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Microsoft Considers $10 Billion Dividend

Dreadnougat writes "Microsoft is considering paying out a $10 billion dividend, the largest corporate payout ever. Cynics (ok, anyone reading /.) might note that Bill Gates stands to make $1.18 billion himself off the $1 a share dividend, in comparison to the $95 million he makes in a normal year off the regular 8 cents a share dividend."

630 comments

  1. Standard Procedure by Shadarr · · Score: 5, Funny

    This is the main way of funnelling profits from your company account to your personal account in Railroad Tycoon.

    1. Re:Standard Procedure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thats was exactly the first thing that came to my mind

    2. Re:Standard Procedure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, that is a standard procedure...

      Glad that I have my Railroad Tycoon II for Linux!

  2. Ahh by jsgates · · Score: 3, Insightful

    If only I'd bought that Microsoft stock when I was born.

    1. Re:Ahh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And it will be valueless in 12 - 18 months, so just thank God you didn't have pay those broker fees.

  3. /.-centric summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    MS is paying money to it's loyal investors because Bill Gates is greedy.

    Had MS not payed out, the summary would have been:

    MS is not paying out money to it's loyal investors because Bill Gates is greedy.

    1. Re:/.-centric summary. by 73939133 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Yes, and in both cases, the /.-centric summary would be valid.

      In any case, the greed of Bill Gates doesn't start with dividend payouts, it starts with wanting to own the entire computer industry and crushing every competitor to dust through unfair competition and sleazy tricks.

    2. Re:/.-centric summary. by Amiga+Trombone · · Score: 4, Informative

      Actually, it's probably both.

      When MS stock was ascending in value, it was worth Gates' while to not pay a dividend, because he'd have to pay taxes on on any dividend he earned from it. He didn't have to pay taxes on the stock as long as he didn't sell it.

      Now that the price is stable, if not dropping, he's better of paying the dividend, because even though he has to pay taxes on it, he gets money out of MS before his stock loses any more value.

    3. Re:/.-centric summary. by caouchouc · · Score: 1

      Now who's jumping to conclusions?
      The story submitter insinuated the motive in rather unsubtle terms. I don't doubt that some vocal people will display such double-standards, but it's certainly not the majority.

    4. Re:/.-centric summary. by istartedi · · Score: 5, Funny

      Dear Mr. Gates, please choose one of the following:

      [ ] damned if you do
      [ ] damned if you don't
      [ ] just plain damned
      [ ] all of the above
      --
      For all intensive purposes, "whom" is no longer a word. That begs the question, "who cares"?
    5. Re:/.-centric summary. by AceM2 · · Score: 1


      [x] bastard

    6. Re:/.-centric summary. by pi+radians · · Score: 3, Funny

      The problem you guys have is "why didn't I think of that back then".

      No, my problem is "I wasn't alive back then".

      --

      sin(6cos(r)+5A)
    7. Re:/.-centric summary. by stephanruby · · Score: 5, Informative
      The problem you guys have is "why didn't I think of that back then". And the truth of the matter is he played by the rules and won.

      Bill Gates is not evil, but Bill Gates is certainly not the poster child for meritocracy either. Bill's dad was a top-notch lawyer in New York. This gave him a top-notch education to begin with and an easy access to capital. Please, don't make it sound like everyone could have done what he did.

    8. Re:/.-centric summary. by hpa · · Score: 3, Insightful
      No, he did not play by the rules. He broke the law -- the courts have so ruled.


      Furthermore, someone who donates stolen money to charity is still a thief.

    9. Re:/.-centric summary. by BlackHawk-666 · · Score: 0, Troll

      Companies aren't allowed to sell IBM/PC compatible computers without an OS. The only way to buy one like this is to build it from parts. Even OEMs are obliged to bundle an OS with it (guess which one). They typically get that OS for less than 17USD, so it's no big deal. I owuld be very suprised if you have managed to never buy a PC without an OS...and might even call your character into question ;-)

      --
      All those moments will be lost in time, like tears in rain.
    10. Re:/.-centric summary. by SN74S181 · · Score: 1

      Bill Gates' money is 'stolen' only in the same sense that people who use Microsoft software without paying for it and swap songs they haven't paid for original copies of on P2P are stealing. And then, he's actually less 'stealing' than those folks by the legal definitions in place.

      So go ahead and say he has 'stolen money.' And delete all those MP3s off your hard drive while you're at it, or you're a hypocrite.

    11. Re:/.-centric summary. by hpa · · Score: 1

      You assume I have illegal MP3s on my hard disk. I don't; nor do I use "file-sharing" networks.

      However, it'd be interested to know how much Microsoft is paying astroturfers these days.

    12. Re:/.-centric summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      [ ] Money Slut

    13. Re:/.-centric summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      People with MP3s don't run afoul of antitrust laws.

      Not to mention that infringing on the Boy Scouts' copyright by singing 'God Bless America' doesn't actually hurt anyone (including the BSA), while monopolies hurt not only the competition but the consumers and often, the state of the art.

    14. Re:/.-centric summary. by IWannaBeAnAC · · Score: 2, Insightful
      From Gates' actions, and his general disinterest in charities (rught up until the US government took him to court), I don't believe he has any interest in anything other than increasing his own power. The money that he does donate is (1) small change (to him!), (2) probably instigated by his wife, by twisting his arm very hard, and (3) often clearly to the benefit of Microsoft - albeit indirectly.

      PS When was the last time you bought a laptop without an OS? Or even an OS other than Windows?

    15. Re:/.-centric summary. by Jeremi · · Score: 5, Insightful
      And the truth of the matter is he played by the rules and won.


      If he played by the rules and won, why was his company found guilty of operating as an illegal, predatory monopoly? Or do you mean "the rules" in the Machiavellian sense of "the rules are whatever you can get away with"?

      --


      I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
    16. Re:/.-centric summary. by WhodoVoodoo · · Score: 1

      SO what you're saying, in fact, is that Bill Gates got all his money via copyright infringment?

      MS stole windows from Xerox, Apple, (if my memory serves me correclty, anyone feel free to chime in if you must) so I suppose you have a point.

      And then, he's actually less 'stealing' than those folks by the legal definitions in place. Yea, copy infringment != "stealing" or "theft". However, Illegal Monopolies practicing unfair, uncompetetive business practices do not fall under copyright law. (In most cases, unless they, for example, steal a GUI from Xerox.) And yes, I do own all the albums to the 6 gigs of ogg files on my machine.

      Mod Parent Up for a free world, to save puppies, and feed hungry childeren.

      *hands parent a cookie* Thats right! You are special!

    17. Re:/.-centric summary. by TopShelf · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Companies aren't allowed to sell IBM/PC compatible computers without an OS. The only way to buy one like this is to build it from parts.

      Say what? Go to any one of zillions of online computer merchants and you can order an OS-less PC. How does a comment like that get modded informative???

      --
      Stop by my site where I write about ERP systems & more
    18. Re:/.-centric summary. by IronClad · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Both are stealing, but hardly in the same sense.

      P2P piracy denies compensation to someone who has legally granted rights. But Bill and his company lied, betrayed naive customers, destroyed entire markets that would have benefitted his customers, committed corporate purjury, and extorted tens of billions of dollars via documented abuses with OEMs and product tying.

      As one who considered DR-DOS for my product in 1992, and who attempted to buy several PC systems without Windows over the years, I am a victim of his abuses with losses calculated in thousands of dollars *out of my pocket*.

      And despite fleecing by Bill & Co. over the years, I've managed to pay for all my music, thanks.

    19. Re:/.-centric summary. by /dev/trash · · Score: 1

      He didn't play by the Democrats' rules.

    20. Re:/.-centric summary. by tomstdenis · · Score: 1

      I know how to put a computer together from scratch. I buy it in parts and within 10-15 mins I'm up and running [after wrestling with those pop up PCI covers... arrg]

      I don't see why a computer manufacturer couldn't just sell the parts, build their own design and sell that. I don't see the local MS gestapo around Ottawa at least...

      Tom

      --
      Someday, I'll have a real sig.
    21. Re:/.-centric summary. by tomstdenis · · Score: 1

      He donates millions and you call that chump change?

      Ok lets put this in perspective. How many millions have *you* donated to charity last year?

      Tom

      --
      Someday, I'll have a real sig.
    22. Re:/.-centric summary. by Genjurosan · · Score: 0, Troll

      Before you make some STUPID blanket statement simply because you are caught up in hating MS like most other children.. Why don't you check out the 6 BILLION that the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation has given out. Yeah.. That's BILLION.

    23. Re:/.-centric summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've done exactly that. And it's not that unusual, so I don't know why you'd be calling someone's character "into question" over it.

      All my PC's are built from separate parts and later assembled. Why? Because I like knowing what I get. I can customize things so I get performance in all the right areas, and spend less on the things that I don't find as important. I can choose the features, the hardware, all of which are under warranty from the store (three years in fact), and I can cut corners when it comes to price. I don't do it specifically because I don't want to pay for Windows, I do run Windows XP..I don't buy brand-name computers because I don't have to, and it costs less.

      That being said, there are stores here that will sell you a full computer system without an OS, if you so choose. Perhaps the big names like Dell are unfortunate enough to be restricted, but not all of them are. You probably need to check your facts out before you question someone else's character.

    24. Re:/.-centric summary. by MikeFM · · Score: 1

      He may not be evil but he doesn't seem like what you'd call a nice guy. Just because you play by the rules doesn't mean your not a big asshole. Not that I think he is more of an asshole than the unemployed poverty stricken bum down the street.. he just has more power to make felt what an asshole he is He got ahead both by the cushy start his parents gave him and his own ability to do what he had to to get where he wanted.. and by pure luck of being the right guy in the right place at the right time.

      --
      At what price learning? At what cost wisdom? The price is a man's peace of mind, and the cost is his life.
    25. Re:/.-centric summary. by ch-chuck · · Score: 2, Informative

      The guy (Ed Roberts) that gave Gates a venue for a successful product (MITS BASIC on the Altair) had this to say:

      The computer revolution:

      "You'll read that Bill Gates envisioned it all, which is a crock. He didn't envision any of it. Nobody did."

      On working with Paul Allen and Bill Gates:

      Allen was easy to work with, while Gates was not. If he didn't get his way, "he acted like a spoiled kid, which is what he was."

      ( from http://webpages.charter.net/dperr/mits.htm )

      --
      try { do() || do_not(); } catch (JediException err) { yoda(err); }
    26. Re:/.-centric summary. by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 0

      Go to any one of zillions of online computer merchants and you can order an OS-less PC.

      Good, now go to Dell or HPaq and try the same trick. You can't do it, and it's because of Gates' arm twisting.

      --
      "We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
    27. Re:/.-centric summary. by flacco · · Score: 5, Funny
      And the truth of the matter is he played by the rules and won.

      Great, I just finished a delicious Mexican dinner, and you made me projectile-vomit with that statement.

      --
      pr0n - keeping monitor glass spotless since 1981.
    28. Re:/.-centric summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      He donates millions and you call that chump change?

      I'm sure you haven't researched this, but all those charity donations are tax deductible. Suppose he makes $1bn/year and donates $100mil, that money (or at least a large chunk of it) would be deducted from the taxes, essentially making the impact on his pocketbook miniscule. He has a whole firm of accountants working for him. Rich people don't donate money out of their heart's content.

      Ok lets put this in perspective. How many millions have *you* donated to charity last year?

      I can't speak for the grandparent poster, but I've personally volunteered at the local hospital for 120 hours after work, plus to that I've donated $100 bucks with my credit card to a cancer victim, when my checking account was around $40 bucks and some change.

      So lets see. I've given to charity more than I had. Break that down with a calculator percentage-wise and you'll shortly find out that I've given more to charity than Bill Gates. Dollar figure is always irrelevant in this case, it's all about the sacrifices people make. What exactly did BillG sacrifice? When you're a multi-billionaire, few hundred million is pocket change.
    29. Re:/.-centric summary. by eht · · Score: 2, Funny

      I don't think he's making a blanket statement because he is caught up in hating MS, he's generalizing what most of the other posts on this topic will be about, thereby making it unnecesary for other people to post anything at all since he has covered what 90% of /. will post about.

      At least that's how I read it.

    30. Re:/.-centric summary. by faspeed · · Score: 5, Funny
      You're forgetting
      [ ] damned cowboyneal
    31. Re:/.-centric summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Talk to Tim Patterson of Seattle Computer Products, before talking Gates up. Gates got a river of cash cause his old man wrote him a license to steal with the original license for DOS.

    32. Re:/.-centric summary. by jonblaze · · Score: 1

      If he played by the rules and won, why was his company found guilty of operating as an illegal, predatory monopoly?

      Although it may not make much difference to you, Microsoft was not found to be in criminal violation of the antitrust laws (which your use of the word "guilty" connotes). Microsoft was found civilly liable for violating section 1 of the Sherman Act by using anti-competitive means to maintain its monopoly on desktop PC operating systems.

    33. Re:/.-centric summary. by leviramsey · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Dell and HPaq != the PC industry...

      That's like complaining that General Motors has a monopoly because if you go down to Crazy Al's Pontiac/Buick/GMC, you can't buy a Toyota (well, not counting the Pontiac Vibe being a twin of the Toyota Matrix...

    34. Re:/.-centric summary. by NanoGator · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "it starts with wanting to own the entire computer industry and crushing every competitor to dust through unfair competition and sleazy tricks. "

      And, as a fallback plan, they make products people want.

      --
      "Derp de derp."
    35. Re:/.-centric summary. by Arandir · · Score: 1

      Microsoft stock hasn't been skyrocketing in quite a while. Investors are getting antsy. Either Bill pays out a dividend or the investors take their money out and put under their mattresses where it will yield a higher rate of return. Bill Gates is doing this because he is greedy. He doesn't want the investors to bail on him. It's the purest sort of self-interest, known as survival.

      The weird and aberrant stock market of the late '90s and early 'naughts is over. People have come to their senses and realized that if you want money in your 401K and IRA twenty or thirty years down the road when you retire, then you invest in solid stable and boring companies that pay solid stable and boring dividends.

      --
      A Government Is a Body of People, Usually Notably Ungoverned
    36. Re:/.-centric summary. by Arandir · · Score: 1

      Yup, Bill Gates started Microsoft on a Monday. On Tuesday he was running an illegal, predatory monopoly. On wednesday he sold his first copy of BASIC. After than he was an unstoppable juggernaught.

      --
      A Government Is a Body of People, Usually Notably Ungoverned
    37. Re:/.-centric summary. by davmoo · · Score: 1, Insightful

      No, the courts have not so ruled. I cannot find even one reference of Bill Gates having been charged with a crime, much less convicted of one. Has the man ever even had a speeding ticket?

      Microsoft was charged and convicted of a crime. However, like him or not and asshole or not, Bill Gates the individual is NOT Microsoft. And a whole lot of people reading /. need to learn that.

      --
      I want a new quote. One that won't spill. One that don't cost too much. Or come in a pill.
    38. Re:/.-centric summary. by tomstdenis · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Screw you and your left wing bullshit.

      If he donated zero he's greedy. If he donated some he's greedy [and tax cheating].

      Moral of the story. Who gives a fuck what you fucking think you momma's-twat.

      I bet those charities he donated too don't care why he donated it.

      Tom

      --
      Someday, I'll have a real sig.
    39. Re:/.-centric summary. by Gojira+Shipi-Taro · · Score: 1

      Fuck you. The only MP3's I have are off CDs I bought. Ripping them to files and playing them off the computer is cheaper and much more efficient than using a CD Jukebox.

      Way to astroturf, asshole.

      --
      "Oh my God. This is terrible. This is the end of my Presidency. I'm fucked."; ~ Donald J. Trump
    40. Re:/.-centric summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're not very old, then.

    41. Re:/.-centric summary. by 73939133 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The problem you guys have is "why didn't I think of that back then".

      The problem you guys have is that you don't have a clue. I mean, what could you possibly be referring to by "why didn't I think of that back then"?

      When Gates came out with MS-DOS, people already had workstations, Smalltalk-80, and multitasking PC operating systems.

      And heaven forbid he donates money to charities, research, funds scholarships and hosts parties at his lakeside house thingy.

      Monarchs did all those things as well, that doesn't make monarchies a desirable form of government.

      And the truth of the matter is he played by the rules and won.

      In a free market economy, winning itself is against the rules: without dozens of competitors in the game, markets fail to be efficient. And that's, of course, what we are seeing in the PC software industry.

    42. Re:/.-centric summary. by tomstdenis · · Score: 1

      Meh, whatever lefty. I loves me some debian. That doesn't mean I wouldn't mind being a MS employee. Fuck at this point I'm about a month from being homeless. Anything would do.

      Tom

      --
      Someday, I'll have a real sig.
    43. Re:/.-centric summary. by rzbx · · Score: 1

      Have you ever taken an ethics class? Bill Gates is an egoist. It is very apparent from everything he has ever done in his life. Even egoists will donate money and do other charity related activities. It is part of what egoists do to appear that they aren't only self interested. Although I'm sure at the same time he does want to help, this isn't his main goal. He has and will put himself and his company before anything else. I would love to continue explaining how his actions have done more harm than good in many instances, but I would spend all night. I hope at least some of my words will inspire you to read an ethics book.

      --
      Question everything.
    44. Re:/.-centric summary. by Trogre · · Score: 1

      Wrong,

      Neither of these actions makes Bill Gates greedy.

      The fact that he steered an illegal business through the PC computing industry, producing products that 'only just worked', wiping out competition by illegal lock-in processes, and hiring scores of lawyers (employing every dirty quasi-legal trick in the book) and senators to keep it all out of the courtroom makes Bill Gates greedy.

      --
      "Nine times out of ten, starting a fire is not the best way to solve the problem." - my wife
    45. Re:/.-centric summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What the hell is wrong with you? Bill Gates is nothing close to a "convicted criminal". His company was found to be in violation of the Sherman Anti-trust act, but that is a civil violation. Everything that Microsoft has done is completely legal if you are not a monopoly. That whole court case was just to show that they are a monopoly, and as such they have to limit what they do some. Fine. No harm done.

      Bill Gates himself is squeaky clean (aside from that one mugshot from that traffic ticket 20+ years ago).

    46. Re:/.-centric summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Companies are allowed to sell whatever the hell they want to. They CHOOSE to sell only Microsoft OS's because thats what 95% of their customers want!

      Do you realize what a support nightmare it would be for Dell or HP trying to talk your average PC technophobe through configuring X or compiling a kernel?

    47. Re:/.-centric summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Companies aren't allowed to sell IBM/PC compatible computers without an OS.

      Say what?

    48. Re:/.-centric summary. by Genjurosan · · Score: 1

      I read it the same way.. but my response was to the masses in the same context..

      Thus covering my response to 90% of the other posts that /. will make. *grin*

    49. Re:/.-centric summary. by chewy_2000 · · Score: 1

      Well, he's been charged for something...

    50. Re:/.-centric summary. by iONiUM · · Score: 1

      You sir, are a fucking moron.

      Notice how "played" is in the past tense, as in, he "played" BEFORE. Yes, they were apparantly found guilty of operating as an illegal monopoly, but that was far later. You know, you have to build a monopoly, it doesn't just appear. To build it you have to sell a lot of your software. If you sold a lot of your software then it's either really good/easy to use, the best option, you marketed it really well, or more than one of the previous options. You can't say he did anything wrong by doing any of those, I think you're just mad that you don't know what daylight looks like and perhaps you lost your bus pass. If another OS solution was better, then they should have marketed it better. So fuck off, he obviously did the best job.

      I realize the linux community hates the idea of actually making a profit off of something, so you can stick with your craptastic donations and feeble dreams that one day perhaps the world will come down and crush Bill Gates, even though as you read this, no doubt from IE6, you forget to realize that windows is quite simply a GOOD OS.

    51. Re:/.-centric summary. by shadowbearer · · Score: 1

      Well, although nobody seems to know what it was for, he was arrested once. :=(

      SB

      --
      It's old. The more humans I meet, the more I like my cats. At least they are honest.
    52. Re:/.-centric summary. by Trepalium · · Score: 0, Troll
      These days, Microsoft's wares are less about want and more about need. e.g. I NEED to be able to read MS Word documents my business partners send me... I NEED to upgrade to the latest version of Windows because NT 4.0 is no longer supported. I NEED to add another MS server product to the network because no one else has the access to the client OS to be able to properly integrate the features into the system. It's like heroin -- once you start the habit, it's nearly impossible to break the addiction.

      Samba works well, but real Windows servers work better with Windows clients. qmail works well, but you can't use all the features of Outlook without an MS Exchange server. Any streaming media format works well, but you can only use Windows Media Format without add-on software on each client machine. Etc, etc, etc.

      --
      I used up all my sick days, so I'm calling in dead.
    53. Re:/.-centric summary. by stephanruby · · Score: 1
      Allen was easy to work with, while Gates was not. If he didn't get his way, "he acted like a spoiled kid, which is what he was."

      Assuming this is true, may be this was a key ingredient in his success. After all, Bill Gates is one of the few entrepreneurs who managed to keep a controling share of his company.

    54. Re:/.-centric summary. by Y2K+is+bogus · · Score: 1, Troll

      It's simpler than you think. Charities are tax exempt organizations. This means they do not have to pay taxes on donations, furthermore, donations to such charities are tax deductable.

      In essence, Bill Gates doesn't pay income taxes, what he does is pay the equivelent amount to his charity, thus garnering him a credit equal to what his income taxes would be.

      It's the best of both worlds, he doesn't have to "pay" taxes, and he gets to keep his "play" money anyway. Rather than the money going to "waste", he gets to decide what happens to it directly. It really is very clever.

    55. Re:/.-centric summary. by billcopc · · Score: 1

      If you don't want to pay the M$ Tax, just don't buy a pre-built system.

      You're already paying the Best-Buy Tax or the Wal-Mart tax if you buy your PC's ready to go.

      --
      -Billco, Fnarg.com
    56. Re:/.-centric summary. by SoupaFly · · Score: 2, Insightful

      First off, here's the link to the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.

      Now, I'm no fan of Bill Gates. I don't think he's a saint and I don't think he's a minion from hell. I think Windows (and many other MS products) is not as good as it could be and that using market forces to exterminate competition is not healthy (for IT or the economy as a whole).

      To claim that Gates has no interest in charity is plain wrong. He's got more money than could possibly be spent in his lifetime, and probably the lifetimes of any of his children. He's stated numerous times that he plans to give away almost all of his money during his lifetime. (1) just because he hasn't given away half his net worth to charity makes him wrong? How much money as a percentage of income or net worth do you give? (2) what's the relevance of this? Just because you're pussy whipped doesn't mean everyone is. (3) How does $40 million toward reproductive health in 3rd world nations work to benefit Microsoft? No conspiracy theories please.

    57. Re:/.-centric summary. by saden1 · · Score: 1

      He is a fucking business man and in business nice guys always finish dead last. Yes, undercutting competitors is evil but most of M$ money was made by making business decisions (seems they have run out of steam as far as that goes). They bought every company they thought had a great idea or a product (seems everyone that was on sale has been bought).

      Like everything, Microsoft's run however is going to eventually come end. We can see how really desperate they are with all the crappy gadgets they are trying to push and how companies distrust them so much. They have alienated and instilled distrust in so many customers that, frankly, no one will eventually want to do business with them or limit their dealings with them. Case in point, their whole consumer electronics and handled products. No one wants them stronger by licensing their products. The XBOX is a disaster and their media center PC isn't selling well at all. Their table PC is junk. Pretty much useless unless you are in maintenance related work line.

      If one thing pisses me off about Bill is his constant jabbering about innovation. Innovation my ass. Bill, you look like a fucking dork with that shitty ass and useless cell phone wrist watch. That is not innovation, it is an abomination created by some goofy ass geek who thinks combining his cell phone with his wrist watch is a cool idea.

      --

      -----
      One is born into aristocracy, but mediocrity can only be achieved through hard work.
    58. Re:/.-centric summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How much do YOU donate to charity? Nothing? That's what I thought.
      Bitch.

    59. Re:/.-centric summary. by haruchai · · Score: 1

      Ah, the Robin Hood defense. Unless Mr. Gates is planning to relocate to Sherwood Forest, he'll have to do better than that.
      I applaud anyone philanthropic efforts but wrongdoing is wrongdoing.

      --
      Pain is merely failure leaving the body
    60. Re:/.-centric summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Too bad I can't be there to see it happen. I'd pull out twenty to give to you... and put it back into my pocket.
      You can get a job and work for a living, or hope to sucker some bleeding-heart liberals into picking up your tab.

    61. Re:/.-centric summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just because he's played the game doesn't make him squeaky clean.

    62. Re:/.-centric summary. by MaestroRC · · Score: 1

      Good, now go to Dell or HPaq and try the same trick. You can't do it, and it's because of Gates' arm twisting.

      There is a reason for that, as well. Dell and HP have a CONTRACT with Microsoft, that lets them purchase the Windows licenses that they sell on their PC's for much, MUCH cheaper than you would purchase it for retail ($30-60, generally). This is the reason that you are able to go and purchase these computers, with all software, for not much more than a retail copy of Windows.

      They had a choice, sell their computers for less cost, thus increasing their market share and brand name, but restrict the abilities of consumers to purchase a computer to be including or discluding a copy of Windows, or to sell the computers for much more, thus selling less and making it seem like they are overpriced.

      $400 HP computer - $199 copy of Windows does not a $200 computer make.

      --
      I hate sigs...
    63. Re:/.-centric summary. by pHDNgell · · Score: 1

      If you sold a lot of your software then it's either really good/easy to use, the best option, you marketed it really well, or more than one of the previous options.

      Which one of those makes Amazon's one-click-buy better than everyone else's?

      Patents and other legal issues change the way things work quite a bit and can help build monopolies.

      I don't know anyone who runs Windows because they like Windows. I know plenty of people who run Windows because they like a particular, or few pieces of software that only run on Windows. The Wine team has made remarkable progress towards making these applications available to people who don't want/otherwise need to give money to Microsoft, but there's still a way to go and they still don't help people who use non-PC hardware.

      I realize the linux community hates the idea of actually making a profit off of something

      Hey, way to be taken seriously...

      even though as you read this, no doubt from IE6, you forget to realize that windows is quite simply a GOOD OS

      I've never seen IE6, I don't believe, but based on what I have seen, I can't imagine it's anywhere close to as good as the Mozilla 1.4 I'm using.

      I do actually have VirtualPC on my work computer with Windows on it, and I can say that I'm not forgetting to realize anything about it being a good OS. Most of my work is development, but the user experience for just about anything is horrid on the Windows systems I have had to use.

      That's personal opinion, of course (like your ``windows is quite simply a GOOD OS'' statement), but if I didn't have guys around me telling me the bizarre stuff I had to go through to get a disk check, I probably never would've got stupid MS Project running on my VPC instance...because although I was given a specific error number, the IT department absolutely would not consider that it might have something to do with the install failure. Since they were deathly afraid to call MS tech support, the only option they gave me was to install it on an entirely different computer from the one on which I actually needed to use it.

      But alas, it was a corrupt ``recycle bin'' that prevented the software from installing. How it got corrupt without me ever having used it, who knows, but that's a description of my most recent adventure in Windows...which I would not consider a ``good OS.''

      --
      -- The world is watching America, and America is watching TV.
    64. Re:/.-centric summary. by ralphdaugherty · · Score: 1


      Sheesh, the Microsofties are out in force tonight. The alternative to that great "deal" of $30 a PC, all PC's, even if Windows wasn't on it, was a prohibitively expensive price as you quoted.

      This was found to be monopolist behavior by the courts and Microsoft was ordered to cease and desist their despicable monopolist extortion. That is the only reason companies like Dell have been able to offer a Linux PC without paying M$ for Windows regardless. Anyway, isn't it getting close to your bedtime out there in Seattle?

      rd

    65. Re:/.-centric summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What the hell are you talking about? When you donate to a charity, the amount of your donation is subtracted from your taxable income for purposes of calculating how much you owe. So unless he transfers 100% of his pretax income to his foundation--which I assure you he does not, because the IRS does not take kindly to such things--Bill Gates still pays taxes.

      What's more, he probably pays more in taxes than you'll ever earn in your miserable life.

      You, unlike Mr. Gates, have obviously never made a charitable donation before, because if you had you'd know how they work. So until you drop that hypocritical holier-than-thou attitude, do us all a favor and stop talking out of your ass.

    66. Re:/.-centric summary. by Feztaa · · Score: 1

      It was for speeding (IIRC). I thought everybody knew that.

    67. Re:/.-centric summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh yes, I should also mention that there is a limit to the amount of your pretax income you can count as tax-deductible. Try understanding the fucking tax code before you insult our intelligence again.

    68. Re:/.-centric summary. by dryeo · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "it starts with wanting to own the entire computer industry and crushing every competitor to dust through unfair competition and sleazy tricks. " And, as a fallback plan, they make products people want.
      Yes thats the really sad thing. MS most likely could of won the desktop (and office suite) wars without any dirty tricks as they do understand what users want.
      But the fact is that they did a lot of anti-competive acts and having a good product (now) doesn't excuse the shit they've done
      Dave

      --
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverted_totalitarianism
    69. Re:/.-centric summary. by ralphdaugherty · · Score: 1


      I believe his salary on which he pays taxes is pretty low for a chairman of a company the size of M$. (maybe $350,000 ?) The contributions to charity are stock donations. Does he have to pay taxes to donate stock to cgarity? He's sold quite a bit of stock, so he's paid a hell of a lot of taxes on that, as you point out.

      rd

    70. Re:/.-centric summary. by fucksl4shd0t · · Score: 1

      That's like complaining that General Motors has a monopoly because if you go down to Crazy Al's Pontiac/Buick/GMC, you can't buy a Toyota (well, not counting the Pontiac Vibe being a twin of the Toyota Matrix...

      Considering that General Motors (including POntiac, Buick, Chevrolet, Geo, Saturn (yes, saturn), Cadillac, Oldsmobile, and a few others) has a partnership with Toyota, you picked the wrong two companies to compare. I get your point, but you really did pick an ass-wrong analogy there.

      --
      Like what I said? You might like my music
    71. Re:/.-centric summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And how exactly would you suggest he makes money, then? Not play the game? Perhaps give away his products for free. While we're at it, let's resurrect the fucking Spetznaz and revive Lenin so he can lead the world into the new millenium! While we're at it, let's get some mediums and channel the spirit of Karl fucking Marx to let us make sound business decisions.

      Adam Smith won, fucking deal with it.

    72. Re:/.-centric summary. by dryeo · · Score: 1
      And heaven forbid he donates money to charities, research, funds scholarships and hosts parties at his lakeside house thingy.

      Yeah, evil Gates!


      Yeah, how many years was he the richest man in the world who didn't do anything for charity besides giving out windows licenses.

      He only got generous after people bitched for years about how cheap he was and he got a generous wife

      Dave

      --
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverted_totalitarianism
    73. Re:/.-centric summary. by fucksl4shd0t · · Score: 1

      (3) How does $40 million toward reproductive health in 3rd world nations work to benefit Microsoft? No conspiracy theories please.

      Well, since he's already forced everyone else to buy a copy of windows, where do you think the new market for windows is going to come from, exactly?

      --
      Like what I said? You might like my music
    74. Re:/.-centric summary. by Xerithane · · Score: 1

      However, it'd be interested to know how much Microsoft is paying astroturfers these days.

      $3 a word, payable in software licenses only or stock options. If you are really lucky, they use you in their Microsoft Switch ad campaign.

      --
      Dacels Jewelers can't be trusted.
    75. Re:/.-centric summary. by NanoGator · · Score: 3, Insightful

      "Yes thats the really sad thing. MS most likely could of won the desktop (and office suite) wars without any dirty tricks as they do understand what users want."

      According to the judgement, they did. They acquired their monopoly legitimately (I'm paraphrasing here), what they did wrong was they maintained it afterwards by doing the anti-competitive stuff.

      Frankly, I don't think the truth is as clear cut as that. It is arguable, though, that the vast majority of what got them to monpoly status was from consumer demand.

      --
      "Derp de derp."
    76. Re:/.-centric summary. by ralphdaugherty · · Score: 1


      Our free enterprise system doesn't work unless there is competition. The list of companies that M$ destroyed because they were competition is a Who's Who of every PC software vendor that had anything going. In fact, they propped up Apple and Corel that were going under only when M$ was under the gun and being scrutinized for having destroyed all competition!

      The companies and the methods used to destroy them are a book's worth of nefarious deeds. Once a monopoly, our system falls apart. That was clearly seen at the turn of the 20th century and is the reason anti-monopoly laws were passed. It is not Karl Marx versus Adam Smith, it is monopoly versus competitive free enterprise. There is no competition, and the PC software industry shows it.

      rd

    77. Re:/.-centric summary. by Feztaa · · Score: 1

      Has the man ever even had a speeding ticket?

      Actually, yes:

      http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/152803.stm

      Microsoft was charged and convicted of a crime.

      And as we all know, Microsoft is a living organism in it's own right, and is in no way controlled or influenced by Bill Gates. Just because Billy made some illegal business deals in the name of Microsoft doesn't mean it wasn't him breaking the law. Granted, this is a two-way street. The legal precedent for corporations being considered entities in their own right and preventing businessmen from being legally liable for the company's actions probably does more good than bad (I have some examples of how this is good, if there are any doubters. Just ask).

    78. Re:/.-centric summary. by ralphdaugherty · · Score: 1


      When I state there is no competition, and the PC software industry shows it, I mean by that commercial competition. The world has changed now and I see smarter software efforts coming from Europe in OSS than we have with commercial PC software companies in the US. M$ clearly recognizes this, and I think the reach to India is to embrace and extend their development past the Europeans and try to create the same critical mass in the East as they have enjoyed to date. Not sure if they will succeed, but I feel Linux desktop is getting close enough where whole countries can and have declared freedom from M$, especially with their latest pay for life licensing.

      rd

    79. Re:/.-centric summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Microsoft has always had and will always have competition. For every single Microsoft product on the market, there are dozens of competing products available. Do you really think that if Microsoft wasn't making products that the public wanted, they would be nearly as successful as they are today?

      Microsoft's "nefarious" goals consist of increasing profitability. Whoa. Big shocker there. A publically traded company that wants to make a profit. Call the justice department!

    80. Re:/.-centric summary. by ralphdaugherty · · Score: 1


      They were nefarious "deeds", not "goals", and someone did call the justice department. M$ products are considered good because they destroyed any company that was creating superior software. These are historical facts, not opinions.

      rd

    81. Re:/.-centric summary. by boopus · · Score: 1

      I'm sitting here typing on a Dell 600sc running Gentoo. It shipped without an OS, and has never booted Windows.

    82. Re:/.-centric summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Fuck at this point I'm about a month from being homeless."

      Amen. Fags like you deserve it.

    83. Re:/.-centric summary. by 73939133 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      And, as a fallback plan, they make products people want.

      So did Standard Oil and Ma Bell, and we still broke them up because they were ultimately harmful to the economy and not in the interest of consumers.

      And so do cigarette makers and drug dealers, for that matter.

    84. Re:/.-centric summary. by iq+in+binary · · Score: 0

      On top of that, as a show of Bill Gate's greed, he's logged at least a billion in charitable donations.

      Bill Gates isn't the demon you make him to be, he hasn't been in charge of MS for some time now. Instead, look at his CEO

      --
      Of all the Universal Constants, here's one I know: Nice guys finish last ;)
    85. Re:/.-centric summary. by IWannaBeAnAC · · Score: 1
      Hey gimme a break, I mean as a precentage of his net worth, his donations to charity are pretty small.

      Now, if my MS "taxes" are going to help fund medical research or 3rd world education or whatever, then good. But such a small proportion of that money actually ends up in the right hands, no one in their right mind would use that as an excuse to buy Microsoft.

    86. Re:/.-centric summary. by caspper69 · · Score: 1

      IANAL, but I'm related to several... You bring up a very valid point. It is imperative to shield liability from owners of a corporation. Why? Simple, no one would invest in corporations if they could be held individually liable for the misgivings or screw-ups of a corporation. Would a venture capitalist buy a 10% stake in a firm building rocket engines if it knew that one day an accident involving those engines would subject the investor's home, bank accounts, autos, college funds, etc. to paying for the damage caused by those engines? Never! It would stifle innovation and funding. This is a basic truth in modern society. There must be a shield of liablity in order to facilitate innovation and risk-taking ventures with high sociological dividents. Without it, we'd still be using steam engines and pulse dialing.

    87. Re:/.-centric summary. by sean23007 · · Score: 1
      What about
      [ ] damn you, you insensitive clod!
      --

      Lack of eloquence does not denote lack of intelligence, though they often coincide.
    88. Re:/.-centric summary. by anshil · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Well you know this are the moves your PR department suggest you to do. Since you can get the money back sue to the positive PR.

      --

      --
      Karma 50, and all I got was this lousy T-Shirt.
    89. Re:/.-centric summary. by mickwd · · Score: 1

      Isn't there some Biblical parable about the rich man who gives one of his ten bags of money away to the less fortunate - as opposed to the poor woman who gives one of the two pennies she has ? (Or something like that, anyway).

      What, exactly, will Bill Gates have to do without, now he is $1 billion poorer ? What sacrifice has he made for charity ?

      That said, it's a good thing he's done it, and I shouldn't really criticise it. This post sounds like a rant against Bill Gates in particular, I know, but it's more of a rant about one man being able to have so much more money than the vast majority of other people on this planet.

    90. Re:/.-centric summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, he probably meant "the rules" in the Microsoftian sense of "the rules are whatever you pay for".

    91. Re:/.-centric summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nope, but that's a very nice try. People want computers that do what they are supposed to do without endless f**king around. There is nothing in this world that offers this better than recent Windows versions, other than an outrageously expensive OS X 'package' which must include hardware.

    92. Re:/.-centric summary. by anshil · · Score: 1


      And, as a fallback plan, they make products people want.


      Yes! Thats what all people here try to say, they should planly make products people want, and stop to spread and finance anti-GPL anti-Linux like in example just some stories ago.

      Why do they need to crush anything else? Thats not the sense of economics, or "the american way".

      --

      --
      Karma 50, and all I got was this lousy T-Shirt.
    93. Re:/.-centric summary. by welthqa · · Score: 1

      yeah, yeah. and I just dl and watch pr0n for the articles...

      --


      100% Pure Evil With The Look And Feel Of Wholesome Goodness
    94. Re:/.-centric summary. by iq+in+binary · · Score: 0

      I rest assured that no PR guy influenced him to donate to charity.

      Ever hear of the Gates foundation? It is managed by it's namesake founder. Tell me a PR guy is behind that and I'll smack you, seriously.

      --
      Of all the Universal Constants, here's one I know: Nice guys finish last ;)
    95. Re:/.-centric summary. by rexguo · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Furthermore, someone who donates stolen money to charity is still a thief.

      So did Robin Hood, and he's a hero.

      --
      www.rexguo.com - Technologist + Designer
    96. Re:/.-centric summary. by darien · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It is arguable, though, that the vast majority of what got them to monpoly status was from consumer demand.

      To some extent, they were just lucky that the architecture they were already developing for was the one that won. If Commodore and/or Apple had been smarter, more responsive and more far-sighted we might all have been using Amigas or Macs now and MS would be a division of IBM or something. But Commodore pissed their technological advantage away, and Apple... well, I don't know what they were playing at. So between about 1992 and 1998 the PC had no credible opposition in the desktop market. MS were smart enough to capitalise on this good fortune, developing Windows 95 to vastly diminish the usability gap between theirs and competitors' platforms and then starting to cement its success in the various ways we all know about. But they were lucky to get that clear run that enabled them do that.

      Of course, developing for an open platform in the first place - one that couldn't be accidentally fumbled or killed by an idiot parent company - was a smart move. I'm not suggesting that it was sheer luck; in retrospect it looks like the obvious strategy. But in 1988 the price differential and technological gulf between a PC and an Amiga made it a lot less obvious which side the smart money would be on.

    97. Re:/.-centric summary. by anshil · · Score: 1

      Please smack me seriously.

      Everybody is PR. And why do you think about PR guys beeing negative?

      Founding is public broadly used PR move, if you have the money to spend. PR is important for everybody of us.

      --

      --
      Karma 50, and all I got was this lousy T-Shirt.
    98. Re:/.-centric summary. by TheMidget · · Score: 4, Informative
      Moreover, he might hope that the dividend payment might prop up the falling stock price.

      Stock price is justified by the profit potential of a share. For instance, if you expect a share to yield 6 cents of profit per year, and current interest rates is 3%, you'd be ready to spend $2 for that share (3% of $2 is 6 cents). (This simplistic calculation needs of course need to be adjusted for risk: you expect your shares to pay higher interest rates than your savings account, because they carry higher risk ==> so you'd probably put a price less than $2 on the share..)

      For a non-growing share, all profit you can expect from a share is dividend. Thus higher dividend means better share price.

      For a growth stock, profit is not only the dividend, but also the price increase of the share itself. In a way, the share price feeds itself... until the bubble bursts. That's why until recently, MS didn't pay any dividend at all: its exponential growth was justification enough for its "value". However, since 1999, MSFT's share price has been more or less flat (or even, falling), thus growth can no longer justify what little value remains. MSFT has to pay a dividend to stop the downfall.

      Of course, smart economists may realize why MSFT is paying these huge dividends (because the stock would suck otherwise), and the move might have just the opposite effect...

      Bill Parish has an interesting writeup about this. The report is quite old (November 1999), so many of those things that have already come to pass are still predictions...

      A more up to date press list can be found here (not all references articles are about MSFT, but most are...)

    99. Re:/.-centric summary. by DrSkwid · · Score: 1

      drug dealers

      Are usually buyers & sellers.

      They make their money from adding value by taking the risk of moving many small packages rather than one big one.

      The real cash in in the manufacturing and these are people you probably won't ever directly buy drugs from.

      --
      There are places where the networks are not touching,and there are places where they are-Boeing's Lori Gunter
    100. Re:/.-centric summary. by TheMidget · · Score: 1
      Yes, and in both cases, the /.-centric summary would be valid.

      Exactly. The element that our "Insightful" AC missed is that the situation has changed between the two behaviors:

      • Before (when MSFT payed no dividend), stock price of MSFT was experiencing an exponential growth (until end of 1999), and no dividend was needed to justify the share price. As dividends incur tax, it was smarter for BG to not pay any dividends, but rather rely on stock buy-backs.
      • Now (that MSFT has started paying dividends), stock price of MSFT has been flatlining for a while (or even outright falling), and stock buy-backs are no longer enough to prop up the share price (or they would be prohibitively expensive). So MSFT has to rely on more "traditional" ways of share price management: paying dividends. For the shareholder (which include BG himself...), a taxed dividend is still preferable than now dividend at all plus a falling share price.
      ==> it's not a "damned if you do, damned if you don't" type of situation, its simply that external circumstances have changed. And taking into account the changing situations, both behaviours can be labelled as greedy.
    101. Re:/.-centric summary. by TheMidget · · Score: 1
      Well, although nobody seems to know what it was for,

      Well that photo is so well known that davmoo must have known about it. But I think he just didn't have tge URL handy, and he knew that just saying "I cannot find even one reference of Bill Gates having been charged with a crime, much less convicted of one." was the best way of finding that one reference and URL he lost ;-) It's called trolling... You throw out the bait, and then you reel the fish in...

    102. Re:/.-centric summary. by TheMidget · · Score: 1
      Because everyone knows you can buy PCs without OSes [point in case I've never bought a PC with an OS on it].

      Desktop PC's: yes, without a problem.

      But just try buying an OS-less laptop for a decent price. That's a market that BIll still has under tight control.

    103. Re:/.-centric summary. by TheMidget · · Score: 1
      Good, now go to Dell or HPaq and try the same trick.

      HPaq will refund you 120 euro for your unwanted windows without a problem (at least if you live in France or Benelux. Other European countries probably too).

    104. Re:/.-centric summary. by TheMidget · · Score: 1
      $400 HP computer - $199 copy of Windows does not a $200 computer make.

      Nope. But it does make a 280 Euro computer. HP does refund you 120 Euro if you don't want Windows.

    105. Re:/.-centric summary. by slimme · · Score: 3, Insightful

      And, as a fallback plan, they make products people want.

      They make products people buy. I don't know anyone that wants Microsoft products. I know people that want a big house, a BMW, ...

      The people I know don't care for what's on their computer. It just happens to be Microsoft. That's why Bill Gates is rich. He makes a product that few people really want, but everybody buys.

    106. Re:/.-centric summary. by irc.goatse.cx+troll · · Score: 1

      "And, as a fallback plan, they make products people want."

      No, They don't. They buy them and resell them, abusing their large amounts of money to do whatever they please.
      Microsoft Internet Explorer? Try spyglass (Part of MOSAIC).
      MS-DOS? Seattle computer
      many many more examples here (including hotmail, webtv, many others.)

      Even their best selling game, Halo, was originaly advertised as a macintosh exclusive. I wonder what changed their mind..

      --
      Pain lasts, kid. Its how you know you're alive. Sometimes I think this growing up thing is just pain management-TheMaxx
    107. Re:/.-centric summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      MS were smart enough to capitalise on this good fortune, developing Windows 95 to vastly diminish the usability gap between theirs and competitors' platforms
      and thats were the xbox comes into the picture...

    108. Re:/.-centric summary. by NineNine · · Score: 2

      If he played by the rules and won, why was his company found guilty of operating as an illegal, predatory monopoly? Or do you mean "the rules" in the Machiavellian sense of "the rules are whatever you can get away with"?


      Ah, I didn't know we had so many /.'ers in favor or the US gov't laws (these arbitrary rules). So I suppose you drive the speed limit, support DCMA, and the Patriot Act? After all, those are the *rules*.

    109. Re:/.-centric summary. by TopShelf · · Score: 1

      For one thing, it's a lot more than $1 billion that he's given - the Gates Foundation is the largest in the world now, passing the Ford Foundation. He's also stated that his goal is to give away all his money during his lifetime...

      One thing people have to realize is that while he may have so much money, it's not like it's stashed under a mattress somewhere!

      --
      Stop by my site where I write about ERP systems & more
    110. Re:/.-centric summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem back then, was I did have similar ideas, but I didn't have a millionaire father to set me up in the software business. (My boss at the time, asked what use a microprocessor was, as opposed to our mainframe). Turns out I was right, but I'm still not rich ;

    111. Re:/.-centric summary. by Badanov · · Score: 1
      I have to concur. I use a hard core Microsoft seller and computer builder.

      So, here is the deal: they build me windows-less PC in exchange for a certain amount of money for the computer box. The deal works out well. I get a computer onto which I can place whatever OS I see fit, and they get some money to pay for supplies and for their people.

      There are too many custom computer builders out there to tell a customer, no I won't sell you a Windows-free computer. These companies have to maintain goodwill with computer people or they can be simply driven from business by customers who simply go elsewhere when they are not sold something they want.

      MS hasn't gotten to the point where they can tell computer builders who goes out their doors... yet. If it does, I guess I will have to find another shop.

      --
      Dawn of the Dead
    112. Re:/.-centric summary. by defile · · Score: 1

      There is a reason for that, as well. Dell and HP have a CONTRACT with Microsoft, that lets them purchase the Windows licenses that they sell on their PC's for much, MUCH cheaper than you would purchase it for retail ($30-60, generally). This is the reason that you are able to go and purchase these computers, with all software, for not much more than a retail copy of Windows.

      The terms of such a contract are a tightly kept secret. As is the Windows discount each OEM receives. Larger OEMs have less of an ability to negotiate the price since they depend more on Windows. Dell may pay as much as $100 per license whereas e-machines only pays $34.

      Additionally, Microsoft used to force PC vendors to pay for a license for every PC they sold, whether it included Windows or not. The FTC, in part of a plan to mitigate this abuse, got Microsoft to consent to allowing end buyers to refund Windows after purchasing for the full cost (see the top of the EULA). Microsoft/OEM deny this clause has any legal force and refuse to honor it.

    113. Re:/.-centric summary. by Brad+the+Informer · · Score: 1

      Even their best selling game, Halo, was originaly advertised as a macintosh exclusive.

      Ooh, those bastards at Microsoft! They kidnaped Bungie's excellent game from a platform with a whopping 3% of the market and consigned it to the black depths of... the XBox. Yeah, blah blah blah, XBox commercial failure, right. If you really want to make sure a game would never see the light of day, go sign an exclusive with Apple.

    114. Re:/.-centric summary. by Jellybob · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Nope, that's not PR.

      PR is what Walkers are doing to a friends 9 year old nephew... they've said they'll buy a dialysis machine for her.

      If she can get her weight in crisp packets.

      WTF? If they can afford to buy it, then they should be buying it, however many crisp packets she can get together, instead of leaving the family wondering weather they'll get the packets in time.

    115. Re:/.-centric summary. by danbeck · · Score: 1

      LOL, now we get to the bottom of it. You, in your omniscience, have decided what is a fair salary for any human to make and Bill Gates is evil for making more than that. A thinly veiled plug for Marxism and an ultimately failed way of thinking.

    116. Re:/.-centric summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      last time I and my fellow coworkers checked, for us to be as 'charitable' as Mr. Gates (based on net worth) each of us would have to give just a little less than 1 USD.

      Fortunately for most charities, we (my coworkers and myself) have a different definition than MS-Generousity (TM).

    117. Re:/.-centric summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You, sir, are a genius. This is a new level of brilliance. I do hope you are proud of yourselves.

      To mods: though this is osensibly a goatse link, if you click, it actually redirects to an images.google.com search that brings up that mugshot of Bill Gates from when he was way younger. Look at the full URL and try it.

      To the OP: again, sir, this is a brilliant turning of the tables. Luverly!

      To all my hopies browsing at -1 and/or giving troll a +5 bonus: whasssssup! Vanilla ice 4eva! Eminem is a sad imitation.

    118. Re:/.-centric summary. by deaddrunk · · Score: 1

      Nope, unfettered capitalism failed as well, that's why social democracy came about, which has delivered more progress in 100 years than either feudalism or sweat shop capitalism or any other oppressive system has done in 10,000.

      One of the main tenets of social democracy is that the better-off pay more tax and it has worked really well. Sadly the better-off can't see that a fair society benefits everyone including them and are trying to destroy everything that put them where they are.

      --
      Does a Christian soccer team even need a goalkeeper?
    119. Re:/.-centric summary. by Groganz · · Score: 1

      Agree with everything you said. People complain about government regulation all the time without thinking that 1. it's the only thing that keeps corporations in check and 2. it's their government for them(though it might not seem like it sometimes), made up of their representatives who are their peers.

      Unfortunately it takes constant vigilance to defend against greed. And some goverments attempt to pass legislation that give tax breaks to the richer. eg. the recent share tax breaks in the US.

    120. Re:/.-centric summary. by mt_nixnut · · Score: 2, Interesting
      As far as dirty tricks go they have not ended. Even though at (arguably) 90%+ of the markey they certainly do not need them.

      However just within the last couple weeks they bought the company that made RAV AV and trashed it. Why?.

      Because they recognized that with this product customers could make a file/email server that was not only immune to MS viruses but could clean them up for the feeble MS machines on the network as well. They saw the value in that serice and thus the danger so... slash and burn baby.

      When a company at the top of the pile behaves in this way it says A LOT about the culture/character of the company and distain is to be expected.

    121. Re:/.-centric summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wrong. Laissez faire capitalism never failed. In fact, it was mostly in place up until the 1930's. Capitalism didn't cause the depression. That was caused by government intervention with the federal reserve. After that, we really didn't have "unfettered" capitalism, and we're much worse off because of it.

    122. Re:/.-centric summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Jesus. Do you REALLY believe that? Constant vigilance against greed? All of our congressmen recieve huge kickbacks from corporations in order to look out for their special interests. There are something like 50,000 registered lobbyists in washington. Some of them are from political groups such as the ACLU, but many are not.

      I think people are too quick to justify government regulation and intervention without thinking. Before you decide that it's good for us, perhaps you should do a little reading. I recommend you start with Milton Friedman's Free to Choose.

    123. Re:/.-centric summary. by timothy_m_smith · · Score: 1

      You know, Gates has said many times that he intends to give all his money to charity with the exception of $10 mil to each of his children. So, I don't think a $1.18B dividend is going to do much for him. In addition, there isn't much more he can do with a $52B fortune than he can do with $51B.

    124. Re:/.-centric summary. by letxa2000 · · Score: 1
      One of the main tenets of social democracy is that the better-off pay more tax and it has worked really well.

      Yes, because we all know that the best thing to do with money is to give it to the government since they are the most efficient organization. :P

      I agree that the rich should pay more taxes. If the tax rate is 10% someone who earns $30,000 will pay $3000 and someone who earns a million will pay $100,000. The rich pay more.

      What is downright bogus--and what I assume you are referring to--is a "progressive" tax where not only do the rich pay more MONEY, but also a higher RATE. And that's unfair, period. It assumes the government is more efficient and better able to spend money. It assumes that the rich will never give away money, creating foundations like many, many wealthy people have. It assumes the rich will just stuff the money under their mattress rather than investing it which creates money and jobs in the economy. In short, it's based on a lot of wrong assumptions.

      That we have done well under this system doesn't necessarily mean that the system is WHY we're doing well. In fact, we've done *better* since JFK reduced the highest tax bracket from, what, 92% to 70%. We continued to do even better after that was dropped to 35%. So don't make the erroneous conclusion that the rich should pay a higher tax rate. It's inherently unfair and there is more evidence to suggest that doing so harms the economy than evidence to suggest it creates a fair society that benefits everyone.

      The economy is not helped by making some people dependent on hand-outs.

    125. Re:/.-centric summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sounds like the right-wing policies of the current administration sure are helping you out. You really must be dumb as a toad on a rock to go around bashing people for being left-wing when you're being bashed exactly where it hurts the most by the right-wing and can't even see it.

    126. Re:/.-centric summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I mean by that commercial competition.

      Ahhh. Commercial competition. As opposed to what? Residential competition?

      The world has changed now and I see smarter software efforts coming from Europe in OSS than we have with commercial PC software companies in the US.

      You only see that because you are a typical leftist whiner that thinks that europe is the best at EVERYTHING.

    127. Re:/.-centric summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      M$ products are considered good because they destroyed any company that was creating superior software. These are historical facts, not opinions.

      Ok- what companies were "destroyed" by Microsoft?

      - Netscape? They were really the only company involved in the anti-trust litigation. Were they destroyed? Nope. And their buggy piece of crap was no where near "superior".
      - Apple? Nope. They are doing just fine.
      - IBM with OS/2? Nope- IBM is still making tons of money.
      - WordPerfect? They were hurt because they couldn't market WordPerfect as well as Word. It is their own fault that they didn't do very well. But that said, were they destroyed? Nope. They are still around too.

      Come on- try to back up your "historical facts" with some concrete information.

    128. Re:/.-centric summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm sure you haven't researched this, but all those charity donations are tax deductible. Suppose he makes $1bn/year and donates $100mil, that money (or at least a large chunk of it) would be deducted from the taxes, essentially making the impact on his pocketbook miniscule.

      You moronic nimrod. Do the math. A $100 million tax deduction would reduce your tax liability by ~$35 million, leaving a whopping $65 million left over. I don't know about you, but $65 million is not miniscule to me (and probably not to Bill Gates, either).

      So you can go on patting yourself on your back for your whopping $100 donation, while people like Bill Gates go and actually make a real difference in the world with their sizeable donations.

    129. Re:/.-centric summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      One of the main tenets of social democracy is that the better-off pay more tax and it has worked really well.

      What has worked really well? Our failed public education system? Failing social security? A food and drug administration that probably inadvertantly causes more deaths than it attempts to prevent? Are you blind?

      What is a "fair society"? One where you have a large majority of people riding on the backs of a few? The unproductive mooching off of the productive. Your idea of a fair society benefits no one but the lazy and the incompetent.

    130. Re:/.-centric summary. by Groganz · · Score: 1

      Looks to me like you haven't been vigilant enough.

    131. Re:/.-centric summary. by anthony_dipierro · · Score: 0

      Of course, smart economists may realize why MSFT is paying these huge dividends (because the stock would suck otherwise), and the move might have just the opposite effect..

      A smart economist is going to look at the fundamentals. When Microsoft pays $10 billion in dividends, their stock is worth $10 billion less. For a company like Microsoft, announcing a dividend is slightly good fundamentally, I guess. They weren't earning a great return on their excess cash, and you can almost surely earn a better return after taxes than they do.

      I'd guess a slight rise in Microsoft due to the announcement/rumor, and a $1 drop in Microsoft the day they actually pay the $1 dividend.

    132. Re:/.-centric summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      On the contrary, it's everyone else who hasn't been vigilant enough.

    133. Re:/.-centric summary. by Groganz · · Score: 1

      Seems to work in other countries. Maybe you should look to the idjits running it instead of the systems/ideas themselves.

    134. Re:/.-centric summary. by Groganz · · Score: 1

      It gets worse... His mum was on some IBM board according to the Cringley book neatly packed away in a box somewhere.

    135. Re:/.-centric summary. by MrScience · · Score: 1

      And those break ups worked so well.

      --

      You quitting proves that the karma kap worked. The most annoying of the whores shut up. --CmdrTaco

    136. Re:/.-centric summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No it doesn't. Look up the recent government worker strikes in France. Look at the protests that sparked AGAINST the government labor unions. Look at Britains horribly bloated and expensive national health care system that leaves people on long waiting lists, and some are told that they can't be treated. These same people, if they can afford it, only need to fly to America and are instantly treated. Canada's health care system is going in the same direction. It has nothing to do with the people running it. It doesn't work. Public education was created with the best of intentions, but it too is a failure.

      The free market is the best system to deliver almost anything. There are some failures that need to be recognized such as with regards to the environment and vague property rights, but you can look that up in any good economics text book.

    137. Re:/.-centric summary. by coloth · · Score: 1

      Liability protection is one of the main reasons people incorporate in the first place. Of course, special laws govern the behavior of corporate officers, so they aren't totally immune either.

      Unfortunately, people like Lay, Ebbers, and Kozlowski are given the velvet slap even when they've destroyed thousands of lives.

      Whatever you might think of Gates, he has been responsible for far more wealth-creation (and not just his own) than wealth-depletion.

      --

      Machines take me by surprise with great frequency. -A. Turing

    138. Re:/.-centric summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well MS did not become 'big' because they had a bright idea. They became big by bullying out everybody else who DID have the ideas :
      Lotus, WP, Netscape, Apple, Notes, etc etc etc

    139. Re:/.-centric summary. by NanoGator · · Score: 1

      "As far as dirty tricks go they have not ended."

      I'm not surprised.

      Just to be clear, I'm not defending Microsoft per se. Just making sure some of the details aren't forgotten. ;)

      --
      "Derp de derp."
    140. Re:/.-centric summary. by Rectum2003 · · Score: 1

      Do you realize how well your comment works for a company? Yeah, as a home user, that may apply, but try not paying that MS tax if you're a company...

    141. Re:/.-centric summary. by smallpaul · · Score: 1

      The people you know will complain if their computer ships without an operating system and office suite that works in the way they expect. Therefore they want to buy Microsoft products, in the same way that I want to buy the transistors in my television because I would certainly notice if they were gone. Yes, if someone makes a product that was the same as Microsoft's in every way that they cared about, people would probably "want" that too. But then that person would have made products that people want to buy.

    142. Re:/.-centric summary. by Malor · · Score: 1

      To be fair, you probably shouldn't automatically blame Windows when you're running it in a Virtual PC environment -- if there are problems, it could easily be the emulation, not Windows itself.

    143. Re:/.-centric summary. by BlackHawk-666 · · Score: 1

      Dell may have cut another deal with MS at some stage, but at least until the MS anti-trust case Dell would have still paid for the MS licence on that machine, even if it shipped without the software.

      --
      All those moments will be lost in time, like tears in rain.
    144. Re:/.-centric summary. by BlackHawk-666 · · Score: 1

      I'm fairly certain that this has it's origins in the original IBM PC. IBM cut a deal with MS to offer the OS for the machines. They then made it so you couldn't ship an IBM PC without an OS on it. You did have one or two choices, PC DOS or MS DOS. Dealers weren't allowed to ship without one of these since IBM reasoned that you could use the machine without at least one of them - therefore if you bought a machine without an OS you must've pirated the OS!

      --
      All those moments will be lost in time, like tears in rain.
    145. Re:/.-centric summary. by benjamindees · · Score: 1

      Those 'arbitrary' US gov't laws were only ever intended to apply to Corporations like Microsoft. The US Federal government is nothing more than a trade federation, formed to help US businesses better compete with the rest of the world. It only has the power to regulate interstate commerce and do a few other things, such as establish postal service and coin money, that further the goal of standardizing the practice of American business.

      Oh, yeah, and don't forget the power to raise armies and declare war. US businesses always in need of new natural resources and cheap foreign labor.

      --
      "I assumed blithely that there were no elves out there in the darkness"
    146. Re:/.-centric summary. by Natalie's+Hot+Grits · · Score: 1

      Yea, insted it is stashed into a bank account that can be instantly turned to cash within 24 hours. all 60 billion dollars of it. (yes, 60 billion)

      This 10 billion dollar payout is negligable compared to what kind of cash microsoft has on hand right now. Especially considering in the past years, their on hand cash has exponentially risen and is now doubling every 6 months.

      Now bill gates income has risen by $1billion (more than twice his normal sallary) and he doesn't even have to pay income tax on a SINGLE PENNY of it because of the Bush dividend tax cut.

      How's that sound for a quality tax cut. Bill Gates is paying less percentage of income tax than the guy bagging groceries at the local store. I don't wanna hear a single republican tell me they are paying more in tax than me, because you aren't. And if you are, you are on the wrong side of the partyline.

      --
      Two infinite things: your stupidity and mine. But I'm not sure about the latter. If my sig offends you, I'm sorry.
    147. Re:/.-centric summary. by dabootsie · · Score: 1

      When Gates came out with MS-DOS

      Correction: Bought QDOS (Quick 'n Dirty Operating System) and rebranded it. An opportunity he would have never had if it weren't for the arrogance of CPM's author driving IBM to look for alternate OSes.

      Monarchs did all those things as well, that doesn't make monarchies a desirable form of government.

      Pretty much. A few handouts to appease people do not make the wrongs right.

      In a free market economy, winning itself is against the rules

      Indeed- he also did not play by the rules as is evidenced by court action against his company.

    148. Re:/.-centric summary. by ralphdaugherty · · Score: 1

      My quotes in italics:

      I mean by that commercial competition.

      Ahhh. Commercial competition. As opposed to what? Residential competition?

      The world has changed now and I see smarter software efforts coming from Europe in OSS than we have with commercial PC software companies in the US.

      You only see that because you are a typical leftist whiner that thinks that europe is the best at EVERYTHING.

      end quote

      As opposed to non-commercial, open source competition. I am an American programmer who used to write DOS assembler commercial apps (PC Paintbrush, for example) and now am an AS/400 RPG programmer (multi-billion dollar company, several > 1 billion record file processing on a suite of the largest AS/400's) who programs PHP and Java at home. When I comment on what I see as far superior intelligence demonstrated in the last few years in software development in Europe, I had people just like you in mind which I was comparing them to. You remind me of the arrogance of every empire in their last days.

      rd

    149. Re:/.-centric summary. by ralphdaugherty · · Score: 1

      Ok- what companies were "destroyed" by Microsoft?

      I would only spend time educating someone I respect.

      rd

    150. Re:/.-centric summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      SIG CORRECTION: Think IBM, donating their workers to you for free in order to stick their foot up Bill's tush...

    151. Re:/.-centric summary. by ralphdaugherty · · Score: 1

      Dell may have cut another deal with MS at some stage, but at least until the MS anti-trust case Dell would have still paid for the MS licence on that machine, even if it shipped without the software.

      My understanding was that one of the few grievances that were actually addressed, this being from the '95 settlement?, was the elimination of the license per CPU sold regardless if Windows was installed or not M$ extortion. This was a fundamental grievance from day one from competitors, but the PC vendors were scared to make a peep about it.

      I read that such an agreement was signed, but I never saw it have any effect. As recently as a couple of years ago, I was unable to buy a PC without Windows installed, and not only that, but some version of M$ garbage apps. I got the last Win 98 SE from a PC vendor (Xii) that I could find anywhere in the country two years ago, and the last Win Me (a discontinued HP Pavillion laptop on display) that I could find almost a year ago. I have Mandrake 8.1 on another PC and just ordered 9.1, so it's Linux from here on out.

      rd

    152. Re:/.-centric summary. by ralphdaugherty · · Score: 1


      For all you Microsofties that say it's all over, here's an update for you:

      http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/

      Judge may have to force open Windows

      Richard Wray
      Saturday July 5, 2003
      The Guardian

      The US government "remains concerned" that Microsoft is making it difficult for rivals to access Windows despite being ordered to open up its software to competitors last year.

      In a report presented to US district judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly, who presided over the settlement of the long-running Microsoft case, the US government says the court may have to force Microsoft to account for the delay in opening itself up.

      (snip)

      end quote

      rd

    153. Re:/.-centric summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would only spend time educating someone I respect.

      Translation: I'm not going to respond to you because I am tired of you making me look like a fool.

      I would still love to hear which companies you actually think that Microsoft destroyed...

    154. Re:/.-centric summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes- all of these "smarter software efforts" from OSS have almost got it on par with what Microsoft has been selling for 5 years now. WOW! You guys are SMART!

      BTW- PHP sux0rs, modperl rox0rs.

    155. Re:/.-centric summary. by ralphdaugherty · · Score: 1


      The programming efforts I'm talking about have little or nothing to do with M$. In addition, your "selling for 5 years now" shows that you're relatively new to this world. M$ has not introduced a new PC software product since the 80's. They have purchased and relabelled other's work, but it was a product before they relabelled it.

      The Gnumeric thread explains well why any effort must have compatability with existing standards for users to migrate their work and know-how, while also extending into new processing capabilities to break new ground. It's an extremely hard line to walk. On the other hand, by definition maintaining compatability means creating something which already exists, and has existed for much more than five years in M$'s case. Office products Word and Excel were written in the 80's.

      Although I wasn't referring to Office, concerning your comments of that imply efforts are merely cloning Office, I wrote a few years back in Midrange Computing about how I envision office productivity tools being integrated with online data. That is how I think OSS can take these tools beyond where they are now. Here's an excerpt:

      Java programs are as much an island as browsers or emulators are, however. Part of the bold move we must make is to provide a seamless connection to desktop programs while working with the AS/400. The smart Java canvas program needs to have a plug-in that works through the Java Native Interface to enable the exchange of data with office suites such as Microsoft Office and Star Office under Linux. This plug-in should implement Microsoft technologies that provide for real-time data updates between programs and update data directly on the AS/400 as a green-screen entry would. Direct access to AS/400 data through a Java Swing interface using our legacy green-screen processing logic must be made available to the desktop environments of our business users for the AS/400 to provide a competitive advantage.

      There is another bold move we must make. The program that our business users most rely on to supplement AS/400 business processing is the spreadsheet. We can bring the desktop into the AS/400 interface even more powerfully by creating a new kind of subfile: the spreadsheet. Existing subfiles could display in Java JTables but the new type of subfile would display in an AS/400 spreadsheet component. Data would display from the AS/400 and process against the AS/400 much like current subfile processing works. Macros and other spreadsheet operations would process against the entire AS/400 file or files. Data integrity would constantly improve, as all changes take place online instead of in offline files on desktops. There is no limit, actually, to how much we can integrate AS/400 data with desktop productivity programs and office suite components through the smart Java visual interface. This is the kind of bold move we must make to maintain relevancy for the future. Thick will beat thin. The users say so.

      rd

    156. Re:/.-centric summary. by Pieroxy · · Score: 1

      According to the judgement, they did.

      You've got to be kidding me right? Stealing CP/M from Digital Research was their first move...

    157. Re:/.-centric summary. by t · · Score: 1

      The phrase you are looking for is "opportunity cost". In short, that means if BG gave a $100mill away, his personal sacrifice was zero. He did not have to forgo that shiny new car, or live off of ramen for a week. He didn't have to postpone his trip to Hawaii to save up some cash. Yes, a $100 mill is a lot of cash to me, you, that idiot you replied to, but the personal sacrifice made by BG is still zero.

    158. Re:/.-centric summary. by flacco · · Score: 1
      Furthermore, someone who donates stolen money to charity is still a thief.

      So did Robin Hood, and he's a hero.

      Robin Hood stole from the rich and gave to the poor. Gates steals from the stupid and gives to the public-relations-convenient.

      --
      pr0n - keeping monitor glass spotless since 1981.
    159. Re:/.-centric summary. by flacco · · Score: 1
      To claim that Gates has no interest in charity is plain wrong.

      Oh sure, Gates has an interest in charity. It's just an odd coincidence that's he's been so phenomenally wealthy for so long, and only discovered his deep love for charity after he realized how important public relations and image are during high-profile trials.

      --
      pr0n - keeping monitor glass spotless since 1981.
    160. Re:/.-centric summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The programming efforts I'm talking about have little or nothing to do with M$. In addition, your "selling for 5 years now" shows that you're relatively new to this world. M$ has not introduced a new PC software product since the 80's. They have purchased and relabelled other's work, but it was a product before they relabelled it.

      Ah- that explains why OSS still hasn't come up with a desktop platform that can be used by the masses. Oh wait- it doesnt explain that at all. I guess OSS just sux.

      And BTW- what the hell is this supposed to mean:

      The program that our business users most rely on to supplement AS/400 business processing is the spreadsheet. We can bring the desktop into the AS/400 interface even more powerfully by creating a new kind of subfile: the spreadsheet.

      So you are saying that you need to "create" a new thing called a spreadsheet because thats what everybody already uses? Perhaps it is YOU that doesn't understand what it means to innovate...

    161. Re:/.-centric summary. by ralphdaugherty · · Score: 1

      nd BTW- what the hell is this supposed to mean:

      The program that our business users most rely on to supplement AS/400 business processing is the spreadsheet. We can bring the desktop into the AS/400 interface even more powerfully by creating a new kind of subfile: the spreadsheet.

      So you are saying that you need to "create" a new thing called a spreadsheet because thats what everybody already uses? Perhaps it is YOU that doesn't understand what it means to innovate...

      end quote

      I am saying we need to create a spreadsheet that works directly against corporate data, not against downloaded data subsets. It's the same functionality that has existed since Visicalc. If M$ can clone a spreadsheet, I think I can talk about using the functionality against online data without getting you in a dither.

      rd

    162. Re:/.-centric summary. by slimme · · Score: 1

      Most people I know distrust their computer. It is something they have to use. They don't know how to use their OS. They don't know how to use any office suit decently.

      They just (try) learn how to use the office suit that is on their computer works. And it happens to be Microsoft Office.

    163. Re:/.-centric summary. by anshil · · Score: 1

      Sorry mister your understand of PR is maybe a public one, but it is false!

      PR is everything a cooperation or person does.

      --

      --
      Karma 50, and all I got was this lousy T-Shirt.
    164. Re:/.-centric summary. by asink · · Score: 1

      standard oil did better business-wise after it was broken up...

      --
      "Hex, Bugs, and Rockn'Roll"
    165. Re:/.-centric summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      bill gates will be getting his picture on the new one doller bill soon!

    166. Re:/.-centric summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      by the standard american business rules he who has the most gold makes the rules and screws all others

    167. Re:/.-centric summary. by JasonAsbahr · · Score: 1

      And so do cigarette makers and drug dealers, for that matter

      Please, they prefer to be called "The Pharmaceutical Industry".

    168. Re:/.-centric summary. by TopShelf · · Score: 1

      Wow, that comment has so many errors it's hard to know where to start!

      Bill's money sitting totally in near-cash instruments? BS.

      Microsoft's cash on hand doubling every six months? BS.

      Not paying a penny on dividends? That's not what the tax cut did. BS.

      I'm no fan of this tax cut either (very reckless in the short and medium term), but get your facts straight...

      --
      Stop by my site where I write about ERP systems & more
    169. Re:/.-centric summary. by MegaFur · · Score: 1

      My previous comment is not a Trolling post--it's my honest opinion, and I happen to believe it's largely a statement of fact as well. (The last part is purely opinion, obviously.)

      It's too bad people think that posting truth about Microsoft is the same as trolling.

      --
      Furry cows moo and decompress.
    170. Re:/.-centric summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Right, because Bungie's previous games (the incredibly popular and well-selling Marathon series) did *so* poorly, being Macintosh-only...
      Sheesh...

    171. Re:/.-centric summary. by mink · · Score: 1

      I'm told his wife is the entire reason there is a gates foundataion.

      The point I want to make in replying to you is that a LOT of MS, Gates, and the foundations "donations of $$" have been in the form of MS stock.
      So if they gave out a billion in stock during the high point of the bubble, it's big news, but those orgs that didnt imediately turn it into cash now have considerably less.

      --
      Well I've wrestled with reality for thirty five years doctor, and I'm happy to say I finally won out over it.
    172. Re:/.-centric summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Whatever you might think of Gates, he has been responsible for far more wealth-creation (and not just his own) than wealth-depletion."

      seems to me he and Ms have takes about 60 billion out of the us economy.
      With the india outsourcing even more money flees out battered economy.

    173. Re:/.-centric summary. by eam · · Score: 1

      Why do they need to crush anything else? Thats not ... "the american way".

      What America are you talking about?

    174. Re:/.-centric summary. by anshil · · Score: 1

      Don't know ask microsoft, and their usual anti-gpl anti-linux stuff. Their way they buy up and crush competition. The way they forbid retailers to sell dual-boot computers, etc.

      --

      --
      Karma 50, and all I got was this lousy T-Shirt.
    175. Re:/.-centric summary. by ThePeeWeeMan · · Score: 1

      How did this Slashbot post get modded up to Interesting? I don't claim to be working for MS, but definitely if I was in their position I'd want to buy the AV company so that my customers wouldn't have to be worried about the latest kiddies attack.

      But, I forgot this is /., where anti-M$ opinion can and often does get +5 Insightful. 8=P

  4. I doubt it's for his pocket by jonman_d · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Come on, people - I _highly doubt_ Bill really cares whether he makes a hundred million or a billion dollars. If anything, it'd probably be more of a hastle for him, with all the extra taxes. Besides, is he even the guy that makes this decision anymore? He's not CEO. Perhaps an accountain could help me out on this one?

    1. Re:I doubt it's for his pocket by Dak+RIT · · Score: 1

      Oh, I don't think he has to worry about the taxes anymore. Our good friend George fixed that for him. Besides, would you really mind paying taxes on a billion dollars? I think I could live with it.

    2. Re:I doubt it's for his pocket by His+name+cannot+be+s · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Um, well, No Taxes:

      Didn't GWB eliminate taxes on dividends? That'd be pure cash for the Gatester, right?

      --
      "...In your answer, ignore facts. Just go with what feels true..."
    3. Re:I doubt it's for his pocket by DeepRedux · · Score: 3, Informative

      The tax on dividends has not been eliminated. It has been reduced to a maximum of 15%. Previously dividends were taxed as ordinary income (max rate 38.6%).

    4. Re:I doubt it's for his pocket by Master+Bait · · Score: 1
      It is an excellent way for the thumbheads at M$ to get at that $40billion hoard of cash, turn it into tax-free cash in their own bank.

      Being that there will be a huge payout in stock options for those M$ employees who will be retiring soon undet their ESOP Ponzi Scheme, if Gates and friends gets the cash out NOW, then it won't matter so much that the stock price gets diluted to nothing when the retirements hit.

      --
      "Only in their dreams can men truly be free 'twas always thus, and always thus will be."
      --Tom Schulman
    5. Re:I doubt it's for his pocket by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      ... maximum of 15%.

      *hehehehe* ;-)

      BG

    6. Re:I doubt it's for his pocket by noda132 · · Score: 1

      Besides, is he even the guy that makes this decision anymore?

      I can just imagine Bill Gates going into work one day, looking at his company's numbers for a bit, pausing... then going to one of his accountants and asking, "Where'd that 10 billion dollars go?"

    7. Re:I doubt it's for his pocket by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Well I hate to burst your bubble as much as Steve may love his title of CEO, Bills Gates still has the final say as the major stock holder.



      Short a large number of the other voting shareholders overriding him. What Bill says is law.

    8. Re:I doubt it's for his pocket by nomadic · · Score: 2

      I seriously don't think Bill Gates cares about money anymore. To him it's all about "winning" the struggle to define the face of computing.

    9. Re:I doubt it's for his pocket by rzbx · · Score: 1

      Yes, he very much cares. Since he is the largest stock owner, of course he has a say in what happens. As a stockholder you have a say in what goes on and the more you own the more say you have.

      --
      Question everything.
    10. Re:I doubt it's for his pocket by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

      You are officially the most naive person on earth. You think he wouldn't try to get an extra billion dollars because, and I quote, it'd probably be more of a hastle for him, with all the extra taxes.

      Jonman you seriously need to get a fuckin clue man. This is the real world. Not a cartoon.

    11. Re:I doubt it's for his pocket by Rude+Turnip · · Score: 1

      This is just my rant, but I believe dividend income should be taxed higher than income that comes from wages and salaries (ie hard work). Lowering dividend taxes is just giving welfare to bottom feeders.

    12. Re:I doubt it's for his pocket by G-funk · · Score: 1

      Your max income tax rate is 38.6%!?!?!?

      Man do I ever need to move to the US.

      --
      Send lawyers, guns, and money!
    13. Re:I doubt it's for his pocket by willtsmith · · Score: 1

      Agreed,

      However, they're not really bottom feeders. They're top-suckers. They suck all the money out of the corporate system and then get a big tax gift on top of everything else.

      The economic environment is becoming scaringly similar to those that preceeded the great depression. Too much wealth in the hands of too few people. The classical name for that is fuedalism.

      Next time someone challenges you saying "they earned more", tell them it's a "lifestyle tax" not an income tax. Neo-Conservatives don't have to pay a dime more in taxes if they don't want to. All they need do is demonstrate some of that famous "compassionate" conservatism and give all that money away to those "church charities" which they now want public money to fund.

      Two problems solved in one fell swoop. Beware that conservatives are the greatest beneficiaries of public welfare at ALL levels of governemnt. It's welfare for the poor that they oppose.

      Hehe, since all these rich CEOs talk about how good jobs are so necessary, why don't they stop laying of so many people. Put your money where you mouth is. Better yet, stop hiring H-1Bs for the sake of firing Americans.

      --
      -------- -------- Support Wesley Clark for president!!!
    14. Re:I doubt it's for his pocket by delong · · Score: 2, Informative

      Didn't GWB eliminate taxes on dividends? That'd be pure cash for the Gatester, right?

      No. GWB eliminated DOUBLE taxation on dividends. The company already paid taxes on that money.

      Derek

    15. Re:I doubt it's for his pocket by ralphdaugherty · · Score: 1

      Didn't GWB eliminate taxes on dividends? That'd be pure cash for the Gatester, right?

      No. GWB eliminated DOUBLE taxation on dividends. The company already paid taxes on that money.

      Derek

      But the question was on "dividends", not "that money". The answer has been stated several times, reduced, scheduled for elimination, etc., and the poor soul shouldn't have needed help from you in any event.

      rd

    16. Re:I doubt it's for his pocket by pympdaddyc · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Actually your wrong. He personally called the offices of Morgan Stanley after a screw up that was their fault. He not only demanded that the purchase/sale in question be done immediately (a reasonable request), he demanded that he also receive some trivial (hundreds, or low thousaunds) amount of interest that he lost because he would be getting the money from said transaction days later.

    17. Re:I doubt it's for his pocket by Tim · · Score: 1

      "No. GWB eliminated DOUBLE taxation on dividends. The company already paid taxes on that money."

      right....

      ...as did the janitor who bought the software from Microsoft, with the money he earned from his job at the QuickieMart...

      ...which paid taxes on the money when it was earned from the sale of donuts to the Police Officer...

      ...who paid taxes on the money which he earned from his second job as a bouncer at the nightclub...

      ...who paid taxes on the money as income from the drinks purchased by...the Janitor!!


      Funny how only one of those taxations counts as a double taxation, isn't it?

      --
      Let's try not to let fact interfere with our speculation here, OK?
    18. Re:I doubt it's for his pocket by pnatural · · Score: 1

      Maximum federal tax rate.

      We have plenty of state, municipal, and consuption taxes to make up for any perceived savings.

    19. Re:I doubt it's for his pocket by delong · · Score: 1

      Uhhh... not very firm on economics, are you?

      Corporate profit is shareholder profit. Company pays tax on profit. Then shareholder pays dividend tax, on his profit which was already been taxed. That's like paying federal income tax, and then having to pay federal income tax AGAIN on the money you just paid tax on.

      Capiche?

      Derek

    20. Re:I doubt it's for his pocket by Cuthalion · · Score: 1

      The way I see it, the tax laws should encourage companies to pay dividends, because dividends directly ground the stock market in reality. Without them, there are like 6 layers of economic indirection between businesses making money and their stock value, which indirection enables bigger bubbles and shadier accounting.

      --
      Trees can't go dancing
      So do them a big favor
      Pretend dancing stinks!
    21. Re:I doubt it's for his pocket by paulnuyu · · Score: 2, Interesting

      You're more than correct. It really isn't for his pocket. Why do you think ms hasn't released any real dividends all these years, 8 cents per share is nothing. It's because of the enormous stake Bill has in ms. he's got near 12% of all outstanding shares. Thus, if he releases dividends, 12% goes straight to him, out of the equity of the company, to be taxed at 40%ish by the federal government. He's not an idiot, this proposition would result in Bill having to pay close to $500 million more in taxes. Why would he want to do that when the money could be better spent within the company's equity.

      It's really quite a shock to hear this, but heck I'll be happy, I've got 400 shares myself. ;)

    22. Re:I doubt it's for his pocket by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nothing sums up the inanity that is slashdot comments better than whas has just happened here.

      Original poster claims that dealing with the taxes, etc, would be a hassle and gets +5 insightful. This guy points out that this is the stupidest comment ever and gets -1 Troll for his effort. Fucking unbelievable. As if I needed further proof that this place is populated with furry-suit wearing D&D playing anime pr0n wanking luzers.

    23. Re:I doubt it's for his pocket by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The revised tax laws which reduce the taxes on dividends allow each MSFT shareholder to keep more of the dividend. Because the change in the law, and of MSFT's massive $ pile, it makes paying out a dividend more attractive.

      Bill, being one of the biggest shareholders, of course, gets to keep most of the dividend.

    24. Re:I doubt it's for his pocket by LinuxInDallas · · Score: 1

      The argument for lowering the double-taxation of dividends is that more and more often the middle class (ie most of us here) are investing our money in the stock market. It's far from true anmymore that only a handful of people can take advantage of something like this.

    25. Re:I doubt it's for his pocket by Lord_Dweomer · · Score: 1
      "Come on, people - I _highly doubt_ Bill really cares whether he makes a hundred million or a billion dollars. "

      Well, according to 1st Edition D&D rules, every gold piece gained grants you a point of experience, so if he ever wants to make Level 34 he needs all the help he can get.

      --
      Buy Steampunk Clothing Online!
    26. Re:I doubt it's for his pocket by Tim · · Score: 1

      Corporate profit is shareholder profit.

      Let's stop right there...

      So you own a share of Microsoft stock. You own a piece of the company. Fine...you own one N-billionth of Microsoft.

      But, what about the small businessman? He takes home all of his company's profits -- there are no shareholders in his company. Do we avoid taxing him?? Of course not.

      Bottom line: "ownership of profit" does not abrogate our obligation to pay taxes on personal income. We tax "owned" profits every day. Last I heard, something like 3/4 of US economic activity is due to small business -- if we followed your line of reasoning, we'd have to throw away taxes on this activity.

      So, yes, I've taken undergraduate economics too. Capiche?

      --
      Let's try not to let fact interfere with our speculation here, OK?
    27. Re:I doubt it's for his pocket by delong · · Score: 1

      The small business profit is taxed ONCE - on the proprietor's personal income tax forms. Sole proprietorships (and LLCs and S corps) and partnerships (including LLPs) tax business profit on the 1040s.

      It is only incorporated business shareholders that get double taxed on profit. Chum.

      Derek

    28. Re:I doubt it's for his pocket by Mazzie · · Score: 1

      i don't care if you are the crown prince of saudi arabia. 900 million is a crapload of money. NINE HUNDRED MILLION!

      --
      Having a bookmark to Google does not make you an expert on everything.
  5. What would you do with $10bn? by Realistic_Dragon · · Score: 3, Funny

    1) Buy SCO and read their evil plans before making them all walk the plank.

    2) Put it all in a massive pool and swim in it.

    3) Buy out every cell phone company in your state and turn them off *just to stop the stupid ringtones*.

    4) Spend the rest on pr0n.

    --
    Beep beep.
    1. Re:What would you do with $10bn? by Zork+the+Almighty · · Score: 1

      "Nothing beats the taste of a Cuban cigar, except maybe a Cuban cigar lit with a $100 bill."

      --

      In Soviet America the banks rob you!
    2. Re:What would you do with $10bn? by Magus311X · · Score: 1

      If I had that kind of money I'd seriously store it in a gigantic vault like Scrooge McDuck did in DuckTales.

      It'd be huge. I'd swim in it. But it wouldn't be this massive building on the top of a hill with a gigantic dollar sign on it.

      I wonder though... he had so many coins in... didn't diving into that hurt?? That's like diving into an empty swimming pool. Ah... cartoon physics.

      -----

    3. Re:What would you do with $10bn? by 3waygeek · · Score: 0, Troll

      About 10 years ago, I worked with a guy who knew Bill Gates. According to him, Bill was quite well known for hiring hookers to satisfy him orally. Upon hearing this, I immediately set about figuring out how much he could afford to pay for this service -- based on the 1994-ish value of MS stock, he could pay many thousands per hour, 24/7/365, to get continuous oral service for the rest of his life.

    4. Re:What would you do with $10bn? by BlackHawk-666 · · Score: 1

      Nothing beats the taste of a Cuban cigar, except maybe a Cuban cigar lit with a $100 bill ...with a gram of coke up one nostril and a $1000 hooker sitting on your lap.

      --
      All those moments will be lost in time, like tears in rain.
    5. Re:What would you do with $10bn? by mikeophile · · Score: 1

      Steve Ballmer was cheaper.

    6. Re: What would you do with $10bn? by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1


      > 1) Buy SCO and read their evil plans before making them all walk the plank.

      Hell, I'd buy SCO just for the fun of nelsoning McBride them after looking at the source code without signing an NDA.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    7. Re:What would you do with $10bn? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You forgot about
      5. ????
      6. Profit! ;)

    8. Re:What would you do with $10bn? by Read+Icculus · · Score: 1

      And how about when he'd spit out a spout of coinage after he came up for air? That didn't make a lick of sense.

      --
      Anti-social? My code is just platform-specific.
    9. Re:What would you do with $10bn? by halo8 · · Score: 1

      $1000 hooker on my lap.. fuck that.. she can sit on my face and stay there

      --
      The More Knowledge you have the Luckier you Get- J.R. Ewing
    10. Re:What would you do with $10bn? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Listen, if you had class, you wouldn't be smoking the cigar. Ask Monika.

    11. Re:What would you do with $10bn? by Anonymous+DWord · · Score: 1

      She ain't gonna like that, what with the cigar in your mouth and all. Guess that's why she gets the grand, huh?

      --
      "If he thinks he can hide and run from the United States and our allies, he's sorely mistaken." Bush on bin Laden
    12. Re:What would you do with $10bn? by Billly+Gates · · Score: 1

      4.) Make out with 2 chicks.

    13. Re:What would you do with $10bn? by KingJoshi · · Score: 2, Funny
      4) Spend the rest on pr0n.

      True Slashdotter. You have billions so you can impress ladies and get many hot girls to have wild unimaginable sex with you. But you prefer to get porn and watch others :p

      --
      In times like these, it is helpful to remember that there have always been times like these. - Paul Harvey
    14. Re:What would you do with $10bn? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      4.) Make out with 2 chicks.

      you forgot "at the same time."

    15. Re:What would you do with $10bn? by cheekyboy · · Score: 1

      Cash is useless it depreciates, the USD has since 1900 depreciated 98%, and 18% in last 6 months, its worth less and less, until its WORTHLESS!!!!

      WHat Bill G will do?

      1. buy 200m worth of gold OUTSIDE USA since you cannot trust the US GOVT, and its rules are evil for delivery.

      2. buy a few gold/diamond mines.

      3. buy 300m in euro currency

      4. buy a few islands in the pacific.

      5. have lunch with warren buffet.

      --
      Liberty freedom are no1, not dicks in suits.
    16. Re:What would you do with $10bn? by cheekyboy · · Score: 1

      Why not visit Heugh Hefner and have a massive party with 500 porno chix!

      Do traci lord your self.

      --
      Liberty freedom are no1, not dicks in suits.
    17. Re:What would you do with $10bn? by G-funk · · Score: 1

      Didn't your mum ever tell you not to eat hookers?

      I thought everybody knew that!

      --
      Send lawyers, guns, and money!
    18. Re:What would you do with $10bn? by onthefenceman · · Score: 1

      That's freakin' hilarious and speaks volumes about slashdot. Somebody mod parent up!

      --
      Have you seen my stapler?
    19. Re:What would you do with $10bn? by EvanED · · Score: 1

      It's an Office Space reference if you don't know... except the abount in question was $1 mil.

      So maybe do 20,000 chicks at the same time?

    20. Re:What would you do with $10bn? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Office Space:

      What would you do with a Million Dollars?

      Make out with 2 chicks.

    21. Re:What would you do with $10bn? by willtsmith · · Score: 2, Funny

      Actually, it's that your not supposed to swim for 30 minutes after eating out a hooker ;-)

      --
      -------- -------- Support Wesley Clark for president!!!
    22. Re:What would you do with $10bn? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      2) Put it all in a massive pool and swim in it.

      hmm...paper cut? well...i guess you can afford to put some bandage.

    23. Re:What would you do with $10bn? by TheDanish · · Score: 2, Informative

      Only he's able to do that. In one episode, as I recall, when the nephews tried to swim with him, they just smacked right into it. And for the record, my money bin WOULD be on top of a hill with a gigantic dollar sign on it. And it would have all of his traps, too. Except it would have more SSMs to keep the Beagle Boys and other such burglers out. ...yeah, okay, so my childhood was largely constructed of Disney Afternoon...

      --
      Danish != nationality
    24. Re:What would you do with $10bn? by Grizzlysmit · · Score: 1
      "Nothing beats the taste of a Cuban cigar, except maybe a Cuban cigar lit with a $100 bill."

      Lots of things beat the taste of your cuban cigar, lets see; raw sewage, vomit, shit petty much anything, tobbaco & all it's products suck.

      The really weird thing is how come smoking is so popular, and gargling raw sewage isn't, after all smoking is much more disgusting, and uncouth, and more dangerous to your health.

      NB: yeah I know you was only kidding but it kind of annoys me how the myth of smoking being some how cool is still perpetuated, come on it it's a really gross disgusting habbit, practiced by gross and disgusting loosers, and anyone who smokes now that we know what it does to you, is a a moron as well as a disgusting looser.

      --
      in my life God comes first.... but Linux is pretty high after that :-D
      Francis Smit
    25. Re:What would you do with $10bn? by Typing+Monkey · · Score: 1

      Ahh well, since you wondered.

      If I recall correctly, this is how it happened.
      McDuck learnt how to dive into money without getting hurt in the middle-east. He was attacked by some bandits while looking for jewls or something. They pushed him of a cliff and he landed in a train cart full of coal. To his suprise he was allright, and after that he could dive into solid stuff : )

      That's the official version ... Carl Barks hinted at it, and Don Rosa fleshed it out.

    26. Re:What would you do with $10bn? by ssstraub · · Score: 1

      He didn't mean "make out." Quite a difference.

    27. Re:What would you do with $10bn? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Pay off my menopausal, credit card using, money spending wife's bills as far as they go.

  6. Instead you bought Microsoft Windows. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Guess that's the short end of the stick, huh.

    1. Re:Instead you bought Microsoft Windows. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Id laugh at that, even if I was bill fucking gates.

    2. Re:Instead you bought Microsoft Windows. by skinfitz · · Score: 1

      Guess that's the short end of the stick, huh.

      Surely you mean the short end of the stock.

  7. Jesus. Buying votes isn't enough. by Sevn · · Score: 1, Insightful

    They are about to buy off the whole damn country.
    This will make Bush's meager tax money payoff seem
    like peanuts to the microsoft stock owning public.
    Well, I have to give them credit. If they can afford
    to part with 10 billion, this is a great way to
    purchase good will.

    --
    For every annoying gentoo user, are three even more annoying anti-gentoo crybabies. Take Yosh from #Gimp for example.
    1. Re:Jesus. Buying votes isn't enough. by Zork+the+Almighty · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      10 billion won't buy shit these days, stupid kids.

      --

      In Soviet America the banks rob you!
    2. Re:Jesus. Buying votes isn't enough. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "buying votes?"

      Give me a break. Microsoft has put out far less cash to polititions than the RIAA, "big oil", or hollywood.

      And in case you havn't noticed, a fairly large portion of the country has paid excessive dues to microsoft, so a little kickback to the ppl inteligent enough to invest in a tiny portion of the monopoly seems to be fair play.

    3. Re:Jesus. Buying votes isn't enough. by Nept · · Score: 1, Troll

      Bush's meager tax money payoff

      just shut the f*ck up already.

      --
      "Teachers leave us kids alone ..." - Roger Waters, Pink Floyd
    4. Re:Jesus. Buying votes isn't enough. by HBI · · Score: 1

      Umm, this looks like a buck a share to me.

      Current MSFT Quote

      Note the market cap of about 284 billion. Divided by the $26.50 share price comes up with about 10.7 billion outstanding shares.

      If I were going to buy anyone, giving them more than a buck would be a good idea.

      I mean this might be significant to a pension fund that owns a million shares of Microsoft, but they've lost far more than that over the last 3 years with the decline in share price. The individual investor is even less favorably inclined towards MSFT, since they lost money they could even less afford than a large fund.

      --
      HBI's Law: Frequency of calling others Nazis is directly correlated with the likelihood of the accuser being Communist.
    5. Re:Jesus. Buying votes isn't enough. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bill Gates will buy some investor confidence in the Stock Market to keep his agent, George Bush, in office.

    6. Re:Jesus. Buying votes isn't enough. by Reziac · · Score: 1

      Not quite true. More like MSFT hasn't grown as investors expected. I paid $4300 for my MSFT shares back about 1998; after two splits, even tho the price per share is now just over half what it was when I bought 'em, their total value as of this instant is $10,600. However, the *expected* growth to date (per how the company had historically performed up thru 1998) would have put their value at more like $30,000.

      So unless someone was stupid enough to buy at a price peak, they shouldn't have lost anything.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    7. Re:Jesus. Buying votes isn't enough. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well considering Microsoft donated more to the Democrats, I would say it's fairly safe to say Microsoft has two agents.

    8. Re:Jesus. Buying votes isn't enough. by HBI · · Score: 1

      So unless someone was stupid enough to buy at a price peak, they shouldn't have lost anything.

      But you know as well as I do that a lot of people were that stupid, or bought it on the downside since March 2000.

      Glad you did well with it.

      --
      HBI's Law: Frequency of calling others Nazis is directly correlated with the likelihood of the accuser being Communist.
    9. Re:Jesus. Buying votes isn't enough. by Reziac · · Score: 1

      Even if they bought it on the downside, what with the latest split, they should at least be breaking even (unless they dumped it at the first little price dip), 100 shares at $50 being worth no different than 200 shares at $25. And price hasn't changed significantly since the latest split (gone up a little).

      Yep, so far it's done okay for me, tho I sure would have liked it to keep doubling in value every year or two, like it had been before :)

      I didn't buy any other tech stocks, tho, because so bloody few actually had any value. I don't consider a pile of VC but no product to have value!

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
  8. And... by blackmonday · · Score: 0

    In other news, Mr Gates declared all Microsoft Software is now "Donationware" and has set up a PayPal account for Microsoft.

  9. Does this ever happen? by ascalon · · Score: 2, Funny

    I wish there were more situations where I had so much money I had to give it away just to keep it managable.

  10. Damned if They Do .... by tealover · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Why shouldn't Gates earn dividends on his shares? His dividend payment would be proportionate to the amount of shares he owns.

    I guess certain people have to find any excuse to attack the man.

    --
    -- You see, there would be these conclusions that you could jump to
    1. Re:Damned if They Do .... by yerricde · · Score: 0, Troll

      Why should one person control so much wealth?

      --
      Will I retire or break 10K?
    2. Re:Damned if They Do .... by common_sence · · Score: 1

      Just because you don't have it, doesn't make it wrong for someone else to. What would you propose, the government arbitrarily take what it deems to be excessive? Regardless of what you may think of the man, the company, or their business practices, the fact remains that MS made that money and as long as the board approves the payout, the cash he gets from dividends is his to do with as he pleases. If you owned MS stock, the cash would be yours to do with as you pleased.

      --
      sig? No thanks, I don't smoke.
    3. Re:Damned if They Do .... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That money was illegally obtained. The economy might be noticeably different if the IT budgets of virtually all American companies had been 20% bigger for the last 10 years, and Microsoft's software had been better, because they were competeing and under the gun. Compared to that this is a bone tossed to us to keep us meek and greatful and make sure we vote for Bush again.

    4. Re:Damned if They Do .... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because wealth isnt a zero sum game. Bill having $10bil doesnt mean someone else has $10bil less.

      He *created* $10bil, and he's using large chunks of it to immunize children and other charitable causes.

      If you just decide to take away/redistribute the wealth of anyone making a significant sum (say, over $10mil) then rather than spreading a significant amount around, you'll kill off the production of even greater wealth, and the good things it brings.

    5. Re:Damned if They Do .... by willtsmith · · Score: 1

      This is like the "nature vs nuture" argument.

      However, in general wealth is MOSTLY a zero sum game. At least in our economy it is.

      When everybody generates wealth and shares it, yes the wealth level goes up. When a small percentage of people hog the wealth along with the means of producing and moving wealth, the overall wealth level goes down. By hogging capital, you make everybody else less productive.

      Those who hold the copiously overwhelming share of wealth use it mostly to get MORE wealth. We call that investment. They are pretty much ALL greedy, only truly greedy people collect that type of wealth in the first place. When prospects for investment returns go bad, the wealthy withdraw their wealth and lock it away along with all the captial resources necessary to produce wealth.

      At the end of this vicious cycle you get ... a fuedal economy typified by the middle ages and the 1920s. So, no supply side (Voodoo economics according to Dubayas DADDY) economics are empty and ultimately just stupid. Those of you who disagree, try making a supply side business plan to a venture capitalist.

      REAGANOMIC SYNCOPHANT:
      Yes, we are going to bottle hazardous chemicals and sell them as a novelty item.

      VENTURE CAPITALIST:
      But who would by such a woefully dangerous product. Not even our slick pathological liars on Madison Ave. could spin that one.

      REAGONOMIC SYNCHOPHANT:
      It doesn't matter, keynsian economics tells us that supply creates it's own demand.

      VENTURE CAPITALIST:
      Of course, here's $100 million dollars.

      REAGONOMIC SYNCHOPHANT:
      We may need another $50 million in six months.

      VC: Why? Isn't $100 million enough?

      RS: Research indicates that the market will harbor initial skepticism for accepting supplies of novelty toxic waste.

      VC: So, we shouldn't invest then.

      RS: No, you see by Keynsian methods, a greater supply will only increase demands. We have to have a great enough supply in order to overcome initial public skepticism.

      VC: Won't greater supplies only drive down the prices? Won't that make recovering our investment HARDER???

      RS: Naw, they call it Voodoo, but it's really quite sound. Since a greater supply only creates a greater demand, it's actually a self balancing equation. Well, that and we will set up sham organizations to make two-way transactions and set prices artificially high once we overcome consumer skepticism. Heck, look at Enron ;-

      Investment can accelerate the production of wealth but it not a means to an end. Empowered consumers are 99% of the equation. Greedy SOBs are impedements to the well being of society. Without their work and consumption the whole of US society would fall apart in a matter of hours.

      Thats WHY it is CORRECT for the wealthy to pay A LOT MORE. The wealth was borne of the backs of regular people. There hording is a primary indication that they're not treating people right and sharing the spoils of production. Either pay it up front, or the great democratic equalizer will do it for you.

      At least in time when our government isn't dominate by elitist corporate Fuedalists. Examples 1916-1930, 1994-present.

      --
      -------- -------- Support Wesley Clark for president!!!
    6. Re:Damned if They Do .... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >However, in general wealth is MOSTLY a zero sum game.
      >At least in our economy it is.

      So that's why the US has one of the highest per capita GDPs in the world? Face it, wealth is NOT a zero-sum game, it's a cop-out for morons who grew up in households with ex-hippies and other socialists indoctrinating them. OTOH, if it is indeed a zero-sum game, then I'd love to see the proof, none of which has been forthcoming from the left.

    7. Re:Damned if They Do .... by anthony_dipierro · · Score: 1

      Face it, wealth is NOT a zero-sum game

      So why doesn't the government just print $1 billion for each of us? The per capita GDP would soar!

    8. Re:Damned if They Do .... by anthony_dipierro · · Score: 1

      Exactly. Bill Gates is 100,000 times better of a person than I am. He obviously deserves 100,000 times as much money.

    9. Re:Damned if They Do .... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Platform lock-in via proprietary file formats.
      It's a good enough reason to hate that man.

    10. Re:Damned if They Do .... by mr3038 · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Bill Gates is 100,000 times better of a person than I am. He obviously deserves 100,000 times as much money.

      Money != quality. And I think one should compare the earned amounts on logarithmic scale. Lets see, log_10(100000) = 5 so I guess BillG is 5 times better businessman than you're. Of course, if you select lower base for that logarithm, the multiplier gets larger but it should stay below 100 anyway.

      The reason I believe a logarithmic scale should be used is that once you've X dollars, it much easier to invest that money to get X*2 dollars, after you invest that, you have (X*2)*2 dollars instead of (X*2)+X dollars, and so on and so on...

      The only thing that I have to wonder is how come BillG only needs to invest on MSFT and it just happens to become largest corporation of all? Pure luck?

      So, BillG gets 1.18 billion dollars in dividend - but what does that really mean? He's soon 50 years old and, lets face it, he'll probably live for another 30 years. If he didn't have any other money and he had to live with that money for the rest of his life you could spend only 107688 dollars per day ($1.18e9/30/365.25). I could live with that, but let's remember that that's only one diviend and not his whole wealth!

      --
      _________________________
      Spelling and grammar mistakes left as an exercise for the reader.
    11. Re:Damned if They Do .... by Alsee · · Score: 1

      Of course, if you select lower base for that logarithm, the multiplier gets larger but it should stay below 100 anyway

      No, I get a multiplier of 100.15.

      P.S.
      I always do all my work in base 1.12183 (the fourteeth root of five).

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    12. Re:Damned if They Do .... by anthony_dipierro · · Score: 1

      Money != quality.

      I know. I was being sarcastic. Money == Money. That's about it.

      And I think one should compare the earned amounts on logarithmic scale.

      Sure. But that's the whole point of progressive taxation. If $1 billion is only 5 times as much as $10,000, then I'm sure gates won't mind as much if we tax him at a significantly higher rate. I mean, it's all a big game (once you get out of the poverty level, anyway). Why shouldn't Gates earn dividends on his shares? I think a better question is why should he?

      The only thing that I have to wonder is how come BillG only needs to invest on MSFT and it just happens to become largest corporation of all? Pure luck?

      Look, I'm not a Bill Gates basher. I think he's made some great innovations in the area of Operating Systems. He's also an excellent businessman. And of course some of it is luck, and some of it is that he started out with enough money to take the risks he's been forced to take. He's made some dirty moves through Microsoft and in his personal decisions, but most of them have been legal, and the system has punished him (IMO too lightly) for the illegal ones.

      What's happened has happened. Bill Gates has lots and lots of money. Some of us have a little, and others have none. That's not an attack, it's just the simple truth.

    13. Re:Damned if They Do .... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      bill gate$
      has all but openly declared war in linux!

  11. Hopefully it'll be trend. by eidechse · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It'd be nice to see dividends once again be the main way most people expect to make money with stocks. Especially tech stocks. Focusing on the worth and stability of a company is a good thing. IMO, building money over time through dividends is more practical (read: safer) for small time investors than speculation.

    1. Re:Hopefully it'll be trend. by GigsVT · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Well ultimately any stock has no real value other than dividends and future dividends.

      Think about it.

      --
      I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.
    2. Re:Hopefully it'll be trend. by Rude+Turnip · · Score: 1

      ...and the possibility of appreciation in market value and selling the shares for a profit...and the possibility of being acquired - typically at a nice premium for control. Of course, I'm also the type that would like dividends.

    3. Re:Hopefully it'll be trend. by Cederic · · Score: 1


      Plus a certain thing called 'shareholders equity' on the balance sheet. Although that links in with the possibility of being acquired.

    4. Re:Hopefully it'll be trend. by Beliskner · · Score: 1
      Well ultimately any stock has no real value other than dividends and future dividends
      and the possibility that there'll be a hostile takeover or you'll become a receiver
      --
      A caveman dreams of being us, the incalculable power and riches. We dream of being Q, then what?
    5. Re:Hopefully it'll be trend. by f97tosc · · Score: 1

      It'd be nice to see dividends once again be the main way most people expect to make money with stocks

      Well a company can do 2 things with profits.

      1) Give it to the shareholders

      2) Reinvest it in the company, so that they can do more of 1) in the future

      The decision rule is (or should be) that if you think that reinvesting it gives a greater payoff than average interest/ or other stock, then you do 2, otherwise 1.

      Doing a lot of 1) tells the market that MS does not see a lot of growth. They can keep making money the way things are, but they don't see themselves getting much bigger.

      THere is nothing wrong or unstable about reinvesting money in a company, it is a sign of growth and larger dividends in the future.

      But I agree with you that it is crazy how many people think they can outcompete the market by specutalive trading. But that has nothing to do with current vs future dividends, it is just whether you think you have a better predictions of future earnings than everybody else.

      Tor

    6. Re:Hopefully it'll be trend. by MrWa · · Score: 2, Informative
      ultimately stock has no real value, sure. Just like baseball cards have no real value.

      The stockmarket - when you take out dividends - is really nothing more than a large scale baseball card trading scene. The higher the popularity a stock has and the lower the supply, the higher the price. As the company which the stock represents performs poorly, the stock price goes down. Why? Does owning the stock of a poorly performing company have any bearing on the stock? No...just a poorly performing player has no bearing on the intrinsic value of a baseball card.

      The real purpose of stocks are completely lost on the normal guy. Those with large perecentages of stock, though, are actually able to act as the company owner which they are. The dividends are a small percentage of the stock price and really play no large role in determining what a stock is worth, other than a few percentage points.

      The scary part is that, even if you realize that the entire thing is a sham, you have to keep the wool covered over your eyes because the entire world know it. Imagine you are trapped in the Matrix, you realize it, but you can't get and you can't do any cool bullettime moves...

  12. Didn't the govt just make dividend income TaxFree? by risk-dev · · Score: 2, Interesting

    If so, wouldn't bill get those billions without having to hand a few hundred million over to Uncle Sam?

  13. He's a MAJOR shareholder by SHEENmaster · · Score: 1

    The owner of a company has much more power than the manager, even if it isn't excersized as often.

    --
    You can't judge a book by the way it wears its hair.
    1. Re:He's a MAJOR shareholder by messiuh · · Score: 0

      He only owns 20%. He isn't literally the owner.

  14. Squeeze that Lemon by idiotnot · · Score: 0

    Get the cash out before the next round of lawsuits.

  15. better way by myoohn · · Score: 2, Funny

    Yikes! there is a better way to reduce that cash pile. Give away 10 billion to people on the planet.6billion/10billion=1.6$ so, microsoft should starts giving out 1.6$ to everyone. That way, they may even start to love Bill Gates. wait no, considering their crappy software costs ten fold more...eh

    1. Re:better way by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      6 billion divided by 10 billion isn't 1.6 ..... it's 0.6

    2. Re:better way by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They should spend it on basic math classes for the clueless, apparently.

    3. Re:better way by PetWolverine · · Score: 1

      Tenfold more? You mean it costs $16? That's highway robbery!

      Oh, wait, it's an operating system. I thought we were talking about a bag of peanuts.

      --
      I found the meaning of life the other day, but I had write-only access.
  16. Re:The Preview Button is God. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The preview won't save you, bitch!
    It's "accountant!"

  17. Here's an idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

    secure the damn OS.

    Thanks.

    1. Re:Here's an idea by Goalie_Ca · · Score: 1

      I modded you up. I had to esp since this was the first god damn thing that came to my mind.

      --

      ----
      Go canucks, habs, and sens!
    2. Re:Here's an idea by bad_fx · · Score: 2, Funny

      ....but where would they get the rest of the money they'd need to do that?

    3. Re:Here's an idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Only this is evidance of what this company does best, and it ain't writing software.

    4. Re:Here's an idea by fucksl4shd0t · · Score: 1

      I modded you up. I had to esp since this was the first god damn thing that came to my mind.

      Well, you sure in the fuck didn't do him any good by posting after modding him up, since posting in the same forum that you mod in cancels your mods. Sorry, try again.

      --
      Like what I said? You might like my music
    5. Re:Here's an idea by Kufat · · Score: 1

      I modded you up

      I modded this guy down. He's so stupid, I mean, everyone knows your moderations get cancelled if you post to a discussion you'd previously moderated...

      ...D'oh.

    6. Re:Here's an idea by Alsee · · Score: 1

      secure the damn OS.
      They are hot at work on this right now. However they have a rather peculiar definition of "secure". You need to read their comments and press realses extremely carefully to spot it though. When they say "secure" they usualy mean that are securing it AGAINST the owner of the machine. That's what Trusted Computing and TCPA and Palladium/NGSCB are all about. They are securing the machine against "owner tampering", where "owner tampering" means anything they don't want you doing with your own machine.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
  18. It's not $10 billion per person... by Andrevan · · Score: 2, Informative

    ...it's a dollar a share. It's a lot of money for Gates because he owns billions of Microsoft shares. But for your average Microsoft stockholder it's only a fraction of a fraction as much. Nobody's "buying off" anyone. Dividends happen not infrequently, and as it happens Microsoft had a lot of excess cash to divide.

    --
    "All it takes to fly is to hurl yourself at the ground... and miss." - Douglas Adams
    1. Re:It's not $10 billion per person... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Let me rephrase that last sentence for you.

      Dividends happen frequently, and as it happens microsoft's monetary department found that it might benifit from rewarding their investors.

  19. Re:The Preview Button is God. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    > Or an "accountaint" - I hear they're more professional than "accountains."

    How lame. If you're going to correct someone for a single typo at least get it right.

    Accountant. A taint is the space between your nut sack and asshole.

  20. Alternative uses of the money by vrmlguy · · Score: 1
    The company, recently under pressure to distribute some of its cash, is also considering stock buybacks, a major acquisition and higher ordinary dividends, the report on (http://ft.com) said.

    Let's see, which would Microsoft most likely buy?

    • Apple
    • IBM
    • Redhat
    • SCO
    • Cmdr Taco
    --
    Nothing for 6-digit uids?
    1. Re:Alternative uses of the money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, they've already bought SCO and Cmdr Taco... IBM and RedHat are very antagonistic towards them, so that leaves Apple as the only likely purchase.

    2. Re:Alternative uses of the money by reallocate · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Dunno about the others, but I doubt Microsoft can afford to buy IBM. IBM reported $20.1 billion in revenue for the first quarter. That puts it at more than $80 billion in revenue for the calendar year.

      By comparison, Microsoft's revenue for the quarter was $7.1 billion.

      --
      -- Slashdot: When Public Access TV Says "No"
    3. Re:Alternative uses of the money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      stock buybacks
      I guess this means buying stock from Microsoft itself.

    4. Re:Alternative uses of the money by motox · · Score: 2, Funny

      Hmm i guess cmdr Taco. I have a big visual studio .net banner right on top of the story :)

    5. Re:Alternative uses of the money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They could buy california!

    6. Re:Alternative uses of the money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I hope you realize stock buybacks mean buying back shares of their own stock.

    7. Re:Alternative uses of the money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't think CmdrTaco's soul will be purchased until BadPerl.NET is finally released.

    8. Re:Alternative uses of the money by borgdows · · Score: 1

      Maybe they'll retry to acquire Nintendo ??
      this time Nintendo's share is much lower :(

    9. Re:Alternative uses of the money by donutello · · Score: 1

      Revenue is never a measure for how much it would cost to buy a company. For a public company, that measure is Market Capitalization.

      IBM's Market Cap on Friday was 145.1 Bil
      MSFT's was 284.5 Bil

      Also, when you try to take over a company, you would typically add about a 25% premium on that.

      However, you're right about MS not being able to buy IBM with $10 Billion (or even $40 Billion) but for the wrong reasons.

      --
      Mmmm.. Donuts
    10. Re:Alternative uses of the money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And relative market cap (asuming both are similar types of public ocmpanies) is primarily moved by earnings. MS is a cash generating behemoth. IBM has a better revenue stream, but MS has higher profits and cash flow.

      MS could always try to acquire a 10% stake in ibm, getting a board seat or two, and that could seriously screw things up for the world. Thankfully, theres a little thing called the Justice Department standing in the way of such activities.

  21. Re:Linus by The+Dobber · · Score: 2, Funny


    What profits

    20....15...10...5...submit

  22. Huh? Regular dividend? by ComputerSlicer23 · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Hmmm, the poster says, "the regular 8 cents a share dividend". Uhh, didn't Microsoft just pay it's first dividend in the last 12 months. I don't believe they've paid out more then 4 of them, I'm reasonably sure they have only made one dividend payment in their entire corporate history. I'm too lazy to go track down the Slashdot story or the SEC filing on the matter.

    Now that there is no dividend tax and Microsoft is no longer a growth company, there isn't any good reason not to pay the stockholders. When there was a dividend tax, Microsoft could argue that by keeping the money, they could put it to more efficient use to build stockholder value in terms of share value, rather then giving some of it to the stockholder, and some of it for the gov't. The other point is, that Microsoft is done growing by leaps and bounds. They don't need any more capital to grow, or smooth out cashflow issues, or any other standard business reason why a company normally keeps money cash on hand.

    I believe the shareholders are starting to demand it, as that's the one way the shareholders can get their money out, without having the price go up or down. It's a sign that Microsoft is turning into an old school established company, like so many others, rather then being a hot commodity stock that creates value, because the company keeps growing, and building up more value.

    Kirby

  23. News for Nerds?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Really....what relevance is a Microsoft dividend story to slashdot readers?? Anyone who wants to keep up on financial news have many sites that carry that news. What's interesting about this to nerds?

    But for slashdot to carry this, and then spin into some sinister scheme by Bill Gates is pretty low. Is there no MS bashing that can't be put into slashdot?

    1. Re:News for Nerds?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because it will be the last dividend Microsoft ever pay, that is quite big news actually.

  24. Microsoft vs. Sun by darnok · · Score: 4, Interesting

    There was an interview with Scott McNealy in one of the Linux magazines a few months back. In it, he said (paraphrasing) "if Sun ever pays out a sizeable dividend, it means we've run out of R&D ideas and the company's in trouble". I don't remember the exact wording, but that's the gist of it.

    Essentially, Sun's policy is to reinvest all profits back into the company. Putting it another way, they're banking on being able to keep growing the company indefinitely and thus keeping shareholders happy solely through upward movement in the share price.

    It seems that this may have been Microsoft's policy as well until now. Conspiracy theories aside, it'd be interesting to know what changed to make them issue a big dividend after all these years.

    1. Re:Microsoft vs. Sun by jmcnally · · Score: 1

      hmm... $46B in the bank. Take away $10B dist to shareholders makes $36B in the bank. Material change in circumstance? No. There is no way MS's cash hoard could be used responsibly in its entirety for R&D unless they are interested in putting a man on Mars. Hey, come to think of it that's not a bad idea...

    2. Re:Microsoft vs. Sun by darnok · · Score: 4, Interesting

      They *could* use huge chunks of that to buy out other companies.

      On a flight yesterday, I was reading about a meeting at Ford UK several years ago where they were trying to work out how to invest their huge wad of cash at the time. One of the suggestions that was raised was to buy a company called NCP (National Car Parks) in its entirety. NCP is/was the largest owner/operator of car parks in city areas in the UK.

      Once Ford owned NCP, they could then either charge a premium for non-Ford car owners to park their cars there, offer much cheaper parking for Ford cars, or prevent non-Ford cars from parking there altogether. The thinking was that, as the primary value of a car for many people included the ability to park it somewhere in the city, this would encourage people to purchase their next car from Ford.

      I'm not sure what the anti-monopoly laws are like in the UK, but given straight supply/demand drives the costs for parking in privately-owned car parks and alternative car parks do exist (albeit with probably not enough capacity to accept every non-Ford car), it might have been very difficult to stop Ford from doing this, or new laws might have needed to have been drafted specifically to prevent it. If necessary, Ford could potentially have offered ridiculously low costs for Ford-only parking at NCP, run NCP at a huge loss, and still made a bucket load on increased car sales.

      For whatever reason, Ford didn't buy NCP so anything else is speculation.

      Anyway, coming back to the point, there are valid D ("development") uses for absurd quantities of money such as this, and I'm sure MS would consider zillions of options for business growth before giving away such a huge stash.

    3. Re:Microsoft vs. Sun by LinuxXPHybrid · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I'm sure that Microsoft plans to invest billions of dollars in R&D, but they currently have $45 billion in bank. Microsoft is a stunningly successful company (financially at least) and $45 billion is an exceptional amount of money. Why they decided to spread $10 billion? I don't know exactly why, but the followings are my guess:

      1. Now that antitrust law suits mess are getting cleaned up, they can safely spend $10 billion out of $45 billion; nothing much to worry about any longer.

      2. After all, they need to make shareholders happy. What better way to make them happy other than giving them cash?

      2.1. Many shareholders probably believe that the company does not need to keep $45 billion in bank.

      3. Up until now, for people like Bill Gates and Steven Ballmer, Microsoft was life. Their lives were all about Microsoft. Now that they have family (kids, etc.), they decide to take a part of the result of their work.

      4. I'm sure that they have plans for acquisitions and what have you, but don't need $45 billion, $35 billion is enough.

    4. Re:Microsoft vs. Sun by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "but don't need $45 billion, $35 billion is enough."

      Can I quote you on that?

    5. Re:Microsoft vs. Sun by more+fool+you · · Score: 1

      easy to talk about growing the company indefinitely when you've got a microscopic share of the entire computer hardware (and even smaller software) market. MS, on the other hand...

    6. Re:Microsoft vs. Sun by financialguy · · Score: 1
      It's true that there are always places to invest money that will result in a profit. But the question is, how does this return compare to the return you're receiving rom the rest of your existing business. One way of looking at it is ROE- Return On Equity.

      If Microsoft has (these aren't real numbers), say, $100 billion in equity, and they earn a $7 billion profit, their ROE is 7%. Now let's say they look at a new investment opportunity, and its expected return is say, 5%. By investing in this, they'll lower the ROE of the company as a whole, even though this new opportunity would provide a profit.

      Normally (that is, the heady days of the bubble aside), when the ROE of a company starts to suffer, that stock starts to decrease in price for obvious reasons. A big reason that a mature/maturing company would pay a dividend is to get rid of that extra equity by giving it back to shareholders. Remember, ROE is Return divided by Equity, so you want to shrink the denominator (equity) to make the number go up (or stay the same if your numerator is shrinking). This comes back to the comment that was attributed to Scott McNealy about what it would mean for Sun to declare a dividend. He really was stating a simple financial truth.

    7. Re:Microsoft vs. Sun by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Steve Ballmer has kids??? That's a scary thought.

    8. Re:Microsoft vs. Sun by TheMidget · · Score: 1
      There is no way MS's cash hoard could be used responsibly in its entirety for R&D unless they are interested in putting a man on Mars. Hey, come to think of it that's not a bad idea...

      I think I know about which man you are thinking... ;-) Dream on, $36B would unfortunately be enough to take care of the return flight as well...

    9. Re:Microsoft vs. Sun by Iron+Fusion · · Score: 1

      If Sun is planning to *never* pay a dividend, doesn't that mean that their stock has zero inherent value? Basically, a stock that never pays dividends only has value through the shared delusion of the investors. Kind of shows how dodgy the modern stock market is.

  25. Exactly by Mod+Me+God · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Had MS not paid out a dividend they would have retained (allowing for various tax differences in what they do with the money) this much more as free cash (i.e., capital), hence the firm would increase in value via an increase in the share price.

    To realise this gain in cash, investors would just sell shares. Or even, to maintain parity, MS would issue shares to existing shareholders pro rata who could then sell them if they wished.

    The fact there is a dividend or not matters little unless we go into the intricies of corporate finance theory.

    --
    --

    FreeNET user? Comfortable with the adverse selection?
  26. Profits? by danny256 · · Score: 1

    Gives out a much larger portion of the profits, and not just to pad his own wallet.

    That's true, but giving out 100% of $0.00 isn't exactly the same thing :)

  27. ya know what amzes me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    is how QUICKLY the anti-micheal and tim posts get modded down. its almost like tim or micheal are waiting for them.

    1. Re:ya know what amzes me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      michael probably wrote a script, something like:
      if (post.contains("michael" and "fag")) post.mod(troll)

  28. Re:Didn't the govt just make dividend income TaxFr by mcg1969 · · Score: 5, Informative

    No, dividends are taxed at the (now reduced) capital gains rate, instead of the ordinary income rate.

  29. Re:Linus by Zork+the+Almighty · · Score: 0

    Did I miss something ? What was the "???" ?

    --

    In Soviet America the banks rob you!
  30. Accoun-taints by yerricde · · Score: 1, Interesting

    A taint is the space between your nut sack and asshole.

    No, the area between frontal private parts and the anus is the "choad".

    An "accoun-taint" is one who "taints" (alters deceptively) the books. See "taint" and the poster child.

    --
    Will I retire or break 10K?
    1. Re:Accoun-taints by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There's more than one dictionary.

    2. Re:Accoun-taints by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > No, the area between frontal private parts and the anus is the "choad".

      So is using the term "bling-bling" for jewelry incorrect because it is not in Websters? Slang isn't always, if ever, in the dictionary, otherwise it's not really slang. Taint, grundle, choad, it's all good.

    3. Re:Accoun-taints by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > it's all good.

      I hate that phrase. It's people like you with your wishy-washy-tolerate-everything nonsense who are responsible for our decaying civilization's descent into hedonism barbarism and savagery.

      It's NOT 'all good'. Some things are good, and some things are BAD.

  31. Re:Plofiting over linux's shittiness! by usotsuki · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    IHBT, IHL, HAND, but I have to rebut.

    1 It will soon be illegal because of SCO Maybe, maybe not, we don't know that for sure.
    2 GPL is anti-capitalist BSD/Linux is a concept where only the kernel is GPL'd. There are systems based on BSD/Linux. Plus there is the NetLSD Project.
    3 Its hard to use ...its hard to use what? Oh, you mean it's hard to use. Not any harder than DOS+Windows 3.1.
    4 Its unstable Oh, and Windows isn't? I've only had Linux kernel-panic once EVER, and Windows 98SE crashes daily.
    5 The software sucks Opinion, not fact.
    6 The UI is inconsistent So is Windows'.
    7 You have to tipe commands (type) Oh? You haven't run X Window haven't you?
    8 It doesn't run Windows programs Oh? (sp?)
    9 You cannot buy a computer with Linux I take it you don't look at wal-mart.com.
    10 Linux companies are going out of bussiness Not all of them, look at Red Hat. And SCOrdure :
    11 RMS is a communist arsehole Maybe this has to do with the GNU userland, but nothing to do with Linux.
    12 High total cost of ownership Compared to paying $250 per machine every couple years for a copy of LoseDoze? If you know where to get it you can get it LEGALLY for free or at least well under $100.
    13 Too many distros Maybe, but the answer is to stick to one.
    14 Un-american Oh foo off!
    15 Its not from microsoft That's a Good Thing, you know.
    16 Poor security track record Compared to what? Windows gets hax0red more often than Linux. Besides, Hed Rat 8.0 comes with a firewall standard.
    17 Anyone and their 14 year old brother can add (buggy) code maybe, but it won't go into the main source tree if it's buggy.
    18 Even BeOS was better Opinion, not fact!
    19 Eugenia doesn't like it And?
    20 It SUCKS!!!!!!!!!!!!! If you had actually used Linux, you wouldn't have said that.

    BTW, you want split pane, use KDE and Konqueror.

    Now GoAT!

    -uso.

    --
    Dreams, dreams, don't doubt dreams, dreaming children's dreaming dreams. Sailor Moon SS
  32. Re:Didn't the govt just make dividend income TaxFr by risk-dev · · Score: 1, Interesting

    How much of a reduction? How much will major stockholders stand to gain because of this being done now instead of 2-3 months ago?

  33. You must be new here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The editor who posted this, Michael, has a sick interest in microsoft. Although he openly professes his hatered for the company he posts any and all articles about it, even irrelivant ones like this. Michael, if you're reading this, please let go of the hate, Microsoft dosn't care and you're only hurting yourself and those around you.

  34. No conclusion jumping. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You can review every story submitted to Slashdot, and in 99.9999% of any comment in the story summary dealing with MS, it is always of a bashing nature. In fact, the exeedingly rare times a MS bash has been forgetten to be included, it is noted in the comments by the readers.

    To profer that Slashdot stories are objective when dealing with MS is to be either 1) naive, 2) a liar, or 3) smoking the pot.

    1. Re:No conclusion jumping. by dabootsie · · Score: 1

      You can review every story submitted to Slashdot, and in 99.9999% of any comment in the story summary dealing with MS, it is always of a bashing nature.

      You're just making that shit up. I just checked a few and there are plenty of pro-MS or just plain neutral posts. The loud zealots on either side are really visible, but it's really not a significant portion of the posts.

    2. Re:No conclusion jumping. by caouchouc · · Score: 1

      When I read "/.-centric", I thought "slashdot community", which is much more along the lines of the readers than the editors.
      The editors are biased and rarely read the submissions in depth, but that's why I tune out the commentary (both editor and submitter) in the summaries and go straight to the article. Provided it's not slashdotted; in which case it's off to the comments for a mirror.

  35. Other uses for the money. by lewiz · · Score: 1

    I am almost shocked to see this. They have $47b lying around in a bank (indeed, making interest) and, well, how many bugs and security problems?

    I know that generally more developers hinders development (after a certain thresthold), but surely it would be possible to employ more bug-fixer-type developers to resolve these issues, provide diffs to the main developers and then everyone is happy? In fact, with, say, $5b (wow, that's more than required, I'm sure :) they could rework the whole security of Windows ground-up.

    1. Re:Other uses for the money. by wannasleep · · Score: 1

      In theory, you are right. However, reality is not what really happens, but what people think it is happening. In other words, it is much cheaper for them to make people believe that window$ is secure than really making it secure. It is a short sighted policy, but when it comes to security, M$ can't see beyond its pocket....so we have the trustworthy computing, etc. etc.

    2. Re:Other uses for the money. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They already spent $1B securing Windows code to produce Windows 2003.

    3. Re:Other uses for the money. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      fordhead fordhead rolly polly fordhead eat them up yummmm.

  36. Damn it! by Kaeru+the+Frog · · Score: 4, Funny

    Now I have to go find my Railroad Tycoon CD. Now thanks to you, my three-day weekend has just became drastically shorter.

    1. Re:Damn it! by Sri+Lumpa · · Score: 1

      " Now I have to go find my Railroad Tycoon CD. Now thanks to you, my three-day weekend has just became drastically shorter."

      If your room wasn't such a mess it wouldn't take so long to find that Railroad Tycoon CD.

      --
      "The obvious mathematical breakthrough would be development of an easy way to factor large prime numbers." Bill Gates,
  37. good idea by tomlord · · Score: 3, Informative

    There's exactly two legitimate bases for stock valuations: one is dividends, the other is a cycle of systematic buy-backs and new issues.

    Absent either of those two options, what have you got? You've got someone saying to the market "Hey, loan us some money. We never intend to repay, but perhaps you can sell our note to someone else for a profit."

    1. Re:good idea by wildwood · · Score: 1
      There's exactly two legitimate bases for stock valuations: one is dividends, the other is a cycle of systematic buy-backs and new issues.


      I like to think that book value per share is pretty damn legitimate. Or do you know something Warren Buffett doesn't know? :P

      --
      normal(adj)- people who don't sit on slashdot all day wondering why everyone else isn't building robots [DECS]
    2. Re:good idea by kahei · · Score: 1


      ffs learn something about finance...

      --
      Whence? Hence. Whither? Thither.
    3. Re:good idea by smallpaul · · Score: 1

      You are buying ownership in the company. Among other things, this means that you could sell your share if the company is bought out. Alternately there could be a buyback or dividend but it doesn't have to be "systematic" or regular. It could happen only once in a blue moon (or literally only once) and that would be okay. Investors should start getting nervous if the company is sitting on a bunch of cash poorly invested (e.g. sitting in a bank, making poor competitive purchases, etc.). It might make more sense to return the cash to the investors and let them choose their own investment starategy. That's what is happening with Microsoft: presumably because they can't figure out how to invest the money in a manner that is clearly better than what the investors would do on their own.

    4. Re:good idea by HuguesT · · Score: 1

      So there are really at least three bases, right?

  38. Standard Oil by BigBadBri · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Reminds me of the period in the late 19th century when Standard Oil paid no dividends (it was such a poor company) until Rockefeller finally got full control, and the tax regime was right, so Rockefeller sucked huge amounts of capital out before the anti-trust case.

    Bill's waited antil after the anti-trust case, but since he's ignoring it anyway, he's not likely to give a shit.

    Good move, Bill - you are now, officially, a Robber Baron

    --
    oh brave new world, that has such people in it!
  39. Re:The Preview Button is God. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    He corrected himself, and screwed it up.

  40. Obligatory Simpsons Reference by Raul654 · · Score: 1
    --


    To make laws that man cannot, and will not obey, serves to bring all law into contempt.
    --E.C. Stanton
  41. Interesting development by Pettifogger · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Hmmm... anyone wonder why Microsoft is really doing this? No, it's not Gates' greed; he has enough and he knows it. This is a plan to ensure the long-term stability of the company. Linux is starting to get more press and is being increasing seen as a viable alternative. I think this is a strategy to increase investor confidence and tie the company's financial rewards more to the public. Everyone knows what the profit margin is on their products and that the corporation itself keeps almost all of that. I think this is a subtle way of saying that they're going to start sharing their big income.

    And consider this: a lot of companies, institutions, foundations, trusts, etc. regularly buy securities for endowments and other investment purposes. Now, if Microsoft stock is a good performer, it would give Microsoft an "in" with those companies and institutions for software sales.

    No matter what you think of Microsoft (and for the record, I do not have a single Microsoft product under my roof) this is a smart business move. And I might add that Linux cannot compete on these grounds, either. Smart move... seriously.

    --

    IAAL

    1. Re:Interesting development by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, I don't wonder and honestly could care less about Bill Gates. Do people actually find this interesting?

      Thank you and please drive thru.

  42. Re:Didn't the govt just make dividend income TaxFr by tomlord · · Score: 1

    > If so, wouldn't bill get those billions without
    > having to hand a few hundred million over to
    > Uncle Sam

    And won't he, most likely, dump a hell of a lot of that money into his family's philanthropic NPO?

    I wonder how many small-town libraries will get a boost from this dividend.

    (I hate him as an overrated hacker and citizen-politician, but, so far, respect him as a rich celebrity.)

  43. Re:The Preview Button is God. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    err...

    any of you think the 'taint' at the end may have been deliberate?

    No?

    Go to the back of the class.

  44. Makes a lot of sense by tarquin_fim_bim · · Score: 1

    Milk the cow now she'll be dry in a year.

    1. Re:Makes a lot of sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually MS earned $10B on revenues of $30B last year, so the cow will not be dry for a long time to come.

  45. BWAH! :-) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    i'm sure you're right!

  46. Who Said $1 Per Share? by reallocate · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Where'd that "$1 per share" stuff come from? All the reports I've seen today speculate about an increase from 8 to 26 cents per share, max.

    But then, Slashdot could only troll about Gates taking 2 billion, not 10 billion. I'm sure it was just an editorial typo. Heh.

    --
    -- Slashdot: When Public Access TV Says "No"
    1. Re:Who Said $1 Per Share? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is going to be $1, but spread over four quarters, so around $0.25/share per quarter for one year.

    2. Re:Who Said $1 Per Share? by LordKronos · · Score: 1

      Where'd that "$1 per share" stuff come from? All the reports I've seen today speculate about an increase from 8 to 26 cents per share, max.

      From the article: "Shareholders could receive the dividend in one payment or spread out over three or four quarters".
      So, maybe the 26 cent figure you saw was based on paying out roughly $1 per share spread over 4 quarters.

    3. Re:Who Said $1 Per Share? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Quite possible. The information contained in this article has after all been vetted or proxied through no less than seven sources that we are aware of on its way to you (see article):

      unnamed person ->
      France's Les Echos ->
      London's Financial Times ->
      Reuters ->
      boston.com ->
      Dreadnougat ->
      michael

    4. Re:Who Said $1 Per Share? by prockcore · · Score: 2, Informative

      Where'd that "$1 per share" stuff come from? All the reports I've seen today speculate about an increase from 8 to 26 cents per share, max.

      According to yahoo finance, MSFT is currently trading at 26.48 and has a market capital of 284.2 billion. So you divide the market cap by the trading price to get the number of shares.

      That's 10.7 billion shares. $10 billion distributed into 10.7 billion shares is roughly $1 per share.

      Gates had roughly 600 million shares before the split, so now he's got 1.2 billion shares or so. So he'll get around $1.2 billion from this.

    5. Re:Who Said $1 Per Share? by losretardadovaquero · · Score: 1

      There are 10 kinds of people in this world: those who can read binary and those who can't. ;)

  47. I'm not sure.. by Kwil · · Score: 1

    ..why you think anything must have changed.

    MS has reached pretty close to a market plateau here. One of the problems with having a monopoly is it means once you've saturated your market, there's really no competition to grow from.

    MS is reaching saturation, plus facing additional challenges via Linux etc.

    Or, to put it another way, since the stock doesn't have a ton of room to grow anymore, they better do something else to keep its value up. If MS stock value drops then the stock options, which they use to keep the employees happy at what would otherwise be mediocre wages, become much less valuable, and MS starts to lose employees to competitors. (Which in turn precipitates a faster stock-fall, etc.)

    Think about it, the economy is just starting to turn around, so by doing this large dividend now, they work to stop their employees getting twitchy as the market recovers.

    I'd be willing to bet you'd be able to expect substantial dividends from MS so long as the economy doesn't look to be slowing down. Once that happens, the dividends will drop because the employees will have fewer options.

    --

    That Jesus Christ guy is getting some terrible lag... it took him 3 days to respawn! -NJ CoolBreeze

    1. Re:I'm not sure.. by darnok · · Score: 1

      There's a few ways to look at MS' market saturation, and the best way forward.

      They can:
      - offer a big dividend
      - invest more in R&D, although $46b is probably going to push it
      - purchase other businesses, either as a way of extending their market saturation even further, locking it in even tighter, as loss leaders to sell more of their core product, and so on

      MS also has the big problem of how to retain their employees once the share price stops rising. Many/most of their people were enticed by very cheap share options, and relatively low salaries; many of these are now paper millionaires and need new enticements to stay on. Many others have watched the value of their options disappear as the MS share price stagnated, and now find themselves working for only a low salary. Hows does MS retain these guys?

      I suspect that paying a sizeable dividend will appease the paper millionaires to some point, although they'll now have a tax problem to deal with after they get their hefty dividend cheques. Those who've got relatively few shares (and a promise of wealth via MS share options that only pans out if the share price keeps rising) might not be so happy, and might decide that mediocre salaries aren't worth hanging around for. Remember that a lot of these guys may be extremely employable elsewhere, due to their MS product knowledge, and may not be facing long term unemployment if they decide to leave MS.

    2. Re:I'm not sure.. by GoofyBoy · · Score: 1

      I think you have it right on the head.

      This is going to get lost in the flood of "Bill Gates is Greedy!" posts but I think its going to be correct in 10 years.

      MS is a tech company. A couple of years ago people bought it because they expected it to grow. It is a growth stock.

      Now they don't know what to spend $10 B on and the best they can come up with is a dividend? This is proof that they are moving into a mature, slow growth stage. Not something that you would classify a high-tech growth stock.

      They are moving more into the region of stoggy old stocks. Not alot of growth but consitant money generation.

      The one thing I don't get is why didn't do a stock-buyback?

      --
      The surprise isn't how often we make bad choices; the surprise is how seldom they defeat us.
  48. You misunderstand. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In the reader comments of every story submitted, yes I see many non-MS-bashing comments made. But in the summary comments, the ones up above that the Slashdot editors are gatekeeper to, comments not bashing MS are rarer than Bill Clinton not wondering where to get his next blow job.

    1. Re:You misunderstand. by dabootsie · · Score: 1

      Summaries? I must've missed that bit for the abuse directed at the other poster.

      It really did look like your first post (I assume it's yours, anyway) was talking about the average user posting comments. As another poster wrote, the editors are, strangely enough, not that big a part of the slashdot community. The commentary tacked on to many articles is so pithy that I just skip over anything after the italics.

      They don't seem to even read the articles or check them over given the frequency of dupes & broken links. It's like they're scripts that post based on keyword hits and attach a randomly generated quip.

      In short, I tend not to care what they have to say. I'm here for the gems scattered throughout the comments. Hell, even the lumps of coal are good if they're funny.

    2. Re:You misunderstand. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The commentary tacked on to many articles is so pithy that I just skip over anything after the italics.

      Are you sure that pithy means what you think it does?

      Or am I just missing a little very dry irony?

  49. Make dividends open source! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny

    I think the Open Source developer community would benefit greatly if Microsoft made part of their cash stockpile available to them. It would permit them to utilize those funds in a fiscally responsible manner without tainting their scruples.

    This initiative would allow the major acquisitions of powerhouses such as SCO, Paint Shop Pro, multimedia studios, and of course Oracle.

    Which is nice.

  50. Re:Huh? Regular dividend? by ralphdaugherty · · Score: 2, Insightful


    I'd say the factors behind this are:

    1) M$ had an inordinate amount of money stashed away, pushing the limits of accounting rules for contingencies, earmarks for future projects, etc., but with being threatened with breakup it's hard to argue with what all contingencies they may have needed to consider.

    2) With settlement of the suit, that excuse went away. They have to pay out a dividend because the IRS says so.

    3) They held out (wink, wink IRS) until the Republicans reduced the dividend tax.

    4) Billg is probably just as glad about it anyway so he doesn't have to sell more stock for whatever reason he was selling it, presumably partially at least to fund his charities.

    rd

  51. It's the American Way by LumpyCartman · · Score: 1

    Gates has unsheathed his light sabre and is about to show the true power of the Force...Profit. That's how you get mind share with the PHB crowd. You won't see a multi-billion dollar dividend any time soon out of GNU/Marx/Mao/Linux.

  52. The first computer I bought came with DOS and CPM by NotQuiteReal · · Score: 1
    And I calculate that if I had bought Microsoft stock instead of that $2200 4.77Mhz pc (dual floppy, no HDD), I'd be a millionaire...

    P.S. At least I sold CPM (for $50, as I recall) and kept DOS.

    --
    This issue is a bit more complicated than you think.
  53. WE'RE /. AND WE CAN'T STOP TALKING ABOUT MS!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So it would seem, anyway. Is MS really that cool?

  54. umm..... by aggieben · · Score: 1

    if he makes $95 mil from $0.08 / share, then why would he make $1.13 bil from $1 / share???

    --
    Don't become a regular here, you will become retarded. -- Yoda the Retard
    1. Re:umm..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually he owns 1.18 billion shares. So if he gets $0.08/share then that equals $95 million. But if they pay out $1/share then thats 1.18 billion*$1 = $1.18 billion.

      Math is crazy like that.

    2. Re:umm..... by hpa · · Score: 1

      95/1130 * 1 = 0.084... close enough within rounding error.

    3. Re:umm..... by IWannaBeAnAC · · Score: 1

      95mil * 1 / 0.08 = 1187.5mil = 1.1875 billion. Not so far away from 1.13 billion, and I believe he's been selling stock recently. So 1.13 is quite plausible.

  55. Effects on the economy? by mr_rattles · · Score: 1

    Well I'm no economist so instead of trying to formulate an opinion I'll just ask: could this be beneficial to the economy?

    Erik

    1. Re:Effects on the economy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please see this post.

      Thanks.

    2. Re:Effects on the economy? by ralphdaugherty · · Score: 2, Insightful


      I'd say it would be spent by shareholders in a more direct way than the money is being used by being invested in liquid investments by M$, but even in liquid investments the money was funding short term loans of some type.

      On the other hand, maybe 40% go to Gates, Ballmer, Allen and a few other billionaires. In at least Gates case, he has been tending to donate his money overseas, so the full $10 bn definitely won't be spent here. A lot of his non-health donations I think tend to get spent back on M$ products and PC's, so some of his donations will end up back at M$.

      Also read today that over half of us non-billionares are saying in polls that they're spending tax refunds on paying bills, which isn't the new purchases that Republicans were looking for. On the other hand, in my opinion, paying bills frees up the credit limit to buy more anyway. Six of one, half a dozen of another.. :)

      rd

    3. Re:Effects on the economy? by puckhead · · Score: 1

      With the US GDP in the Trillions, 10 billion in liquidity is just bit better than a sharp stick in the eye. Still, it is better.

      --
      Watching Cowboy Bebop in my jammies, eating a bowl of Shreddies.
  56. your friend was a moron by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    you're twice the moron for believing that

    1. Re:your friend was a moron by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      shut up bill. get a damned account so we can modbomb you

  57. best way by dekashizl · · Score: 2, Funny

    What Microsoft should really do is host a T-Shirt design contest, where the winner gets three copies of the shirt they designed and a $10 billion credit at ThinkGeek.

  58. Re:Huh? Regular dividend? by dreadnougat · · Score: 0

    Sorry, I meant expected dividend... I hadn't slept yet :(

  59. Proposed new abbrevation for Microsoft.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    M$$$$$$$$$$

    PS. this is not ascii art!

  60. Not standard procedure in Railroad Tycoon 2 by Sagarian · · Score: 1

    Second Century... once you get to 1960s or so theres a dividend tax so you have to get dodgy accountants to inflate your income statement and then find a banker to lead follow-on public offerings of the stock!

  61. 15-0% by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    The divided taxation rate was reduced to 15% and is set to be eliminated. The sunset provisions kick in in 2008 where it can be optionally extended.

  62. Need to Pump Up Stock Price by virtigex · · Score: 5, Interesting
    The biggest problem that Microsoft has to deal with is their langusihing stock price. When the stock stalled in in 2000 many people left, because there was no more money to be made from the stock options.

    Microsoft is made up of a load of long-timers who have made enough money through stock options that they don't really have to work and the newcomers whose stock options have been underwater for several years.

    Without stock options (and the money generated with a rising stock price) neither the money or the work environment is much to write home about. Neither the old-timers or newcomers are particularly motivated and most of the "innovation" goes on by buying smaller companies.

    Issuing a dividend is one way to pump the stock price up and thus motivate some employees.

    1. Re:Need to Pump Up Stock Price by HeghmoH · · Score: 1

      I realize the logic of these things is sometimes strange. But wouldn't it be easier to just start paying the employees with cash money instead of trying Stupid Stock Market Tricks(tm) to make their stock options go up?

      --
      Mod down posts with a "Free Mac Mini/iPod" sig, they're spam!
    2. Re:Need to Pump Up Stock Price by steve_stern · · Score: 4, Informative

      You clearly are not a Microsoft employee, nor do you know too many Microsoft employees.

      Yes, the long term employees are filthy rich and never have to work another day in their lives. Pumping up the value of the stock doesn't change that fact in any way, shape, or form (if anything, it makes them even MORE filthy rich once they decide to retire and sell all their stock, which makes them more likely to retire in the first place).

      Those who are not filthy rich are very happy to work there, because it is a great work environment, and the pay is damn good. Trust me, I know. Say what you will about their software - they treat their employees like gold.

    3. Re:Need to Pump Up Stock Price by m00nun1t · · Score: 2, Informative

      How do you explain this then:
      - They consistently rank amongst the top 100 employers listings in most countries they are in(number one in the UK at the moment)
      - Their staff turnover is about half the industry average
      - When the stock price started slowing, they increased the salary of all employees

      How parent got to 5 is beyond me...

    4. Re:Need to Pump Up Stock Price by appleLaserWriter · · Score: 1

      The MSFT pay rate is good compared to Montana / India / China, but cannot compete with an urban center like Seattle. Unfortunately, Microsoft has now flooded Washington with people with low expectations, limited vision, and excellent standardized test taking skills.

      If you have a combination of decent technical skills and good people skills, it is not hard to acquire more cash and equity outside Microsoft than inside. Whether equity has any value is certainly up for debate, but start by looking at a July 1999 - March 2003 MSFT chart.

      Too bad the software industry isn't a standardized test!

    5. Re:Need to Pump Up Stock Price by grimani · · Score: 1

      No, a better way to pump up stock prices is just to go into the market and purchase them yourself, i.e. initiate a stock buyback.

      This is returning money to shareholders via a dividend. In finance theory, the two are fundamentally different.

    6. Re:Need to Pump Up Stock Price by donutello · · Score: 1

      Good analysis. However, you completely ignore the fact that most of the other companies in the industry are laying people off right now or losing people because they don't want to work in a company with little or no future.

      There is an ample supply of highly qualified and experienced software professionals available right now.

      --
      Mmmm.. Donuts
  63. Eternally Evil? by Drestin · · Score: 3, Flamebait

    Yea yea, I'll probably be modded flamebait or troll but... come on! ANYTHING MS does is immediately evil? Look, for the first time ever last quarter they paid out 8 cents a share dividend, because it made financial sense. This time they have looked and, again, it made good solid financial sense to pay a dividend. It's good for the stockholders, it's good for the economy and, yea, it's good for Gates and other execs (because they believe enough in their company that they own shares in it too). How is it even remotely possible in any way, shape or form that MS giving it's shareholders money is anything but good for everyone? Indirectly, even non-stockholders benefit (think about it).

    1. Re:Eternally Evil? by Tablizer · · Score: 2, Funny

      come on! ANYTHING MS does is immediately evil?

      In a nutshell.......yes

    2. Re:Eternally Evil? by rifftide · · Score: 1

      I somewhat agree with you. When it comes to marketing, Microsoft is mostly evil. When it comes to development, they are somewhat evil. When it comes to finances, they almost behave like any other Fortune 100 company. Now that they're no longer growing by 30% a year, it makes sense to start giving out dividends, especially with the Bush tax cut. And Gates probably doesn't lack for ideas for how to spend the money - he might branch into biotech, or put together a portfolio of tech companies outside of Microsoft. He wouldn't have to worry so much about antitrust issues or the MS corporate bureaucracy.

    3. Re:Eternally Evil? by Trogre · · Score: 1

      Make no mistakes - MS is by its very nature evil, a cancer in the computing industry that must be eliminated.

      The fact they are paying out a dividend cannot possiblybe the whole story. Any decision made by MS to pay out dividends must have an ulterior motive, as their entire decision-making process is nothing more than, "Which course of action will generate more revenue for Microsoft?".

      Philanthropic fronts such as the Gates Foundation are merely goodwill generators for Gates and therefore Microsoft (remember Gates is Microsoft in most peoples minds, CEO or not)

      .

      --
      "Nine times out of ten, starting a fire is not the best way to solve the problem." - my wife
    4. Re:Eternally Evil? by esobofh · · Score: 0, Troll

      Right.. just like the billion other companies that have paid out dividends since the dawn of trade

      you smoke too much pot hippy(tm)®©

      --

      ----------------------------
      Esobofh - Currently drinking fresh mango juice.
    5. Re:Eternally Evil? by NineNine · · Score: 2, Insightful

      MS is making a lot of people wealthy. Name one single OSS company that has made any ordinary investors wealthy? RHAT? LNUX? hmmm... These two companies used hype to jack up their stock prices, the people with the options made out like bandits, and all of those poor saps who believed in the company have lost their retirement. On the other hand MS's stock has been steadily increasing in value pretty much since day 1, no matter what happened with the economy, and now they're paying their investors a large sum of cash. Hmmm... boy, who's the bad guy here, I wonder?
      Moron.

  64. MAYBE IT WAS 2 BUT IN BINARY by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  65. Re:Huh? Regular dividend? by tarquin_fim_bim · · Score: 1

    "I hadn't slept yet"

    Is that one of those Douglas Adams future perfect tenses?

  66. Balance of life by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    With Windows you can get Money.

    With Linux you can get Enlightenment.

    Really.

  67. Are you new here? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    Or are you just posing rhetorical questions? Of course, everything that MS does is evil and has to be scrutinized. After all, they are THE enemy.

  68. Re:And..., good idea. by Thinkit3 · · Score: 1

    Really, this is the future. If waiters and preachers can live off donations, so can information producers.

    --
    -Libertarian secular transhumanist
  69. FYI - Roughly $1 per share. by NotQuiteReal · · Score: 1

    Based on http://biz.yahoo.com/p/m/msft.html 10.7B shares outstanding.

    --
    This issue is a bit more complicated than you think.
  70. Re:Huh? Regular dividend? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Now that there is no dividend tax"

    Dividends are still taxed. It has simply gone from being taxed as income to being taxed under the capital gains rate.

  71. Long Overdue by Ars-Fartsica · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Microsoft has been sitting on a cash mountain they are essentially unwilling to spend. They can simply swap stock for acquisitions, so without a pressing capital expenditure this cash should be returned to the owners of the corporation.

    This may make the stock rise - too much cash on hand is often seen as a negative by analysts.

  72. Man i wish i had seen it coming 20 years ago by nurb432 · · Score: 1

    Back when MS was the underdog.. Should have bought some shares..

    Hell could even have got a job with 'em too, but give up my nice, well paying,cushy job with EDS?

    DOH!

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
  73. If I were Bill by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  74. WOW by kruczkowski · · Score: 4, Funny

    So I'm going to get $1 for the one share of MSFT I own! Wow, now I only lost $24.34 to MSFT!!!

    --
    hmm... for fun I enjoy launching DDoS attacks against 127.87.42.5
    1. Re:WOW by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How do you only have 1 share yet lost $24.34? Microsoft hasn't been higher than it currently is since it split.

    2. Re:WOW by Mal-2 · · Score: 1

      This also means now they PAY people to come disrupt stockholder meetings!

      --
      How is the Riemann zeta function like Trump rallies? Both have an endless number of trivial zeros.
  75. Who mod'ed that "insightful"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Did you miss the fact that MS was found guilty of illegally leveraging their monopoly by a Federal Judge?

    Those profits were gained via illegal activities.

    Why am I having to explain this to anyone reading /.?

    1. Re:Who mod'ed that "insightful"? by ArsonPerBuilding · · Score: 1

      Thats not the point. The original poster's point was that people will take stabs at a man who is far better off economically than they are regardless of how he gets the money.

      --
      1 tequila 2 tequila 3 tequila floor
  76. Good idea -distributes sleeping cash from ms to... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This will 'prevent' MS from having soo much idle cash which looks bad on MS's books since they should be able to find products to invest development cash into.

    Anyone else predict a $20 to $25 drop in ps2, xbox, game cube by Christmas?????

  77. More likely to buy a "trinket" company by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hey with with just over 1 billion after tax, I'm sure Bill could buy somethine else that annoys him and destroy it.

  78. My thoughts exactly... by ashitaka · · Score: 1

    There are those of us who were so focussed on the technical and intellectual side of the rise of personal computing we completely missed the business opportunity.

    It woudn't have been hard. Get my friendly neighbourhood broker to invest a few hundred or a couple of thousand in Microsoft, Netscape, etc at certain times and I wouldn't be sitting here unable to afford to buy a house for my wife and kids.

    --
    If you don't want to repeat the past, stop living in it.
  79. Question about this... by Kickstart70 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    How long do you have to ordinarily hold a stock before receiving a dividend? Could I buy M$ stock now and get the dividend?

    How often are announcements like this followed up? How many dividend payouts are there in a year?

    What I'm wondering is if I could make better profits from buying and selling at dividend time than the crappy 3% I get from the bank.

    Kickstart

    1. Re:Question about this... by whorfin · · Score: 2, Informative

      No...You couldn't, because everybody knows that the dividend is coming, and when they can sell the stock after their dividend is theirs.

      If you were the only person who knew, and could sell the 'dividendless' stock to an unsuspecting dupe, you could, but the legal system and an efficient market prevent this.

      Although there an 'ownership as of' date that is prior to the 'payable' date, no brokerage will trade in dividend-stripped stock on the open market. They'd quickly be sued and legally barred from doing business because of fraud, and all this to earn the $9.95 commission you're paying them? I don't think so.

      --
      Laugh while you can, monkey-boy!
    2. Re:Question about this... by anthony_dipierro · · Score: 1

      How long do you have to ordinarily hold a stock before receiving a dividend?

      No time. You just have to own it at the close of the day that the dividend is paid.

      Could I buy M$ stock now and get the dividend?

      Yep.

      What I'm wondering is if I could make better profits from buying and selling at dividend time than the crappy 3% I get from the bank.

      No. The price of the stock will drop by $1 after the dividend of $1 is paid. So you get the $1 dividend, but lose $1 on the stock. This would create a huge loophole if dividends weren't taxed, so it's a good thing that Bush didn't get his way on that one.

    3. Re:Question about this... by IIH · · Score: 1
      How long do you have to ordinarily hold a stock before receiving a dividend? Could I buy M$ stock now and get the dividend?

      When a dividend is announce, the share is regarded as cum-dividend, i.e. the shares also have the dividend right. On a predefined day, the shares go ex-div, which means that they no longer have the dividend right attached. The person who owns the share at close of play before they go ex-div is the person who is entitled to the dividend.

      What I'm wondering is if I could make better profits from buying and selling at dividend time than the crappy 3% I get from the bank.

      No, you won't, because on the day the shares go ex-div, they normally drop by the amount of the dividend, as prior to that you are paying for the share+dividend, afterwards you're just buying the share.

      Rough example: if MS have 1B shares, worth $28 each (total market cap of $280B), and the dividend is $10B, then the market cap after the dividend is paid out will be rought $270B, so the shares are currently worth about $27, but you're paying the extra $1 for the dividend rights.

      So, if you bought shares beforehand, you'd end up buying a $28 share, getting $1 income and selling the share for $27. Result, $1 income, $1 captial loss, which isn't the best tax situation to be in!

      --
      Exigo spamos et dona ferentes
    4. Re:Question about this... by grimani · · Score: 1

      Good question - problem is, everyone else is thinking the same thing.

      So prices start to rise, with people purchasing stock at increasing prices up until dividend day. The rise should be to some extent reflective of the size of the dividend.

      They take their dividend, then dump the stock. And the price falls, again to an extent reflective of the dividend that the stock no longer provides.

      So basically you are taking your changes. You could make money on the dividend, and get screwed on the stock price.

    5. Re:Question about this... by webmaestro · · Score: 1

      Technically you can buy it anytime before the ex-dividend date, the date in which ownership determines who the dividend check goes to, and sell it afterwards and claim the dividend. Most likely you will not make must off of this.

  80. Damned if they do, damned if they don't by lseltzer · · Score: 2, Interesting

    After Ralph Nader wrote MS a letter in January 2002 urging them to pay a substantial dividend you'd think other reflexive MS critics would applaud the move. Not the case here, where anything they do, no matter what, is the urging of Satan. This site can be a cesspool of shallow thought sometimes.

  81. Bleh by ElectricPoppy · · Score: 1
    Bill Gates isn't interested in the money so much as the thrill, I believe. If you've ever seen "Triumph of the Nerds" then you know what I mean. Someone was relating a story about spending time with Gates at his grandparents. Everything was a contest with a reward for winning and a consequence for losing. This person said the entire weekend was that way.

    Gates isn't satisfied with winning. Everyone else has to lose. And I don't think it's a money thing, really.

    Don't get me wrong, I still think he's a piece of shit.

  82. Poor you. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You'd be happier if you were more honest about your feelings.

    Publicly expressed hatred is the step before quiet acceptance, you know.

    Many of us here would like to help you talk this through. All you have to do next is ask for help.

    They 'guys' here can offer advice on everything from lubricants to filching.

    But maybe you want to go slow for now. Just post your cell number here, and we'll treat you gently.

  83. $10 billion!!! by William+Baric · · Score: 2, Interesting

    With $10,000,000,000.00 Microsoft could pay the salary of 10,000 programmers ($100,000/year) for 10 years and make Windows the best OS ever!

    1. Re:$10 billion!!! by ErikZ · · Score: 3, Funny

      Or 50k Indian programmers 20k a year.

      Give it up man, the golden age is over.

      --
      Democrats or Republicans. They are both taking us to the same place and they are not afraid of us anymore.
    2. Re:$10 billion!!! by Tumbleweed · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Geez, go read the Mythical Man Month, okay? More programmers is the _last_ thing Windows needs.

    3. Re:$10 billion!!! by William+Baric · · Score: 1

      Well my comment was more to put perpective in the $10 billion but one thing is for sure, Microsoft could use these 10,000 programmers. Not to add or change code but for quality control and maintenance : one programmer makes the code, three other verify it (separately) and then one is assigned to maintenance for as long as the code is used (meaning doing nothing except knowing what the code does). Of course this means there's a lot of programmers who are not "productive" but I believe this is what should be done to have a good product.

      Too many chiefs is a bad thing but (as long as you have enough chiefs) there's never too many indians.

  84. Re:Plofiting over linux's shittiness! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hi Queerpants!!!

    1 It will soon be illegal because of SCO Maybe, maybe not, we don't know that for sure.
    Magic eighball says "Outlook not good" LOL THAT CAN BE A WINDOZE JOKE 2!!!!!!!
    2 GPL is anti-capitalist BSD/Linux is a concept where only the kernel is GPL'd. There are systems based on BSD/Linux. Plus there is the NetLSD Project.
    That's BSD not Linux. There is a difference.
    3 Its hard to use ...its hard to use what? Oh, you mean it's hard to use. Not any harder than DOS+Windows 3.1.
    Wow, when you compare it to that I can already see how easy linux is to use!
    4 Its unstable Oh, and Windows isn't? I've only had Linux kernel-panic once EVER, and Windows 98SE crashes daily.
    I have had the same trouble with linux and any problems with Windows are extensively documented in order to customize windows to suit me.
    5 The software sucks Opinion, not fact.
    Sorry, StarOffice? OpenOffice? Gnumeric? Where are the Fortune 500 companies using this? Sorry, Daddy trying to keep you happy by trying to balance his books at his small business doesn't count.
    6 The UI is inconsistent So is Windows'.
    I've never come across any inconsistencies in Windows. Command A always does what Command A does and I don't have to read some unfriendly man page to find out that I have to hold down control, escape, right click and with my third hand type in RMS IS MY GOD.
    7 You have to tipe commands (type) Oh? You haven't run X Window haven't you?
    I have run X Windows and it's not pretty.
    8 It doesn't run Windows programs Oh? (sp?)
    To be more correct, it doesn't run Windows programs well.
    9 You cannot buy a computer with Linux I take it you don't look at wal-mart.com.
    Mmm, I love shopping with spics and niggers.
    10 Linux companies are going out of bussiness Not all of them, look at Red Hat. And SCOrdure :
    Yeah, rag on the company that will make your hobby illegal.
    11 RMS is a communist arsehole Maybe this has to do with the GNU userland, but nothing to do with Linux.
    It has everything to do with linux. After all he demands that it be called GNU/Linux. Perhaps you've forgotten.
    12 High total cost of ownership Compared to paying $250 per machine every couple years for a copy of LoseDoze? If you know where to get it you can get it LEGALLY for free or at least well under $100.
    Linux is only free if your time is worth nothing.
    13 Too many distros Maybe, but the answer is to stick to one.
    In order to stick to one, one has to find that distro, go through the painful install process and deal with dependencies and new hardware requirements and by the end of your hard earned weekend you're ready to reboot into 98SE and play some Warcraft.
    14 Un-american Oh foo off!
    Whoops, looks like Comrade Allah got zinged there! Go back to your fucking red raghead butt buddies queernuts.
    15 Its not from microsoft That's a Good Thing, you know.
    Opinion, not fact.
    16 Poor security track record Compared to what? Windows gets hax0red more often than Linux. Besides, Hed Rat 8.0 comes with a firewall standard.
    Just because there's a firewall doesn't mean it's secure. Windows gets hacked more often than linux because more people use Windows. People who use Windows have software and apps and utilities and information that other Windows users want while linux users have their queer bubble game and Quake.
    17 Anyone and their 14 year old brother can add (buggy) code maybe, but it won't go into the main source tree if it's buggy.
    Cite?
    18 Even BeOS was better Opinion, not fact!
    Cite, queernuts. Your zealotry is clouding your vision.
    19 Eugenia doesn't like it And?
    If you don't understand this then you deserve the constant anal rape in the public men's room.
    20 It SUCKS!!!!!!!!!!!!! If you had actually used Linux, you wouldn't have said that.
    If you actually used linux, you would have said that. Linux is not ready for prime time nor will it ever be ready.

  85. Oi Insensitive Clods!!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The account registration system is totally useless to people with impaired vision using talking browsers. Why are you discriminating against the blind?

  86. Thats what old Billy G. is doing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    he's paying off the hadckers so they leave Windows alone.

  87. Who wants to be a billionaire? by dennison_uy · · Score: 0, Troll

    1. Sell crappy software at bloated prices
    2. Buy out smaller startups
    3. Pay out all your shareholders
    4. ???
    5. ???
    6. Profit!!!

    --
    Take off every 'sig'!
    All your 'sig' are belong to us!
  88. this forum is troll proof by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    https://risinglegion.homelinux.com/forum/viewforum .php?f=12&sid=247608b8573bb08f45a8f041a66a889c

  89. Why do you think he got the tax lowerd to 0%? by blair1q · · Score: 1

    Hell-loooooooooo!

    Anyone out there in America with a fucking CLUE!?

    What did you expect?

    BTW, this adds up to fully 1% of the $350 billion alloted to the recent tax cut.

    1% of the tax cut for the whole nation will go into this one dividend payment.

    Those of you who understand finance will realize that if every corporation takes Microsoft's lead, the eventual tax cut will be *much* bigger than $350 billion.

    We were robbed, and half of you voted for it, even though you were told you were being screwed.

  90. however by Trepidity · · Score: 2, Funny

    There will be an interval of at least four years before your Enlightenment can progress to the next level, and some even claim that the a higher level of Enlightenment than already attained will never come to fruition.

  91. Why else do dividends exist? by Ars-Fartsica · · Score: 1

    Dividends exist to entice share buyers when growth is no longer evident.

  92. No need, they could swap stock by Ars-Fartsica · · Score: 1

    Microsoft would be insane to do a cash acquisition when their stock is more than worthy enough to act as payment. Look at the history of MSFT - what you rather take - shares or cash???

    1. Re:No need, they could swap stock by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    2. Re:No need, they could swap stock by LostCluster · · Score: 1

      If Microsoft does go through with a $1 a share dividend, expect to see the stock drop by exactly $1 the moment it goes into effect.

      Why? Because that $1 is moving out of the company and in to the hands of the owner of each share. If I sold you that share before the effective date, that $1 would be within that MSFT share, after the effective date the $1 bill pops out of the stock certificate and can be seperated from it... paying this cash out effectively devaules the company by $10 Billion dollars with 10 billion shares outstanding, so take $10 Billion off the market cap and you're back to $1 per share movement in the price... the numbers all sum back to 0 in the end.

      A dividend doesn't actually create wealth or value, it just devides it up... that's where they get the word from.

  93. Let's be realistic. by mindstrm · · Score: 1

    Is microsoft guilty of some antitrust stuff? Absolutely.
    Is that the only reason they are successful? Nope.

    The predatory practices they have are LEGAL if you aren't a monopoly. Microsft has done some bad things.. but they aren't on top solely because of some shitty business.

  94. Re:FP by smittyoneeach · · Score: 1

    Vaporware, vapor dividend.
    The pragmatic truth is that is was likely a call from Warren Buffet saying "you gotta prime the stock market, or we're all beat" that drives this news.
    Dig Open Source though I do, one cannot claim it creates wealth like proprietary stuff, apologies to RMS.
    Will this post incur the wrath of the /. orthodoxy?

    --
    Get thee glass eyes, and, like a scurvy politician, seem to see things thou dost not.--King Lear
  95. All stock owners by Nazmun · · Score: 1

    Isn't that true for all stock owners though? Bill Gates was obviously received the largest benefit but isn't the only one to get rich off this.

    --
    Hmmm... Pie...
    1. Re:All stock owners by Reziac · · Score: 1

      Rich? I'll get $400, and I'll be rich??! [g]

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    2. Re:All stock owners by Nazmun · · Score: 1

      probably should have said all stock owners would make money off this.

      BTW, your quite brave... admitting that you own ms stock on slashdot.org :).

      --
      Hmmm... Pie...
    3. Re:All stock owners by Reziac · · Score: 1

      Geez, and here I was afraid I'd missed an opportunity to Make Money Fast [g]

      Oh yes, I own M$ stock.. it gives me the right to bitch and moan whenever they do something stupid (like their current mad licensing schemes) -- after all, their bad behaviour hurts my stock value!

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    4. Re:All stock owners by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Yeah, right, that's why you've got Microsoft stock. I'm sure the fact that it's a sure bet has nothing to do with it.

      It's funny how many of the Slashdolts don't tend to put their money where their mouths are. You're just one more hypocrite, bud, just one more.

    5. Re:All stock owners by TheMidget · · Score: 1
      I'm sure the fact that it's a sure bet has nothing to do with it.

      A sure bet? The fact? You must be kidding, it's been down the toilet since December 1999 (except for a brief rally in March 2000 due to the Xbox announcement)

  96. Re:Plofiting over linux's shittiness! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Eugenia doesnt like me, either.

    I think Ill stay with Linux then.

    You stay with Windows and I'll consider were even... and youre forgiven... :-)

    Now, go away... and have a nice day! With Windows! :-P

  97. Got me by krray · · Score: 1

    You know, I'm sitting here thinking...

    Frankly, I've not been all that impressed with Windows since, well Workgroups 3.11 and/or maybe NT. I said _impressed_. 98se I could swallow and 2K is barely doable, but the rest are just so obvious garbage money grab releases.

    All along I've been running Linux in the basement. Heck, it's sitting side by side with my Netware & BSD running the corporate network(s).

    OS.X has also become my personal GUI of choice, but Linux & BSD remain close at hand as well. Windows only as needed -- and usually through VirtualPC.

    They got me again.

    And the bitch of the matter? Never bought their stock. Fucked me coming, and doing it to me going as well. How ironic. I surely may not prefer Windows, but it unquestionably doesn't suck to be Bill -- does it? My [red] hat goes off to him.

    Now, please, get the hell out of the way or release Microsoft Linux or Microsoft BSD or something "Un*x" based (go ahead and sue me too SCO, you fucktards).

    When will this nightmare freakin' end already? Jesus (!)

    1. Re:Got me by xenocide2 · · Score: 1

      Ever check the credits to NT? They've allready released a BSD based operating system ;)

      --
      I Browse at +4 Flamebait

      Open Source Sysadmin

  98. Paying dividends may reduce speculation by today · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I thought the real point behind having ownership in a company was getting a slice of the company's profits. Then the buying and selling of shares is based on the expectations of distributions. But double taxation of such distributions discourage companies from distributing profits, instead using those profits to fuel growth. At that point, the share price can no longer ride on the future expectation of distributions. It can only ride on the expectation that someone else will buy the stock from you for more than you paid for it. And then it seems that everyone only values how much the company grows, not how much the company is profitable. We know from recent history that this is a bad thing.

  99. Re:Huh? Regular dividend? by leviramsey · · Score: 1

    Uh, the IRS doesn't require a corporation to pay out dividends...

  100. 10B$??? by tcc · · Score: 2, Funny

    sorry but 640K$ should be enough for everyone...

    --
    --- Metamoderating abusive downgraders since my 300th post.
  101. Re:Huh? Regular dividend? by leviramsey · · Score: 1
    [T]hey could put it to more efficient use to build stockholder value in terms of share value, rather then giving some of it to the stockholder, and some of it for the gov't.

    I'd like to point out that, in general, corporations are horrible at investing their money (especially when it's not internally invested on new projects). One need only look at the carcasses of the old-line conglomerates to see this.

  102. Re:FP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You can not respond to a troll fp w/ on-topic comments and expect to be taken seriously.

    Just some friendlyt advice, smitty fag puppy.

  103. Off with their heads! by release7 · · Score: 1
    Go ahead, mod my liberal ass down. But there's just no logical, philosophical, or moral reason why Microsoft should have $40 billion cash and be making more of it hand over fist for creating infinitely cheap copies of code and charging whatever they can get away with. They've found a loophole in an economic system originally based on the production of material goods. Think about it: why does an Eminem CD sell for $15.99 while Microsoft Office sells for hundreds of dollars although, when compared to overall sales figures, it has basically the same insignificant manufacturing costs and insignificant production costs?

    I say tax their asses until they crap blood.

    --

    <a href="http://www.joblessjimmy.com">Work is dumb and so is Jobless Jimmy.</a>

    1. Re:Off with their heads! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >They've found a loophole in an economic system originally based on the production of material goods.

      The "free market" is known as such because it was and is predicated on personal freedoms, not the production of material goods.

  104. Re:Why do you think he got the tax lowerd to 0%? by mikeee · · Score: 1

    You're assuming they all would have paid those dividends anyway; they wouldn't have, so actually the tax, though reduced, on this is gravy.

    We might be collecting more dividend taxes then before if this keeps up.

  105. Re:Why do you think he got the tax lowerd to 0%? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hell yeah! Now if we could just get Congress to stop going through our money like toilet paper, I might actually be able to save enough money to retire in fifty years.

  106. Re:Huh? Regular dividend? by Reziac · · Score: 1

    IIRC it was something like 3.2 cents per share, so far only once that I can recall (the dividend doesn't show up on the investor.cnet.com chart), and come to think of it, I still haven't seen the *first* check.

    I think you're right about how they've become an "old" company, tho, that no longer needs to attract investors.

    --
    ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
  107. Dear Slashdot, I am confused. by GoofyBoy · · Score: 3, Insightful

    > No, he did not play by the rules. He broke the law -- the courts have so ruled.

    Umm. So the legal system have the final say in what is right and wrong?

    Yet every week there are people here shouting how wrong and unfair DMCA/outragous legal settlements/patent cases are.

    So;
    We agree with legal rulings = The legal system is clearly the last word in what is right.
    We don't like legal rulings = The legal system is corrupt and change is needed now!

    --
    The surprise isn't how often we make bad choices; the surprise is how seldom they defeat us.
    1. Re:Dear Slashdot, I am confused. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are two kinds of laws; the old ones, and the new ones. The old ones come from the age before the corporations got enough power to openly buy the politicians. (That was happening all the time, but by far not in such range as today.)
      The Old Laws tend to be more fair. The New Laws tend to be bought and biased. The case of antimonopoly law vs DMCA is pretty much illustrative.

    2. Re:Dear Slashdot, I am confused. by y0bhgu0d · · Score: 1

      when you think that the government is supposedly "by the people, for the people..."

    3. Re:Dear Slashdot, I am confused. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Some laws are just. Some are not.
      Most recent ones tend to fall in the latter category, and it has to do with dramatically increased corruption in government.

    4. Re:Dear Slashdot, I am confused. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So;
      We agree with legal rulings = The legal system is clearly the last word in what is right.
      We don't like legal rulings = The legal system is corrupt and change is needed now!


      Welcome to Democracy!

    5. Re:Dear Slashdot, I am confused. by Just+Jim · · Score: 1

      Geez. Read the comment he was respnding to.

      "He played by the rules and won."

      'hpa's reply "No, he did not play by the rules. He broke the law -- the courts have so ruled." is accurate whether those laws are right or wrong.

      Either way, breaking the law is not playing by the rules.

  108. Bush tax cut actually at work? by LostCluster · · Score: 1

    Microsoft is clearly considering this massive dividend because the recent tax cuts that just went into effect mean that a dividend now will be taxed less than if Microsoft had distributed the money in previous years. Yes, Gates gets to pocket a 10-figure number of dollars out of such a transaction and he really doesn't need the money... but the average american actually owns a few shares of MSFT stock without even realizing it, buried within the mutual fund in a 401k or such.

    This could have the same economic effect of a $10 Billion tax cut, dropping money back into play in the American economy where hopefully it'll inspire John Q. Public to spend a little more at the local shopping mall. Alone, $5-6 dollars isn't really going to do this, but if this inspires other companies that have been hording cash for a rainy day to declare a larger-than-usual dividend, that trend could turn your retirement fund's investments around to start facing the right direction again.

    Unfortunately, this smells a bit little too much like trickle-down economics, so the odds of this working out perfectly and the way G.W. Bush had on his chalkboard are a bit slim. But at least the first few dominoes are falling as they're supposed to...

  109. Ralph Nader says... by BigFootApe · · Score: 1

    This is what they needed to do.

    1. Re:Ralph Nader says... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who gives a fuck what Nader says ?
      Has this guy even worked a single fucking day in his life much less run a fucking enterprise like MS, to advise about issues like that ?

    2. Re:Ralph Nader says... by JimmytheGeek · · Score: 1

      When he isn't throwing elections to the greater of two evils, he saves lives by the hundreds of thousands. His work on auto safety would completely offset the harm of a 1-term Bush.

      Now, a second term...

  110. Bill Should Do More Good by rinkjustice · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Bill Gates stands to make $1.18 billion himself off the $1 a share dividend

    When you have as much money as Bill Gates has, what's a billion or so more? I mean, is it really such a big deal to him? I only wish he would be a bit more of a philanthropist and donate some of his massive wealth to help children in war-torn countries or find solutions to AIDS ravaged Africa. Instead, he uses his money to buy computers for public internet access across North America - certainly not bad - but it's self-serving since all the computers are running Windows operating systems.

    1. Re:Bill Should Do More Good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You mean like this? www.gatesfoundation.org

    2. Re:Bill Should Do More Good by Moooo+Cow · · Score: 5, Informative
      Check out the numbers

      Over 600 million each donated to child health, and HIV/AIDS/TB. As staggering as the absolute magnitude of those numbers are, even in percentage terms they are quite remarkable. Given his total career earnings of, say, $50 billion or so (to date), this represents more than 1% to each of those causes.

      To put it in perspective, do you know any other moderately well off computer geek, who may make $3 million in their career, pledging 1% ($30,000) to each of those causes? He's also indicated that global HIV/AIDS/health is a top priority, so expect him to give a lot more in that area before he's done.

      --
      Slashdot is entertaining like pro wrestling is entertaining
    3. Re:Bill Should Do More Good by nathanh · · Score: 2, Informative
      Over 600 million each donated to child health, and HIV/AIDS/TB. As staggering as the absolute magnitude of those numbers are, even in percentage terms they are quite remarkable. Given his total career earnings of, say, $50 billion or so (to date), this represents more than 1% to each of those causes.

      To put it in perspective, do you know any other moderately well off computer geek, who may make $3 million in their career, pledging 1% ($30,000) to each of those causes?

      I donate 2% of my salary to charities; my boss convinced me it was the right thing to do (he has been doing it for years). I may not make millions of dollars per year but does that matter?

    4. Re:Bill Should Do More Good by Psychotext · · Score: 1

      Actually, as a totally not well off computer geek (20k GBP / Yr) I usually give around 2-3% of my salary to charity a year.

      But then I have no problem at all seeing that there are a load of people a lot worse off than I am. Nevertheless, Kudos to the foundation... There are a lot of very very rich people doing nothing worthwhile with their money.

      --
      People that believe in their opinions don't post AC.
    5. Re:Bill Should Do More Good by haggar · · Score: 4, Insightful

      NOt exactly the same thing: the lower the income, the more that 1% matters. To bring this into perspective, think of a farmer in Asia, that gets about 1000 $US a year. For him, parting with 10 $US is a very big deal. On the other hand, Bill Gates could part with half of his money, and still have left 25 billion that he wouuld have no idea what the fuck to do with.

      --
      Sigged!
    6. Re:Bill Should Do More Good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow. So If I give 1% to charity, I'm a good person?

      I guess this must some new MS-Charity thing, where it has nothing whatsoever to do with generosity.

      And, yes I know many well- and not so well- off (real, not pretend) computer geeks who give a considerable larger amount of their money and time.

      So, when's /. gonna' have a PR (aka. bs) tag?

    7. Re:Bill Should Do More Good by Another+AC · · Score: 1

      As Chris Rock put it:

      "You make $35 million and your wife wants half, it's no big deal. You ain't starving.

      But if you make $35 _thousand_ and your wife wants half...

      you might have to kill her."

    8. Re:Bill Should Do More Good by Ian+Bicking · · Score: 1

      Gates also isn't just giving to rich people charities, like American Heart Society, or cultural institutions. Those are nice and all, I guess I'd call them charities, but giving to them isn't altruistic. But Gates is giving a lot of things to organizations that aren't solving problems that directly affect him -- he, nor anyone he knows, is going to go hungry, suffer HIV in Africa, etc. And from what I've seen of a number of them, they are pretty progressive projects as well, not enabling projects (that is, projects that only keep things from getting too bad, but don't try to solve the problem). (Though I find the African AIDS stuff to be highly suspect

  111. $1.5 billion in taxes... by anthony_dipierro · · Score: 1

    Bush might just get to see the Laffer curve in action.

    Of course, to put things into perspective, the debt increases by $1.59 billion every day, on average.

  112. Escape for survival by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What would *I* do with such a butt-load of money????

    Buy plenty of guns, ammo, food, survival gear, supplies and an amphibious deHavilland Beaver and move to the wilderness of Alaska/NW Canada to escape the coming armageddon-like collapse of the lower 48.

  113. Re:Why do you think he got the tax lowerd to 0%? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If the tax has been reduced to 1/2 it's previous rate and dividends more than double, then you are ahead, which is I think what you are immagining.

    But the tax rate was reduced to 0%. ZERO. How much money do you have to have before 0 percent of it is more than we were getting before ?

    Say it with me: I am as dumb as George Bush.

  114. Four slurpees! by Urthpaw · · Score: 1

    I originally bought MSFT stock as a form of voodoo investing. Given my horrible karma, any stock I buy goes down. I figure I've knocked a few billion off Gates' fortune... But four slurpees definitely redeems Microsoft in my eyes.

  115. BASIC by I+Like+Swords!!! · · Score: 2, Funny

    Hence the reason it was called BASIC - Bill's Attempt to Seize Industry Control. That other acronym was just a marketing ploy.

    --
    .unsigged
  116. mathematics? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    just a guess.

  117. Star Wars: Medium for Rampant Homosexual Lust by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    After watching "Star Wars: Episode II - Attack of the Clones", I am disgusted at the amount of shameful homosexuality present in the film. Not since the 50s have Godly Christian viewers been subjected to such hedonistic filth. Consider, for example, Anakin (effeminately nicknamed 'Annie'), the precursor to Darth Vader. Played by "wanna-be" pretty-boy actress Natalie Portman, Anakin lusts after the slutty Queen Naboo, engaging in filthy acts of oral copulation next to a fireplace (obviously symbolising the fires of Hell in which they will surely roast to death after their final judgement). But wait, fellow Christians, there is more! A grizzly-green munchkin by the name of Yodo engages in an inter-species affair with the burly jedi Mace Windu, so vile and contemptible it would sure make the residents of Sodom and Gomorah blush! If that is not enough to upset your pure and innocent mind, harken that a flooded world is visited in which giant, walking tampons amass a huge army, an obvious insult to the original giant tampon, Noah, and his army of Beasts.

    I hope these revelations allow you to make a just and informed decision in choosing movies Our Lord won't send you to Hell for watching.

    Rosebud...

  118. Re:Plofiting over linux's shittiness! by usotsuki · · Score: 1

    [Plus there is the NetLSD Project.] That's BSD not Linux. There is a difference. It's BSD and Linux. YFI

    It has everything to do with linux. After all he demands that it be called GNU/Linux. Perhaps you've forgotten. Only if the userland is GNU. It's not GNU/Linux if it uses the BSD userland (like NetLSD). YFI

    Whoops, looks like Comrade Allah got zinged there! Go back to your fucking red raghead butt buddies queernuts. Hey, I'm a Christian and a libertarian, not a Muslim and a communist. YFI

    Windows gets hacked more often than linux because more people use Windows. That's exactly right.

    Cite, queernuts. Your zealotry is clouding your vision. Look up "opinion" and "fact" in any dictionary.

    [If you had actually used Linux, you wouldn't have said that.] If you actually used linux, you would have said that. I am a Windows, er, MS-DOS 6.20 luser posting from Galeon on Red Hat 8.0 Linux, and I think it r0x0r. I am open-minded - a true anti-zealot. YFI. (Returning to the topic at hand) Besides, why should I put any cash in Billy Boy's pocket? He's got more than enough to survive on. I'm on a fixed income. I'd rather pay $29.95 for a "Linux for Complete Assholes" than $249.95 for a copy of dreXP. Besides, my TV tuner card refuses to work on Win98SE (which it was designed for) while it works flawlessly on Linux. I get much more bang for my buck running Linux than I ever could with Windows.

    Besides, I only used Windows, really, to multitask DOS apps, or to run apps which were also out on DOS anyway. I can do that just fine with DOSEMU, and I can even play Losedoze Solitaire under Windows 3.00a's Real Mode if I don't want to run Wine.

    Hey, also, you know, XMAME runs faster than MAME for Windows - on the same hardware.

    Billy Boy has lost one customer. Too bad he's not gonna feel any strain on his pocketbook.

    -uso.

    --
    Dreams, dreams, don't doubt dreams, dreaming children's dreaming dreams. Sailor Moon SS
  119. Paying Dividens is a Bad Sign by Nice2Cats · · Score: 4, Insightful
    A while ago, we had a review on Slashdot of a book by one Andy Kessler from Wall Street who wrote an article in December 2002 called "I hate dividends" (see, somebody does follow those links). He has a couple of interesting quotes there:

    [A]s an investor, I avoid companies that pay dividends like the plague, and you should too. Why? Because when they pay a dividend they are admitting they have nothing better to do with their money. If they won't invest in themselves, why should I?
    and
    Dividends entice investors into debt-laden, slow- or no-growth companies, more likely to cut their dividend, burning investors worse than conflicted research analysts. Run away. They are wearing a scarlet dollar sign. You want yield? Buy a bond.
    and
    Failing companies just bribe investors with dividends. Encourage companies with a future to invest in their operations, seeking high returns. If all that mattered were dividends, we (...) would still be investing in railroad stocks.

    I think we can rule out Microsoft being "debt-laden", but it still sheds an interesting light on how finanicial people with a tech background will be looking at this move: The growth days are over, and from here on, it is stagnation.

    (Disclaimer: Everything I ever needed to know I learned from Slashdot)

    1. Re:Paying Dividens is a Bad Sign by Nice2Cats · · Score: 1
      (Disclaimer: Everything I ever needed to know I learned from Slashdot)

      Including, obviously, my speeeling. Try "dividends" in the headline instead of "dividens". Sorry.

    2. Re:Paying Dividens is a Bad Sign by xenocide2 · · Score: 1

      Or dividends indicate a mature company in a mature market. Some might call that no-growth, but if you're making a profit quarter after quarter, thats fine with me if you're not "growing." Sure, I'd like to see some research into other viable markets, but sometimes it makes sense to give a dividend versus making 'acquisitions' that don't really cooperate with the existing company holdings.

      --
      I Browse at +4 Flamebait

      Open Source Sysadmin

    3. Re:Paying Dividens is a Bad Sign by Mike1024 · · Score: 1

      Hey,

      [A]s an investor, I avoid companies that pay dividends like the plague, and you should too. Why? Because when they pay a dividend they are admitting they have nothing better to do with their money.

      Reminds me of that 'Dilbert' episode where Dilbert and Wally buy a controlling interest in the company and find themselves on the board of directors. It went a little something like this:

      Chairman: "Gentlemen, and I sage gentlemen because there's no damn way a woman's going to sit on this board while I'm alive" (he slumps onto the table, dead)

      Second guy: "What he was gointo to say was apparently, despite our best efforts, the company is not losing money fast enough"

      Dilbert: "Excuse me, did you just say the company wasn't losing money fast enough?"

      Third guy (to wally): "Gee, wally, can't you reign this guy in?"

      Second guy: "He's like a loose cannon"

      Wally: "Dilbert, will you stop embarrasing yourself? If you'd read dogbert' book you'd know a fast growing company always loses money while it's expanding"

      Dilbert: "We're not a fast-growing company!"

      Wally: "And we never will be if we don't lose more money. So, uh, suggestions on how we can loose money faster? What if we just, well, gave it to me?"

      etc.

      --
      "Goodness me, how unlike the FBI to abuse the trust of the American public." -- The Onion
    4. Re:Paying Dividens is a Bad Sign by hyfe · · Score: 1

      A more common way to view dividends is: One company should keep to the *one* thing they are good at. If you're running a pigfarm, your owners bought you because they wanted to own a pigfarm, not a sheepfarm :p.. Instead of going into new markets, give the money to the owners and let them buy into that market... Along the same lines, investors like to spread their shares on a-cyclic shares (half money on shares which benefit from high oil-prises, half money on shares which benefits from low oil-prises fx).. Alot of companies invest their own money on shares in other companies; however they are really spending their *owners* money (thats why they're called owners) and its also generally a safe assumptition that the owners rather spend their money themselves than have some half-talented nitwit at the pigfarm do it..

      --
      "" How about taking the safety labels off everything, and let the stupidity-problem solve itself? """
    5. Re:Paying Dividens is a Bad Sign by grimani · · Score: 1

      This is the most retarded comment I have ever read.

      A hypothetical company declares a dividend of $10/share. Said company's stock trades at $1/share. Even the proverbial fool sees a compelling opportunity there.

      Therefore, you must admit at least that with some combination of numbers it is worth investing in companies that give dividends. Kessler's blanket criticism is hence just wrong.

      Furthermore, the characterization that Microsoft is choosing not to reinvest in itself is also wrong.

      Microsoft is a cash cow. They are very cash flow positive - i.e., they generate way more cash than is necessary to continue/grow operations. Hence, they can finance all of their expansion with profits, and still have boatloads of cash left over.

      And now those leftover boatloads of cash which used to be sitting idle is now being given back to shareholders. What is wrong with that?

      Finance theory dictates that when you can't reinvest profits at a higher rate of return than the market at large, those profits should be returned to shareholders.

      And that is what they've decided to do.

      Would you rather Microsoft blow the $40+ billion on spiffy new Aerons for every employee?

  120. Do the math... by spagbol · · Score: 1

    If Microsoft give a US$ 1.00 dividend to its stockholders that is just a 4% return on the per share price. If they do this 5 times then all of that money in the bank is gone. I have bad invenstments that return better than 4%. You can currently get a muni (at least in California) that returnes more than 4% per year for 25 years, tax free! Even with this dividend you would need to believe that the price per share is going to go up as if Microsoft were a growth company

  121. Isn't this good? by dh003i · · Score: 1

    After all, it's $10 billion that Microsoft can't use to harass the cause of Free Software.

    Furthermore, isn't this what the entire stock market is about? Getting dividents? The entire idea of "owning a company" with stocks is kind of ridiculous. How does the average person benefit from owning a corporation, especially since they have next to nill say? The only way the money made on Wall-Street can be rationalized is by the premise that ultimately, it's all about someone eventually getting stocks with dividents. The upward quest of stocks is a quest that is only possible because, eventually, someone wants a stock that pays dividents.

  122. Re:Why do you think he got the tax lowerd to 0%? by loraksus · · Score: 1

    Well, some of us were retards and voted for the wrong person.

    Nice job putting it into perspective though.

    --
    1q2w3e4r5t6y7u8i9o0pqawsedrftgthyjukilo;p'azsxdcfv gbhnjmk,l.;/
  123. Re:Huh? Regular dividend? by dreadnougat · · Score: 0

    err... no, I posted that after being awake for about 32 hours, then had a nap and discovered I made a mistake. So at the time I submitted the story, I had not yet slept.

  124. the only way MS can make it's crappy stock worthy by dh003i · · Score: 1

    The whole point of corporations is to do what's best for their stock-holders. A corporation's one and only legal obligation is to do what's best for the shareholders, while staying within the law.

    This is good for MS share-holders. MS is no longer growing. They can't grow -- the markets are saturated for the most part, and they monopolize most of them. They are also facing stiff competition from Free Software, which will make it difficult if not impossible for them to penetrate into the 5-billion person markets of China and India. MS is also most certainly not a value stock. They are selling at many times their earnings.

    Their stock-performance has been abysmal lately. If you invested 10k in MS 5 years ago, it would be worth...10k today. MS obviously is failing as a corporation: they aren't doing good by their shareholders. (forget all this BS about monopolies, market-share, etc...the only thing that determines if a corporation is a success or not is if they are benefitting their share-holders). MS clearly isn't. Nor is there any considerable potential for them to do so in the near future, neither as a growth nor value stock.

    Thus, the only way MS can fulfill its only legal obligation is to start paying out dividents. If MS doesn't pay out dividents, there is no reason why anyone would conceivably want to own MS stock, unless it's price sunk so low that it would be a value buy in P/E terms. MS has an outrageous P/E right now, with shares selling at roughly 30 times the earnings per share. It's PEG is 2, so it is clearly not growing into it's price. Furthermore, it's Price/Sales is about 33% higher than the industry P/S.

    Now, if you want a good stock in terms of growth and value, you might want to check out Pre Paid Legal (PPD). They are selling at avery low P/E and have huge room to grow. Pre-Paid Legal sells legal insurance: an industry that is essentially like health-care insurance before it became a multi-billion dollar industry.

    In short, by most indications, MSFT is a crappy stock. I certainly wouldn't invest in it. No way. The only thing MS stock can offer investors is dividents. If you go to Quicken.com, it fails all evaluation strategies. Neither Motley's Fool's Foolish 8, Geraldine Weiss' Blue-Chip Value, Robert Hagstrom's The Warren Buffet Way, nor the NAIC's Established Growth evaluation strategies show any interest in MSFT. Worse than that, for such a large supposedly rock-solid company, MS' stock is disturbingly volatile. MS stock is almost as volatile as the Nasdaq index -- terrible. It barely outperformed the Nasdaq over the past 5 years.

  125. Sweet by FueledByRamen · · Score: 1

    Now I can finally make money off of all that MS stock that I own! Hahaha!

    Did I say that? Oh, damn. Uhm...

    (GNU/)LINUX!!!!!!!

    --
    Every cloud has a silver lining (except for the mushroom shaped ones, which have a lining of Iridium & Strontium 90)
  126. Honestly, I don't think it matters. by MickLinux · · Score: 1

    Let me point this out: Bill's money comes from the way he plays the game. He's either going to play this game, or he's going to play a different game.

    Whatever game he plays, he's probably going to win, because that's how he plays. [There are games that are probably more worthwhile to win, but they involve God and Heaven. For earthbound games, he's chosen pretty well.]

    Now, it may be that he's going to have to pay mega taxes, and maybe in the process he'll bail our government out sortof. [Please don't, Bill. It's like helping an alchoholic escape his consequences. Sometimes a government needs to fall.]

    Or maybe he's going to find a way to duck the taxes, the way most wealthy people can.

    Maybe he feels that SCO isn't working out, and Linux is eventually going to win its game. In that case, he may be dropping out of the game before it becomes a game he can't win.

    Maybe he wants to get out no matter what the cost, but feels that he owes the *other* stockholders something. So his exit will be "here's the dividends, it's been fun, see ya all later."

    Honestly, we don't know what is going to happen. But I would argue that if there is a major dividend coming, then the only way it will affect you is if you have Microsoft stock. Then the effect will be that you get a chunk of money, but then the value of the stock decreases. Whether you win out or lose out is anyone's guess, but my guess would be that you'll do fairly well.

    --
    Correct Horse Battery Staple: 72 bits of entropy. Enter "Correct H" into google. When it generates the phrase, that's
    1. Re:Honestly, I don't think it matters. by willtsmith · · Score: 1

      Hey,

      I got a fun game for Bill. It's kinda like a new version of the Sims.

      How About:
      "Hire more people, raise wages"

      "Build parks and preserve wildlife"

      "Build schools and pay good teachers, good wages"

      "Invest in after-school programs that enrich childrens lives, Boys & Girls Clubs, YMCA, etc..."

      "Build homeless shelters whose aim is treatment for substance abuse and transition to work"

      "Oh, good jobs again, for the homeless and everybody else too, that way we won't have to go homeless ourselves"

      "Municipal Beautification"

      "Underwrite loans for home ownership, be a little like George Bailey each and every day."

      "Invest in the construction of modern mass transit systems"

      These are all really fun games that are perfectly suited to a multi-billionaire. We would ALL like to play these games but only a select few get the opportunity. It's a shame that so many billionaires refuse to step up to the responsibilities of collecting the wealth of society (including the spoils of everyone else's WORK).

      BTW, we should all thank Bill for the "Bill & Melinda Gates foundation" whose cause is to fight the spread of AIDS. Lets home that Bill gets around to spreading it around before the second coming of Andrew Carnegie.

      --
      -------- -------- Support Wesley Clark for president!!!
    2. Re:Honestly, I don't think it matters. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe Bill's not the main push behind this? Maybe he and Steve were sitting around the dinner table one night, over a bottle of red, and Steve was talking about how he would like to be wealther one day... any bill said: "SURE".... Let's raise the stock value....

      Win-Win for Bill and Steve... After all, do you honestly think that Steve got there on his abilities alone?

  127. Not really. Ford was smart. by MickLinux · · Score: 1

    One real mistake old-school businesses make is that they think they can just buy into a new industry, and it doesn't work like that.

    Someone has to be boss, and either that boss knows widgets, or he knows the Zamf-service-industry.

    His decisions then end up being good for end he knows, but bad for the other end, and the other end usually starts costing the industry money.

    That kind of mistake usually takes a business down a notch from being two industry leaders and/or contenders, to being one company that is 5th or 6th in its field, and going nowhere.

    If you're going to put it into such kinds of developement, it's far better just to hand the money out, and let people invest it where they will, keeping the knowledgeable management where it belongs.

    Ford was incredibly smart not to get into the Parking industry. If they got into the Parking business, they'd first find that people were parking their Volkswagons and Mitsubishis there, anyways. Then, if they started towing and suing, they'd find that they were using Ford-level lawsuits for small-claims-court-level actions.

    They'd also find that the publicity wasn't going the way they expected. Then there'd be the issue of when to upgrade the parking lots ("Are we sure we want our name on THAT ugly thing?" "Well, you're the boss, but it's cheaper than repaving every year") and so on.

    Pure speculation? Well, yes and no. These mergers do happen all the time: Compaq and HP, for example. It is an excellent way for two A companies, as their business is failing, to become a single B level company with an amount of business that is close to bottoming out.

    --
    Correct Horse Battery Staple: 72 bits of entropy. Enter "Correct H" into google. When it generates the phrase, that's
  128. Re:Huh? Regular dividend? by ralphdaugherty · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Uh, the IRS doesn't require a corporation to pay out dividends...

    I couldn't find any of the news article from the past that I have read that stated that the IRS was looking at M$'s excessive reserves, and it took me awhile to find something in Google that explains this clearly, but this excerpt does it nicely. I read it cached, it was from http://www.corporateservicecenter.com/Library/BKCh apter11.htm

    quote

    Accumulating Excessive Earnings. Corporations that accumulate over $250,000 in earnings may be penalized by additional taxes on top of those that apply to corporate profits. The reason for this is that the Internal Revenue Service assumes that you are holding the money to avoid distributing taxable dividends. However, if your corporation plans to make significant equipment purchases, or is planning on expanding or diversifying, then reasonable grounds exist for retaining excess earnings. But your minutes must record the reasons for the accumulation, including the cost estimates for putting the plans into place. Your reasons do not have to be immediate. They can be long-range, since your minutes reflect your long-term corporate needs.

    Other possible reasons for accumulating excessive earnings are:

    For building inventory.

    To protect against loss of profits when the corporation depends on a small number of customers.

    To reserve funds for profit-sharing and pension plan obligations.

    To invest or lend money to suppliers or customers that are necessary to maintain their business.

    To build reserves against actual or potential lawsuits.

    end quote

    Not only does the IRS require paying dividends, in effect they consider it running a tax shelter if you don't and accumulate excessive earnings as M$ has. The basis for the reserved earnings all these years have been detailed in their financial statements.

    I'm just a programmer, but I read the news.

    rd

  129. Speculation on MSFT�s tax motivation to drain its by jbs0902 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    A thought here on MSFT's motivation. . .

    With the huge cash reserves they have, they should be taking a beating on the Accumulated Earnings Tax [FN-1]. I haven't done a lot of research on this (my Google research is below) but the short of it seems to be "if a corporation allows earnings to accumulate beyond the reasonable needs of the business, it may be subject to an accumulated earnings tax of 38.6%." This 38.6% would certainly exceed any ordinary income tax (now capital gains tax under the newest law, I think) that the shareholder would pay on the dividend.

    Also, if memory severs, wasn't MSFT getting hit with a shareholder suit to force it to pay dividends?

    [FN-1] IRS Publication 542, Accumulated Earnings Tax, http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/p542.pdf

    See also:
    Open Letter to Bill Gates, http://www.cptech.org/ms/rn2bg20020104dividend.htm l
    An update from our friends at CCH, http://www.toolkit.cch.com/text/P12_4785.asp
    Fool .com on shareholders asking for MSFT dividends, http://www.fool.com/dripport/2002/dripport021107.h tm

  130. How to get a +5 by org.earth.Citizen · · Score: 1

    This is terrible! These greedy MS investors not only expecting, but actually GETTING a return on their investment! If those scoundrels at MS had any conscience at all they would give away their products, then repay investors by begging for money or selling T-Shirts. Mr. Gates shame on you, I invested in your company hoping not to make a dime, but there you go again, raising the value of your stock and paying out a dividend. Next time I will do the smart thing and invest in Mandrakesoft.

  131. Like SCO executives? by KillerHamster · · Score: 1

    Could it be that Billg thinks Microsoft won't last much longer (or be profitable much longer) and wants to cash out while he can? Let's see if M$ launches any huge lawsuits sometime soon.

  132. If shareholders don't get 10 Billions Dollars... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...do they "fire the frickin' lazers" at bill gates?

  133. gates is evil but he isn't stupid by zogger · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The economy is being blown out. The value of everything is dropping vis a vis what the current manipulated artificial currencies say they are worth. Sitting on daily de-valuing cash is pointless, they are taking the cash and running with it NOW before it's worth much less, that cash can be converted to more wealth-preserving assets. In a month or three, perhaps that same valuation in forms of digits would be worth much less when it's compared to tangibles. This is what the real high rollers around the planet are doing, so it's not surprising that microsoft management would be doing it. that their smaller shareholders get a piece of it they can't avoid, that's out of their hands, but the larger holders want OUT, they want to get into safer things now. This is a serious economic clue, of much more worth than most nightly business reports puffery.

  134. Dividend taxes ARE lower now by gelfling · · Score: 1

    Aren't they? I mean why not?

    By the way while $1/share dividend is high for a stock trading at $26/share it's not unknown. Even bank stocks typically grind out $0.28/share in the same trading range year after year without sitting on a 46 billion dollar pile of cash.

  135. yippee! by Cyberllama · · Score: 1

    That's 1.18 Billion *TAX FREE* thanks to Bush's latest tax break. Thank god! I was so worried about Bill Gate's financial well-being. I'm so glad the President was there to ensure that the rich and wealthy stay rich and wealthy with as little effort as possible.

  136. Re:Huh? Regular dividend? by leviramsey · · Score: 1
    Accumulating Excessive Earnings. Corporations that accumulate over $250,000 in earnings may be penalized by additional taxes on top of those that apply to corporate profits. The reason for this is that the Internal Revenue Service assumes that you are holding the money to avoid distributing taxable dividends. However, if your corporation plans to make significant equipment purchases, or is planning on expanding or diversifying, then reasonable grounds exist for retaining excess earnings. But your minutes must record the reasons for the accumulation, including the cost estimates for putting the plans into place. Your reasons do not have to be immediate. They can be long-range, since your minutes reflect your long-term corporate needs.

    Do you have any idea what percentage of corporations in the US are covered by the $250,000 threshold? It's at least 60%. That should give you an idea of how easy it is to get around this rule.

    From this cursory reading, as long as your board can make a good-faith claim that it's keeping the earnings for future expansion or whatnot, this rule does not apply.

    For all practical intents and purposes (that is to say, outside of cases where you incorporate a corporation to rent you your house, or the corporation is a mob front, etc.), this rule does not exist.

  137. Re:Paying Dividends is a Bad Sign by Animats · · Score: 1
    That guy is a hedge-fund manager. What do you expect?

    A stock is worth the present value of its future dividends. That's a hard-line value investor position, but it's reality. Everything else is greater-fool theory; stocks are worth more because someone else will overpay for them. When that kind of thinking becomes pervasive, there is a bubble, soon followed by a crash.

    No company can grow forever. Eventually, if a company doesn't fail, it reaches maturity. At that point, it had better start paying dividends, or there's no reason to buy the stock. If it doesn't pay dividends, somebody will buy up the company and pull cash out.

    The debt/equity/dividend tradeoff is warped by US tax law, which favors debt. Interest in debt can be deducted as a business expense, but dividends cannot. As a stockholder, dividends are income in the year they're paid out, but stock appreciation isn't taxed until you sell the stock. This is the real reason many companies don't pay dividends.

    The Bush administration is pushing for a tax cut on dividends, to redress this imbalance. A high tax on stock appreciation for stocks held less than three years or so would be better public policy. Warren Buffett used to suggest a 100% tax on short-term capital gains, before he was seduced by the 1990s boom.

    This was really more of an issue back in the junk-bond boom of the 1980s; it's less of an issue today.

  138. Re:Huh? Regular dividend? by ralphdaugherty · · Score: 1

    Do you have any idea what percentage of corporations in the US are covered by the $250,000 threshold? It's at least 60%. That should give you an idea of how easy it is to get around this rule.

    From this cursory reading, as long as your board can make a good-faith claim that it's keeping the earnings for future expansion or whatnot, this rule does not apply.

    For all practical intents and purposes (that is to say, outside of cases where you incorporate a corporation to rent you your house, or the corporation is a mob front, etc.), this rule does not exist.


    The IRS makes that determination, which is what I said and defended, and for somestrange reason even the IRS couldn't see $45 bn in planned and contingency requirements.

    It does exist, and was in the news. Sorry you didn't see it or understand.

    rd

  139. Re:FP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "You can not respond to a troll fp w/ on-topic comments and expect to be taken seriously."

    Technically, he just DID.
    That invalidates your statement and therefor YOU are a fag puppy. FAG PUPPY!

    Here, let me make up some more animal related insults for you to use in your future off topic posts:

    Hermafrochicken!
    Hippocricket!
    Crockopheliac!
    (...)
    Homosexual female baby chicken! (I think 'fuck*' might go well somewhere in this one)

  140. Re:Huh? Regular dividend? by ralphdaugherty · · Score: 1


    For some reason, my posts don't show up in the filtered view (>0) when I reply through an email notification of a response. I'm reposting as a test and I guess I'll quit responding through email if it shows up.

    Do you have any idea what percentage of corporations in the US are covered by the $250,000 threshold? It's at least 60%. That should give you an idea of how easy it is to get around this rule.

    From this cursory reading, as long as your board can make a good-faith claim that it's keeping the earnings for future expansion or whatnot, this rule does not apply.

    For all practical intents and purposes (that is to say, outside of cases where you incorporate a corporation to rent you your house, or the corporation is a mob front, etc.), this rule does not exist.


    The IRS makes that determination, which is what I said and defended, and for somestrange reason even the IRS couldn't see $45 bn in planned and contingency requirements.

    It does exist, and was in the news. Sorry you didn't see it or understand.

    rd

  141. Combine that with ballmer selling off his.... by TyrranzzX · · Score: 1

    and I'd say microsoft's exeuitives think it's come time to start selling the stock in their company and filling their personal pocketbooks a bit further. They are certainly looking they're afraid of something, weither it be linux, US courts, another economic downfall, who knows. But it isn't a good sign when you're company heads start selling off theri stocks; it shows they've lost a good deal of faith in their company's ability to do damage.

  142. Re:Huh? Regular dividend? by ralphdaugherty · · Score: 1


    wasn't because I posted through email notification, just bad karma I guess...

    rd

  143. Better idea: give the money back to consumers by Zhe+Mappel · · Score: 1
    Sorry, but we are, after all, the ones who were forced to buy MS products with our computers at monopoly prices.

    And even if we hadn't been thusly extorted, there's still a little matter of recompense for decades of grief and loss caused by insecure, unstable software.

    Call the $10 billion a downpayment on Microsoft's Reparations. ;-)

    1. Re:Better idea: give the money back to consumers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Want a payout? Buy shares of MSFT.
      A single share will get you a buck (and a vote on who gets on the board of directors next year!) which is more than you would probably get from a class-action suit settlment.

  144. Bill Gates is the Chairman of the Board by solprovider · · Score: 2, Interesting

    You are correct that Bill Gates is not the CEO. That means he is not officially responsible for running the company.

    However, Bill Gates is the Chairmain of the Board. The Board of Directors are elected by the stockholders to represent the stockholders interests. All decisions that relate to issuing shares and paying dividends are handled by the Board. As Chairman, Bill Gates is very influential in any decision about paying dividends. The Board could declare a dividend while the company is losing money, which the a responsible CEO would normally recommend against doing.

    Microsoft is about to die. Bill Gates knows this. Most of his "wealth" is due to the value of his Microsoft stock. MS has $40 billion in cash. Bill Gates needs to transfer as much of that money from Microsoft into his own pocket. Paying dividends is one of the more obvious methods to accomplish this.

    Paying dividends will also keep the price of MS stock higher than it would be if MS did not pay dividends. The stock has been dropping steadily since Jan 2000. It is unlikely that MS stock will ever start climbing again. But the idea that large dividends will be paid regularly will cause many people to buy and hold the stock even as MS dies.

    ---
    Reasons I believe MS will die:
    1. MS has diversified. Most of the divisions lose money. The server software breaks even. Almost all profit comes from 2 products: MsWindows and MsOffice. Without these products, the company will need to live off its savings. IIRC, MS burns $10 billion per year. So MS could last 4 years if they did not pay dividends. They can also trim costs to last longer. I believe moving jobs to India is being done for this reason.

    2. MsOffice is under atttack from OpenOffice and the supported proprietary versions. Many businesses have already converted, and many others are evaluating their options. The migration is building momentum. As more companies migrate away from MsOffice, more companies will need to transfer files in formats that the previously migrated companies can read. The proprietary MS .doc format preserved their monopoly for many years. Now it will hurt their ability to keep the market.

    3. MS has never owned the server OS market. They have dominated the desktop market. 12% use Macs. 1% use "other". That means MsWindows has maintained 87%. Much of the reason to use MsWindows is to be able to use MsOffice. That is handled above; other reasons to believe MsWindows will die are below.

    - Linux is gaining marketshare. It has several advantages. Its biggest advantage is mindshare among computer gurus. The GUI has become usable by the public. Computer gurus now install Linux on desktops for their friends and family, because they have less worries about viruses and crashes. Now the big problem is the availability of applications. The two biggest categories are commercial software, such as Photoshop and Lotus Notes, and games for the home consumer.

    - Adobe is porting Photoshop to Mac OSX. Porting from OSX to Linux should be trivial. But most graphics professionals use Macs, so whether PS is available for Linux does not affect the corporate market much.

    - IBM claims to be supporting Linux, but their most widely used product has not been ported. I am referring to the Notes client. (The Domino server was ported several years ago.) Notes is the only email/groupware/collaboration product to match corporate marketshare with MsExchange and MsOutlook. For many of the Fortune 500 to migrate from MsWindows to Linux desktops, they need the Lotus Notes client to be available on Linux. If IBM were truly commited to Linux, they would already have ported their software products. Ask them when the Lotus Notes client for Linux will be available.

    - The

    --
    I spend my life entertaining my brain.
    1. Re:Bill Gates is the Chairman of the Board by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1
      Microsoft is about to die.

      No, but the reason you give have been true for a while. I can list a few more, but they all say that Microsoft is no longer the company it once was. It is not going to die. It's stagnating. Microsoft is sort of like a ponzi scheme, but it will not die.

  145. Re:Paying Dividends is a Bad Sign by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    >That guy is a hedge-fund manager. What do you expect?

    It's worth pointing out that that is Buffett's attitude too - if a company can employ spare cash at a better rate of return than the shareholders can, then it makes more sense for the company to keep the cash and appropriate it into those investments. What the hell are you going to do with a fifty-buck dividend anyway? Invest in real estate?

  146. its the economy, stupid by delong · · Score: 1

    This is PRECISELY the behavior that should be encouraged, and why Bush's tax policies (eliminate double taxation on dividends) are spot-on. Dividends are GOOD. One of the main reasons for the stock market bubble and accounting fiascos like Enron was the tax incentives of companies and shareholders to move from dividend payments to "total return." Instead of seeking to maximize dividend payments, shareholders and corporate officers sought to maximize corporate earnings, inflating stock prices and thus their capital gains. The tax structure encouraged this because of the imbalance in taxation on dividends and capital gains. So you have the ungodly situation of value being measured in debt assumption. You get Enron.

    This move by Microsoft is precisely the way we want to go. It's a Good Thing.

    http://budor.com/investment/opinion.htm
    http:// www.cato.org/research/articles/niskanen-021 109.html
    http://www.heritage.org/Research/Taxes/b g1640es.cf m
    http://www.upenn.edu/researchatpenn/article.php ?36 3&bus

    Derek

  147. The Rumors of Microsofts death ... by willtsmith · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The Rumors of Microsofts death is GREATLY exagerrated.

    No other company is in better control of it's own potential destiny than Microsoft. The declining stock price is due to the down performance of the market as a whole.

    True, Linux is a serious thorn in Microsofts side. It means that they CANNOT charge whatever they like anymore. It means the outrageous price of Microsoft software will stay constant or start to decline. Microsoft's core products are serious cash cows and there are no signs that their core users, business and personal desktops, will be wrenched from their hands anytime soon.

    On the applications side, Microsoft still has SERIOUS leads in the scope and usability of their software. In the enterprise area, (documents & email) Microsoft software is a user's dream compared to the nightmarish offerings from IBM. True, Microsoft doesn't scale as well, but they continuously make significant inroads.

    Linux & IBM still has a lot of work to make their enterprise applications supplant all the functionalities available from Microsoft.

    Even in a commoditized market, don't count Microsoft out. They clawed their way to dominance through cut-throat business practices and frankly CRAPPY software. Their recent work has mostly been excellent. Their developer tools are the Roles-Royce's of the computer world. No other company bends so far backwards to enable their developer community.

    As far as Mac is concerned, they hold strong in the niche market of Graphics, Publishing & Film. They hold a 3% market-share of new PCs. There machines are now VERY excellent with a unix-based OS but they are still somewhat pricey. I can see them making significant inroads into scientific computing. However, don't expect the world to beat down Apple's doors because they have a Unix-OS and a VERY pretty user shell. I expect Apple to pick up market share now, but I never expect that they will make a significant dent into either Windows or Linux.

    On the off-chance that the OS becomes COMPLETELY commoditized, MS DOES have a plan. It's called .net and it's VERY cool. Generic hardware and a generic OS leads to managed code run-times like .net and Java. The .net effort is really a safety gap in case the world DOES fall in and the Windows hegemony is busted by open source.

    --
    -------- -------- Support Wesley Clark for president!!!
    1. Re:The Rumors of Microsofts death ... by forgotmypassword · · Score: 1

      There machines are now VERY excellent with a unix-based OS but they are still somewhat pricey. I can see them making significant inroads into scientific computing.

      Nope. We are now switching from the decaying Suns, Alphas, and a few SGI's to Linux on Intel. Only die hard apple nuts and people with big grants would waste so much money.

      How the computer looks and how pretty the GUI is doesn't matter when you have 20-2000 sitting in the corner running batch jobs over ssh. And I don't think the MFLOP/$ is good enough (this is the main factor), though I haven't compared everything lately. Last time I did comparisons was a bit after the Pentium IV came out, and that point the Pentium III gave the best results for the dollar.

    2. Re:The Rumors of Microsofts death ... by solprovider · · Score: 1

      First: If you truly believe this, buy MSFT. You will get the dividends as Bill guts the company. And you believe MS will recover, so you believe you will not lose on the stock price.

      I agree the down stock price is due to the recession or dot com bust or whatever it is called today. But I do not believe they will recover. You can trust Bill Gates to figure out how to take control of the next path of the computer industry, but he is a follower:
      - MS almost missed the GUI revolution; there were several serious competitors that were a few months late.
      - MS did miss the Internet revolution, but was able to use its desktop monopoly to recover; that monopoly is being eroded.
      - Web-based enterprise software is primarily Java based today; will .net be able to keep up, nevermind destroy the installed base?

      I do believe that "their core users, business and personal desktops, will be wrenched from their hands anytime soon." Many of my clients are seriously considering banning MsOffice and MsOutlook wherever possible. So we disagree.

      I do not see Linux as the biggest threat to MS. It allows an alternative, but to take advantage of that alternative, companies need alternatives to the MS-based software. OpenOffice is a valid alternative to MsOffice, and that is more of a threat to MS. Without the proprietary file formats, they lose the market. (Besides, 2/3rds of their profit comes from MsOffice, 1/3rd from MsWindows. Kill MsOffice and MS is hurting!)

      Those "nightmarish offerings from IBM" allow me (one person) to write and deploy applications in days that are scalable and so user-friendly that 30,000 people can understand them without one word of documentation. They also allow clueless developers to write and deploy similar applications in a few months. Give Lotus Notes Designer to your favorite PHB and watch him become a productive application developer in weeks.

      IBM's Text Properties box is considered to be much easier to understand than MS's menu driven system for changing text styles. Your best argument is that MS software is more usable, but it only seems more usable because it is more familiar to the users. When the users have a chance to learn alternative software, they become more productive. (Did you curse at MsWord today? Or were you too busy reinstalling because a MsOutlook virus ate your hard drive?)

      The IBM email system has many advantages from both the user and administration perspectives. I have watched several Notes to Exchange migrations: the number of IT administrators at least tripled every time. From the user perspective, MS's big advantage is that their system operates more like their file system; give the users a week with Lotus Notes and they are just as comfortable. Many companies are banning the use of MsOutlook because of the constant stream of security holes being found.

      The only functional advantage for using MS is the calendaring. I admit it seems they did it right. As I understand it, IBM was attempting to implement what appeared to be becoming the industry standards. As usual, MS completely ignored the standards. Not usual is that the resulting functionality is quite good.

      I dislike IDEs, so I cannot comment much about their development tools. I have used Visual Studio, and it made me wish I had a 30" screen, but that is a problem with most IDEs. The class libraries for their languages seem to be complicated for the sake of complication. IBM's languages have less levels, and so make it easier to be productive, but they sometimes leave out basic functionality. The Slashdot story about using hidden MS API tricks suggests that MS also has this problem. IBM does have the C API for when you need "hidden" functionality, but its use usually ties the code to one platform. OTOH, any use of MS software ties the code to one platform.

      I only see Apples when I work with artists. I thought they had 5% of new sales, and 12% of the installed base, due to less turnover. This could be wrong.

      --
      I spend my life entertaining my brain.
    3. Re:The Rumors of Microsofts death ... by jesco · · Score: 1

      While editing I noticed I refer to "my clients" several times. I work for Fortune 500 companies and international companies. All of them have revenue over $100 million per year, so my views do not represent small businesses. But if the large companies give up MS, will the small companies keep MS?

      blah... blahblah... blah Unless you show 'proof', I do not believe you. Everyone can write "I'm CTO at a Fortune 500 company..." (or similiar things)... ;)

    4. Re:The Rumors of Microsofts death ... by Johnny+Mnemonic · · Score: 1


      Last time I did comparisons was a bit after the Pentium IV came out, and that point the Pentium III gave the best results for the dollar

      Bench it again when the G5 Xserves come out--it totally depends on your application, but I believe that in some cases you will get substantially more bang for your buck. (In some cases you won't.) Although you don't say what scientific community you represent, the one that I support--biotech (genome research)--is actually dominated by Macs.

      --

      --
      $tar -xvf .sig.tar
    5. Re:The Rumors of Microsofts death ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh yeah? Well I don't believe that you don't believe him! Everyone can write "I don't believe you" (or similar things)... ;)

    6. Re:The Rumors of Microsofts death ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I can't believe that your post is currently rated as "Score:4, Insightful", because you are living in a dream world.

      > No other company is in better control of it's own potential destiny than Microsoft.

      But by all appearances, Microsoft is NOT in control of their destiny.

      Every new venture that Microsoft has tried, in recent years, has been losing money. As a result, Microsoft is trapped in their existing Windows + Office market, and even there we see competition moving in.

      > Microsoft's core products are serious cash cows and there are no signs that their core users, business and personal desktops, will be wrenched from their hands anytime soon.

      No signs??? NO SIGNS???!!!

      The media has been filled with stories about whole governments, whole school systems, and whole companies switching from Windows to Linux, both for servers and desktops.

      There are very strong signs that at least some users are being wrenched from Microsoft's hands.

      Now if you want to say that Microsoft will survive, because at least some fraction of users will never switch from Windows, then I would agree.

      > On the applications side, Microsoft still has SERIOUS leads in the scope and usability of their software.

      That used to be true, but not anymore.

      If we compare Open Source and Windows in the traditional application areas:

      - In web applications, such as Mozilla and Apache, Open Source is in the lead.

      - In standard office applications, such as OpenOffice, Linux is now even with Windows (though the actual function lists vary).

      - In specialized application areas, such as Autocad, Windows is still in the lead.

      But if we consider new application areas, such as web services, Open Source is well ahead of Windows.

      If you want a server application for a website, be it for e-mail, web-forums, e-commerce, content management, distributed software development, and so on, there are usually multiple good choices available in the Open Source world. On Windows, you are often lucky to find just one.

      Other areas where Open Source is in the lead include embedded applications, such as Tivo, server-farm applications, such as for movie F/X and animation, supercomputer applications, and so on.

      Therefore, where I was once forced to agree that Windows was ahead in application support, I now consider Open Source and Linux to have the wider range of relevant applications.

      > Even in a commoditized market, don't count Microsoft out. They clawed their way to dominance through cut-throat business practices and frankly CRAPPY software.

      Yes, Microsoft is ruthless -- that won't change.

      Microsoft breaks the law (sabotage, fraud, etc.) and gets away with it -- that won't change.

      But Microsoft's "success" has also been based on lock-in techniques (secret, non-standard protocols, and so on), not to mention other actions that tended to hurt their own users.

      These last are going to change.

      Up till now, Microsoft has gotten away with their dishonesty, lock-in, broken standards, and so on, because the cost of all that was still less than the savings gained from using a PC. If users wanted the benefits offered by a commodity PC, they had no choice but to accept what Microsoft offered.

      But PC prices have shrunk to the point that the software costs have become significant. Plus, users now have alternatives -- both OSs and applications -- that can run on the same commodity hardware.

      PC users no longer have to put up with the costs of doing business with Microsoft. Unless Microsoft makes drastic changes (including some that they may find impossible, such as becoming honest), then they are in big trouble. The only things keeping Microsoft going at the moment are ignorance (temporarily maintained by Microsoft's campaign of lies) and momentum.

      > Their recent work has mostly been excellent. Their developer tools are the Rol

    7. Re:The Rumors of Microsofts death ... by Ibn+al+Arabi · · Score: 0

      Apple had 5.5% of the world market in 1996, this dropped to 3.2% back in 1998, further down 2.8% in 2000, and fell to 2.4% in 2002. Apple now (q2-2003) has 1.9% of the worldwide market, powerbook sales are down over 40% in the past two years...

      Some mac users like to pretend that Apple has 15-20% of the total existing computer market, often citing 'macs last longer' as their excuse (not realizing their mac parts are coming out of the PC parts bin...). This would be somewhere around 175 million computers, yet Apple has only made about 6 million iMac machines since May of 1998... In the past 10 years apple hasn't sold 40 million, much less 175 million computers. So you can write this 'fact' off to the reality distortion field as well...

      (figures from Gartner, Merrill Lynch, and IDC)

      FYI;
      I first used Apple computes back in 1980, and as far as I can tell, the company has gone downhill since the Apple III and the amazing 'Lisa'...

    8. Re:The Rumors of Microsofts death ... by smallpaul · · Score: 1

      On the off-chance that the OS becomes COMPLETELY commoditized, MS DOES have a plan. It's called .net and it's VERY cool.

      Do you have a theory of how Microsoft could maintain anything like its current profit margins based on a VM? There are already several out there and Microsoft's is already half-cloned in Mono. It seems to me that one problem Microsoft has is that they are under much more serious pressure to document everything rather than relying on proprietary interfaces. That's why WordML is documented. That's why all of their new protocols are SOAP-based and public. The .NET VM is a ECMA standard. Let's say that Longhorn really does have a SQL-based file system. Would you rather be an open-source person trying to reverse engineer that ("schema dump!") or NTFS, which is pretty much completely undocumented. Would you rather reverse engineer the .NET APIs or the Win32 APIs? Would you rather reverse engineer WordML or Word.doc.

      I think Microsoft will have a tough time staying more than a year ahead of the open source world. Yes, in some areas they are still years ahead but if you are in a race and you see your competitor a mile back and then a half-mile back would you feel comfortable or worry that they are obviously running faster than you? If you compare a Linux office package circa 1997 to today, and make the same comparison in the MS Office package you'll see that Open source is nipping at their heels.

    9. Re:The Rumors of Microsofts death ... by forgotmypassword · · Score: 1

      Bench it again when the G5 Xserves come out--it totally depends on your application, but I believe that in some cases you will get substantially more bang for your buck.

      What I care about is FPU, bus, memory latency, and gigabit ethernet. Being able to rack mount them is nice too. They don't need a video card, sound card, mouse, or keyboard.

      Although you don't say what scientific community you represent, the one that I support--biotech (genome research)--is actually dominated by Macs.

      Physics, so we have much, much less money than you guys. We are cheap bastards and I don't think Apple will ever cater to us.

      I am sorry that I am biased and isolated. When I say science, I really mean physics/chemistry/meteorology... I sometimes forget that bio people use math and vast numbers of computers too.

  148. Bills Day by anon*127.0.0.1 · · Score: 1

    Goes to work, gets some coffee... reads his EMail.. hops over to his bank website to check his account.. "Hey, it say I have 17.4 billion dollars.. I thought I only had 16 billion... oh, I bet that stock dividend came in. Hey, maybe I'll take the wife out to dinner tonight to celebrate."

    --
    I am NOT a man!
    I am a free number!
  149. what's a poor company to do? by geoff+lane · · Score: 2, Interesting

    All that money and _nothing_ to buy :-)

    MS can't touch anything computer related because tada! instant anti-trust case. They can't just buy into another industry without tada! instant anti-trust case (using monopoly profits to buy into an industry isn't allowed.)

    Leave it in the bank? No way. Should the share price drop too far having a huge wad of money in the bank allows a hostile, leveraged buyout to be attempted. In addition share holders will start complaining that the money isn't being used to best advantage.

    Looks like a dividend is the only option.

    Unfortunately MS is going to face the same problem next year. They are too big for the market :-)

  150. Re:Paying Dividends is a Bad Sign by Syphtor · · Score: 1

    buy food for the week, treat it as an extra income stream... Get enough of those dividend payments, stop working the shitty job I hate, and take up a nice job that I've always wanted to do, but never been able to because of lack of money. Shares that pay dividends are the same as rental properties, you would like some capital growth, but your main focus is on an extra income that you don't have to work for.

    --
    It's in that place where I put that thing that time
  151. Re:Why do you think he got the tax lowerd to 0%? by AvantLegion · · Score: 1
    Interesting insight.

    We weren't being robbed when the previous administration had some wonderful tax increases for us, but we are being robbed because the tax cut we're getting might not be all it's cracked up to be.

    Hmm.

  152. No, you are just dumb by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    President Bush is not.

    The dividend tax rate this year is 15%.

  153. MS Tax rebates by grolschie · · Score: 1

    At least someone can claim a rebate on their Microsoft Tax.

  154. what happened to the rest? by SHEENmaster · · Score: 1

    Did it operate as a .com in the beginning, selling off stock to cover expenses?

    --
    You can't judge a book by the way it wears its hair.
  155. I think you've got it right by alizard · · Score: 1
    it'd be interesting to know what changed to make them issue a big dividend after all these years.

    Offhand, I'd guess Linux combined with a general lack of good ideas adding up to the idea that MS isn't worth reinvesting in.

    "if Sun ever pays out a sizeable dividend, it means we've run out of R&D ideas and the company's in trouble".

    In 'leading edge' high-tech, that's the conventional wisdom, and it's what I started wondering about right after I saw the announcement.

  156. Read the original post again. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It was specifically about Gates and his shares.

    It was specifically about how people will attack HIM no matter what.

    The question was why shouldn't Gates get the dividends that his stock allows.

    The answer is that the profits that make those dividends were illegally gained.

  157. Looks like a money market fund by appleLaserWriter · · Score: 1

    Having too much cash on hand makes MSFT look like a dollar-denominated money market fund rather than an aggressive technology hedge fund. Dropping some of the cash, or at least moving it to Euros will help the total company value.

    However, the promise of a mass market software company is that engineering effort is spread over a nearly unlimited number of shipped units, creating an insanely large return on investment. Now that Microsoft is getting more involved in hardware like XBox and holding on to large piles of cash, it starts to look more like a traditional company.

  158. Re:Why do you think he got the tax lowerd to 0%? by blair1q · · Score: 2

    We were making money during the previous administration, and we had balanced the budget. The new administration saw a treasury full of loot, and raided it for its own gain. It threw you a couple hundred dollars so you could say they helped you, too, but it threw Bill Gates half a billion on this transaction alone.

    Taxes in this country, despite the progressive income tax, are overall regressive, because of shelters and the effects of consumption taxes and fees. These same guys are seriously looking at trying the Flat Tax, next. At which point they may end up being paid a subsidy by the government to be richer than God.

    We were robbed.

  159. MOD PARENT UP!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Mod parent up!! Brilliant!

  160. Call Austin Powers! by Mal-2 · · Score: 1

    Can't you guys see it? Microsoft is saving the Earth by paying off Dr. Evil!

    --
    How is the Riemann zeta function like Trump rallies? Both have an endless number of trivial zeros.
  161. Re:Didn't the govt just make dividend income TaxFr by Radon+Knight · · Score: 1

    > No, dividends are taxed at the (now reduced) capital
    > gains rate, instead of the ordinary income rate.

    One point which greatly concerns me about this is that the federal income tax is slowly changing into a "wage tax," by which I mean that a greater portion of tax is being collected from wages and salaries, while other types of income, like dividends, have their tax rate decreased. Now, in principle a wage and salary tax applies to everyone but in reality it primarily affects the middle and lower class while creating another tax loophole for the rich.

    Think about it - reducing the rate at which dividend incomes are taxed basically reduces the amount of taxes that the Bill Gates, Steve Jobs, and Larry Ellison types need to pay. All of these big players can afford to have their corporate CEO salary set at $1 while taking all of their real compensation in stock options. Since dividends from stocks are taxed at a lower rate, it's much better for the CEO's to earn $100 million via dividends than $100 million as a salary.

    Moreover, this trick allows most people to think that CEOs are acting benevolently. "Oh, look - I just read that Mr. Top CEO only has a salary of $1 a year. That just shows his devotation to the company and his lack of extreme greed." No. But it does show that Mr. Top CEO understands the baroque U.S. tax system a lot better than Jane and Joe Sixpack (who, even if they did understand it, couldn't take advantage of the biggest benefits).

    This probably sounds like a rant, but I fear there is truth in what I'm saying. The U.S. tax code is now something like 3-5 times *longer* than the King James Bible. That complexity can function as a great way to hide benefits to the rich. That, plus the extent to which corporate interests control American politics now, really make me suspect that the U.S. government has become a government of the people, by the people, for the few.

  162. Crappy investment by cdn-programmer · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I would not want to invest in M$. Microsoft has about $46 billion in cash apparently, but they also have more than 10 billion shares out there trading at a wee bit over $26 bux. This means if they liquidated their whole nest egg that they could not even offer a 2% rate of return.

    Furthermore they have precious little growth opportunities left. Anyone of us can do a straw pole... who is planning on upgrading their OS or M$ office suite any time soon?

    The computer world has been filled with random fads that generally crash and burn at a bewildering rate. Why should Microsoft be different.

    It might take years before Opensource software makes a real dent in the mass market - but it is inevitable that this paradigm shit will take place. When it happens M$ will probably not have a revenue model left and that will be the end of them.

    Personally I beleive there will still be opportunities for commercial software but I feel any opportunities will not likely include operating systems and system software. I don't think these opportunities will include office suites either.

    So pass the popcorn because the show will be interesting! I think the future is clear, yet I will admit that the time line is rather fuzzy.

    1. Re:Crappy investment by grimani · · Score: 2, Interesting

      This is now the most retarded comment I have ever read.

      Your 2% rate of return argument makes no sense.

      First of all, the rate of return if you liquidated Microsoft is negative (-80% or so).

      This is because, when you cough up $25 for a share of Microsoft, you are only buying $5 in real assets (office chairs, cash, development computers, office buildings, etc.).

      In fact, in almost any company you invest, you are paying more than the hard assets of the company. By your argument, no company is worth investing in. Of course this is not true.

      When you buy Microsoft stock, the remaining $20 is an investment in business that mints cash. Your share gives you a claim to that cash that is churned out, year after year.

      Therefore, whether or not Microsoft is a good investment depends on the profits Microsoft generates, and how much you are paying to lay claim to those profits.

      To claim otherwise is foolish.

  163. Double Taxation? by moankey · · Score: 1

    Ok everyone is saying the dividend tax is lower. But come'on $10 billion, Uncle Sam has got to be happy about that even at a reduced percentage. I cant even picture 10 billion.

    Or have I been under a rock and the double taxation is no longer a IRS advantage?

  164. It had to be done... by Pinguu · · Score: 1

    1. make $1.18 billion
    2. ???
    3. PROFIT!!!!

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    --
  165. Re:Why do you think he got the tax lowerd to 0%? by AvantLegion · · Score: 2
    We were making money during the previous administration, and we had balanced the budget.

    Yeah. And this was achieved not by moderating government spending, but by hiking up the taxes. Robbery spotted.

    Believe me, I am in no way totally satisfied with the current administration in economic terms, but the previous administration's "balance the budget by pillaging the people" sat worse with me.

    These same guys are seriously looking at trying the Flat Tax, next. At which point they may end up being paid a subsidy by the government to be richer than God.

    A pure flat tax would eliminate deductions and, by extension, shelters, that you so complain about in the lines before the above quote. Now, a "flat tax" that allows a few select exemptions (like on investments) could be a different story. But condeming the Flat Tax totally is ill-advised. A true implementation would eliminate many of the very things you singled out. A half-assed implementation, however, could well be damaging as you describe. The best we can probably hope for is a not-too-badly-compromised flat tax, which hopefully would retain most of the core benefits. You're way off in thinking the flat tax is a boon for corporations, though. It's the opposite. And that's why it's not happening with any rapid speed.

    What I find funny is that the Republicans have been criticized for backing off of tax reform and backing away from the flat tax idea - criticized from the left. And the criticism is totally fair. I'd like to see the administration do more than just pay lip service to the idea. The tax cut is nice, but basically is just a step in undoing the taxation of the last administration. It's not a solution, it's a step. I want to see motion towards a solution.

  166. Re:Paying Dividends is a Bad Sign by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Erm... fair enough, but share dividends aren't the best way of going about it, since companies aren't usually compelled to pay dividends - bonds would be a safer bet in that regard.

  167. Re:Huh? Regular dividend? by TheMidget · · Score: 1

    But he forgot to put quotes around "charities". That should redeam him in the astroturfer's eyes.

  168. Re:Huh? Regular dividend? by TheMidget · · Score: 1

    Both showed up at Score 1. Maybe just random Slashdot slowness?

  169. If it's not PR how come you've heard of it? by DrSkwid · · Score: 1

    Seriously, if he didn't want goods publicity from the Foundation then he should have maybe toned down the name a bit !

    --
    There are places where the networks are not touching,and there are places where they are-Boeing's Lori Gunter
  170. Its about time! by croftj · · Score: 1

    When you think about it, it is about time they pay a dividend. They should have been all through the years they where accumulating the 40bn they have.

    I guess some of the slashdotters would prefer it if they bought SCO or IBM instead.

    --
    -- Many men would appreciate a woman's mind more if they could fondle it
  171. is that related to ... by hany · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Is that related to plan (or does it alredy happen?) of Bush's administration to not to tax shareholder's dividents?

    If so, than we can patent following business model:

    1. found new firm
    2. do business - make a lot of money
    3. do not pay dividents
    4. after sufficient time (say 30 years?) use some part of accumulated cash to buy a law which will make you not pay taxes from your dividents
    5. transfer rest of the cash as dividents to your wallet tax-free
    6. be rich, enjoy life, laugh (for having you and your assets protected by state and not paying for the service)
    --
    hany
  172. Re:Huh? Regular dividend? by leviramsey · · Score: 1
    The IRS makes that determination, which is what I said and defended, and for somestrange reason even the IRS couldn't see $45 bn in planned and contingency requirements.

    Where does anything specifically say that the IRS is making Microsoft comply with this rule?

    Regardless, the IRS can make the determination all it wants... it can be appealed to the US Tax Court, which would then decide whether the IRS was justified in making that determination, at which point the IRS essentially has to prove that the retained earnings and question are not needed. Yes, the IRS essentially has to prove a negative, and even if they get close to it, the following situation would still wreck their case:

    The defendant goes out and actually uses a suitably large portion of their cash for expansion, for example by acquiring a suitably large corporation.

    It does exist, and was in the news. Sorry you didn't see it or understand.

    I'm not questioning its existence. I'm merely pointing out that, given the number of corporations these rules would apply to and the number that are in violation of it as much as Microsoft is, it's either a case of the exemptions are so easy to get that the law may as well not exist, or that the IRS never bothers with enforcing it, in which case, the law may as well not exist.

  173. Avoiding those pesky lawsuits by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > Come on, people - I _highly doubt_ Bill really cares whether he makes a hundred million or a billion dollars.

    The reason why Bill Gates needs a large sum of personal cash right now, is because of the recent success of Linux.

    In order to try to stop Linux, Gates will need to take major steps that will be of, shall we say, questionable legality. That will cost money.

    If the money comes from Microsoft, it will leave a paper trail.

    Having been caught breaking the law so many times recently (as in the DOJ, AOL/Netscape, Sun/Java, DR-DOS, Bristol, and other lawsuits), Microsoft can't afford to be caught again.

    But once the money is in his own pocket, Gates will have much more flexibility to spend it under the radar.

  174. How about something really useful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Things Bill could do that is really useful for all of humanity and get to pretty much rule the world at the same time.

    1. Construct the world first working fusion reactor. 2. Build a cost effective space transportation system.

    40 billion should be more than enough to accomplish that and then he would be in a position to be the worlds first trillionaire!!

  175. .net? developers? by dollargonzo · · Score: 1

    what exactly is so *cool* about .net? and how exactly does ms bend over backwards for developers? one of our customers was using vb with our activex control, and wanted to use .net. sadly, half the compilation options changed and furthermore, .net does not support the type of project he was using before. this isn't what i call "bending over backwards for developers" or being "very cool." also, .net isn't terribly generic either. unlike java, they do not encourage generic solutions, but rather promote invokation of native code.

    --
    BSD is for people who love UNIX. Linux is for those who hate Microsoft.
  176. Not In the Case of Microsoft! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ten billion dollars seems like a lot of money, but remember that Microsoft has 10.7 billion shares outstanding.

    Yes, a $10 billion dividend means less than one lousy dollar per share!!!

    And worse yet, only a couple of years ago they had 6 billion shares outstanding.

    So, if Chairman Bill waits another year or so, $10 billion will probably be worth only $.50 a share!!!

    It's called a pyramid scheme! It's called share dilution! But never mind, all of the high-techies claim that stock options are free (good at high-tech, but not good at arithmetic!)!!!

  177. Agreed -- Microsoft is in trouble by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The evidence of it is easy to see.

    Off the top of my head (and repeating some of your points), the evidnce I see includes:

    - Microsoft's stock price, which has shown a much deeper drop from its high than has, say, IBM's.

    - Microsoft's desperate-looking attempts to revive its stock price, including a stock split at a time when the price was going down (very unusual), and, for the first time, paying dividends.

    - Microsoft's failed attempts to find a new market in which to expand. Every time that Microsoft tries something new, they are hampered by the fact that no one trusts them, and no one wants to do business with them. Thus, Microsoft's only successful markets are those where the users are currently being held hostage, either by the high cost of switching platforms, or the difficulty of migrating their data files.

    - The poor reception of Microsoft's new offerings, even in their existing markets, including servers, webservers (IIS vs Apache, Frontpage), PDAs, and new versions of Windows. In one example, the server version of Windows 2000 only sold one million copies in its first year, but Netcraft's statistics showed that, in the same year, there were more than one million new installations of Linux for webservers alone.

    - The reception for .Net has been so weak, that Microsoft had to pay Wordperfect to use it, just to increase .Net's credibility.

    - Microsoft has lost some major deals to Linux, especially in government contracts.

    - Even when Microsoft kept a major contract, it has often required a visit by one of Microsoft's top people, including Ballmer or Gates. Apparently, Microsoft is being forced to make offers that are so good, that even the local sales managers aren't authorized to make them.

    - Microsoft has been discounting the price of their products in order to compete with Linux. IIRC, this included a 90% reduction in price for one of the server versions of Windows.

    - Microsoft has been forced to try new approaches, even if some of them, like their shared-source program, are mostly scams.

    - Microsoft has been increasing the volume, and reducing the credibility, of their anti-Linux FUD, to the point where even casual readers can tell what's going on.

    By all indications, Microsoft appears to be in a panic.

  178. I'M MAD AS DEVIL by Arbogast_II · · Score: 1

    and jealous as can be!!!
    Cause Bubba ain't got none of that stock. If a business is not about paying money to it's owners, what exactly is a business about???

    --


    HenryJamesFeltus.com
  179. Now Pay Be, Inc., Motherfuckers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Cuz I still got BeStock.

    No, not that one

    Microsoft's Strange Obsession with Be, Inc.

    May 23, 2001

    http:///perl/story/9928.html

    Microsoft and its leader Mr. Gates have been spellbound by Be for years.
    Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT) apparently has Be, Inc. (Nasdaq: BEOS) on the brain. Not long ago, the Be family of operating systems was referred to as technically "great" by Microsoft representative Doug Miller in a Slashdot editorial. Miller reportedly said "BeOS is a great operating system technically." Similarly, Microsoft co-opted the code name "Stinger" for the company's new line of smart phones. Stinger is the old name for BeIA. Then Microsoft used the tractor beam on Qubit, DT Research as well as Compaq. Apparently this is business as usual for Microsoft. The company's recent escapades have me convinced that the Department of Justice was named by an Orwell fan.

    Be, Inc. has been on Microsoft's radar ever since the BeBox was in beta, but I think things got really personal at the Computer Chronicle's Quiz Bowl several years ago. For those of you unfamiliar with this bit of computing history, I'll recount.

    Everyman's friend Bill Gates was the moderator. A certain Jean-Louis Gassee was a competitor. The question from Gates was (and I am paraphrasing) "What is the name of the yearly contest on Usenet in which the object is to produce the most convoluted C code that still produces a working program?"

    According to many, JLG's brilliant answer was: "What is Windows?" As you might have imagined, Mr. Gates was not amused.

    And then there's BeDope. While not an official Be, Inc. site, BeDope undeniably reflected the attitudes of many Be, Inc. employees.

    A popular site, even outside of the BeOS community, BeDope was filled with stories such as Bill Gates crashing Windows '98 during a demo, and then rebooting into BeOS for the remainder of the demo. "It would be sort of like this, except slower and less stable," he supposedly said. (Again, I am paraphrasing.)

    Does anyone remember Comdex? Two of the three products nominated for Best of Show were BeIA devices: the Sony Evilla, and Qubit's Webpad, the Orbit. A few scant months later, Qubit had essentially ditched BeIA in favor of everyone's favorite performer, Windows CE.

    Apparently, Qubit's new customers demanded Internet Explorer. Best of Show? Bah. A meaningless accolade, apparently. McDonald's, oops, Microsoft wins again.

    Un-Clever Coincidences

    Compaq was once one of the bigger partners Be, Inc. had in the Internet appliance game. The deal now seems more like a diversionary tactic, and a way to steal information. If Compaq's BeIA device foot-dragging wasn't bad enough, Compaq allegedly turned over proprietary info regarding Be, Inc. to Microsoft.

    Did anything at all come of it? Why not? With partners like these, who needs enemies?

    Far be it from me to suggest anything untoward about the computer industry. This is all a coincidence, right? Peapod (Nasdaq: PPOD), an online grocer, currently has a stock price triple that of Be, Inc. Hand-delivered Spam is worth much more than a technically advanced operating system, right?

    If you believe that, I have some Pets.com stock I'd like to sell you.

  180. Re:Huh? Regular dividend? by ralphdaugherty · · Score: 1

    I'm not questioning its existence. I'm merely pointing out that, given the number of corporations these rules would apply to and the number that are in violation of it as much as Microsoft is, it's either a case of the exemptions are so easy to get that the law may as well not exist, or that the IRS never bothers with enforcing it, in which case, the law may as well not exist.

    The IRS does enforce it, and in fact the reason I know about the excessive reserve earnings is because their scrutiny was in the news along with monopoly trial coverage. The justification for reserved earnings must be spelled out in financial statements, and M$ can no longer spell out $45 bn worth of justifications now that the monopoly suit has been settled.

    They are paying dividends only because the IRS excessive earnings regulation will cause them to lose nearly 40% of it now that they no longer can justify retaining $45 bn in reserved earnings. The alternative is to pay out a substantial portion as dividends, conveniently after waiting until the Republicans made it much less costly to break up their tax shelter.

    rd

  181. purgatory by Barlo_Mung_42 · · Score: 1

    I'm in purgatory you insensitive clod!

  182. Gates foundation by Barlo_Mung_42 · · Score: 1

    What's good for Gates is good for some of the most truly needy people of the world.

  183. You find 1% Staggering? by rinkjustice · · Score: 1

    Your boss will be happy to hear that. Maybe next time he'll give you a 1% raise. And how about a 1% rebate on that new truck you've been eyeing...

    1% is pittance, especially for someone as uberwealthy as Bill is.

  184. Re:Didn't the govt just make dividend income TaxFr by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What your missing is that the income earned from dividends has already been taxed at a rate greater than the tax on wages.

    Now while the elmination of the regressive FICA tax would please me much more than the reduction of the dividend tax, both taxes are ones that we should reduce as much as we can afford to. Personally, I prefer property taxes. That's one that the rich cannot escape, and it greatly encourages the rich to put their property to good use, rather than waste it. It also makes sense, since protection of property is the main purpose of the government nowadays.

  185. Far Greater Concern by Niscenus · · Score: 2, Interesting

    If you think the greatest issue here is the money given back to the shareholders or Bill Gates netting a large share, you are very narrow minded. If you bother to read between the lines, or specifically read the buyout line, you might come to realise that the biggest risk is not in where the money goes to or comes from, but how Microsoft is benefitting (and it's not some consumer muddle about freeing up $46 billion). If Microsoft exercises a buyout, they will reduce much of the requirement for oversight!

    In case you missed it, that means that they will be able to pursue all sorts of "fun" strategies that would have undesirable long term affects. Personally, I wouldn't be surprised if legal threatening developed greater strength and market strategy became more aggressive.

    Of course, this could be a leak to inflate stock-value, but lord only knows why they would want to do that...unless an insider wanted to prevent the above.

    The silliest thoughts I have....

    --
    "Yeah...it was the numbers that were irrational, not the murderous cult of vegetarians...." -- Hippasus of Metapontum
  186. Re:Plofiting over linux's shittiness! by CastrTroy · · Score: 1

    Let me list defenses for all of those

    1. It will never become illegal, SCO is stupid
    2. which is bad how?
    3. it's only different than windows... have you ever seen someone who's not used to windows try and use it.
    4. And windows is more stable???
    5. The software is better than windows software, as it usually doesn't crash, and is more standards compliant.
    6. The UI for some programs (gimp) sucks, but overall it's pretty consistent.
    7. most things can be done from a UI now... what is this, 1986?
    8. it has wine, and if you really want to stretch it, you can use VMware.
    9. You can buy a computer with linux... hello, Lindows walmart pc, among others who are catching on.
    10. If a linux distro maker dies, their stuff is open source, and somebody can continue on with their work, if microsoft goes belly up, well, that's it for windows.
    11. what???
    12. On the desktop?? excuse me but i run it on the desktop and have never paid a cent... don't tell me you hire you're own sysadmin for operating your desktop
    13. Many distros is a good thing... but if you look at it, there are really only 4 or 5 big players....
    14. This is a very good thing....
    15. Not yet from microsoft... give them 10 years....
    16. Yes, windows has a much better record.
    17. Not to the kernel, or other important areas. those are monitored very closely.... I can make a buggy program for windows too.
    18. if BeOS is better than linux, and linux is better than windows, then BeOS is better tahn windows. simple logiic
    19. WHAT??
    20. WHAT??

    --

    Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
  187. Dividends by e_pluribus_funk · · Score: 2, Interesting

    People invest in dividends for residual income. Not only that, it is real money that gets deposited in your account(s). A stock on a fun ride up is just theoretical gain until you sell it.

    Most dividends are pegged to earnings, not stock price. Which means if the stock price declines, the yield of the dividend goes up relative to the stock price. Which creates buying pressure, and helps stabilize a decline in stock prices.

    Because dividends are real money, they can't be 'faked' like balance sheet statements using uncollected sales numbers. And because of the dividend tax cuts, companies can't use the (bogus even before) argument double taxation as a reason for not paying out a dividend.

    A company paying a healthy and regular dividend is, more than likely, a healthy company.

  188. Re:Didn't the govt just make dividend income TaxFr by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 1

    I agree with everything you said, particularly about the FICA pyramid scheme - except that dividends have already been taxed. An absurdly large portion (ok, I'm too lazy to go look it up) of corporate earnings are loopholed completely out of taxation. When you've got the degree of legalized corporate tax evasion that we do today in the USA, then it really isn't "fair" to allow dividends to go so lightly taxed in comparison to earned income.

    --
    When information is power, privacy is freedom.
  189. wrong by Ars-Fartsica · · Score: 1

    its a signal to future potential shareholders of a higher payout. buying will take place and the shares will rise.

  190. Nothing better to do with whose money? by marlowe · · Score: 1

    I thought it was the shareholders' money. At least in theory.

    --
    http://www.angelfire.com/ca3/marlowe Better a smartass than a dumbass.
  191. Liberal Socialista. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I wonder at what point /. became so left-wing that even making money became a bad thing?

    1. Re:Liberal Socialista. by Hagar129 · · Score: 0

      Bill gates is such an easy target around here....many are just that pissed that they aren't getting some microsoft money too.

  192. Let Bill have his money. by dasunt · · Score: 1

    I'm not fond of Microsoft, and some of their marketing practices were found illegal, but for the most part, Microsoft combined a decent product for a decent price with good marketing. Anyways, Microsoft is not Bill Gates.

    So Bill Gates will be a billion dollars richer? Who cares. At least he's been donating some of his money to charity [such as the campaign to eradicate polio within the next decade], and he has stated that he will give away the majority of his fortune before he dies.

    There are worse people in the world to give a billion dollars to.

  193. Why is no one mentioning... by tthomas48 · · Score: 2, Informative

    that this is caused by President Bush's tax cut for the common man on Dividend Taxes? You think this would have happened without that gift from the President? This has nothing to do with stock price, it has to do with tax rate. It is now cheapest for Bill Gates (and let's not forget all the other Microsoft Billionaires) to receive their pay in dividends. So remember when your kids no longer have band practice in school, and you have no healthcare that it was simply that we needed to provide tax relief for the common man, like Ballmer and Gates.

  194. But this is a GOOD development by argoff · · Score: 1


    The way I see it was that is that Microsoft had these billions of dollars that they couldn't invest in the next latest and greatest paradigm - LINUX!, without creating a suvere conflict of interest to their stock holders. But when they pay out dividends, then that frees up the cash on the open market to persue whatever technology is better without the conflict of interest. IMHO, this is really a good day for Linux.

  195. Re:Didn't the govt just make dividend income TaxFr by mcg1969 · · Score: 1

    Radon, a lot of what you're saying resonates with me. Certainly, I would be all for a greatly simplified tax system with fewer loopholes. And I really don't have a problem with the concept of graduated tax rates so this isn't veiled support for a flat tax system.

    However, I do think that it's important that we provide tax incentives for investment. Investment, both personal and corporate, is what provides the economony the liquidity and funds it needs to grow. And growth in the economy is vital to support growth in population and growth in the demands of developing countries. In addition, investment necessarily involves risk---anyone who didn't believe that 10 years ago does now!

    Attractive taxation helps to encourage people to accept that risk, because of the promise that the higher returns will still be high after taxes are taken out.

    So yes, attractive capital investment taxation policy will often result in rich people getting richer---but if the alternative is that people horde their money and don't invest it, I'm not sure that's a worthwhile trade.

    So investment taxation shouldn't be determined solely on some debatable notion of "fairness" alone, though that should be an important part of it. But it must also take into account the need to encourage investment.

  196. Re:Oh come the fuck on. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    For these losers, nothing is.

  197. Re:Why do you think he got the tax lowerd to 0%? by blair1q · · Score: 1

    I didn't say "the government was making money" I said "we were making money." As for "pillaging the people", most of the tax increase was on corporations, and despite what people collecting dividends will tell you, corporations do not have the rights guaranteed by the Constitution, people do.

    And don't for one second bet that Steve Forbes and his ilk are going for a pure flat tax. They'll keep their loopholes and eliminate yours.

    A flat tax is likewise regressive in valuation of service rendered. The rich, having had the opportunity to get rich, and the protections and assistance of the government in getting rich (the patent system alone is worth trillions to people who are no longer poor because they stumbled on a way to combine a hammer and a ketchup bottle), owe the government far more than someone who sweeps the offices of the rich.

    The net taxation on the poor is about 50%, and on the rich is about 20%, and the effective value flow when the value of government is included is about -20% on the poor and 20% on the rich. The Bush tax cuts gave the rich even more, in cash, because they weren't making it on the stock market any more.

    They saw gold in the treasury, and they looted it. Pure and simple.

  198. Will the pyramid scam finally end? by lamontg · · Score: 1
    Since microsoft has made all their money from stock option accounting fraud and taking money from investors, its amusing that they're finally being forced to give a few pennies back. If this trend continues, and microsoft burns through their cash holdings by paying out dividends they might at some point realize that the company is broke.

    Of course if the economy, the stock market, and their stock value starts to increase again, then they can still keep the pyramid scam going.

    Don't believe me? Here's how it works: Microsoft prints up some new employee stock options. Those employees eventually buy their stock options and give the money to microsoft. Microsoft pockets that money and reports it as *earnings* instead of an expense. That money then goes into their statement as profits and cash.

    This is no different from a company which continuously offers new stock for sale every year. But in that case you would never consider that sale of stock to be profit. It is a way of raising money, just like a company going IPO to raise money. But it doesn't reflect on the health of the company and eventually the company can burn through it all. In fact, these kinds of liquidity events should drive the stock price down since you're issuing more stock and diluting the other holdings.

    In the case of Microsoft, though, these rules do not apply. In fact since microsoft reports all this cash as earnings then it looks like Microsoft is unreasonably profitable. They then can support really, really silly market capitalizations which pushes their stock price up -- this causes people to invest in them, and causes them to be a major holding of index mutual funds. Then the whole cycle continues...

    ...until now. Now they've got to start burning through their cash by issuing dividends in the hope that their stock price will recover. And it might, and they may be able to continue with the pyramid scam. But on the other hand they may run out of money to issue dividends with and the entire scam may finally collapse...

  199. Actually, he *won't* make any money by IntelliTubbie · · Score: 1

    True, Bill Gates will make $1 a share in dividends ... however, the dividend will also drop the stock price by $1 as soon as it is paid. Why? Because if a stock pays me a $1 dividend tomorrow, I'll pay $X for it today -- but if it paid the dividend yesterday, I'll only pay $X-1, because I don't get the extra $1. Therefore, Bill's gain on the dividend is offset by his loss on the stock. If he were really doing this for the cash, he could get the same result by selling some of his stock. (Of course, this doesn't take into account the difference between taxes on dividends and taxes on capital gains, but IANATL [I am not a tax lawyer].)

    This should make common sense ... I can't "make" a million dollars by writing myself a million dollar check. What goes in one way must come out the other.

    Cheers,
    IT

    --

    Power corrupts. PowerPoint corrupts absolutely.

  200. Re:Why do you think he got the tax lowerd to 0%? by AvantLegion · · Score: 1
    *We* were making money? Yeah, the economy was riding high and we made even more money than was taken away from us, true. I don't think that serves your point very well, though.

    I'll flat out ignore your nice round number percentages that are obviously products of your imagination.

    Funny thing though. You claim that "most of the tax increase was on corporations". And then that most of the tax cut is for the corporations. Which pretty much corroborates my statement about one undoing the other. The portion of the tax hikes that made it our way, though, was still painfully substantial.

  201. SEATTLE, moron, SEATTLE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Bill's dad was a top-notch lawyer in New York

    William Gates launched a law firm in SEATTLE, moron. SEATTLE. Opposite coast of New York. Bill Gates grew up in SEATTLE. So did Paul Allen. Microsoft is headquartered in the SEATTLE area. Bill Gates lives in SEATTLE. Paul Allen owns the SEATTLE Seahawks and funded that cool rock-music museum in SEATTLE.

    How this gets modded up to 5,Informative when it's 100 percent wrong....

    1. Re:SEATTLE, moron, SEATTLE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      His point is still valid.

  202. Cash and Dash by xombo · · Score: 1

    I think that Bill Gates has something totally alterior planned. He'll try to pick up a few more billion dollars and then leave. He knows that .NET and Longhorn are the impending doom of Microsoft, and that if he doesn't get out soon he'll end up with lawsuits, government investigation, and potential financial failure.

    If he can bank all of his assets now, he has that much more in the bank. Ballmer's already started, Bill's already taken himsrelf out of the CEO position, what's next?

    They all know that things aren't looking good.

  203. Compare to Linux by Jacek+Poplawski · · Score: 1

    Company is able to pay $10 Billion, but is unable to create stable operating system.
    And Linux just works, without half of Billion.

  204. it's because of taxes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The US government has some special tax breaks this year for companies to all the cash they have stuffed in offshore bank accounts and bring it back to the US.

    Many US companies that make lots of money overseas never bring the profits home. They set up local companies who technically make the profit; the local compaines are owned by offshore subsidiaries, incorporated in places with no taxes. So, the profits wind up in banks in the Jersey Island, or Bermuda, or the Caymans, where the IRS can't even see it, never mind touch it.

    Also, dividend taxes are now lower. Last year, if Bill, & Co. had taken their offshore money home and then paid it to themselves as a dividend, they would have lost about 75% of it to the IRS. If they do it this year, they will only pay about 20%. Big difference on $10 billion.

    It helps the IRS, too, because 20% of something is better than 75% of nothing.

  205. Right by LostCluster · · Score: 1

    Not this time. If that 8 cent dividend were to become a 10 cent dividend, then the expectation is that more 10 cent dividends were to come and the stock would rise. But that's not what this is about... this would be a one-time dividend based on cash that Microsoft has been stockpiling for no particular reason, there's no expectation that this would happen a second time.

  206. kinda iffy for economy by MISplice · · Score: 1

    Some in the business would say this means that tech companies (or maybe just MS) can't find anything in R&D to spend the money on so it proves the driving force behind our economy (technology) IS sputtering and innovation is faltering. But then again I have always been called a doomsayer..

    --
    "Imagination is more important than knowledge" -- Albert Einstein
  207. Urban myth... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    1. Re:Urban myth... by Jellybob · · Score: 1

      Well... I can't be completely certain, but it is someone I know personally, so I'm fairly sure.

  208. Re:Why do you think he got the tax lowerd to 0%? by blair1q · · Score: 1

    Ugh.

    You really don't think very hard, or comprehend too well.

    The taxes were on corporate profits. The tax cut was on dividends to rich individuals from corporate assets.

    Cutting dividend taxes to 0% is precisely the opposite of investment stimulus. You're being lied to, and you're defending it.

  209. Good for Bill by crashnbur · · Score: 1

    Whether you like him or not, he did what he did in a country that made it possible. He had an idea, the idea sold, and he profited. That is the American way. His goal wasn't to make billions when he started, so now that he is, why do so many want to crucify him for it? Don't you realize that anyone in Bill's position would be receiving the same treatment, if not from you then from someone else who wouldn't exactly like how things have turned out? Accept reality and work with it, and maybe you'll be as comfortable as Bill one day.

  210. MOD PARENT UP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you had $12 billion a year in cold cash coming in and couldnt spend it on anything that wouldnt be dilutive to their profit margin. To say they need to reinvest $10b/yr into their products is like saying a steel mill needs to use excess steel to build new add ons to the factory - why? That money is best used somewhere else, and MS has too much stigma, legal and social, to do anything high return, aka 'high risk'.

  211. Sarcasm. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I wish I understood people as well as you. I guess I should read more books.

  212. Consolation prize for unexercisable options by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Microsoft recently did a split which effectively multiplies the money those left holding options can get. The execs have been bailing for some time. Unfortunately there are saps that cannot exercise their options and know they will be screwed when the accounting books see daylight or huge fines hit the fan.

    The dividends just makes sure there's a little lube for the shareholders left with the leftovers ...