did the job. We had roughly 1/3 the estimates for development time as the Windows team (which were more persons than us, too, I think), and we KEPT our schedule, which the Windows team did not.

      With good programming skills, any editor you like will do as a programming environment. It's not the tools that makes a good program, it's the programmer.

  94. No he isn't. by foo12 · · Score: 1

    Unless a traffic violation with no serious injury is a Felony in New Mexico. I'm no worshipper of Gates, but jeesh... come on --- that's just libel.

  95. Java sucks for a teaching language by 0x0d0a · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Java is, IMHO, a really really awful choice for a teaching language.

    As a matter of fact, I have serious doubts about an OO language *period* as a first language.

    What I've pretty consistently seen is people getting started on Java having to deal with a pretty high up-front cost. They have to get OO architecture, a ton of terminology, protection, and casting shoved down their throat before they can really write simple programs (more than Hello World).

    What I've seen in a lot of intro CS classes is that the profs try to teach all the terminology and concepts first (in a pretty abstract manner) so that they can use the terms, and then start teaching the mechanics of the language. Everyone promptly gets lost.

    BASIC was a really great language to get people programming in, because it was so incredibly simple to start someone coding reasonably well. You could teach everything needed to write a full-blown program very quickly, then spend time building on a concrete foundation, instead of a bunch of abstracts.

    Pascal is pretty simple that way. C is a pain to debug and has a few syntax warts (the syntax of the for loop, the printf syntax...), but it's almost as good to teach things to students with. C++ is only usable as a first language if it's used pretty much like C at first. If you start introducing the entire language up front, you lose a lot of people.

    Some people have promoted Scheme as a good first language. I personally think decent static typing is pretty important to someone that may be making type errors left and right, but Scheme is still probably not a bad choice.

    Anyway, like I said, Java is a truly shitty language to introduce someone to coding on. It's (potentially) a really sexy language to someone that has a C++ history.

    Personally, I'd say that a procedural version of BASIC is probably the best sort of intro language I can think of. Very low cost to entry, not a lot of concepts to bang your head into.

  96. Err...hold on a moment by 0x0d0a · · Score: 2

    Okay, this is taken a smidgen out of context. I'm also at CMU. And CMU is about as *anti*-MS as it gets (partly because MS hired away all the faculty that were willing to work for them a few years ago).

    I do not know of a single CS course (for CS majors) that is taught based on Windows. All development is done on Solaris or (increasingly) Linux. Pushed tools include emacs, gdb, LaTeX, and OpenGL. I have never been required or encouraged to do any work that interfaced in any way with Windows.

    How many universities have a video game programming class -- with a Linux target?

    There's a Microsoft club? Hell, I wasn't even aware of it. The Linux users group is a lot more visible (frequently putting up posters for Linux Installation Days). Go into the Wean clusters (where most of the CS people do work, if they're working in a cluster) and you see Linux, Solaris, and few (in their own tiny room) Windows boxes.

    CMU officially provides free support for a number of different Linux distros to its students. It has banned at least one Windows release from campus usage (NT Server, due to DHCP problems).

    Yes, Microsoft recruits aggressively here. The campus does not encourage it more than any other company. There are people that intern at MS, and there are people that intern at IBM. RTLinux had a booth at the last job fair, and IBM's first question for people dropping resumes that mentioned Linux was "Have you written a patch for the Linux kernel?"

    I know one professor that allowed MS to come and do a presentation on campus (basically, they'd pay to do a workshot on some of their stuff if they got a room to do it in). He ended up in hot water because of some pretty strong anti-MS sentiment in the CS department.

    Now, CMU may not be perfect, but one thing it sure as hell is not doing is promoting Microsoft.

    If you want to complain about moronic misallocation of tuition funds at CMU, complain about the annual rip-out-the-flower-planters-and-plant-full-size-ba nana-trees-two-weeks-before-first-frost scandal.

    Or (while it was cool, I'm not sure it qualifies as research) the guy that got an undergraduate research grant to build a shack adjoining Doherty Hall and then live in it for two months without talking to anyone and wearing a lobster suit.

  97. What To Teach by jefu · · Score: 2
    I have taught a number of intro programming courses and I quite like java as an intro course. I like intro classes being able to avoid dealing with pointers, dealing with too much detail about linking and so on.

    But then too, given my druthers I'll also toss the students into a Unix environment, and an environment without a big fancy IDE.

    Why? Because I dont much care what specific language they learn first as long as they learn it. (But see caveat below.) And then learn another language, and preferably several more. My preferred list would be Java for two courses, then C (for pointers and memory), then Python (for scripting), then Haskell (just to bend their brains a bit). Then one or four of APL, J, Prolog, Lisp, Scheme, XSLT, SQL, Intercal, Befunge, Unlambda and so on.

    Its not overly important which languages they learn as long as they master (and mastery is important) several different languages with several different models (imperative, logic, functional). And most especially as long as the students learn about their own personal process of learning - enough so that they will not be stumped by the process of learning a new language, os or system in the future.

    It should be noted though that this is not a view universally shared. I was kicked out of my last teaching job in part because I was asking students to learn Haskell - it seems that Haskell doesn't have an associated "Visual Studio" and isn't supported by major software vendors and learning anything of that sort is considered a waste of time by the students. Especially something difficult enough to require an effort in learning. And the liberal arts administration of the community college - though it liked to call itself a university - liked to agree with the students. Retention you know. Very important thing.

    caveat I like to choose a first language that is available for free on as many platforms as possible that the students might want to use (in the school labs I prefer to run unix - mostly to go through that "learn a new system" process), that does not require an IDE, that can do more or less platform independent graphics ( I like drawing pictures and have found that students do too - mostly - and by graphics I do not mean GUI nonsense), and that does not have too many hidden gotchas. This pretty much leaves Java.

  98. Esp. since this is Umich by 0x0d0a · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I mean, for chrissake. Anyone else remember the umich Mac freeware/shareware archive? Predated Info-Mac by a bit, but was excellent. Only notable thing I'm aware of about umich, too. :-)

    And now they've made a complete about-face?

  99. Re:How else does a convicted felon keep its monopo by Hyped01 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    They said...

    >>One of the few joys I had rubbing Mac OS X in my advisor's face

    >You see, this is why I'm anti-Mac. Well, one of the reasons. Mac people pretend to be better than me. That really pisses me off.

    Though you may think that's the case, think about what Mac and Linux and OS/2 and Amiga, and Atari 2600, and TRS-80 users go through every time they have to listen to a Windows user extolling either some amazing, new, innovative feature in Windows that the rest of the world has had for years, or a dozen other similar conversations along similar lines.

    Now keep in mind, I'm not accussing you of this. I am merely pointing out that so many Windows users seem to wonder why users of every other OS seem to evangelize their OS... and perhaps that's a big part of it. Tired of hearing the shit from MS, and Windows users who just plain and simply dont know better. It's not entirely the Win users fault, and I know in my case, I found unenlightened Win users more funny than anything... it's very much MS's and the media's fault though - and they I did indeed get very pissed at.

    Of course, any response from me - because Windows wasnt my OS of choice, made me a zealot. This, by the way, was when MS had big shares in Ziff Davis, who used to go as far as printing MS pre-prepared "media kits" as Win95 reviews, even in 3 different publications in one particular case, 2 written by one author, the 3rd written by someone else... identical to the word though... identical also to the copy that MS sent us at CompUSA. Oh - and mostly false. True 32 bit, no more DOS, 4MB of RAM... I'm sure you remember all those early claims that MS made that were just pure bs.

    So... people wonder why users of other OS's seem to lean towards zealotry? Perhaps it's because many Win users, without knowing better, have went far beyond that extreme... we may brag about what our OS can do, and probably did long before Windows could... but Win users brag often about what their OS is NOT (like stable, secure, fast, slim, non resource hungry, etc...), or about features that their OS had last out of the pack - because they believe the "propaghanda" (for lack of a better word) that they hear in MS ads and paid "reviews".

    Again, nothing personal... but perhaps something every Win user should think of the next time they wanna get mad at the user of another OS for being proud of what their OS can do...

    - Rob

    (Heck, I'm still waiting for MS's promised 64 way cpu support - since 1995... )

    --

    WebMaster:
    BinFeeds
    XXX Thumbnailed Image Newsgroups but

  100. Excuse me? by Otis_INF · · Score: 2

    Do you know the exact contract details? It appears to be secret. I guess then that you don't know the exact details. Then my conclusion is: texts like
    MORE EVIL: Here, have all the .NET crap you want, and we better see this entering your curriculum or else you lose your discounts and we audit your asses.
    are just speculation and ment to be insulting for MS and .NET using people.

    If MS gives away tons of computers and software to schools they're up to "converting these children over to their side", when they are making deals with universities (which are just companies if you don't know that, every university has research sponsored by large companies, oh the horror), they are bending courses.

    If you really think "java" or "C#" or whatever language you get on your university is more important than the real point of what you get taught: "OO development using an imperitive language", you don't know jack about computer science and how it is taught to students.

    and no, to answer your question, I don't see the difference.

    --
    Never underestimate the relief of true separation of Religion and State.
    1. Re:Excuse me? by WindBourne · · Score: 1

      Yes, CS is not about the language, but about concepts. But at te same time, we need to code to prove the concepts. That means that you have an evironment that is used. All schools use one environment to simplify. Likewise, ACM normally picks what language is to be used. It used to be Pascal, then went to modula, and I believe that we are now on java. MS would love to kill that. So they are back dooring it.
      History has shown that most ppl are lazy and will try to stay with what they know, even if new approachs truely are better. IBM, apple, and now MS us that to turn the schools into their playgrounds. ppl will have tendancy to use what they know, not what is better.
      Finally, as to the original statement or else you lose your discounts and we audit your asses. being specualation, it is well documented that BSA appears whereever MS is threatened. Ask Portland's school district. A school that I helped before let it be known to the local MS rep, thatlinux was coming in. 3 days later, BSA showed up.
      Still not believing? well, tell you what. Assuming that you are not an MS employee and are not tied closely to MS, why not tell us the name of your company and your home address. I will gladly povide it to the BSA and our current FBI with a very little bit of inuendo (statistically, it would be true), and then you can let us all know how you do!

      --
      I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
    2. Re:Excuse me? by Jason+Earl · · Score: 2

      The problem, of course, is that Universities pretty much have to use Windows and MS Office, but they certainly don't have to teach their development courses using VS.Net. Tying cheap licenses to the acceptance of VS.Net is almost precisely the type of thing that got Microsoft into trouble with the DOJ. As a convicted monopolist such an action would almost certainly land them into hot water again.

      Which begs the question, if Microsoft isn't tying cheap licensing for Windows and MS Office to the acceptance of VS.Net then why are the deals secret? What exactly is Microsoft trying to hide?

      Personally, I would be just as upset if Sun or IBM were pulling similar tricks. I have a right to know how my tax money is being spent. If the deal truly is a good one, then why is Microsoft requiring secrecy?

    3. Re:Excuse me? by MillionthMonkey · · Score: 2

      texts like
      MORE EVIL: Here, have all the .NET crap you want, and we better see this entering your curriculum or else you lose your discounts and we audit your asses.
      are just speculation and ment to be insulting for MS and .NET using people.


      How in the world do you take this to be insulting to people using .NET? It has nothing to do with them.
      It's an issue of disclosure. If I'm paying lots of money to a university for a degree, I expect that my curriculum is being chosen by professors who evaluate technologies on their own merits, not because of bullying by a vendor. Maybe they would have taught C# even without extraneous pressure from Microsoft. Who knows?

      If you really think "java" or "C#" or whatever language you get on your university is more important than the real point of what you get taught: "OO development using an imperitive language", you don't know jack about computer science and how it is taught to students.

      I agree with this sentiment, as far as good students are concerned. You can teach a good student Java or C# and he will be able to abstract his knowledge when picking up other programming languages later in his career. (Things like pointers, etc. are minor details.) Teach a bad student Java or C# and he will be writing everything in Java or C# forever because it's what he knows and he is unable to think abstractly, which is necessary when transferring one's experience to another language.

      Frankly, if I went to school and didn't get a course in C, I would be very upset. It's really the Latin of computer science.

      and no, to answer your question, I don't see the difference.

      Then reread the post more slowly this time.

  101. Software WORTH $1000? by InfiniteWisdom · · Score: 2, Funny
    it's nice to let students get $1,000+ worth of software for less than $200
    Surely you mean software *costing* $1000, not software *worth* $1000
  102. And this surprises you because? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hasn't everyone figured out that just about everything M$ does is shady?

  103. scurvy bastards by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    that's right. anyone who has ANY integrity, would flat out refuse to have ANY dealings with fuddle's swarm of Godless, greed/fear based, gottiesque, phony payper liesense peddling, stock markup FraUDs. that would include posting IT's phony billonly bugwear false advertising on EVERY page of your decaying blog (rob).

    fud on dough. .asp we all know, IT's ONLY about money for (too) MANY.

    face the facts, there's probully only room at the "top", for a handful of stock markup FraUD, convicted "non"-felons, who have won or more outstanding felony indictmeNTs.

    remember FraUDuleNT dysfunction, STARTS at the "top".

    there is NO joy in fudville tonight, as phony fuddles keeps striking out (at anything that move$). LIEk some kind of megalomaniacal power&.controll freak "non"-felon.

    very merry. happy happy.

  104. Perspective. by WindBourne · · Score: 1

    stomp the face of freedom and right from wrong?
    I find it interesting that we speack on rights and freedoms concerning the ability to see what MS does. All the while, the feds have spent the last year taking away oversight committes on what they do and I am hearing very little outrage over that.
    Do not get me wrong. I object highly to much of what MS does. It is almost always illegal, and morally repugnent. It is rarely what I consider good capitalism or supply and demand. But it is apparent that MS will be losing to OSS in the long run. In contrast, we are losing our true rights and freedoms.

    --
    I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
  105. Secret agreements between universties and MSFT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And if you'll notice, Ohio State's radio station, WOSU, after first indicating that it will consider adding Real Audio streaming to its Widows Media, has now decided to stay solely with Windows Media.

  106. Secret means MS is playing divide and conquer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    If Academia had the wits to form a consortium to supply their own software needs, they could have MS begging to make a deal that everyone could see. (Ok, that was rhetorical. They do have the wits. Their thing is to have wits ;-) But they are divided and being played with separately by MS, it sounds like.

    The same applies to government offices from towns to megacities and states. The smaller end is helplessly divided. And yet they buy huge quantities of identical things -- which they don't even get to own, and which they can't afford underused copies of. It's crazy. They should go where they can get the most for tax dollars. And it will happen. The feds are probably already big enough to bargain if the bargainers are doing their job.

    Academia has the ability to create its own alternatives, as amply demonstrated by individual projects that have resulted in e.g., BSD and PostgreSQL etc. Linux and Gnu stuff is being enhanced and extended in academic sites. Bleeding edge research happens there. Taxes fund a lot of it.

    A consortium (think MIT, W3, etc) that consolidated buying power as well as productive power across all of Academia could really get max bang from the combination of taxes and volunteer work and also support like IBM' support of Linux.

    There is no reason benefits from money/time spent on software should feed anything but a free common benefit pool for the participants and anyone they want to invite. And the free software deal is everyone is invited, because there can be no shortage from people copying too much.

  107. Civil vs Criminal (again) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    It's a small point, that can't be repeated too often. There's are many differences between a civil offense and a criminal one. Microsoft is not a convicted felon. If it was, you'd see jail time for people at Microsoft and maybe even a revocation of their charter.

    I believe they could convict people at Microsoft of a felony, but no one has tried (to my knowledge). ADM on the other had, has ex-managers sitting in jail, but no one even seems to reallize how nasty a monopoly they are.

    Oh, BTW, we only pay $5 per CD here at UT.

  108. Objective Law? by lousyd · · Score: 1

    what the colleges and Microsoft are doing may not actually be illegal (or could be argued not to be, anyway)

    Hey, arguing the point is all the law is about, right? I mean, what's "objective"?

    -lousyd

    --
    If aspiration is a virtue, achievement cannot be a vice.
  109. Loaded phrase by Loundry · · Score: 3, Insightful

    And I don't care what you say about capitalism's evil business practices.

    It's the humans, not capitalism, who have evil business practices. Let's place the blame where it is due. There are lots of honest and ethical business owners and employers who are overshadowed by the crummy ones. I pride myself in being honest, fair, and compassionate to my employees and my customers who, without which, my business and livliehood would fail.

    --
    I don't make the rules. I just make fun of them.
  110. the entire budget is available by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As it should be since the taxpayers pay for a lot of the budget.

    Furthermore, I don't remember any exception to the FIA being made when I was a U of M.

    But anyway, if they won't release the actual contract, you should be able to find the yearly line items in the budget.

  111. One is a slanted view, the other more slanted by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah, I see the difference.

    You ascribe certain actions to MS with no info behind it. Then you ascribe somewhat more altruistic measures to a company which has screwed over everyone who tries to make a clean implementation of their "open" language.

    No, they're both junk to me. Inherently, no controlled language can provide all the functionality of a open one, and thus they are doomed to failure in the long term.

    1. Re:One is a slanted view, the other more slanted by MillionthMonkey · · Score: 2

      You ascribe certain actions to MS with no info behind it.

      Ostensibly this is because those details are wisely being kept secret.
      Then how about this:

      MORE EVIL: Here, have all the .NET crap you want, and here is lots of $$$ to entice you to make C# mandatory in your curriculum. In that case they were using a carrot instead of a stick, which is why it wasn't kept a secret. From the point of view of a student, the effect isn't any different.

      Then you ascribe somewhat more altruistic measures to a company which has screwed over everyone who tries to make a clean implementation of their "open" language.

      Black and white thinking, and offtopic as well. You don't have to tell me that Sun is full of idiots. They make boneheaded decisions all the time. But what does that have to do with coercing universities to teach a proprietary language?

      No, they're both junk to me. Inherently, no controlled language can provide all the functionality of a open one, and thus they are doomed to failure in the long term.

      Well I agree with this except the "doomed to failure" part. Controlled languages are junk but they're more forgiving of bad programmers, so they're not going to go away.

  112. Not just colleges... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Posting anonymously to avoid violating my own (large, non-profit) organization's licensing agreement with MS, but the non-disclosure clause was viewed as a small price to pay when MS decided to toss nearly a million dollars worth of software our way.

    I personally found it a little insidious, but I'm just one of the little people (I do actual work, not make business decisions). I can't comment as to the legality of any of it, but most organizations, especially ones like colleges and non-profits, aren't in a position to say no to an offer like this..

  113. From an MS Intern by Ikeya · · Score: 1

    I'm a Microsoft intern and I love slashdot and everything posted here. I like to see Microsoft succeed at some things, but dislike it when they do shady deals. I also enjoy seeing open source and Linux succeed (at home I dual boot winxp/slackware linux w/ slack being the primary boot).
    Speech should not be restricted. Everyone should be able to say what they want.
    I agree with many of the statements made toward microsoft good and bad.
    Just my viewpoints.
    ikeya

    --
    ---- Move SIG...For great justice!
  114. Ethics 101 (skipped) by oldstrat · · Score: 2


    Wow!
    Screw the law, I got mine!

    Lets us know where your working after your done with school, I want to be sure to stear my investments away from that company (Enron2).
    Seriously, This isn't about who has the best tools, or even the best prices. It's about circumvention, bypassing, and subverting the law, and the rights of the citizens of the States.

    There's no such thing as an ok, shady business deal.
    At least there shouldn't be, but then again, the Administration that was going to restore integrity to the office of President of the United States, changed the rules so that the Government can continue to do business with individuals and corperations that have been caught breaking the law.