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A Look at Microsoft's Regulatory Problems

jrexilius writes: "The Economist has a great article on the state of the EUs anti-trust case against microsoft, background, and future troubles with google. One interesting comment was 'Microsoft is preparing to use its dominance in web-browser and operating-system software to promote itself in yet another separate market--search engines this time'."

302 comments

  1. Fishy company by krray · · Score: 4, Interesting
    Microsoft's contracts with PC-makers required them to pay it for a copy of Windows for each PC sold, even for PCs that were sold with other operating systems, or with no operating system at all.

    This is exactly what REALLY ticked me off with them (in the IT adm position no less). I put up with their marginal quality on the desktop up until this point. Sure, part of me still wished I had gone OS/2 there as well, but I digress. I certainly still remember buying PC's that I had to pay the Windows tax on ... even though they still run Linux to this day (except one actually which is one of the Netware servers).



    Microsoft may some day conclude that the costs of constant regulatory battles--legal costs, fines, bad publicity, and bad relationships with governments--exceed the benefits of its Windows monopoly.

    One can only hope. In the mean time it's still Linux in the data-centers and my basement for that matter. OS.X on my desktop, thank you very much. And yes, they talk NFS and not SMB with each other as well. It's faster... You know what I've learned at the offices that have agreed to run Linux and/or Mac's? Within one year it's obviously cheaper and faster than before. Almost ironical after reading all the Microsoft funded ROI type studies showing the exact oppisite. I thought something smelled fishy.

    1. Re:Fishy company by October_30th · · Score: 5, Insightful
      required them to pay it for a copy of Windows for each PC sold, even for PCs that were sold with other operating systems

      Which, of course, is an exaggeration. Any such requirements come from the deal your shop has signed with Microsoft. If the contract stipulates that in order to get OEM discounts you must sell MS Windows with every piece of complete hardware you sell, that's a perfectly reasonable clause.

      --
      The owls are not what they seem
    2. Re:Fishy company by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      You may feel that such a contract stipulation is perfectly reasonable -- and no, it was not an exaggeration. It was a statement of fact in the article. I make it a statement of fact based on my personal experience.

      The ONLY reason that any such contract was agreed to and signed was for one reason only at such a time: at least 50% or more (likely 80% at that time) of people walking in the door knew no better than Windows 95 (which was GARBAGE and refused to be distributed on our networks). I don't blame Jeff (my local OEM dude) for such a decision. I would do the same thing so I can sell to the most people available. Good business, no?

      Except I still want my money back Microsoft.
      I don't forget or forgive easily. The garbage STILL coming out and selling from Redmond is amazing (read: XP).

      CLASSIC example why Microsoft got spanked by the DOJ in the States -- my OEM did NOT want to sign such a contract and comply, but was cornered into doing so. ANYBODY walking in the door on the border of OS/2 pretty much all of a sudden had no choice anywhere they went. The choice was made for them by big business [Microsoft].

      Obviously you simply just do not "get it" and am willing to bet that you're sitting there on a Windows box and not Linux or OS X. Pussy.

    3. Re:Fishy company by NoOneInParticular · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It might be a reasonable clause in the case of a competitive market where OEMs can pick any OS-vendor and strike a deal with them, but in the current world it doesn't work that way. If you sell PC-hardware, then you have to provide Windows. If you don't strike this deal, you go belly up. That's the nature of Microsofts monopoly, and that's why such deals should be illegal.

    4. Re:Fishy company by October_30th · · Score: 1, Insightful
      It was a statement of fact in the article.

      Uh, no. It was an exaggeration in the article.

      my OEM did NOT want to sign such a contract and comply, but was cornered into doing so.

      No, your OEM did not want to sign the contract but good business sense made him do it. It was not someone from Microsoft holding gun to his head or eastern-european thugs (if you'll excuse the stereotype) threatening to break his bones if he didn't comply.

      Complaining about how OEMs are forced to sell Windows is just like complaining about how you're forced to hike your prices when the memory prices worldwide go up. It's the market, stupid.

      Obviously you simply just do not "get it" and am willing to bet that you're sitting there on a Windows box and not Linux or OS X. Pussy.

      Hehe... I "got it" already in the early 1990s. I just grew out of the OSS bigot phase in the mid 1990s.

      Right now I run Linux on my file server and Windows XP for all-things-desktop side by side. I hope you'll get over it too soon and see that Windows is a perfectly good desktop OS.

      --
      The owls are not what they seem
    5. Re:Fishy company by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      Pro-SPEWS? Welcome to my foe-list.

      That's an interesting sig.. On one hand you seem to deplore SPEWS, ostensibly for the wide net which they cast; yet you're quick to make someone a foe for being pro-SPEWS.

    6. Re:Fishy company by October_30th · · Score: 1
      On one hand you seem to deplore SPEWS, ostensibly for the wide net which they cast; yet you're quick to make someone a foe for being pro-SPEWS.

      Excellent. You're the first one to get the subtext (or at least to say it aloud).

      --
      The owls are not what they seem
    7. Re:Fishy company by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Um, whats spews?

    8. Re:Fishy company by jefe7777 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      ah whatever.

      if you are an oem, small or large, prepared to buck the establishment?

      then be prepared to die.

      if you don't play ball, you're not playing at all.

      Microsoft still controlls the playing field.

      Competition is great for all of us...till somebody finally really wins.

      with 40billion in general liquidity, 40billion estimated worth of the founder, and 40billion estimated worth of the next several officers combined(after the founder)...I think we know who has won.

      and it's not the public...hell it's not even the stockholders.

    9. Re:Fishy company by gigahawk · · Score: 1

      Then you just go belly up. That is not Microsoft's fault. No one is forcing anyone to choose Windows as an operating system. A monopoly is when one company unfairly controls the market and forces everyone to use their product. Last time I checked, we still live in a free market economy, and you can choose whatever OS you'd like. As a matter of fact, Microsoft hasn't bought or litigated another OS out of the market. The fact that there isn't another OS that is friendly enough and marketing hard enough to compete in the public eye as Microsoft's Windows line is not Microsoft's fault. Actually that's Microsoft doing their job in the free market.

    10. Re:Fishy company by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It was a statement of fact in the article.

      Uh, no. It was an exaggeration in the article.


      "Under these agreements an original equipment manufacturer (OEM) was required to pay Microsoft a royalty an every machine the OEM shipped regardless of whether the machine contained MS DOS or another operating system."
      (Judges Order: Caldera vs Microsoft) http://www.drdos.com/fullstory/062899.html

      As for your personal involvment in OSS. The invention of the WWW (invented '93 widespread by '95) has really changed things since then. You might want to give it another look.

    11. Re:Fishy company by McDoobie · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "No one is forcing anyone to choose Windows as an operating system."
      No, thier not. But they sure as hell are forcing people to pay for it, even when thier not using it.

      "As a matter of fact, Microsoft hasn't bought or litigated another OS out of the market."
      Sure, if you dont consider OS/2 and BeOS to be operating systems.

      Check youre facts before you spew.

    12. Re:Fishy company by stephanruby · · Score: 0
      This is like a customer of a hot dog stand who doesn't use ketchup and complains about it because the hot dog stand always orders way too much ketchup so it can get it for rock-bottom prices.

      You want a non-exclusive unsupported OEM version of Microsoft, get it here
      $5 - Windows XP Pro
      $5 - Windows XP Home
      $7 - Windows Server 2003
      $6 - Windows 2000 Pro OS

      What? Your company doesn't want to pay that kind of money? It's too expensive you say? Your company doesn't want to buy one license at a time? It would save on labor cost to just have one CD with no registration key. It may even want to get some sort of minimum level of support. Well, the evil Microsoft corporation can help you with that -- it's all part of the negotiations. In the end, your company gets a wholesale quantity at a wholesale rock-bottom price.

      And yes, your buyer will probably get too many licenses, but hopefully your buyer will base his purchasing decision on the actual number of licenses he needs and not the actual number of licenses he gets.

      Sincerely Yours,

      A Fellow Linux User
      (who chose not to pay the extra $5 the last time I assembled a Linux box)

    13. Re:Fishy company by NoOneInParticular · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Forcing everyone to use their product is not what a monopoly makes. Obviously everyone could have gone without railroads in the time of the robber barons, right? You don't really *need* a telephone right. Sure you can refrain from using windows when your entire network of suppliers, customers, government, bosses, etc. assume you use windows/office and communicate with you through that?

      There's also nothing unfair about a monopoly per se. Many monopolies exist, and they're not neccessarily evil. Nor are monopolies per se illegal. In Microsoft's case, it was the leveraging of the monopoly that was deemed illegal, *not* the monopoly per se.

      The point I'm trying to make is that if you get into the situation where you want to sell a product (a PC), and that without striking a deal with the supplier of a part of that product (the OS) you will go out of business, simply means that there's no competition and the supplier possesses a de fact monopoly.

    14. Re:Fishy company by NineNine · · Score: 1

      You go belly up because the market DEMANDS MS products. There are no MS thugs with guns forcing companies to sell MS. It's completely and entirely market driven. I have not seen one single successful PC company selling Linux pre-installed. Not a one. Even the owners of /. couldn't make it fly.

    15. Re:Fishy company by NoOneInParticular · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Sure, it's market driven. Save for the thug approach, all monopolies are market driven creations. MA Bell won the phone market, IBM the mainframe market. Purely market driven.

      This does however not mean that monopolies should be left alone, as at some point such a monopoly will start hurting. This is why there are different sets of rules for monopolists versus competitors in a market. For one, barriers to entry must go. One barrier to entry is the Microsoft tax we're discussing currently. It's been set up when MS was on its way to becoming a monopoly, but now that it is has succeeded, the barrier must go. With such barriers in place, there is simply no possibility of a competitor to enter the market, let alone succeed. It's a simple case of making sure that any PC vendor has access to the same pricing of windows as their competitors. MS can still set the price, but cannot play favours. They lost that privilige once they won.

    16. Re:Fishy company by gigahawk · · Score: 1

      Microsoft and IBM coded OS/2 until Windows 3.0 at which point IBM kept on trying to develop until OS/2 Warp which failed as a competitive product to Windows even with IBM's backing. Microsoft didn't litigate BeOS to death at all, I don't understand where this comment came from. The last time they were in court it was BeOS sueing Microsoft and BeOS won 24 million dollars in the anti-trust case and distributed most of it to shareholders. I think you should probably check your facts before you re:spew.

    17. Re:Fishy company by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ""As a matter of fact, Microsoft hasn't bought or litigated another OS out of the market." Sure, if you dont consider OS/2 and BeOS to be operating systems. Check youre facts before you spew."

      I'll repeat the parent. Microsoft hasn't bought or litigated OS/2 or BeOS out of the market. These OS failed.

      "No one is forcing anyone to choose Windows as an operating system." No, thier not. But they sure as hell are forcing people to pay for it, even when thier not using it.

      No this is a fallacy. OEMs get better deals if they buy a license for every PC shipped. So the OEM pays less per machine and makes more money. They pass some of these saving on to you. Don't like it. To damn bad. Pointing a gun at MS and forcing them to renegotiate their contracts is immoral.

    18. Re:Fishy company by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Look closer at pricewatch, it's not $5.

      MS Windows XP Home & Pro Pre--Installation CD for System Builder Not for distribution to end users

    19. Re:Fishy company by gigahawk · · Score: 2

      The EU stopped those contracts with pc-makers in 1994. Why is Microsoft still the dominant force in the market 10 years later? They make a better product?

    20. Re:Fishy company by BuckaBooBob · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      One of the things they could do is force MS to give 100% absolute full access to the API's required for a product to be intagrated into the OS so that rivals can also aproach vendors to include their product instead of MS's during preload so its there at the time of sale..

      Having Software Preloaded is a termendous advantage .. It has proven to be a highly successful aproach to gaining market share... This is inevitable and will be done in the future... MS needs to be hobbled so that competing products can replace MS versions at preload time.. Allowing MS to keep their Verson on the system allows them to sneak in more bugs which many can attribute to their competeing product winding up as default ect..

      This could really start to open up the Monopoly MS has in the Intel market and create Real cometition... It could be expanded into Desktop managers ect to really get the innovation going again...

      What "Desktop" Innovation has there really been since windows 95? None really...

      Breaking the 16 colour barrier for Desktop Icons.. Thats not a innovation

      Quicklaunch Bars? Nope you have been able to get them while windows 95 was the newest MS OS on the Market.

      The new Styled Start menu? Thats just simply Reorganization and fixing the inherent problems the old start menu had.. Innovation? not really Common Sense.

      Hiding inactive systray Icons? again a solution to a inherent design flaw same as the start menu.. why do one and not the other.

      Hmm what else?

      New Widgets to make it looks as spanky as a Mac? Innovation? Nope. Been done before.. No Innovation.

      So where is all of this Innovation that MS claims they are making... They have established their monopoly now there is little to no need for "innovation" for that element of their OS so then they go and look at the market to see what they should "Innovate" next... Browser, Media Player, Search Engine, Messenger, Content Service (The list goes on and on)..

      So far the vast majority Business model consists of examining the marketplace and try to squeeze out the competeion using their OS.. The sectors where they do not have dominace with thier OS are where they repeatedly fail.. (Xbox, Cell Phones, Web TV ect).. It would seem when they cannot use their Windows OS as leverage to gain a market share their product are doomed to fail as they do not offer any real "Innovation"..

      --
      Who needs WiFi when we can have Packet Over Sheep! http://datacomm.org/PoS-InternetDraft.txt
    21. Re:Fishy company by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is like a customer of a hot dog stand who doesn't use ketchup and complains about it because the hot dog stand always orders way too much ketchup so it can get it for rock-bottom prices.

      No. I complain because I got ketchup with my server and be supposed to pay $7 for it - or even more. My servers run on Linux, so I didn't need the ketchup. Other people run their business on ketchup. I know that for sure, I get enough viruses from them. I OTOH think that ketchup is more suitable for hot dogs than for servers. Did I make myself clear?

    22. Re:Fishy company by BuckaBooBob · · Score: 1

      Oh yeah.. Before Anyone starts ranting about the Xbox not being a failure... I classify it as a failure to the fact it fails to produce a positive revenue stream.

      --
      Who needs WiFi when we can have Packet Over Sheep! http://datacomm.org/PoS-InternetDraft.txt
    23. Re:Fishy company by nathanh · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Which, of course, is an exaggeration. Any such requirements come from the deal your shop has signed with Microsoft. If the contract stipulates that in order to get OEM discounts you must sell MS Windows with every piece of complete hardware you sell, that's a perfectly reasonable clause.

      Except for those pesky antitrust laws, sure.

      The FTC (Federal Trade Commission) and DOJ (Department of Justice) got Microsoft into trouble for exclusive OEM deals back in 1994.

      The OEM exclusive licensing was part of the FTC investigation. From that link

      The major illegal practice cited in the complaint was that Microsoft imposes a per processor license fee on OEMs, which means the manufacturers would have to pay Microsoft a royalty for each PC they sold, even if it did not include a Microsoft operating system. See the section on OEM Licensing Issues for details.

      The FTC and DOJ didn't consider per-processor licensing to be "perfectly reasonable". Microsoft settled out of court rather than go to trial; they knew they would lose.

      That settlement led to the Microsoft Consent Decree. Basically Microsoft promised never to do it again. This attracted criticism from Judge Sporkin who said:

      Simply telling a defendant to go forth and sin no more does little or nothing to address the unfair advantage it has already gained

      Of course, Microsoft violated the Consent Decree in 1997 in order to destroy a new company called Netscape. The Consent Decree was worthless (as many people said it was).

    24. Re:Fishy company by Ironica · · Score: 1
      It was a statement of fact in the article.
      Uh, no. It was an exaggeration in the article.

      No, not at all. MS did at one time require OEMs to sign contracts that they would pay for a copy of Windows for every CPU shipped, regardless of what OS was installed on the computer. The other choice was to pay full cover price for every copy of Windows, putting the OEM at a ridiculous competitive disadvantage. MS simply didn't make bulk deals on Windows licenses without that per-processor agreement. This is one of the practices that was found to be anticompetitive by the DOJ.

      Complaining about how OEMs are forced to sell Windows is just like complaining about how you're forced to hike your prices when the memory prices worldwide go up. It's the market, stupid.

      No, it's not. If it was the market, then prices would scale with volume in a somewhat smooth curve. MS did not set its prices based on the market for its OS. They set two prices: one for those who played ball and one for those who didn't. This isn't how supply and demand in a competitive free market works.

      Get this: in the early '90's, if a company wanted to sell *any* copies of Windows, they had only two choices. Sure, one made better "business sense" than the other, in the same way that it makes more "business sense" to just pay the mob protection money rather than incur the cost of vandalism and theft. But there wasn't any reasonable way to buy only the copies of Windows that you actually intended to sell.

      If you walked into McDonald's, and you found out that Quarter Pounders were $2 each, but *only* if you bought one for everyone in the family... otherwise, they're $6 each... which are you going to do? Do you care that your 10-year-old wants a Whopper instead? Or do you tell him to shut up because you're trying to feed your family?
      --
      Don't you wish your girlfriend was a geek like me?
    25. Re:Fishy company by Ironica · · Score: 4, Interesting

      You go belly up because the market DEMANDS MS products. There are no MS thugs with guns forcing companies to sell MS. It's completely and entirely market driven.

      Oh, puh-lease. I suppose it was the market that drove MS's decisions to put fake error messages in Windows 3.1? That it was simply a market phenomenon when MS violated their joint development agreement with IBM by telling developers to code for Windows instead of OS/2? That the consumers demanded them to exploit dozens of cooperative development agreements with all kinds of companies, which were only made to send software engineers in to steal code and then incorporate it into Windows? Remember the Stacker settlement? They were a tiny slice of the pie.

      Anyone who thinks that Windows is the dominant OS because "it's just better" is fooling themselves. MS did many, many things that were at best unethical and usually illegal to obtain their dominant position in the market. They've been convicted of it, for crying out loud. Get over it: they're crooks. Just successful ones.

      --
      Don't you wish your girlfriend was a geek like me?
    26. Re:Fishy company by Xenographic · · Score: 1

      That may all be true.

      I even know that they sell Windows with each PC because otherwise the company might under-count the copies of Windows sold (and, hence, short-change Microsoft...).

      Still, it's an anti-competetive tactic that may well be illegal for a monopoly... IANAL, but I seem to remember this being one of the complaints against Microsoft...

    27. Re:Fishy company by Chaostrophy · · Score: 1

      You forgot the licence key, that is NOT included. $75 for XP Pro for the cheapest on PriceWatch.

      --
      Plato seems wrong to me today
    28. Re:Fishy company by stephanruby · · Score: 1

      Excuse-me, but that's how OEM operating systems are sold. If you can prove you just bought a new cpu or a new hard disk, then it's yours. Most amateurs and most companies can fullfill this requirement. And besides, the parent post wasn't even talking about buying it himself, he was complaining about his company and other companies in general.

    29. Re:Fishy company by stephanruby · · Score: 1

      Yes, I forgot the license key, but my original point stands. If you're using Linux, that $75 is not included in the MS tax the parent poster is complaining about.

    30. Re:Fishy company by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, I think the letter "W" was invented a bit earlier then that.

    31. Re:Fishy company by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or the OEM could have avoided putting windows on their machines at all. In other words, no, they weren't forced to do anything.

    32. Re:Fishy company by ClosedSource · · Score: 1

      It's absurd to compare MS to AT&T. When I was young, you simply couldn't make a phone call without Ma Bell. You couldn't even buy a phone, you had to rent it from the phone company.

      Today you can buy a computer from many different vendors (none of them owned by MS) and many different OS's are available.

    33. Re:Fishy company by stephanruby · · Score: 1
      Sure, it's market driven. Save for the thug approach, all monopolies are market driven creations. MA Bell won the phone market, IBM the mainframe market. Purely market driven.

      Sure, IBM and MA Bell could have sustained their monopoly without the use of monopoly-granting patents. I believe you.

    34. Re:Fishy company by KD5YPT · · Score: 1

      Just out of curiosity, what fake win 3.1 error message? I have never used windows 3.1 before.

      --
      In US, you can easily buy enough major firearms to wipe out your neighbourhood but a few little fireworks are banned.
    35. Re:Fishy company by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because the bulk of the market doesn't give a fuck about Europe?

    36. Re:Fishy company by NortWind · · Score: 2, Informative

      Win 3.1 could run on top of MS-DOS or on top of DR-DOS (Digital Research DOS.) When you would start Win 3.1 on DR-DOS you would get an error message (that said ERROR) unsuportted OS detected. This effectively killed the ability of third party PC makers to sell DR-DOS + Win 3.1 preinstalled. Here is one site that gives the story. (Features Caldera too, eh.)

    37. Re:Fishy company by macjohn · · Score: 1

      news flash to October_30th: a MONOPOLY is not a MARKET.
      Markets require competitors and choices.

      Microsoft imposed this license per cpu formula many years ago and kept it up until the courts stopped them. That's one of the reasons OS/2 - which was far better - never caught on. Neither computer makers nor consumers were free to choose. That is not a market.

      --
      --Hi. I'm in Portland and it's raining. This appears to be a permanent condition.
    38. Re:Fishy company by Eric+Damron · · Score: 1

      Um no, it's not an exaggeration and um.. no its not perfectly okay for a monopoly to flex its muscle in this manner.

      Are you saying that if Microsoft (which has it's OS running on 90% + desktops in the world) should be allowed to tell an OEM that if they want to be competitive (read stay in business) then they must sell Microsoft OSes exclusively?? It doesn't take a genus to understand that this is an anti competitive practice.

      I guess there are some people who will just never get it. The free market stops working when monopoly businesses abuse there position to stay in a monopoly position or to expand their influence into other areas. That's why there are anti trust laws. You should read them someday.

      --
      The race isn't always to the swift... but that's the way to bet!
    39. Re:Fishy company by macjohn · · Score: 1

      Many monopolies exist

      Name three, that are not either regulated by a public utilities commission or guaranteed by patent rights.

      --
      --Hi. I'm in Portland and it's raining. This appears to be a permanent condition.
    40. Re:Fishy company by Eric+Damron · · Score: 1

      Right... Don't put windows (the OS that 99% of your customers want) on the PCs that you sell.

      Yeah, you could do that. You could also only sell 3 computers ever couple of years. Kind of hard to feed a family on that kind of cash flow don't you think?

      --
      The race isn't always to the swift... but that's the way to bet!
    41. Re:Fishy company by Eric+Damron · · Score: 1

      You are correct. It is an anti-competetive practice and yes, it is not legal.

      The idea of letting the market place take care of itself is good until one company becomes a monopoly. At that point the monopoly can force the market to stop behaving in a normal manner.

      Microsoft telling an OEM that they must sell only Microsoft OSes or not get a discount in a market where profit margins are so small is the same as telling that OEM that either they go exclusivly Microsoft or they go out of business.

      --
      The race isn't always to the swift... but that's the way to bet!
    42. Re:Fishy company by Endive4Ever · · Score: 1

      Patents remain in force for relatively short time durations. Certainly in the case of 'Ma Bell' their patents weren't what kept them a monopoly. They thrived for decades, much longer than 'patents' last. And likewise for IBM, for the most part.

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      ---
    43. Re:Fishy company by Endive4Ever · · Score: 1

      That 'error message dialogue' was only 'featured' in pre-release versions of Windows that some journalist reviewers were given. It never made it into the shipping code.

      Which makes a certain amount of sense. Microsoft probably hadn't done the regression testing of Windows on DR-DOS that would be necessary for them to make any promises how it would perform.

      --
      ---
    44. Re:Fishy company by Endive4Ever · · Score: 1

      IBM didn't "keep on trying until OS/2 Warp." They for the most part succeeded. They released OS/2 Warp, and then several successful versions after OS/2 Warp. Not as successful as Windows, of course, but they were good, solid operating systems.

      There are more, complex, details about how and why OS/2 failed. But you make it sound like OS/2 was a technical failure. It most certainly was not.

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      ---
    45. Re:Fishy company by Endive4Ever · · Score: 1

      Worse than that, you couldn't even connect telephone equipment to the phone line coming into your house. You had to have a qualified tech from the telephone company come out and connect it. And there were a very limited number of items they'd allow to be connected. The good old days of 110 and 300 baud modems...

      I have only ever bought a computer once in my life that had Microsoft preinstalled on it. But, of course, that was a laptop bought new, which is something I've only ever done once (ended up returning that laptop, too). Maybe that disqualifies me from discussing 'preinstalls' since it seems such an irrational thing to do. (I have so many cases here that it would seem insane to buy one in a fancy screen-printed cardboard box with all the components already installed in it)

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      ---
    46. Re:Fishy company by Flywheel · · Score: 1

      No OS/2 didn't fail .... Microsoft gave IBM an offer they couldn't refuse - IBM FAILED .... to this day IBM management still tries to phase out OS/2, even though the product branch brings in a profit and new costumers arrives ... must be a bit of a bugger.

      Regarding BeOS, it was Be Inc that failed ... lets hope that YellowTAB Zeta is more successfull.

      But Microsoft did buy GO!OS and made the sourcecode vanish.

      --
      Live long and prosper...
    47. Re:Fishy company by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      OS/2 was hardly a "technical" success either -- under the hood, it was a comprimised design of the 1980s. No security model, "unfixable" input queue issues, 16-bit device driver code, etc.

      Windows NT pretty much mopped the floor with OS/2 in the low-end server market -- and you can't argue anti-trust there because the market was 75% Novell at the time.

    48. Re:Fishy company by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The only reason that OS/2 is "profitable" (on an annual basis) is because it's legacy mode and IBM does almost no dev on it.

      IBM sunk, what, billions into R&D and marketing for OS/2 -- there's no way at all they've made a dime of profit on the thing over it's lifespan.

      And new customers? Pass the crack, teamer.

    49. Re:Fishy company by Felinoid · · Score: 1

      That is what Nintendo said when they told the stores "If you want to sell Nintendos you have to agree to sell nothing else"...
      Corts however said nope.

      Then there was that whole exclusive soda sales deal at Wendys (memorys fuzzy but I think it was Coke who got the deal and Pepsi who was suing.. but it could have been the other way around).
      In that case however it didn't matter as nither had any real monopoly and it's not like people go to fast food outlets to buy soda.
      (Ok I admit I'm one of those people who will buy the soda for the meal at 7-11 or Albertsons)

      The corts have been remarkably consistent on the issue long before Microsoft required Windows be sold with all PCs to get the OEM deal.

      It was an issue of market access for compeating products be it Nintendo, Coke or Microsoft.

      The only workaround that I know of is where Pepsi owned the fast food chains themselfs. If the shop owner dosn't WANT to offer a varrity of products that is the shops choice. But when it's a contractual condition for a prouct liccens that is a whole other ball of wax.

      And long after Microsofts "All or none" deal the 7-11 franchise include a contractrual obligation to buy all the products directly from the 7-11 distrabution even when the store owners could find better deals through other channels.
      The corts found this too wasn't legal.

      Now let's recap:
      Nintendo can't say "No compeating game console". It's not as if department stores went out of business for not selling Nintendos.

      Coke can't say "No selling Pepsi products".
      It's not as if Wendys would lose business for not selling Coke and it's not as if Pepsi suffered for the lack of business from Wendys.

      7-11 franchise can't dictate distrabution channels. It's not even a matter of one product over annother as many compeating products are available from the franchise disrabution channels.

      But Microsoft can say "Eather all Microsoft or no Microsoft" yet any store that would chouse "No Microsoft" would go out of business...

      Makes perfict sense to me....
      NOT!!

      --
      I don't actually exist.
    50. Re:Fishy company by Felinoid · · Score: 1

      Your kinda right.. What is the missing element?
      The market driven monopoly was granted to Microsoft with Dos. Windows is nothing more than a hitch hiker. With out Microsofts "All or none" deal users could buy PCs with OS/2 installed... and Dos was in the pacage.

      Plus Dr Dos was making it's way into the market when Microsoft shut it down with the OEM pacage deal.

      Companys were more comfortable with MsDos at that point in time (Due to FUD on Microsofts behalf) and weren't willing to switch to anything else (including Windows... I knew of at least one office building that while having Windows on every box never accually used it before Windows could support LAN networking...

      --
      I don't actually exist.
    51. Re:Fishy company by pcmanjon · · Score: 1

      No, your OEM did not want to sign the contract but good business sense made him do it. It was not someone from Microsoft holding gun to his head or eastern-european thugs (if you'll excuse the stereotype) threatening to break his bones if he didn't comply.

      No, bit it's damn near holding a gun to your head. -- 90% of Americans who own PC's don't know any other operating system exists, therefore they expect Windows to be on the computers you sell.

      So, if you refuse to agree with Microsoft, then Microsoft refuses to let you sell Windows. If you don't offer windows on the computers you sell then 90% of Americans will not buy your computer

      That means you get 90% less business because you didn't agree to be cornered by microsoft.
      So, your business goes under.

    52. Re:Fishy company by ppanon · · Score: 1

      Also, back in the 80's Coke and Pepsi used to require exclusive deals with retailers whereby, if a retailer stocked products from the Coca-Cola bottling company (or Pepsi) they would only stock products from that company. Those agreements were also deemed anti-competitive, even though neither Coke nor Pepsi had a monopoly on the soft drink market. For a prosecuting attorney (and a judge) to draw a parallel between that precedent and the OEM MS-exclusivity deals would have been trivial.

      --
      Laissez lire, et laissez danser; ces deux amusements ne feront jamais de mal au monde. - Voltaire
    53. Re:Fishy company by NortWind · · Score: 1

      The decision to use DR-DOS or MS-DOS for the hardware vendors was made at the beta phase. That's why it was so important. Here's a better link that explains in more detail, with better technical info. Here's a quote: "While it's difficult to second-guess the precise goal of the encrypted and obfuscated AARD code, its results are clear enough. Windows beta sites that used DR DOS rather than MS-DOS might have been scared into not using DR DOS."

    54. Re:Fishy company by mpe · · Score: 1

      Microsoft imposed this license per cpu formula many years ago and kept it up until the courts stopped them.

      Assuming the courts did actually stop them. Which is far from apparent looking at quite a few suppliers. It's not as if there were any horrible consequences for Microsoft in exploiting any loopholes they could find in the original ruling.

  2. Dominance by OffTheLip · · Score: 1

    If by dominance you mean they have captured the market spewing unwanted popups and spam, well duh!

  3. Search engines are a "low cost" change by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    For users, changing operating systems, and even browsers, can be quite painful. In the case of an OS, old apps might nor work, and you might have to learn a new interface, and there may even be a cost of purchasing the OS. For browsers, it's hard to become aware of alternatives (for regular folk) and a download (on dialup) may take a while. For search engines, though, it's simply a matter of loading a new page, and maybe changing a setting somewhere. Not to mention the fact that even common folk know about Google, and it's become a part of the language. MS can't just "win" the search engine war by pointing users there by default.

    1. Re:Search engines are a "low cost" change by Davak · · Score: 4, Insightful

      MS can't just "win" the search engine war by pointing users there by default.

      To quote the article now:
      [Google] accounts for 35% of search-engine visits--compared with 28% for Yahoo!, 16% for AOL and 15% for Microsoft's MSN

      Do you really think that 31% of the population feels that Microsoft and AOL searches are better than google?

      No. Users do not know better. They just click, and click, and click -- until they find their answer. You and I and most of slashdot knows that google would probably give you the answer quicker and better. 31% of the people out there just blindly search with whatever the easiest search option is...

      Now Word and other Microsoft programs send information to various web sites to get translations, directions, and other additional information.

      MS and AOL may not be able to win by pointing users to their products; however, they can drain enough money from the rest of the field to drive some better products into the poor house.

      Davak

    2. Re:Search engines are a "low cost" change by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Internet Explorer defaults to www.msn.com, in which has a search engine. Yes I'm sure some just use MSN. However, a lot of people probably use Google and Yahoo because people go around and tell people hey Google/Yahoo are better than the rest of them, and Google is a well know site and well know for searching, people don't really reconginze MSN for searching. AOL users, well hey if they're using AOL they are probably not very literate on the subject of Internet. That 63% of users that use Google/Yahoo are most-likely Windows users, who use IE that orignially defaults to MSN.com, and yet you don't seem them using MSN.

    3. Re:Search engines are a "low cost" change by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have to say that I prefer booble to either google or yahoo.

    4. Re:Search engines are a "low cost" change by Killswitch1968 · · Score: 1

      Obviously people that are using MSN/Yahoo over Google simply don't know any better. Is this the result of a monopoly or Google's policy of never advertising themselves ever?

      --

      Corporations: your universal scapegoat for all society's ills.
    5. Re:Search engines are a "low cost" change by 16K+Ram+Pack · · Score: 1
      There's also the times (like after a messenger update) when they say "would you like to change your home page to MSN" (recommended). I could do with a "no, I'd prefer to endure chinese water torture" box.

      Anytime I see it as the default on someone's PC, I point out either Google or Yahoo to them.

    6. Re:Search engines are a "low cost" change by shaitand · · Score: 5, Informative

      Man are you off. You realize that most users STILL do not know the address bar exists or what it is for? There are a huge number of users typing web addresses they are given in the MSN or AOL search box.

      Since typing the address in the search box generally brings up the link they think that is how it's done and never know better.

      Trust me, these people are just using whatever is there, not changing to anything.

      True story. An old man called who had recently bought a windows pc from our shop. He said he was having trouble with his computer, so I talked with him about several minor issues, helped him get the bar back to the bottom on the screen (he had it docked on the left side and expanded to half the screen), typical user. At some point I suggest he use google for searching and gave him the address.

      A month later his modem went out and I went onsite for the service call, after fixing his modem I searched for cleaned off the spyware on his system and launched his browser. Msn.com. "So you didn't go for google eh?" I asked. "No I love it, I use it all the time!" he exclaimed and proceeded to tell me how great google is, I let him take the chair. I turns out he has been starting his internet use by typing www.goole.com into the MSN searchbar and then clicking it, then doing his searches from google.

      The guy though msn search was where you put web addresses and google was a search engine where you search for terms. I think I tried setting google as his home page but he didn't get it, I think he ended up having a kid or grandson change it back.

      Moral of the story, people are idiots. Just accept that and you will be much happier in life.

    7. Re:Search engines are a "low cost" change by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      The Economist is an excellent magazine, but they are quoting the statistics from comScore. Why do you believe their statistics without doing some homework? Look at the clients of comScore

      http://www.comscore.com/about/clients.asp

      and obviously Google is missing, while the other 3 "search engines" owners are there. I'd venture an educated and conservative guess over 60% of all the searches are done throuh Google.

    8. Re:Search engines are a "low cost" change by pipingguy · · Score: 1

      For users, changing operating systems, and even browsers, can be quite painful

      Too bad more vendors don't equip their consumer-level PCs with those plug-in drive trays - $20 extra? - (of course, that would create a whole other set of problems though) and offer a free, additional limited trial of Linux or another OS simply by plugging-in a different HD-in-a-tray. Don't like it/too complicated? Shut down, put the Windows tray back in, re-boot and return the smaller capacity disk and tray for a refund.

      Case manufacturers now offer slide-out motherboard trays and flexible mounting options for other internals. Would a HD tray be a huge additional cost?

    9. Re:Search engines are a "low cost" change by Ironica · · Score: 1

      For search engines, though, it's simply a matter of loading a new page, and maybe changing a setting somewhere.

      Except that MS wants to change that. By putting their MSN toolbar on every IE window by default, they can bypass the need to even *go* to a page to search.

      --
      Don't you wish your girlfriend was a geek like me?
    10. Re:Search engines are a "low cost" change by jrexilius · · Score: 1

      for purely browser based search, you are correct, but that is not what the article suggested.

      Try toolbar that searches local PC fielsystem, hotmail or outlook inbox, and/or the web and possibly news groups. That is not a low cost switching alternative.

      Try installed as part of of IE, OS, outlook (and exchange) and other apps with perhaps a hidden option in a config menu that most users cant find to "hide" the searchbox (how many users still have clippy no matter how they hate it).

      Again, its using pre-installed base and forced usage channels to eliminate competition.

      Now in defence of perhaps the notion of muilti-target search capability, I think its a good idea. I know many people that would love to be able to search for a term they read somehwere and direct it to inbox and folders, local filesystem (and net based filesystem) and web and get results returned in categories and prioritizations. But only MS can run a caching index daemon on exchange and built into outlook and local filesystem (which would probably be neccessary) as most of those formats are proprietary. So who could feasibly compete?

    11. Re:Search engines are a "low cost" change by Endive4Ever · · Score: 1

      A removable HD tray would represent a TREMENDOUS additional cost.

      It would have to be an expensive hot-pluggable one, coupled with smart software that allowed it to be safely hot plugged, and/or it had an expensive interlocking system preventing it from being unplugged when the system is powered.

      If it was the cheap $20 tray you refer to, there would be immense warranty and tech support costs because people would be crashing their hardware/software at a far higher rate than they do now. Tech support for all the damaged equipment gets expensive.

      --
      ---
    12. Re:Search engines are a "low cost" change by pipingguy · · Score: 1

      It would have to be an expensive hot-pluggable one, coupled with smart software that allowed it to be safely hot plugged, and/or it had an expensive interlocking system preventing it from being unplugged when the system is powered.

      No, it would not have to be hot-pluggable. These drives can be locked, preventing unauthorized removal.

      Did you read what I wrote or are you just knee-jerking?

    13. Re:Search engines are a "low cost" change by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      $20 would be the entire profit margin of a large group of machines.

      Intel and Microsoft actually made a very serious proposal for "drive trays" called DeviceBay, and it was universally rejected by the OEM market.

    14. Re:Search engines are a "low cost" change by Jorrit · · Score: 1

      Moral of the story, people are idiots. Just accept that and you will be much happier in life.

      So because someone doesn't understand the concept of web sites and how to browse them makes that person an idiot? I find that a very harsh statement. I don't understand a lot of things in this world (like quantum mechanics and other stuff like that). Does that make me an idiot?

      If you are reading slashdot chances are high that you know about computers. You may even know a lot about computers. But people who know about computers are a minority. Just like people who know about quantum mechanics are a minority. That doesn't make all the other people idiots.

      Greetings,

      --
      Project Manager of Crystal Space (http://www.crystalspace3d.org). Support CS at http://tinyurl.com/cb3x4
    15. Re:Search engines are a "low cost" change by shaitand · · Score: 1

      "So because someone doesn't understand the concept of web sites and how to browse them makes that person an idiot? I find that a very harsh statement. I don't understand a lot of things in this world (like quantum mechanics and other stuff like that). Does that make me an idiot?"

      Yes there is ignorance in the world, all of us are ignorant on some topics. But web browsing is not exactly Quantum Mechanics, if he struggled with Quantum Mechanics for a couple days I'd call it ignorance.

      If one struggles with web browsing for six months I'm afraid one has no choice but to accept they are an idiot. Understanding the basic concepts of browsing the web (not internals, not how the web works, not http revisions, not even html, just type address in bar, type keyword in search engine) requires equivelent experience and intellectual capability as bad finger painting.

      Anyone with a triple digit IQ can handle this concept in under 5mins. Show them big blue E, tell them click, wait for weird tone thingy to happen, browser opens, type address in bar. If don't have address type what you want to look for in this box here. End of discussion. This requires learning precisely THREE extremely basic concepts. It's easier than filling out a form.

      You cannot get anymore intuitive than this, the bar on top says address *gasp* you type the address there. The bar on bottom says "Search" you use that one to search.

      Anyone who has trouble with this after 5mins is either:

      A. an idiot
      B. So damn scared of computers because of people like you consoling them telling them computers are complex and you have to learn them that they don't THINK.

      You basic computer user needs to be introduced to a computer in a positive way. Basic computer use is extremely EASY. They don't need to be shown in clicks, they need to be taught in concepts to begin with.

      In 20minutes you can show someone with no computer experience enough to navigate and most applications within it with relatively little trouble. In another 5 mins (preferablity at another time) you can show them how to browse the web. In 2hrs you can teach them how to write html and basics of how the web works. I've done it, many times. Do they know every detail? Of course not, but they know how to figure those details out on their own now without ever once touching windows help.

    16. Re:Search engines are a "low cost" change by Endive4Ever · · Score: 1

      Locked by whom? The qualified technician that comes free with every home computer?

      --
      ---
  4. Google is done for anyway by ZuperDee · · Score: 1, Troll

    I consider Google to be a has-been at this point. Let's face it: 1) it no longer has the usefulness it once did, due to all the spam in it. 2) Google has so far failed to do anything constructive about it. 3) Google's new technologies just aren't that good anymore. Look at Froogle--I have yet to see it perform as well as things like PriceWatch. 4) Google is losing business left and right--most prominent example: Yahoo is now planning to dump Google. 5) Although many (including myself) have applauded Google in the past for sticking to its core competency of searching, it also means they have failed to take advantage of the synergies possible in a full-blown portal, like Yahoo.

    I think it is high time Google either get its act together quick, or be finished off by someone who wants to do better, like Microsoft, or Alltheweb.

    1. Re:Google is done for anyway by Yort · · Score: 1
      it also means they have failed to take advantage of the synergies possible in a full-blown portal, like Yahoo

      Perhaps... perhaps not:

      Google Directory

      Troy

    2. Re:Google is done for anyway by 16K+Ram+Pack · · Score: 1
      I've tried some alternatives like Overture, and they still don't top Google.

      Sure, some searches are a pain - like I was looking for a florist in an area, and all I got were sites which had created pages with the area name in, and they pointed to big internet florists, presumably through linking their pages and using link farms.

      Trouble is, I don't know of any other search engine that would do better.

    3. Re:Google is done for anyway by great+throwdini · · Score: 1
      It also means they have failed to take advantage of the synergies possible in a full-blown portal, like Yahoo.
      Perhaps... perhaps not: Google Directory

      Which is nothing more than a redressed (and not so frequently updated - the real kicker) dmoz.org feed ... this is innovative use of dormant synergies how?

    4. Re:Google is done for anyway by Ironica · · Score: 1

      1) it no longer has the usefulness it once did, due to all the spam in it.

      What spam? Haven't had any problems here. Can you be more specific?

      2) Google has so far failed to do anything constructive about it.

      Until I know what spam you're talking about, I won't be able to evaluate that point.

      3) Google's new technologies just aren't that good anymore. Look at Froogle--I have yet to see it perform as well as things like PriceWatch.

      Google does one thing and does it well. Froogle hasn't been all that useful to me yet, but I haven't really needed to go farther than newegg or amazon yet. Sure, Pricewatch is better... *if* you're searching for the very, very narrow band of products they deal with. It's not a very valid comparison.

      4) Google is losing business left and right--most prominent example: Yahoo is now planning to dump Google.

      I don't know whether Google is actually losing business left and right. Every time I turn around I find another website that's using Google for its search engine. But the Yahoo! decision may not have to do with Google's quality... it simply may be that they don't feel they can remain competitive if people realize they're using their main competitor's product. The Google pagerank system also may choke off some of their ad sales opportunities.

      5) they have failed to take advantage of the synergies possible in a full-blown portal, like Yahoo.

      And amen to that! All that "synergy" just makes me dizzy. if I want to look for something on the web, I don't want to be bombarded with fifteen thousand links for stuff I never use. Yahoo! has so many services, half the time I want to use one of them I can barely find it on the home page. At least "games" and "mail" are easy enough to find without using the front page.

      --
      Don't you wish your girlfriend was a geek like me?
    5. Re:Google is done for anyway by nyseal · · Score: 1

      You think Google is less usefull than Yahoo? Hmm...that's a new one.

      --
      [SIG] Remember Mattel handheld games?
    6. Re:Google is done for anyway by neko9 · · Score: 1

      i'm using google beacuse it is search engine and not stinking bloated portal like yahoo. if google becomes portal then i think it's over.

  5. Go Google Go by Davak · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Microsoft may have software on the majority of computers sold... but my god, we all use google.

    In the land of pirating with ease... the man who holds the data, not the software, will win.

    Bill isn't dumb... and realizes this; thus, the push into the search engine world.

    One more reason that I really like google.

    Davak

    1. Re:Go Google Go by ZuperDee · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Don't be so sure about Google--people also once said the same things you are saying about Netscape.

    2. Re:Go Google Go by Chess_the_cat · · Score: 4, Insightful

      And AltaVista, WordPerfect, Macs, and typewriters. Just because everyone is using Google now doesn't mean we all will 10, 5 or even 2 years from now.

      --
      Support the First Amendment. Read at -1
    3. Re:Go Google Go by Davak · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I disagree...

      Google has the data.

      Netscape had a physical piece of software.

      Google has one (the?) largest collection of web data indexed. One way they use and abuse this is the way they can give such targetted ads on web sites.

      Their little text-based ads rock the socks off other ads... Is it because people just are drawn to the little google boxes full of text? No... it's because the ads so closely related to what's on the page.

      Data is going to rule. Even microsoft realizes that google has beaten them to the punch.

      Could google screw up (like netscape)? Sure! Right now however... they are sitting pretty.

      Davak

    4. Re:Go Google Go by FlipmodePlaya · · Score: 1

      "Netscape had a physical piece of software."

      Isn't that an oxymoron?

    5. Re:Go Google Go by NoOneInParticular · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Google has the data. The data is however free to be collected by anyone. Indexing isn't a big issue either for the likes of Microsoft. Just add that little MS-search toolbar in IE, and make a few 'adjustments' so that the google-bar doesn't link that well anymore between minor revisions of IE. Finally add a few links into MS-office to enable some search (if only to use MS-search to search the helpfiles), and voila, another market killed and gained.

    6. Re:Go Google Go by Keeper · · Score: 1

      Google is currently in the process of screwing up. The quality of their search results has decreased dramatically over the last year.

      A good example would be searching for information about a specific product -- say a dvd player, or a computer monitor. All you get are links to sites that aggregate links to places that sell the product.

    7. Re:Go Google Go by Killswitch1968 · · Score: 1

      "Could google screw up (like netscape)? Sure!"

      "Your honor Microsoft is abusing its monopoly by making MSN the default search engine. We demand they advertise our product at their expense."

      Even if they do screw up they can play the old monopoly card, works everytime.

      --

      Corporations: your universal scapegoat for all society's ills.
    8. Re:Go Google Go by 16K+Ram+Pack · · Score: 1
      I too am fed up with ugly link sites headed as "companies selling the whizzbang 123" which basically just link to their sponsors. The whizzbang 123 might not even be for sale there - they've just generated a ton of pages with a revised list of titles and told Google to look at them.

      My advice... Try and find well known independent review sites or newsgroups on things.

    9. Re:Go Google Go by Amorpheus_MMS · · Score: 1

      >Their little text-based ads rock the socks off
      >other ads... ### it's because the ads so closely
      >related to what's on the page.

      It's also that they're much nicer ads than most others we see trying to stab each other for the user's attention.

    10. Re:Go Google Go by Ironica · · Score: 1

      A good example would be searching for information about a specific product -- say a dvd player, or a computer monitor. All you get are links to sites that aggregate links to places that sell the product.

      Unless you type "-buy" at the end...

      --
      Don't you wish your girlfriend was a geek like me?
    11. Re:Go Google Go by smchris · · Score: 1

      I would like to think people would notice if MS searches are too skewed -- but I know better.

      On Google -- well, they have the usenet archive. But what does it say about me that I like using Yahoo for searches too? Maybe even first searches.

      My notice of class action lawsuit against Microsoft (Minnesota) arrived in the mail today!! Since it goes back to '94, I actually have a couple copies of NT that apply. Can it get me a Lindows computer?

    12. Re:Go Google Go by macjohn · · Score: 1

      I've also noticed that a lot of other search pages are showing up when I do a search for something on google. It is really irritating, since it usually provides absolutely nothing of value. Wish they could figure out how to nix those pages. I don't see how they're getting in there.

      --
      --Hi. I'm in Portland and it's raining. This appears to be a permanent condition.
    13. Re:Go Google Go by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Microsoft has been beaten to the punch in pretty much everything. Even their 'original' ideas are just a mutant form of other companies ideas.

    14. Re:Go Google Go by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And having to add logical operators to my queries is exactly why I stopped using Altavista and started using Google.

  6. Dominance eh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you mean Microsoft is dominant because it makes quality products and capitalizes on it...then i'd have to say you are right.

    1. Re:Dominance eh? by NormalVisual · · Score: 1

      Yeah, that Internet Explorer is a real quality product...

      --
      Please stand clear of the doors, por favor mantenganse alejado de las puertas
  7. Dumb arses by Stumbles · · Score: 0

    Once again Microsoft fails to realize having an OS and a web browser does not mean you have a great search engine.

    --
    My karma is not a Chameleon.
    1. Re:Dumb arses by WindBourne · · Score: 1

      Actually, MS is spending billions to build a better search engine. and, based on their past, I would not count them out.

      Personally, If I were google, I would try integrating into Apache, Mac, and Linux ASAP. That would force MS to deal with those environments as well.

      --
      I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
    2. Re:Dumb arses by Stumbles · · Score: 0
      I would count them out. Goolge has been doing it longer and certainly has better people that understand all the various search techniques.

      Though you do have an interesting point about integrating google into GPL/open source more throughly. OTOH I'm not sure it would force Microsoft to deal with it as intended. They would more likely cut their arm off inspite of a finger.

      --
      My karma is not a Chameleon.
  8. Re:Why all the Micorsoft hate? by iamwahoo2 · · Score: 1, Funny

    We won't look down on you. We just feel sorry for you.

  9. In some ways, Bill Gates is poor. by Futurepower(R) · · Score: 5, Insightful


    As far as I know, Microsoft has only made money in areas where the company has a temporary monopoly, or where being aggressive temporarily makes a profit.

    Microsoft has a history of bad management, especially in thinking that the company can be aggressive toward customers, without paying any penalty.

    If someone had a monopoly on water, he would make so much money that he would make Bill Gates look poor in just a few days. To unskilled observers, temporary monopolies make those associated with them look like skilled businesspeople.

    When you are a billionaire, what is your biggest need? Is is to make more money? No, your biggest need is for connectedness with other people. By his aggressive behavior, Bill Gates has enforced disconnectedness, and he is in that sense a poor man.

    1. Re:In some ways, Bill Gates is poor. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you forgot to add...

      '...I'm just jealous'

    2. Re:In some ways, Bill Gates is poor. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow... Great insight. I appreciate your view point. How true.

    3. Re:In some ways, Bill Gates is poor. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      troll face.

    4. Re:In some ways, Bill Gates is poor. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Hey, money may not buy you love, but it can sure get you a bunch of sexy broads... I'm sure Bill Gates can afford to buy exactly as much connectedness as he desires. Heck, I'd even hang out with him, as long as he's buying the drinks!

    5. Re:In some ways, Bill Gates is poor. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bill Gates is possibly border-line autistic. I remember seeing a news show on autism and they played a tape of Bill Gates during one of his depositions wherein he was rocking back and forth in a manner that indicated a possible degree of autism. The analyst on the news show was watching Bill Gates in the video and used it as an example that some connection might exist between people who are highly technical yet also border on autism. It was an interesting theory.

      I do believe Bill Gates might very well be slightly autistic and probably has very little need or value for human contact. In fact, I bet if you touch him he probably cringes inside. A handshake in business is probably all he can take. How he procreated is something I find rather remarkable.

      I wish I had his money, but I'm glad I'm not him as a person.

    6. Re:In some ways, Bill Gates is poor. by brasten · · Score: 1

      There's little skill in maintaining a monopoly. For the most part, it's self maintaining. However, GETTING that monopoly in the first part takes a lot of skill, insight, and some luck.

      Microsoft has made it's mistakes, but it's downfall is in no way assured.

    7. Re:In some ways, Bill Gates is poor. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When you are that rich, there also appears to be a need (like Ellison - I think it was him - said in an interview on NPR) "to keep score" with the money.

  10. I agree, good Sir by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Google's results nowadays almost remind me of using Webcrawler back in 97. No thanks. Here's to the next search engine king (whomever it turns out to be).

    1. Re:I agree, good Sir by XeroDegrees · · Score: 1
      Here's to the next search engine king (whomever it turns out to be).
      nutch.org perhaps?
  11. The most important bits by Space+cowboy · · Score: 5, Informative

    ... are that

    1) MS might be forced to either bundle competitors (Go Ogg!) or disable Windows media (which the commission don't seem to fancy)

    2) The commissioners claim to have learnt from the mistakes of other regulators when dealing with MS, and have pre-emptively included a number of 'you can't do it *this* way' examples in their recommendations :-))

    Simon

    --
    Physicists get Hadrons!
    1. Re:The most important bits by PPGMD · · Score: 3, Interesting
      But you are neglecting what many users are looking for when they purchase a new system, they want something that when it comes out of the box does all of the basic functions expected of it.

      Among them is browse the web, watch movies, write papers, et al. But they most of all don't want to spend their first week downloading software, particularly if they are on a dial up.

      So if Windows XP was just an OS nothing else, you would need to download/buy a browser, file decompresser, media player, text editor, calculator, personal firewall, back-up utility, the list goes on. Poor old grandma would be spending several weeks downloading programs, assuming they including a basic ftp program, which the first week would be grandma learning how to use the put command.

      In the end though the end-user is going to expect the computer to come pre-installed with these things, since the margins are so low on the system builders end, that only really leaves the OS manufacturer to add these in, so it's only natural that it's including with Windows. Besides that fact, I do remember a version of Media player came with Windows 95, it was real basic, but it has been in there since then.

      I don't know about anyone else, but even for myself, it's still rather annoying setting up a new computer from a CD install, installing all the apps that I have on the other computer, even if I have the install executables available, it still takes time.

    2. Re:The most important bits by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am still searching for the button to uncheck windows media player during an install.

    3. Re:The most important bits by michael_cain · · Score: 1
      But you are neglecting what many users are looking for when they purchase a new system, they want something that when it comes out of the box does all of the basic functions expected of it... Among them is browse the web, watch movies, write papers, et al. But they most of all don't want to spend their first week downloading software, particularly if they are on a dial up.

      This also extends, at least potentially, to developers as well. The developer of some contemporary application wants to establish network connections, render HTML, play audio or video, etc. So they expect the platform to provide those services, and want to know that every single instance of the platform has them available. While I don't necessarily approve, one way to implement such a set of services is as part of the OS. Other approaches, with X Windows serving as an example, are possible. Some years back, at least one of my jobs would have been MUCH easier if there had been a standard way to play a chunk of audio on assorted flavors of UNIX. Two comments on the MS approach:

      • If they had implemented IE in this fashion -- a low-level HTML-rendering widget and a high-level application that did all the other parts -- they would probably have not gotten into the same legal problems. But they did the HTML "widget" outside of the OS first, as part of an application, then jammed it into the OS later.

      • When they did move functionality into the OS, they would have avoided a lot of security headaches if they hadn't moved quite so much. When the widget starts making its own decisions about what bits to fetch, what checks to make on strings, and so forth, flaws in the widget create security problems in ALL the applications that make use of it.
    4. Re:The most important bits by J.+J.+Ramsey · · Score: 1

      "So if Windows XP was just an OS nothing else, you would need to download/buy a browser, file decompresser, media player, text editor, calculator, personal firewall, back-up utility, the list goes on."

      Except that an OEM could handle the preinstallation of those sorts of things, and when it comes to providing an app to "write papers," that is often what OEMs do. Think about it? Is MS Word--used for writing papers--bundled with Windows XP? Obviously not. Do computers from Dell, Compaq, etc. often come with Word preinstalled? Certainly. Just because it is convenient to have certain pieces of software ready to go on the computer does not mean that those pieces of software have to be part of WinXP.

    5. Re:The most important bits by jrexilius · · Score: 1

      Very good point, which is partially why most Linux, BSD, and even solaris distros come with extra CDs of apps. It really does suck to have to scrounge around on the internet to find the software to do the things you bought the damn computer for in the first place.

      Here is an idea. How about an application lock-box that is pre-installed that has a whole host of apps ready for use once authorization is acquired (if they are not free software). You could buy access keys via net or over the phone. Gives users choice of apps, no trips to best buy or 3 hr downloads via dial-up, lets vendors get money for product. Dell could ship the CD with systems... hmm...

    6. Re:The most important bits by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Every person with a new Windows XP computer should have to visit the web to download all of the updates to make the computer usable. Then there are the drivers, anti-virus updates, pop-up blockers and spam filters.

      So basically, what Windows should do is to offer people a decent set of software, but allow people to choose that software. I.e. don't install IE if the user wants Mozilla and don't install Windows Media Player if the user wants Winamp.

      At the moment the user has no choice and this is bad

  12. Well, really by andih8u · · Score: 0, Interesting

    Microsoft isn't a monopoly, per say, they're just really successful. If Microsoft were truly a monopoly you would only be running your Microsoft applications on your Microsoft operating system that was running on your Microsoft hardware. Back when Ma Bell existed, you couldn't even buy your own phone, you had to lease it from the phone company...now that's a monopoly. Microsoft may be market dominant, but they're not the only choice out there. You can always put linux, os2, beos, or whatever else on your pc. You can run 3rd party applications on your windows operating system. Plus, no one's forcing you to use it.

    --


    slashdot, news for crazed liberal socialist zealots
    1. Re:Well, really by iamsure · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Microsoft isn't a monopoly, per say, they're just really successful.


      You are confused about what they have a monopoly IN. Multiple courts ruled that they were in fact a monopoly. You seem to be under the false impression it is for being a PC monopoly - far from it.

      They have become a defacto OS monopoly - while there are other choices, they leverage their market share to ensure you can't, shouldn't, or won't want to use a competitors product.

      Good companies encourage you to choose their product OVER the competitors, monopolies discourage competitors products through control, price gouging, and more.
    2. Re:Well, really by Xtifr · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Microsoft isn't a monopoly, per say, they're just really successful.

      Tell it to the judge, bub! Seriously, they may not meet ONE OF THE dictionary definitions of "monopoly", but they most definitely meet the LEGAL definition, which is what's important here.

      And furthermore (and this is a point that proponents of both sides often seem to miss), there is nothing wrong with having a monopoly! What's illegal and wrong is abusing your monopoly position. Both Intel and Cisco have been found in court to have a monopoly in their respective markets. But both have been cleared of any charges of wrongdoing (rightfully so IMO).

    3. Re:Well, really by NoOneInParticular · · Score: 2, Insightful

      If you are not putting together your own box (which I don't see many do in the case of laptops), whatever operating system you're installing on your pc, you have already paid for Windows. I think Ma Bell would also have been perfectly happy for you to use any telco, as long as you would pay Ma what was due to her regardless.

    4. Re:Well, really by PishiGorbeh · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I AGREE 100% There are places in this world that do not have international copy right laws.. Places that Linux and Windows XP sit on the same shelf in a software store and cost the same damn price.. Know what... No one touches the linux stuff. I don't know exactly why but seems to me it a clear example of consumer choice. After all, the cost is the same and the availabilty is the same. Windows is easier to use than linux, at least for the average user. BTW.. this place is right here in Tehran.. 4000 toman ($5 USD) for Windows XP and 4000 toman for RH Linux 9 at any software store in the city.. and there are many.

    5. Re:Well, really by MisanthropicProggram · · Score: 1
      Exactly! And, I would like to add that MS had been effectively lowering the price of a Windows machine. Ok, before I get flaimed, let me say this - over the years MS has been adding features to the OS that you (the consumer)had to buy seperately (compression, image viewing, browsers, etc...). They haven't raised their price. It's still about what they charged for a basic OS in '95.
      You say: "Well, they crushed the independent software vendors!"
      Some were crushed (ex. Netscape), others sold out and now are very wealthy. For us, the consumer, (those of us who have to pay with our hard earned dollars) we are getting more value for our money.

      And... for those of you who think that MS is the ONLY company who does such things, I ask you to try to get a cola flavored soda in your supper market.

      --

      There is no spoon or sig.

    6. Re:Well, really by El · · Score: 4, Funny
      The Electric Company isn't a monopoly, per say, they're just really successful. If the Electric Company were truly a monopoly you would only be running your car, boat, and homes with energy from the Electric Company powering hardware supplied by the Electric Company. The Electric Company may be market dominant, but they're not the only choice out there. You can always install gasoline, diesel, propane or natural gas fired generators, solar panels, windmills, or whatever else to generate your electricity. You can even use electric power to power hardware not supplied by the Electric Company. Plus, no one's forcing you to use electricity!

      If it looks like a duck, quacks like a duck, and acts like a duck, then it's a duck. If it's able to exert monopolistic control of a market or markets, then it's a monopoly.

      --

      "Freedom means freedom for everybody" -- Dick Cheney

    7. Re:Well, really by andih8u · · Score: 2, Informative

      Utilities are what's referred to as naturalized monopolies quickdraw

      --


      slashdot, news for crazed liberal socialist zealots
    8. Re:Well, really by El · · Score: 1

      And operating systems are not natural monopolies?

      --

      "Freedom means freedom for everybody" -- Dick Cheney

    9. Re:Well, really by NineNine · · Score: 1

      they leverage their market share to ensure you can't, shouldn't, or won't want to use a competitors product.

      Taht's not true at all. Many, many people know and do have other options. I don't use Linux because it sucks (I'm not getting into this conversation). I don't use Apple because it's overpriced, and I don't like the lock-in. Thus, I *choose* Windows.

    10. Re:Well, really by andih8u · · Score: 1

      And operating systems are not natural monopolies? NO! You can't choose to go out and get Bob's Electricity vs Larry's Electricity. Its a naturalized monopoly. You don't have a choice of utility company, you do have one about which OS you run. Jeez.

      --


      slashdot, news for crazed liberal socialist zealots
    11. Re:Well, really by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When I bought my first computer, the OS cost less than 0.5% of the total spend. Now it costs about 30%. The price of hardware keeps coming down and the price of software keeps going up to the point where Microsoft now gets more than half of the purchase price of an average corporate desktop.

      Each of the features you listed above was added to the operating system because a viable competitor emerged and was offering those services for free or cheaply to the people who needed it.

      There is no value to the consumer in paying more for something that you may not need and you could get for free anyways.

    12. Re:Well, really by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, but you raise an interesting question.

      If, as Microsoft maintains, the network effect of a homogeneous operating system provides a significant benefit to the consumer does it follow that the provider of that operating system should be a utility?

    13. Re:Well, really by Killswitch1968 · · Score: 1

      Multiple courts use an outdated and frankly incorrect definition of monopoly. Their being prosecuted for being a monopoly does not make them a monopoly; especially amoungst economists. "monopolies discourage competitors products through control, price gouging, and more" So if my local grocery 'gouges' me $5/lb for bananas is that their way of excerising monopoly? Claims of monopoly have gone on far enough. Unless you are the sole provider of a good or service the power you can exert is SEVERELY limited. Any economist will tell you that. Unfortuately economists don't make laws, politicians do. And politicians will pass any unjust law if it gets them votes.

      --

      Corporations: your universal scapegoat for all society's ills.
    14. Re:Well, really by Killswitch1968 · · Score: 1

      Jeez.
      I feel your pain. It's unfortunate how many people make grandiose economic statements without knowing any economics. It's a good thing people don't do the same regarding heart surgery.

      --

      Corporations: your universal scapegoat for all society's ills.
    15. Re:Well, really by Ironica · · Score: 1

      Taht's not true at all. Many, many people know and do have other options. I don't use Linux because it sucks (I'm not getting into this conversation). I don't use Apple because it's overpriced, and I don't like the lock-in. Thus, I *choose* Windows.

      That's all well and good. You're in plentiful company, with 95% of desktop machines running some flavor of Windows.

      But then, since this *is* a monopoly (and we won't even get into how Windows gained monopoly status), certain rules apply. You're not allowed to use monopoly position in one market, however it was gained (legally or illegally) to leverage your position in another market. For example, it's not legal to use your OS monopoly to leverage your position in the web browser, office productivity, or media player markets. These other products have to stand on their own merits, independent of the control you have over the OS.

      The courts have ruled on the browser market; MS illegally leveraged their position there. Corel never did take them on about the office productivity market, but they might have had a case. Now Real is giving them hell, not because they integrated WMP into the OS, but because they forbade OEMs with Windows license agreements (i.e., all of them) to bundle competing media players. This is a no-no if you have a monopoly, because they can't simply choose to bundle a different OS to get out of the agreement. It's *irrelevant* that Real is only doing this because they started sucking and people didn't want to use them anymore, because the argument is that MS's OEM agreements violated anti-trust law, and based on the previous court decisions, they're probably right.

      --
      Don't you wish your girlfriend was a geek like me?
    16. Re:Well, really by Ironica · · Score: 1

      I AGREE 100% There are places in this world that do not have international copy right laws.. Places that Linux and Windows XP sit on the same shelf in a software store and cost the same damn price.. Know what... No one touches the linux stuff.

      That supports the notion that Microsoft has a clear monopoly in the OS market. Which does mean they have to play by different rules in the other software markets.

      On the other hand, it could be that no one's paying 4000 toman for RH 9 because they can download it for free...

      --
      Don't you wish your girlfriend was a geek like me?
    17. Re:Well, really by Ironica · · Score: 1

      NO! You can't choose to go out and get Bob's Electricity vs Larry's Electricity. Its a naturalized monopoly. You don't have a choice of utility company, you do have one about which OS you run. Jeez.

      Except that, a whole lot of people have argued that MS didn't do anything *really* wrong in how it achieved OS market dominance, because it was for a greater good... without that standardization, we would never have gotten so far with desktop computer technology.

      Now, I don't necessarily agree that it's all ok because there was something more important at stake. I still think that either MS should have played fair and let the victor emerge from natural market forces, or the government should have stepped in a long time ago to help form a "standard," but regulated OS. Still, if you accept the idea that in order for us to make progress with desktop technology, we need a "standard" OS, then you are arguing that operating systems do not and should not work in the free-market competitive system. Instead they should be naturalized monopolies.

      And with that, look at regulation of utilities: since I *can't* just ditch SCE and go with LADWP (oh, how I would love to), they have to play by much stricter rules than companies who can be regulated by market competition. There's an argument for operating system software to work the same way.

      --
      Don't you wish your girlfriend was a geek like me?
    18. Re:Well, really by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just to clarify...

      Microsoft is defined to be a monopoly by the government from the standpoint of law.

      So even if you personally don't define Microsoft as a monopoly, from the vantage point of law, Microsoft is a monopoly.

    19. Re:Well, really by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sure you have a choice. You can run a natural gas power generator, or a wind turbine, or whatever you want to service your electric needs. In fact, in many countries this is exactly what people use for power.

      At one time a utility company was considered a monopoly. No longer, as there are many reasonable options in the energy market. Simply because some options are more expensive than others doesn't mean that they aren't valid.

      In fact, I contend that the only true monopolies are those provided for by law (copyright, trademark, and patent), and justifiably so. No other business is a monopoly. It's an old-fashion concept that makes no sense in the new global economy.

      The only exception may be the diamond market, which is a tightly controlled and manipulated market - but even so, those who wish to try to compete may try to enter the market.

    20. Re:Well, really by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sitting here on my Apple Powerbook, I somehow doubt that I paid for Windows.

    21. Re:Well, really by PishiGorbeh · · Score: 1

      "That supports the notion that Microsoft has a clear monopoly in the OS market. Which does mean they have to play by different rules in the other software markets." MS has no market here. It's pirated software. I couldn't buy a legal copy even if I wanted to. MS can not even ship software here if I ordered it online. People simply choose Windows because it's easier to use. I ask a couple of people who have software stores how much linux they sell. The answer was sometimes but when people learn what they have to do to get their digital cameras to work.. they come back for windows. "On the other hand, it could be that no one's paying 4000 toman for RH 9 because they can download it for free... " I thought about that but if you consider that 99% of conectivity here is 56K... I don't think that would be the case.. All in all, it's the purest example of consumer choice that I have ever experienced

    22. Re:Well, really by jsebrech · · Score: 1

      Even more importantly, a lot of countries (like mine) have arrangements where you can freely choose your eletricity supplier. The electric grid in that case becomes just a common carrier, like the phone network for isp's.

    23. Re:Well, really by Ironica · · Score: 1

      You miss the point of "monopoly." Regardless of why a product or company has a monopoly, once it does, US law requires it to play by different rules.

      If people are overwhelmingly chosing Windows when there is no price difference, that supports the notion that they have a monopoly.

      --
      Don't you wish your girlfriend was a geek like me?
  13. Yes, your trollness. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Here we have a troll replying to himself.

    1. Re:Yes, your trollness. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      IN SOVIET RUSSIA ASSHOLE FUCKS YOU!

      Reason: Don't use so many caps. It's like YELLING.

    2. Re:Yes, your trollness. by btakita · · Score: 1

      Why is that comment a troll? Because someone dares to say something, *gasp*, bad about Google?

  14. Winning Battles? by OS24Ever · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I don't know about everyone, but I'm not a Microsoft Hater, but I'm not a lover of them either. I don't think they 'won' the battle with the US courts, I think they bought the president. Pretty lame anti-trust slap on the wrist only after Bush comes into office. Prior to that it was looking like they were going to break into bitty pieces.

    Just my viewpoint.

    --

    As a rock-in-roll Physicist once said, No matter where you go, there you are.

    1. Re:Winning Battles? by shystershep · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I don't think they 'won' the battle with the US courts, I think they bought the president.

      I can't think of much nice to say about Bush, but the Appeal's Court reversal of the break up of Microsoft was handed down in June 2001, only 6 months after Bush took office. Considering that the decision was made by appointed judges -- none of whom (AFAIK, but I'm almost positive) were appointed by Bush -- and not by the federal prosecutors or any other arm of the executive branch, I'd say that it's highly unlikely that the change of president had anything to do with this.

      IMHO, politicians are corrupt (or not) regardless of ideologoy/party affiliation, but I have a slightly higher opinion of our appointed-for-life judges who don't have to answer to any special interests once they're on the bench. I don't agree with the decision to overrule the break-up of Microsoft, but I don't believe that it had anything to do with politics or bribery (insulation from the policital process does not guarantee competency, after all).

      --
      The bigotry of the nonbeliever is for me nearly as funny as the bigotry of the believer. - Albert Einstein
    2. Re:Winning Battles? by shaitand · · Score: 1

      Well if your only considering their office yes. But don't ignore other factors. Do you really believe the majority of ANY office holders income comes from salary? If you do your insane, it comes from kickbacks.

      The president has alot of sway with alot of interest groups, if he has enough to get the presidentcy (you don't really think YOU pick the president do you? Your manipulated cattle, who your manipulated to vote for is the real deciding factor) he has the ability to severely disrupt your kickbacks regardless of what office you hold... that's much more serious than the office itself, after all, even after your out of office your influence could be enough to keep the kickbacks going.

      The question is not whether the judge, politician, etc is taking kickbacks, they all are. The question is who are the kickbacks from and how much influence they have to fuck with one another's kickbacks. The president can veto any special interests bill making it much more expensive to get it through. Therefore he's entitled to lots of kickbacks and can demand a cut in someone elses kickbacks. Combine that with microsoft being one of the largest kickback providers and you have a bought case.

    3. Re:Winning Battles? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If I remember correctly Microsoft donated a pretty large sum to Bush's campaing in 2000.

    4. Re:Winning Battles? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The judges reversed the break up decision on appeal at the recommendation of the Justice Department which decided to go soft on Microsoft soon after Bush took office.

  15. Disagree by iamwahoo2 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I still find google incredibly useful. It turns up things no other search engine does for me. An they should not try to copy Yahoo. If I want yahoo, I will go to yahoo. Each engine has its strengths. The trick is to be distinct so that users know which engine turns up the best results for different types of searches.

  16. How Microsoft Will Attack Google by Davak · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Google has more data that Microsoft. Google is a better search engine than MSN. I don't think that anybody disagrees with this. However...

    The next step, inevitably, will be to integrate such search functions into Windows, on the grounds that it constitutes a core technology that should be part of the operating system. In his keynote speech at last November's Comdex show in Las Vegas, Mr Gates demonstrated a prototype technology called "Stuff I've Seen" which does just that. It allows computer users to search for context-specific words in e-mails and in recently visited web pages, as well as in documents on their computers.


    Microsoft has it's reaches into the majority of homes and businesses in the world. As broadband always-on internet becomes more popular, more and more services will really be clicks to other sites.

    Here I describe one of the ways that microsoft uses this in the new version of Word as a translation machine. The information goes out onto the internet and word brings you back the information pretty seemlessly.

    This is where Microsoft knows how to crush their enemies. By using easy clicks with integration, they can direct people to Microsoft search, translation, music, or whatever.

    As the article states, before long your searches and data will be references my Windows software in multiple ways. Windows doesn't just want the web integrated into your system... they want their web integrated into your system.

    Davak

    1. Re:How Microsoft Will Attack Google by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The word you were looking for is "seamlessly".

    2. Re:How Microsoft Will Attack Google by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      MSN doesn't have its own search engine right now. What you see on MSN is merely a meta-engine powered by second-rate search engines like hotbot etc.

      They are, however, developing their own search technology. V1 will probably be nothing to write home about, but V2 or V3 will kick Google in the crotch real hard, not only in terms of userbase penetration, but in terms of features and accuracy as well. They have virtually unlimited resources, and some of the brightest minds there in Redmond. They've also spent a decade and a fortune on natural language processing research. Finally, they simply know better where the money is - they're the biggest online advertiser on the planet right now.

      In other words, if I were investor, I'd hold off buying Google stock when they IPO.

  17. Personally, if it were up to me I'd just: by jago25_98 · · Score: 1

    drop all this reason and argument and just say:

    "You're doing too good and that's damaging the economy." ... split and generally encourage the smaller players

  18. Search Engines, Portals, Etc. by Some+Clown · · Score: 4, Interesting

    In the last few years there has been a lot of hype, at least with business folks, that Web sites like Yahoo, Google, MSN, Netscape would become big "Portals." on the Internet, driving all others into obscurity. It sounds like Microsoft to a certain extent may still believe this. You control the results of the search, you are in a position to profit from it. To quote the certain to come business advice:

    (1) Leverage monopoly to get into search engine business
    (2) ??
    (3) Profit!

    What I've seen in practice however, is quite different. It seems as if the new users tend to get sucked into the "portal" concept when they sign up with Earthlink, MSN, etc. But as they become more Internet savvy, they migrate and spend less and less time on those sites. It's like a giant ponzi scheme... once they run out of new people to sign up, they're done.

    I guess with the speed of the tech cycle right now, If Microsoft profits off of something like this for even a couple of years, then it's worth it (well, duh... Hmmm... case of the painfully obvious this morning.) Bottom line though, I think at this point Microsoft is still coming in well above negatives like costs to litigate, negative regulatory environments, bad feelings, slashdot insults, etc. Microsoft is a business, bottom line, as soon as it gets more expensive to work this way... they'll change strategies. As long as this is working, which it obviously is, they'll stick with it even if God himself came down and said stop.

    --
    "...The mice will see you now..."
    1. Re:Search Engines, Portals, Etc. by Tony-A · · Score: 1

      You control the results of the search, you are in a position to profit from it.

      And as you distort those results in order to profit and are perceived to do so, those results become just so much spam.

  19. I don't hate you... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    But it's like this:

    You know your box is "sick/ill", it spreads virii!

    I can see the "infected" pass by in my serverlogs(they don't hurt me, I got a good imune system).

    lets take this a little further:
    Note:some maybe pesonally insulted by this analogie!

    If I had AIDS and I would go fucking around without a condom, what would you think of me?

    Thats about how I think of people who know their box is "sick/ill" and still use it for their everyday tasks.

    needless to say this applies to most people cause most people know M$ spreads virii.

    ( I do not mind if you use it off line, but whenever you connect make sure you are protected, virii create a lot of useless traffic, on top of that everybody needs to update their virii progs, which results in even more traffic.
    guess who makes money out of all this!?!)

    1. Re:I don't hate you... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For virii, he means viruses...
      Already discussed.

    2. Re:I don't hate you... by Lehk228 · · Score: 1

      Windows is just as capable as linux when it comes to avoiding viruses... you can either disconnect it from the internet or install linux, either of which will secure windows...

      but seriously i keep my machine clean and i download alot of stuff, just gotta know who you are DLing from and practice good computing(NOT RELY ON A VIRUS SCANNER) all a virus scanner does is makes you think you are safe... i actually don't have one installed ( i use the symantec web based scan periodically to make sure i'm not infected) and i don't use either IE or Outlook(express), as those are two of the biggest ways for viruses to infect windows

      --
      Snowden and Manning are heroes.
    3. Re:I don't hate you... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      excuse me, in my native language ....it's virii...I will adapt..(resistance is...)

  20. Slashdot Retribution by Scoria · · Score: 1

    I'm not a Microsoft Hater

    If you're extremely fortunate, you'll get the GNU/chair. ;-)

    --
    Do you like German cars?
  21. Whatever... by apoplectic · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    'Microsoft is preparing to use its dominance in web-browser and operating-system software to promote itself in yet another separate market--search engines this time.'

    If Microsoft were to begin selling bubble gum, the "interesting" quote would be: 'Microsoft is preparing to use its dominance in web-browser and operating-system software to promote itself in yet another separate market--bubble gum this time.' Whatever.

    Calling the orginial quote "interesting" is a somewhat of an overstatement.

    1. Re:Whatever... by apoplectic · · Score: 1

      No. I'm serious. (Flamebait...puhlease...)

      Ok. How is Microsoft preparing to promote itself in another separate market by drawing upon the dominance in web-browsers and operating-systems? There is only one good answer to this: MONEY. Which means that the statement 'Microsoft is preparing to use its dominance in web-browser and operating-system software to promote itself in yet another separate market--search engines this time.' is not insightful as it could pertain to any industry as MONEY is a universal protocol.

      The statement would be more thought-provoking and relevant if it pertained to some aspect of Microsoftdom that was unique to MS...not merely piles of cash (which isn't terribly unique or interesting).

      So, fault me for not backing up my original statement if you wish, but it certainly is not "Flamebait".

  22. Microsoft not thinking long term... by ThomasFlip · · Score: 3, Interesting

    As soon as Linux is ready for the desktop, Microsoft is going to hell. Nobody is going to want to pay for software let alone software which is strictly limited in variety. If Microsoft was smart, they would stop trying to suck every penny out of every company, and start producing software which doesnt limit a users choice. And with DRM in Longhorn, there is going to be even more incentive to migrate to Linux.

    --
    If the dollar is an "I owe you nothing", then the Euro is a "Who owes you nothing." - Doug Casey
    1. Re:Microsoft not thinking long term... by Swanktastic · · Score: 1

      As soon as Linux is ready for the desktop, Microsoft is going to hell. Nobody is going to want to pay for software let alone software which is strictly limited in variety.

      The cost to consumer of Windows XP Home when bundled with a computer from one of the major players is about $50. Yes the source is Balmer, so believe it as you like. As part of a $1500 computer, the price issue is pretty irrelevant. I think saying Linux is free on the desktop really won't get too many buyers to switch. The only thing that would catalyze a switch would be a pretty dramatic disparity in quality (Linux desktop would have to be much, much better than Windows in all respects to get people to get over the hump of switching costs).

      Corporate customers (who should be price sensitive) aren't switching b/c of the price issue, they're switching because a) it's cool to push the envelope in certain IT cultures b) they believe the savings will come from having a more stable infrastructure-- ie dissatisfaction with MS products...

      I think the Linux switch will happen on the desktop, but cost won't be the driving factor.

    2. Re:Microsoft not thinking long term... by anonicon · · Score: 1

      I'm working on not ranting down on Slashdot posts that I perceive to be stupid, soooo...

      "As soon as Linux is ready for the desktop, Microsoft is going to hell."

      Fortunately for Microsoft, that's a minimum of 5 years, millions upon millions of users, and real driver and software support away.

      "Nobody is going to want to pay for software let alone software which is strictly limited in variety."

      So you're saying that there is more variety of software for Linux than Windows? In what?

      "If Microsoft was smart, they would stop trying to suck every penny out of every company"

      They've been sucking companies dry since at least 1988 and haven't had to change a thing. Why change now?

      "and start producing software which doesnt limit a users choice."

      I'm not a fan of Microsoft at all, but how are they limiting a user's choice? I can buy or download any software for Windows that I want and install it on my system. Where exactly are they limiting my choice?

      "And with DRM in Longhorn, there is going to be even more incentive to migrate to Linux.

      Speaking as a PC owner who's looking down the road to 64-bit computing (when it becomes mainstream in 2005, 2006 or 2007), I know that all Linux users will have to deal with Palladium too. Moving from Windows to Linux won't matter - the hardware and content/software manufacturers will still have the final word via Palladium. The only mainstream system without it will be Apple.

      You know, I really do hope Linux eventually kicks Microsoft's ass on the desktop because then I get the best of both worlds - a stable, reliable, consistent operating system that runs on cheap non-Apple hardware. Until Palladium bites the dust for Linux and companies like Adobe, Macromedia and most major games are released for Linux, my future's Mac.

      Peace.

    3. Re:Microsoft not thinking long term... by Alioth · · Score: 1

      That may be wishful thinking. People generally don't want choice (or perhaps don't care) - they just want the path of least resistance. Whilst MS has a desktop monopoly, it doesn't matter what state Linux is in. Linux could be easier, faster and cheaper than Windows - but if Windows comes pre-installed, it doesn't matter one fig.

      People generally prefer the path of least resistance over freedom - it's a basic property of humans, just like it's a basic property of water to freeze at 0 deg C in a standard atmosphere.

    4. Re:Microsoft not thinking long term... by HiThere · · Score: 1

      Cost will be *one* of the driving factors. If it's free, or cheap enough that tech-heads (not necessarily techs) can smuggle it into the office then it can succeed against the wishes of the central bureaucracy. Look at the way the micro-computers originally penetrated to see examples of this.

      Since Linux is essentially free (if you have one set of CDs, you can install it as often as you want), the cost barrier is minimal. Compare this with, say, Apple. If you really like a Mac, it's going to cost you quite a bit to get your Mac into the office without official approval. And if the bureaucracy makes you take it out again, you've got this extra computer that represents a sunk cost (you can't resell it for the same as what you bought it for). So there's both more risk and more of an initial cost barrier.

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    5. Re:Microsoft not thinking long term... by dmaxwell · · Score: 1

      As part of a $1500 machine it is trivial. When a $50 OS is in a $300 machine, it becomes far more significant. Sure, typical Slashdotters won't find much to like in those $300 machines but the nastiest of them would easily outperform the K6-2 500Mhz rig I ran for four years. I've seen bargain machines as low as $269. That $50 is just the OS. That is just so the machine boots. If you want to actually do anything with the machine after it boots count on spending at least $300 for a minimal suite of productivity apps and a game or two. The bargain machine doesn't look like such a bargain at that point.

    6. Re:Microsoft not thinking long term... by Killswitch1968 · · Score: 1

      As soon as Linux is ready for the desktop

      Whatdya mean not ready for the desktop!? Of course it's ready. It HAS to be! I mean the reason people use XP is because of a monopoly, not because Linux isn't 'ready'. Right?! RIGHT!? It's taken awhile for me to build my house of cards and I'd appreciate it if you wouldn't knock it down.

      'oi -1 flamebait, I can see it now'

      --

      Corporations: your universal scapegoat for all society's ills.
    7. Re:Microsoft not thinking long term... by Ironica · · Score: 1

      The cost to consumer of Windows XP Home when bundled with a computer from one of the major players is about $50. Yes the source is Balmer, so believe it as you like. As part of a $1500 computer, the price issue is pretty irrelevant.

      So when you're buying 1,000 computers for an office building, and you're $25,000 over budget...

      It sure can make a difference, and it will happen faster in government agencies, for a few reasons:

      - They're more price-sensitive in a lot of things: if there's no money, there's no money. They can't just wait until next quarter's revenues to come in. The budget is written more or less in stone for the whole year.

      - A government agency is less likely to treat their employees with kid gloves about stuff like this. "Here, we're doing this" is a lot more common, because people at the lower levels are relatively well-paid and have good benefits for the level of training and education the job requires.

      - There tend to be fewer "CEO" types who need to be spoiled.

      - Some of us are trying to get the point across to the masses that the transparency of OSS is a very important enhancement to government agencies who should be transparent to their citizenry.

      I worked in a corporate tech department for about two years, and now I'm at a government agency (doing something completely different, though). It's a very different world; some better, some worse. But I think that Linux will be pushed into being ready for the desktop by a government "bureaucracy" first, before it becomes truly ready for prime-time.

      --
      Don't you wish your girlfriend was a geek like me?
    8. Re:Microsoft not thinking long term... by cpghost · · Score: 1

      As soon as Linux runs Windows binaries smoothly enough (including games!), there won't be any reason to stick to M$. It's beyond me why this should be so difficult. After all, FreeBSD happily runs Linux binaries too.

      --
      cpghost at Cordula's Web.
    9. Re:Microsoft not thinking long term... by macjohn · · Score: 1

      As soon as Linux is ready for the desktop, Microsoft is going to hell.

      Linux won't kill microsoft. Open Office could.

      --
      --Hi. I'm in Portland and it's raining. This appears to be a permanent condition.
    10. Re:Microsoft not thinking long term... by macjohn · · Score: 2, Interesting

      As part of a $1500 computer, the price issue is pretty irrelevant.

      I don't think most companies are buying 1500 computers. The average worker's computer should be a total commodity by now, and it should cost about $300 plus the OS. I suspect that on many PCs today, Microsoft is getting more money than the hardware guys.

      And of course you're aware that the OEM OS you buy has to get thrown away when the computer is no good. You cannot transfer the license to another machine.

      --
      --Hi. I'm in Portland and it's raining. This appears to be a permanent condition.
  23. Re:Troll by xtermin8 · · Score: 0, Troll

    You must be some sort of lawyer. Perfectly reasonable???? its like saying "after all, Musillini made the trains run on time."

  24. If by poor... by CoolMoDee · · Score: 1

    If by poor you mean sleeping with billions and billions of dollars, why yes, yes he is....but seriously, you made a good point there..

    --
    Jisho - A Japanese English German Russian French Dictionary for the rest of us.
  25. Nothing Really Changes by Ridgelift · · Score: 2, Insightful

    But it does confirm that Microsoft is exploiting its desktop dominance in workgroup server software; and that, by "tying" WMP to Windows, it has overtaken its chief rival in the media-player market, RealNetworks.

    _Of course_ Microsoft will continue to use their position in the desktop world to compete against their competitors. They always have, and they always will. The fact ist the legal system moves at a much slower pace than technology. It's a simple formula:

    1) Use monopoly to compete against competitors now.
    2) Drag out law suits for as long as possible
    3) Make token settlement like coupons which continue to expand Windows penetration
    4) Profit & repeat.

    1. Re:Nothing Really Changes by gigahawk · · Score: 1

      The company you work for doesn't leverage its current product lines, services, and customer base to increase revenue? That's a bit odd, you might be out of a job pretty soon. I was under the impression that companies should use their existing infrastructure to advance their products and revenue. Maybe I've taken too many economics classes to know any better.

    2. Re:Nothing Really Changes by Killswitch1968 · · Score: 1

      Oh come on. Google will be sitting pretty as long as they don't make mistakes. Netscape didn't die because of monopoly, they died because they didn't make a significantly superior browser (ie. Firebird or Opera. Admit it, if Netscape had originally had a browser of that calibre nobody would have continued using IE)

      --

      Corporations: your universal scapegoat for all society's ills.
  26. Re:Mussilini made the trains run on time by xtermin8 · · Score: 1

    Damn! Slahsodt should have an automatic spellcheck! Fat finger syndrome lives.

  27. Re:Troll by October_30th · · Score: 2
    No, not a lawyer just a humble physicist who's sick of intellectual dishonesty in the article.

    What's your point? Are you proposing that Microsoft should be subject to another set of rules than the other companies?

    PS. It's "Mussolini".

    --
    The owls are not what they seem
  28. Re:How to Be an American by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

    To become a fully-fledged Yank, you'll need to get a weapon. Americans think that having more killing machines magically makes their country safer, and it helps them to walk around saying "I'll put a cap in your ass". Even though the concept of "no guns = no gun-related crimes" is alien to the average Yank, it'll give you a false sense of security in this country with the highest crime rates in the developed world.

    As an anti-American troll myself, may I suggest that you remove this point or at least change it? It makes no sense to point out that many Americans own guns. It will only make them feel proud, strong or some other shit you can't understand as a civilized European. If you have to include the gun thing, do it in such a way that it makes clear that someone who owns a gun is probably too much of a wuss and too fat to defend himself with his bare hands. State that martial arts are much cooler than guns and you'll actually get to use them if someone pisses you off in school.

    You also should include some ridiculous claim about sex. For example, say that according to statistics, every second American watches gay hairy midget porn on a regular basis. It may be bullshit, but if you do it right, they'll get angry because they think the world doesn't respect them. The patriots over there perceive themselves as some kind of religious, clean Aryan blonde superhero save-the-world type of person, you know.

  29. Re:Troll by chromatic · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Are you proposing that Microsoft should be subject to another set of rules than the other companies?

    That rather is the point of anti-trust law.

  30. Re:Troll by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A company, with that marketshare, WILL be subject to other standards than other companies.

    Nothing wrong in that.

    If Microsoft would stop abusing its position, they would avoid this kind of regulation.

    Governments will need to protect other businesses from Microsofts abuse.

    And Microsoft do abuse their market position

  31. Re:Troll by October_30th · · Score: 1

    Everyone's free to make a complaint against Microsoft.

    --
    The owls are not what they seem
  32. Splitting up Microsoft by LippyTheLip · · Score: 4, Insightful
    I found the following quotation in the article particularly enlightening:

    Microsoft has come to a critical juncture. It can choose to continue its war of attrition with regulators, constantly testing the legal limits and, when it crosses them, treating the consequences as the cost of doing business. Or the company could throw off its monopoly mindset and decide to compete, like most other firms are forced to do, solely on the merits of its products.


    If history is any guide, it is not difficult to predict which of these two paths Microsoft will take. On the other hand, there are a few examples of companies that have begun as monopolies and actually ended up increasing the value of the company faster after being forced to give up their monopoly position. For example, after the breakup of AT&T in 1982, the companies formed as a result have grown much more quikly. According to this article at Businessweek

    The breakup created an array of choices that consumers still find confusing. But it's widely agreed that it lowered long-distance prices and stimulated innovation. The companies created out of the Bell System, including those since swallowed up, are worth about $810 billion today, vs. $59 billion before the breakup. That 1,300% gain compares to a market-cap rise of just 140% for IBM over the same period.
    So... Microsoft splitting itself up would be good not only for consumers and competitors, but perhaps also for its stockholders.
    1. Re:Splitting up Microsoft by Osrin · · Score: 1

      I've always wondered... what exactally would it I've always wondered, split itself up into what exactally? an office and an OS busines?

      There is little if any future for either, the future is probably in their other 5 or 6 business units, many of which are currently unprofitable.

      If you split it up, are you not in effect just closing the company down? While that might be in the interests of this community, I'm not sure it does a good thing for the current customer base, the employees or the shareholders?

    2. Re:Splitting up Microsoft by LippyTheLip · · Score: 1

      I screwed up the link to the article at Businessweek. Here is thearticle from 1999 I was referring to.

  33. Cool Search Engines by iamwahoo2 · · Score: 5, Informative
    There are a lot of unknown quality search engines out there. One of the tricks with search engines is knowing which was is going to turn up the best results in a particular search. In addition to google, I highly recommend www.alltheweb.com, and dogpile.com.

    But one that I have really come to like is vivisimo.com, check it out, and after performing a search ecspecially take a look at the "preview" feature

    1. Re:Cool Search Engines by contrasutra · · Score: 1

      I wouldn't use alltheweb.com. Although they look and feel like google, their cache's are very out of date.

      Very often, you will be searching 4 week old caches. Thats not good if you want to find something even somewhat recent.

      Im assuming they have this problem because they simply dont have as many computers as google to crawl around.

      Thats why I like google. Within 3 days, something will show up on google.

    2. Re:Cool Search Engines by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Whats so good about dogpile? Tried searching for google and it came in 6th below 5 sponsered results. Whats so good about that?

  34. Re:Why all the Micorsoft hate? by errxn · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Parent has a point. While there are things I both like and dislike about Microsoft, I do get kinda sick and tired of seeing a story get posted on /. every time Bill Gates picks his nose in public, or something equally inane.

    Yes, we're all aware of Microsoft's business practices. Yes, we're all aware of the faults in their OS code. No, I don't want to hear about it every FREAKIN' five minutes. Also, if there is such interest in Microsoft, why don't we ever hear about the good things that they do (save your "because they don't do any good things" replies)?

    Take ASP.NET, for example. I've worked with JSP/Servlets, PHP, and "old-school" ASP, and nothing is better or easier to work with than ASP.NET, IMHO. Before you bad-mouth it, why don't you actually try using it? Plus, if it sucked as bad as some people on this site claim, why would Ximian, et. al. be working so hard on Mono?

    All I'm saying is that there should be credit where credit is due, and that it would be nice if every nitpick associated with Microsoft didn't rate a new topic on /.

    I know, wishful thinking.

    --
    In Soviet Russia, Chuck Norris will still kick your ass.
  35. Re:Troll by NoOneInParticular · · Score: 2, Funny

    Everyone has.

  36. Odd by WindBourne · · Score: 1

    Everytime I do a search, I find what I am looking for almost allways on the first page. I would say that it is still tops.

    As to taking advantage of other tech., that remains to be seen. Google took several years to get their top billing. I am going to guess that it will take a while before they catch on (or MS kills them).

    --
    I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
  37. Moderators in crack. by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    The parent post is not interesting.

    It is completely misinformed.

    It has been legally established that MS, for all intents and purposes is a monopoly.

    Anything else about this matter is uninformed babbling that deserves only to be rebuked as soon as such nonsense is repeated (yet once again).

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  38. YOU FAIL IT!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I ask you to try to get a cola flavored soda in your super market.

    What's your point? I can get any of the major brands, or the generic store brand cola.

    You don't see the Coca Cola Company telling your supermarket that if they carry any other brands the price they pay for Coke will go up, do you?

  39. Re:Low-brow idiot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    From which fine European country are you, if I may ask?

  40. Re:Low-brow idiot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sweden, from the fine city of Goteborg. So?

  41. Re:Why all the Micorsoft hate? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The fact that it only runs on IIS makes ASP.NET a lock-in technology and therefore, BAD. Also, I'm about twice as productive using PHP/perl then I am on C# and ASP.NET. Things that are trival in the former are sometimes much more difficult in the latter.

  42. Always the same post - why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You keep posting your 3-point
    bullet list each day. Why?
    It's not like it's very interesting.

    And your posts are way too long.
    No 'content'. And stop blaspheming.

    1. Re:Always the same post - why? by XeroDegrees · · Score: 1
      No 'content'. And stop blaspheming.
      blaspemy is a victimless crime
  43. talk about missing the point! by Xtifr · · Score: 1

    Boy, my post went right over your head, didn't it?

    MS hasn't been lowering the price of anything! Prices of computer hardware and software were steadily falling long before MS got into the market, and continued to fall afterwards. MS has lowered their prices and improved their products more slowly than almost anyone else! If you think you're better off than you would have been in a competitive market, I'm sorry for you!

  44. Re:Why all the Micorsoft hate? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Because Ximian are techno-savvy and yet econo-ignorant?

  45. Again? by Beer_Smurf · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I am not going to debate the truth of this article.
    However we hear the same thing over and over.
    So I cannot begin to hold MS completely blameless.
    What I cannot understand is at this point, with their huge advantage just in cash reserves, why they cannot just do the work and make the best products.
    The potential they have to really do something awesome when put in contrast to their actual tactics it's just sad.

    1. Re:Again? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why should they make great products? They're a monopoly so can do whatever they want. There's no pressure to improve because there's no competition. Plus every nickel they save can go into Billy's pocket.

    2. Re:Again? by Kwil · · Score: 1

      The I, Cringely column has some speculation on this, and I tend to agree.

      Basically, it comes down to Bill's Paranoia.

      You've seen it in Microsoft's anti-trust defense, you've seen it in Bill's book. The man is petrified that what he's built will come tumbling down like a house of cards if he doesn't control every possible factor that could hurt it.

      And why shouldn't he? He got where he is because his mom knew someone at IBM and he wound up with the MS-DOS contract at a critical juncture. His coding skills have been described as anywhere from simply plagiaristic to decent, depending on who you talk to, but nobody has described him as being up to date in creating code these days. The one piece of brilliance I've seen in the man (and I'm not even sure if it's his) is negotiating with IBM in such a way that he got to keep the rights to MS-DOS himself, but considering his parental ties to them, he may not even have faith in that.

      He's never wanted to compete because he still has no faith in how he got where he is. So instead, if he saw something that looked like it might compete, he simply did his best to crush it. Not outperform it, but make it difficult for the product to live. This has been MS's operating stance since day one. DR-DOS, Netscape, BeOS, Word, now Linux etc. Those cash reserves aren't there to be invested in better technology. They're their to fund the next buy out or market-flooding when a competitive product comes up.

      Which is part of the reason why Linux is MS's nemesis. Linux can't be bought out, and can't be bankrupted by a market flood. The only way to compete with Linux is to actually compete for users hearts and minds. But Bill doesn't know how to do that. He's never had to. I doubt he even realizes that that's what it's down to now.

      --

      That Jesus Christ guy is getting some terrible lag... it took him 3 days to respawn! -NJ CoolBreeze

  46. Re:Low-brow idiot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nice. But that's exactly what I expected.

    You up there just don't have the same kind of relationship we (French/Germans) have with the Americunts. We just NEED to vent now and then. I'm fully aware of the fact that it will make me look like an idiot to people with brains, but if just one the those without gets pissed off, my mission was successful. :-)

  47. wow! the first line should have read... by Osrin · · Score: 1

    I've always wondered, what exactally would you split Microsoft up into? Or something like that.

    1. Re:wow! the first line should have read... by Karzz1 · · Score: 1

      An operating system division and a software division. Hence M$ tying everything to the OS. Supposedly you can't remove applications (think IE, WMP, etc...) from the OS; they are part of it (The World According to Microsoft (tm)).

      This way, M$ can argue to the court that such a split is technically impossible.

      --
      Beware of he who would deny you access to information, for in his heart he dreams himself your master.
  48. Re:How to Be an American by jeremytribby · · Score: 1

    Biting in 3...2...1... You're quite the troll. (Or should I say your?) I don't think you would have any problem at all fitting into American society. This whole comment satisfies itself (particularly, number 5.) This comment is quite nonsensical and irrational; not all Americans are ignorant of geography, spelling, the world, the evils of our brand of democracy. I'm also sure that not all europeans are as quick to classify _all_ of America into a subcatagory as you are.

  49. Its really about Real not being able to compete by WhoDaresWins · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You know the whole issue of tying WMP to Windows being an issue is silly. Hello!, Windows Media Player has been included with Windows for free since Windows 3.1 days (yeah go ahead and check it if you don't believe it). So for many many years MS was including WMP with Windows and Real did not have a problem with it? Suddenly one fine day Real has issues with it? What has happened is that MS came up with a superior product ever since Windows Media 8 and started kicking Real's *ss. Who would want to use Real's intrusive annoying player when a better alternative was available?

    With Windows Media 9 Microsoft really started shining in the Media Player arena and Real instead of competing wants to run crying to momma. Get a clue Real! If you hadn't abused your users with the intrusive crap of player you had then no one would have looked for alternatives. As long as WMP was inferior, Real was in fact the one abusing its dominant position by shoving a pathetically intrusive player on its users. Guess what they did when they had an alternative? Real squandered away its lead when real (pun intended) competition was coming its way. I guess it was sheer haughtiness on its part that it thought no one could beat it. When it has finally woken up and realised that no one is going to give it a second chance, then guess what happens. WMP9 is what decimated Real since its a much superior product overall compared to Real. Now the irony is that WMP9 is not bundled with any OS but is a separate download. Yet inspite of that its usage is skyrocketing.

    The other story in all this is how Apple has been able to keep QuickTime alive and not face Real's fate. Well the QuickTime player also does some bad things (like adding itself to runonce reg key) but overall it respects its users a lot more. QuickTime and Windows Media are now the most dominant Media technologies on the net. So how come Apple is not complaining about Windows Media? How are they able to hold on to the market? Clue to Real: They actually compete. They care about their users and make a better player or better codecs (Apple has very good support for MPEG4). This whole media player tying issue looks like some kind of EU vendetta against a large US company. In fact the original case wasn't even about this till Real went crying to the EU comission. Makes me sick. What next? Tying of WordPad to Windows will become illegal since that hurts AbiWord? How silly can people get really.

    1. Re:Its really about Real not being able to compete by dmaxwell · · Score: 1

      I have to agree with you. These government regulators keep missing the point. Focusing on this software package or that is just Microsoft waving the red cape at the bull. The real monopoly action is their ability to dictate terms to OEMs and maybe even hardware manufacturers. Add to that, their virtual control of business communications which they are gearing up to maintain with a really stupid XML patent. As someone snidely pointed out earlier, no vendor has been a roaring success selling nothing but preloaded Windows boxes. However, these OEM contracts ensure nobody can sell them as a sideline either. For that matter, nobody can even sell bare boxes which is also useful to the BSD crowd.

      I know I'm not going to pay for a preloaded Linux machine that still has a MS tax embedded in the price somewhere.

    2. Re:Its really about Real not being able to compete by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Windows Media Player has been included with Windows for free since Windows 3.1 days

      Yes, but back then we called it "stolen Apple code."

  50. Always Blame Microsoft by Tony-A · · Score: 1

    Amazingly effective. To the point of being annoyingly effective.
    It's a shoot first, ask questions second tactic.

  51. Goddammit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    we (French/Germans)

    With this kind of an attitude France and Germany will be left alone to form the hard core of Europe. You'll drive away the moderate states like us and the new member states in the east. Is that what you want? Where is the unified Europe France has always spoken of? Or was it just a dream of a Franco (German) led superpower?

    Let's face it. America has a rotten government at the present, but shit happens. They'll get over with it just like before. On the other hand, the crap people like you are shoveling on ordinary Americans here and in the real life is uncalled for. Throw rotten apples at GWB and Blair, but let's act civilized on this level.

    Let us not stoop to the same level as the freedom fries-crowd. Prolonged idiocy like that and France's present tribal mentality will only get a lot of people killed in the long run.

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

      Sigh. One part of me knows you're right. The other part wants to know what an American patriot's head looks like on a stick.

    2. Re:Goddammit by NortWind · · Score: 1

      Please mod parent up.

  52. Right for the wrong reason by Davak · · Score: 3, Insightful

    In other words, if I were investor, I'd hold off buying Google stock when they IPO.

    You should hold off buying google when they go IPO because everybody else will be buying... and the price will be way too high.

    After a while, the stock will come back down to a fair market price... and that will be when you should buy.

    This has happened before when Yahoo and other hot companies have gone public.

    Davak

    1. Re:Right for the wrong reason by shaitand · · Score: 1

      Usually the firms block it. But if they don't the real wise investment would be to sell the google IPO short by midmorning when their stock opens up, it's the only sure thing.

      But since it is such a sure thing short selling is generally barred on tech IPO's opening day. (I suspect because the brokers haven't been stupid enough to buy any of it for you to sell).

  53. Mod parent up! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Mod parent up!

  54. Pointing to Content vs. Having Content by sangfroid · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The thing that I think most Portal Pushers miss is the difference between having content and pointing to content. New users eventually learn where the content is - even if it's just from having hundreds of bookmarks - even if they're not internet or computer savvy. By repetition even my grandma can now get to google for searching and the new york times website by typing "nyt.com" into the title bar. This is the same woman who calls me every power outage to figure out what button to push to get the "tv-part" back on. To make it work they need more than just the search engines, they need to provide the content. AOL, MSN, and the like just don't provide enough good, unique content to be worth it. IMO.

    To make an excellent indexing, searching, and categorizing group (read: Portal) and top-notch content providers (read: everybody else) would be extremely difficult, very expensive, and kludgy/unwieldy. Most of the best content is started by hobbyists and is community-supported -- I can't see a huge company (read: microsoft) able to compete quality or quantity-wise with the current and emerging nice sites.

    I don't think the super-site is going to work.

    1. Re:Pointing to Content vs. Having Content by 16K+Ram+Pack · · Score: 1
      Good post.

      The interesting thing about the internet to me was always that it acted as an alternative source of information. Most magazines in shops are just advertising whores. Magazines like the NME used to be interesting and quite counter cultural, but now are just part of the industry. I imagine that Rolling Stone was the same.

      The thing is, the word of mouth and the brevity of the link makes it easy. Passing URLs to others is simple. When Google first appeared, the circle of people I knew who used it grew from a few to most within a few weeks. The 'viral' spread of such information is huge.

      For content, the 'community' aspect has a big effect. People are contributing articles and comments to sites - this makes traditional print media look very slow, and at the same time, can provide more depth than TV.

  55. Autistic people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    probably has very little need or value for human contact. In fact, I bet if you touch him he probably cringes inside

    Hey!

    I think I just recognized a lot of myself in that description. You've got any links about autisticy (sic?)?

  56. Teoma is pretty darn good, too by melted · · Score: 1

    When google results come back too "commercialized" (five pages of online stores before the first useful link), I go there and find stuff.

  57. Re:How to Be an American by Clay+Pigeon+-TPF-VS- · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Its not just America's nuclear capability that makes it the most powerful country in the world. America's ability to project conventional forces anywhere in the world in a matter of days. Stealth aircraft that took off half a world away capableof placing a gps guided bomb in a pickle barrel from 50,000 feet, as well as stealth air superiority fighters make it difficult to win against America, as the USA controls the skys. On the ground there is yet to be found a main battle tank capable of standing up to the m1a2 abrams and actually winning.

    --
    Viral software licensing is not freedom, it is in fact GNU/Socialism.
  58. Re:How to Be an American by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    With the pickle-barrel thing. *Technically* correct - it's just the US forces cannot seem to hit the *right* pickle barrel.

    SOP is *supposed* to be "if you cannot tell what you're shooting at - don't". As it is practised, it seems to be "if you can see it, shoot it".

  59. Re:How to Be an American by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Your military crap isn't that great. It's just that no one else cares about developing so much of it anymore.

  60. Look, a new troll. by twitter · · Score: 1
    "Google is dying" he says. I dont' think so. Judge the merits for yourself:

    I quit reading the Economist article after the first paragraph gushed about how Bill Gates, "combines knightly philanthropy on an unprecedented scale with a long and impressive combat record." It's hard to admire someone who's broken the law so many times to rob everyone. The best article on Bill's charity was done by Salon years ago. Since then, much of his giving has been suspiciously close to countries considering free software. There have been and are today much better examples of philanthropy than Bill Gates. The hero worship sickens me.

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

    1. Re:Look, a new troll. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Moderators: Please note that "twitter" is a known fanatical psycophant whose obnoxious offtopic rants are legend here on Slashdot. It doesn't matter what the topic is, he'll find a way to scrape in some pointless Microsoft bashing. While nobody expects us to love Microsoft in any way, his particularly tepid style of calling anyone he replies to "troll" or "liar" because he happens to disagree with whatever they're saying is well documented and should not be rewarded. If anything, twitter is the type of person that should not be part of the open source/free software community. He is an anathema to all that is good about free software.

      I'm posting this so that you (the moderator) have some context to consider twitter and not mod him up whenever he posts his filler preformatted rants about installing Knoppix or whatever that unfortunately get him karma every single time and allow him to continue posting his trademark toxic crap (read on) day in and day out. You may consider this a troll - I consider it community service. And I ain't kidding.

      If you're a /. subscriber, I invite you to look through some of his posting history. I guarantee that you'll be hard pressed to find someone that is more "out there" than twitter. You'll also probably notice he's got quite an AC following. Don't just read his posts, make sure you go through the replies.

      For example, in this recent post twitter not only calls the OP a troll but attempts to "tell it like it is" while making some vague argument about "GNU". Yes, if you're confused, you're not alone. The reply (modded +4) proceeds to simply destroy his bogus argument. You will notice he did not reply. This is what some people call "drive-by advocacy". A sort of I'll just leave you with my thoughts here and move on to the next flamebait kind of deal. In fact, he almost never replies because he knows that his fanatical arguments simply do not hold up to any sort of discussion. It's not that he's chosen the wrong cause - he's just going at it in a completely wrong way.

      More? Just read though this post and the subsequent replies. I guess this stands on its own.

      More? Bad spelling in astounding conspiracy theories, more offtopic FUD and uninformed "I'm right, look at me" rants, promptly proven wrong. Worse even, twitter wants to be RMS, apparently (that first one is a winner). I mean, really. You think?

      FUD, FUD, FUD, FUD, offtopic FUD, and more FUD. This guy is like the Monty Python SPAM skit, but with FUD and more FUD instead of canned meat. Amazed

    2. Re:Look, a new troll. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      oh my, don't you have some fans!

  61. Linux is ready. by twitter · · Score: 1
    As soon as Linux is ready for the desktop, Microsoft is going to hell.

    They are already there. Get you some Mepis today. Mepis is a Debian based distro, much like KDE. It autoconfigures itself in a way that M$ with it's goofey propriatory reboot required drivers can only dream of. More interestingly, it has a graphical install that sticks the working and configured OS onto your hard drive. Click and drool has arived in free software and it comes clean, without security problems, and with all the goodies that larder M$ - office productivity suits.

    DRM, embeded in hardware, is Microsoft's last ditch attempt to stop the comming avalanch of free software use. Rather than being forced to throw away your old computer so that you can get XP, people are going to save themselves loads of money and trouble with CDs like Mepis. Once you discover free software you don't go back because you discover how badly you have been lied to about free software by comercial software companies. Microsoft can not compete on merits, so they are trying to make it technically and legally imposible for others to do anything.

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

    1. Re:Linux is ready. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Moderators: Please note that "twitter" is a known fanatical psycophant whose obnoxious offtopic rants are legend here on Slashdot. It doesn't matter what the topic is, he'll find a way to scrape in some pointless Microsoft bashing. While nobody expects us to love Microsoft in any way, his particularly tepid style of calling anyone he replies to "troll" or "liar" because he happens to disagree with whatever they're saying is well documented and should not be rewarded. If anything, twitter is the type of person that should not be part of the open source/free software community. He is an anathema to all that is good about free software.

      I'm posting this so that you (the moderator) have some context to consider twitter and not mod him up whenever he posts his filler preformatted rants about installing Knoppix or whatever that unfortunately get him karma every single time and allow him to continue posting his trademark toxic crap (read on) day in and day out. You may consider this a troll - I consider it community service. And I ain't kidding.

      If you're a /. subscriber, I invite you to look through some of his posting history. I guarantee that you'll be hard pressed to find someone that is more "out there" than twitter. You'll also probably notice he's got quite an AC following. Don't just read his posts, make sure you go through the replies.

      For example, in this recent post twitter not only calls the OP a troll but attempts to "tell it like it is" while making some vague argument about "GNU". Yes, if you're confused, you're not alone. The reply (modded +4) proceeds to simply destroy his bogus argument. You will notice he did not reply. This is what some people call "drive-by advocacy". A sort of I'll just leave you with my thoughts here and move on to the next flamebait kind of deal. In fact, he almost never replies because he knows that his fanatical arguments simply do not hold up to any sort of discussion. It's not that he's chosen the wrong cause - he's just going at it in a completely wrong way.

      More? Just read though this post and the subsequent replies. I guess this stands on its own.

      More? Bad spelling in astounding conspiracy theories, more offtopic FUD and uninformed "I'm right, look at me" rants, promptly proven wrong. Worse even, twitter wants to be RMS, apparently (that first one is a winner). I mean, really. You think?

      FUD, FUD, FUD, FUD, offtopic FUD, and more FUD. This guy is like the Monty Python SPAM skit, but with FUD and more FUD instead of canned meat. Amazed

  62. Chaning Browsers difficult? by linuxislandsucks · · Score: 1

    Surely you jest.. that staement is almost as bad FUD and flase BS as the statement that java makse s apps crash when the user stating that fact views flash presentations in a browser eachday ass most do not know that flash payer is in fact a java media player running java..:)

    --
    Don't Tread on OpenSource
  63. WTF is a "naturalized monopoly"?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I beleive the phrase you're looking for is "natural monopoly". You're insistence on the use of the term "naturalized" makes me sincerely doubt your credentials as an expert at economics, since I don't think most monopolies are "introduced from another region and persisting without cultivation" or "planted so as to give an effect of wild growth".

  64. "preview" feature... by Dan+East · · Score: 1

    I've you're using Firebird then you've got a preview feature for any hyperlink. It's called CTRL+CLICK.

    Dan East

    --
    Better known as 318230.
  65. Re:How to Be an American by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You MUST be French.......

  66. Be Careful What You Wish For by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Redundant

    It is my opinion that the eagerness of the US courts to drag Microsoft into legal struggles has been the cause of the great IT depression.

    I have been fascinated since I was a teenager by computers. Nobody knew about them. My parents nor my friends weren't interested. But I knew that the microcomputing IT sector was going to become immensely important, and it was with enormous fascination how I saw things falling into place.

    During the end of the '90 the sector was finally receiving acknowledgment of its tremendous importance.

    So I was shocked when first I heard about Microsoft being prosecuted. I thought: "Now that the microcomputing industry is finally being appreciated, they want to destroy a great company, out of pure jealousy and disdain. This will not bode well for anyone."

    Along with smashing the image of its leader, US 'justice' has managed to smash the entire industry, and that includes you, dear reader, into pettyness and unimportance. You see, the sector had become too important, and something had to be done about it. Divide and conquer. Chop it into manageable pieces, and shatter the hopes of visionaries.

    It has taken three years before the first signs of a weak recovery. And you can be sure that it will be a very, very long time before things look rosy again.

    Slave away reinventing the wheel in your cubicles while power and money is kept out of your hands. Will YOU be able to get somewhere if even the great in our sector are not allowed to succeed ?

    Think about it.

    1. Re:Be Careful What You Wish For by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > So I was shocked when first I heard about Microsoft being prosecuted. I thought: "Now that the microcomputing industry is finally being appreciated, they want to destroy a great company, out of pure jealousy and disdain. This will not bode well for anyone."

      To say nothing about the various legal violations - but that would undermine your rant, wouldn't it?..

      "(Score:1, Insightful) " [/me shaking my head here..]

    2. Re:Be Careful What You Wish For by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm sorry, but Microsoft's leveraging of it's monopoly status to crush all of it's competition has absolutely nothing to do with outsourcing technical jobs. Corporations are global creatures now and if they can save money by shifting their IT to countries where the price of labor is cheaper.... they are going to do it regardless of any other circumstances.

      Microsoft is not "the industry". While this is certainly bad for Microsoft, it can only benefit their competition (IBM,HP,Apple,Novell,to name a couple) and hopefully vendors like Dell who won't have to resort to shipping computers with FreeDOS on them to avoid being penalized for breaking agreements with Microsoft not to ship Linux pre-installed.

  67. Re:GOD Bless America by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "God Bless America , and thank God I don't have to live there."

    Yes. Thank God you don't live here. MAssive ever-growing poverty gap. ROFL. The US has been the leader in rasing the standard of living for everyone since its inception.

  68. Re:How to Be an American by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "5 - Become totally irrational and nonsensical Spout on about the Constitution, and then make drastic changes to it. Talk about "freedom of speech" and watch TV programmes about the Ku Klux Klan. Rant on about market freedom, and sit back as companies run riot and destroy the economy with their anti-competitive practices. Essentially, act idiotic at all times."

    Free market means freedom to be "anto-competitve". BTW anti-competitive == competitive. The term anti-competitve is double-speak by govts. who wish to attack freedom of people to do business the way they want.

  69. Re:How to Be an American by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Is it competetive when I make sure no one can ever get his foot in the door in a certain area by using cartel power instead of great products? How does the economy benefit?

  70. A fine ? by Axoiv · · Score: 2, Insightful

    300$-500$ doesn't seem like big enough fine to me. How much hasn't Microsoft robbed us consumers in terms of overprices for their monopolist software? 300-500$? That's for a year... Common guys...give them a fine.

  71. This time for sure! by rspress · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I don't think that MS will be able to buy its way out of their legal troubles with the EU like they did in the U.S. but you never know.

    The problem with a 600 pound gorilla is that if it does not get what it wants it will beat the crap out of you until you are dead and take it anyway.

    As far as their search engine is concerned, making it default will increase traffic to their site as so many windows users just go with what is already there for them. Of course we can trust MS to not filter content so bad words like Linux, Netscape, Opera, anti-trust and Mac will be available through their search engine.

  72. And in another article in the same issue... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

    There is another article in the same issue of The Economist (you need a subsctiprion to access) in which the magazine says

    Begin Quote
    [............]
    Isn't this simply a matter of Microsoft competing vigorously? The strange thing is that its products invariably succeed in PC-based markets where the dominance of Windows provides an advantage: office productivity, web-browsing, media playback and servers. Yet in other markets that have nothing to do with PCs, such as mobile phones, set-top boxes and games consoles, the company is far less successful. Odd, that.

    This newspaper has long argued, and still believes, that a break-up of Microsoft is the only remedy that would have any impact on its conduct, by removing its key weapon, Windows. At the moment that seems out of the question. How else might Microsoft be stopped from illegally exploiting its monopoly? By the long-awaited rise of open-source software such as Linux, maybe, though that seems unlikely. Perhaps the company will eventually conclude that the costs, in bad publicity and constant legal battles, of maintaining its monopoly exceed the benefits, and choose to divest or open up Windows itself. But that also seems implausible when there are large monopoly rents to be had. Some day a break-up of this too-mighty firm will again have to be considered.
    [end of article]

    End Quote

    1. Re:And in another article in the same issue... by asmellysock · · Score: 1
      Yet in other markets that have nothing to do with PCs, such as mobile phones, set-top boxes and games consoles, the company is far less successful. Odd, that.
      Amazing... A software company's software products have been more successful than their hardware products. Must be that monopoly thing.
    2. Re:And in another article in the same issue... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, must be that monopoly thing.

      No, they don't mean the "hardware products" as MS does not (or has articulated it wishes to, yet) make hardware. It is their software for mobile phones and set top boxes that are being talked about by The Economist. I don't believe the XBOX is made in a MS hardware production facility either - likely it is made for MS by some contract hardware oufit.

  73. Re:Why all the Micorsoft hate? by errxn · · Score: 1

    Things that are trival in the former are sometimes much more difficult in the latter.

    Examples? Seriously, I'm curious. Also, yes, the lock-in factor is very true, but we'll see how the Mono implementation works out. ASP.NET application code is supposed to be portable across platforms with no modification with it. If that pans out, the lock-in argument will be a moot point.

    That being said, I wasn't really focusing on the lock-in, but simply the technology itself.

    --
    In Soviet Russia, Chuck Norris will still kick your ass.
  74. Mod parent funny. by Karzz1 · · Score: 1

    .... or insightful! ;)

    --
    Beware of he who would deny you access to information, for in his heart he dreams himself your master.
  75. Re:How to Be an American by Moderation+abuser · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    "Even though the concept of "no guns = no gun-related crimes" is alien to the average Yank,"

    You're basically wrong.

    Gun ownership need not cause large amounts of gun related crime. And the lack of (legal) gun ownership doesn't preclude increasing gun related crime.

    E.g. The Swiss have very high gun ownership rates, second only to the US I believe due to their national defense system but the rate of gun related crime is a tiny tiny fraction of that in the US.

    The UK recently banned all firearms in private hands but now gun related crime is soaring out of control.

    Now, I don't like guns, I believe they should be controlled, owners certified and re-certified regularly but the evidence is that the problem in the US and in the UK is a social and cultural problem, the availability of guns, legal or not doesn't necessarily help but your equation is laughably oversimplified which makes it basically incorrect.

    --
    Government of the people, by corporate executives, for corporate profits.
  76. Re:GOD Bless America by Gramie2 · · Score: 1

    I think you mean "razing the standard of living."

  77. MSonopoly + FUD = less innovation and opportunity by scotty777 · · Score: 2, Insightful
    The Economist points this out in their article, and I agree. In fact, I consider it the core issue. Before I invest any time or money in developing an innovative product, I have to wonder whether MS will find it worthwhile to crush my efforts. Because they can and will, if th past is a guide.

    IMHO, governments adopting Linux is the ray of light through the clouds. If I target my applications to that market, then I need not fear MS. Sure, I will have to compete with all the rest of you. But we will compete as equals in a free market, not as weaklings against a bully.

    Live long, and prosper!

  78. Some one get figures right yahoo and google by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There the same company. Basicly it is 63% google they know that differnet people need differnet searching methords so the provide 2 one being google one being yahoo.

  79. Re:GOD Bless America by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Somebody's jealous.

  80. A Look at Microsoft's Regulatory Problems by vonkas · · Score: 1

    Sometimes I find it curious to see you Americans struggle with your own prerogative: the free market enterprise. Don't you think that market forces will sort things out? Of course if your government (as well as other countries') keeps interfering by giving Microsoft special privileges it does skew things severely. So tell your government to foster equal competition between all players - let it NOT succumb to industry pressures to introduce 'standards' that favour a single player. Microsoft has excellent practices in persuading users to adopt and disseminate their formats. This is in no-one's interest other than Microsoft's. This is all trivial of course and self evident ...

  81. Welcome by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I, for one, wlecome our new EU overlords,

  82. Re:Why all the Micorsoft hate? by tetranz · · Score: 1

    Also, I'm about twice as productive using PHP/perl then I am on C# and ASP.NET. Things that are trival in the former are sometimes much more difficult in the latter.

    You remind me of the old joke where a chainsaw salesman visits a woodsman chopping down a tree with an axe. The woodsman is suspicious about the salesman's claims but he agrees to try the chainsaw for a while. A few weeks later the salesman returns to find the woodsman taking a break in his hut. "This thing is useless", the woodsman exclaims. "I can cut down a tree much faster with the axe". "I'll show you" says the salesman who leaves the woodsman sipping his tea and takes the chainsaw outside. A few minutes later he returns. "There! That tree is down". "Wow!, that was quick, but what was that loud noise?". VS.NET, C#, SQL Server, ASP.NET, ADO.NET and, just released, Reporting Services make an awesome combination. BTW, I happily continue to use PHP / LAMP for several relatively simple, non-profit projects but in my daytime corporate job .NET is looking pretty good.

  83. Re:Why all the Micorsoft hate? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wrong. ASP.NET does not only run on IIS, it runs on apache with the mod_mono apache module: http://www.go-mono.com/download.html

  84. You guys keep forgetting that it's year 2004 here by melted · · Score: 1

    And nobody is excited about high-tech startups anymore. Even more so about more or less mature companies whose potential is well known, and who is gonna receive the wrath of one little company from Redmond this year (rumor has it).

  85. Linux is ready now by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    As soon as Linux is ready for the desktop, Microsoft is going to hell

    Ummm, I have Linux on my desktop and it runs better than WinXP ever could. It could use more drivers for better Plug and Play but it is ready. Real question is: are users ready for Linux?

  86. What should be dnoe to MS by jonwil · · Score: 3, Interesting

    1.they should be forced to reveal on a public website with no cost or licence restrictions their "propriatory" file formats. (exactly which formats would have to be decided by a sutable panel made up of legal people and technical people but should include all the office file formats like word, excel, powerpoint, access). Also, all their "secret" APIs (for example hooks into the shell) and all their "secret" network protocols (for example, the various windows-only authentication for MS IIS and MS proxy server

    2.they should be forced to make all their contracts with OEMs public and be banned from having secret contracts with OEMs.

    3.they should be forced to sell OEM windows at one price and one price only to ALL OEMs.

    4.they should be prohibited from restricting OEMs who ship (or want to ship, talk about shipping etc) systems with operating systems other than windows, systems with no operating system installed at all or systems containing windows in conjunction with one or more other opreating systems.

    5.same as for 4. but for application software (i.e. OEM pre-installs mozilla or netscape or whatever else)

    Basicly, force them open on the OEM desktop plus force them to give up the secrets that will allow their competitors (including Open Source) to talk to, interact with and share data with those products (windows, office, IE, IIS, MS servers, media player, MSN messenger and etc) that microsoft currently enjoys a monopoly on or that microsoft is currently using is monopoly power to push.

  87. As soon as Linux is ready for the desktop... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We'll be dead.

  88. It's really ironic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Microsoft continues to be sued for implementing things that any good web/media oriented operating system should have. A desktop should have an integrated file manager that seamlessly browses local and networked filesystems as well as web sites.

    It should also have integrated media players capable of presenting a wide variety of formats. These are things that make a user interface more enjoyable.

    The problem is that Microsoft cannot integrate these changes into their interface thoroughly without driving out competitors like Netscape and RealNetworks. If they use their market dominance status to do this, somebody (rightfully) is going to scream.

    This is why an open-source model is superior. Once financial gain is taken from the equation, the legality of features like this is no longer an issue.

  89. Basic laws which allowed MS monoply need to change by tdwebste · · Score: 1

    1) All data storage formats and application communication protocols need to publicly available at no charge. In other words make make "Open Standards" the law. Methods how to implement such data storage formats and application communication protocols could be perhaps patented, copyrighted or a trade secret. But NOT the data storage formats and application communication protocols. This is the only effective solution to the artificial bearers Microsoft has put in place to protect its Monopoly. This is not a Microsoft problem per say. Microsoft is just the best example of this problem. The Europe as the European Union is able to and should apply this law retroactively in to all Union Countries. This will give competitors to Microsoft sufficient market to be "economically" successful. The European Union can not force other or even suggest other countries outside the Union follow suit. And I strongly doubt that the US will be happy about this, because United States protected Microsoft because it is HUGE US company with even large political weight. However United States no longer controls the world. So I expect several Counties in Asia with large manufacturing and internal markets to adopt the European approach.

  90. Laws which allowed MS monoply need to change by tdwebste · · Score: 1
    First time User, I messed up previous post

    1) All data storage formats and application communication protocols need to publicly available at no charge. In other words make make "Open Standards" the law.

    Methods how to implement such data storage formats and application communication protocols could be perhaps patented, copyrighted or a trade secret. But NOT the data storage formats and application communication protocols.

    This is the only effective solution to the artificial bearers Microsoft has put in place to protect its Monopoly. This is not a Microsoft problem per say. Microsoft is just the best example of this problem.

    The Europe as the European Union is able to and should apply this law retroactively in to all Union Countries. This will give competitors to Microsoft sufficient market to be "economically" successful. The European Union can not force other or even suggest other countries outside the Union follow suit. And I strongly doubt that the US will be happy about this, because United States protected Microsoft because it is HUGE US company with even large political weight. However United States no longer controls the world. So I expect several Counties in Asia with large manufacturing and internal markets to adopt the European approach.

  91. Re:How to Be an American by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Parent post is ON TOPIC, relating directly to the opening paragraph of the grand parent post.

  92. In the midst of all this excitement,.. by PHAEDRU5 · · Score: 1

    ...let's remember that European courts are nothing like American ones.

    Unlike American courts, which do their own thing (e.g., compare the 9th and 11th Federal Circuit courts), European court decisions mostly reflect what the local government wants.

    Also, European Governments - especially France - have recently shown themselves to be massively susceptible to bribery. Witness MEMRI's stories about how Saddam traded oil for positive opinions from leftists all across Europe.

    This will be no different. Should Microsoft not get a positive decision, it simply means that it failed to pay off enough government hacks.

    Condider a loss in this court case to be the end of one round of negotiations. Nothing more.

    --
    668: Neighbour of the Beast
  93. Re:How to Be an American by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As someone suffering from several legitimate mental illnesses, I want to say a big fuck you for point 7.

  94. Breaking up Microsoft by solprovider · · Score: 1

    Here is an excerpt from one of my posts in July about the best way for Microsoft to auction its divisions. New comments are in brackets.

    Addition: Believing MS is completely myopic, I assume that Longhorn and XBox2 will be delayed as MS concentrates on cost-cutting. They have already started offshoring to India and reducing the headcount on the west coast. I expect the company to implode before Longhorn is supposed to be released.

    ---
    - Windows and Office actually make money, and are the reason MS exists.
    [They will keep them together as long as possible since they define MS. I believe that the Office division will need to sell Linux versions to survive, and that could save the company, but they will wait until Windows has lost its monopoly, and by then it will be much too late.]

    - Server SW would be a good choice, because it breaks even, but is too strategic to be sold first.

    - Mobile software: Too much recent news about how Tablets and PocketPCs are strategic.
    [I have not heard much hype about this recently. Are they pulling back?]

    - Games: Game software companies are always sold cheap, but MS has the XBox hardware. Sell the software to Atari (formerly Infogrames). The XBox could be sold to a company wanting to get into gaming like NVidia, a company that sells consoles like Sony, or a Linux distributor who will sell it as a PC replacement and wants the existing public awareness of the trademark. MS can start by selling older titles to Infogrames: quick cash and it does not look like MS is folding.
    [I have not read any news about their Game division recently; are they still releasing? Could we tell if they stopped new development of games?]

    - Business software: Good choice. Say it was a mistake to upset other companies by having the GreatPlains purchase compete with MS's business partners. Good publicity, and a decent price.
    [I am waiting, but again have not heard much news. Did MS turn off its publicity department?]

    - MSN: With AOL on the run, MSN could look like it will increase marketshare. The problem is that the M stands for Microsoft. They could announce that they believe subscription services are obsolete, but that would kill the price. A quiet deal with Earthlink would be the best. I'd say AOL, but AOL has enough problems. But can a deal like this be quiet with the FCC watching? More likely MS will move move equipment and people to Earthlink, while keeping the receivables moving through MS to satisfy the regulators.
    [Microsoft has already decided to stop promoting MSN.]

    --
    I spend my life entertaining my brain.
  95. Now MS has amnesty Internation after them! by rspress · · Score: 1

    http://observer.guardian.co.uk/business/story/0,69 03,1136045,00.html

  96. Open Standard Laws would solve MS Monoply by tdwebste · · Score: 3, Insightful

    1) All data storage formats and application communication protocols need to publicly available at no charge. In other words make make "Open Standards" the law.

    Methods how to implement such data storage formats and application communication protocols could be perhaps patented, copyrighted or a trade secret. But NOT the data storage formats and application communication protocols.

    This is the only effective solution to the artificial bearers Microsoft has put in place to protect its Monopoly. This is not a Microsoft problem per say. Microsoft is just the best example of this problem.

    The Europe as the European Union is able to and should apply this law retroactively in to all Union Countries. This will give competitors to Microsoft sufficient market to be "economically" successful. The European Union can not force other or even suggest other countries outside the Union follow suit. And I strongly doubt that the US will be happy about this, because United States protected Microsoft because it is HUGE US company with even large political weight. However United States no longer controls the world. So I expect several Counties in Asia with large manufacturing and internal markets to adopt the European approach.

  97. Campus-wide licenses by Slashamatic · · Score: 1
    are another neat thing from Microsoft which doesn't seem to have been covered by the FTC. They offer a flat rate price per system giving access to a wide variety of software. However, you pay it whether your system is Linux, Mac, or even Sun (the latter being incapable of running any MS software). You just pay per system.

    This is addition to their games over the OEM licensing that you mention.

  98. No. by Slashamatic · · Score: 1
    The price is normally per CD. Linux would come on 3 minimum and that was for the binary version. XP would come on one or two (depending on how the Office bundling was done).

    However, it is interesting that Linux is still sitting there, it would be hard to see it getting shelf/stall space unless it was selling.

    The fun thing was when I was working in such places, we were forbiddden about getting Win from the market officially because of piracy but really because of virus fears. Not so with Linux, as we could verify the MD5s over the net.

  99. Losing OEM PC Vendors by solprovider · · Score: 1

    HP merged with Compaq.
    Gateway is buying EMachines.
    IBM can never decide if they want to stay in the PC market.
    Dell is still Dell, but wants to move into electronics.

    [Yes, I am ignoring laptops. They can replace PCs, but are a very different business model.]

    PC manufacturers have consolidated because the profit margins keep shrinking. If it were not for these awful contracts with Microsoft, every one of these vendors would be shipping a "free" OS to cut costs. Most people would not know the difference until their child's new game did not run.

    It would be cheaper to write a few children's games than to pay the MS tax. Making a game unique and challenging are negatives when writing for children. They could invest in The Learning Company and insist the games are ported to Linux. The manufacturers could bundle the games for free, make it another marketing point, and still profit more than paying MS.

    What else do you need? Every distro comes with email, multiple browsers, an office suite, a graphics program, a few movie players, and more games for adults than Windows. Make certain they can easily change the wallpaper. Get Maxis to port "The Sims". At that point, most of the population is covered.

    I do want the boot process to be fixed. Single threaded booting means Linux is slower than Windows (for the boot. After that Linux wins easily.) Split the stuff required for the GUI from everything else. Get the drives mounted, X started, then hit them with the login screen. Make certain the firewall and network are running before the desktop finishes loading. The printers should be ready about then. Internet servers and everything else can finish up while the users are reading their email.

    Linux is ready. The applications are there. We are just waiting for one of the large manufacturers to offer Linux as the default option so they can undersell the others.

    --
    I spend my life entertaining my brain.
  100. Holding the data by philfr · · Score: 1
    the man who holds the data, not the software, will win

    This is really the point: for my part, MS can bundle any software it wants on its platform, as long as this software doesn't make a proprietary/patented/secret protocol or data format ubiquitous.

    If WMP was only a media player, able to play any standard media, it would compete with other software (still with the advantage of being preinstalled).

    From the moment WMP "helps" people to switch from mpg/realmedia/ogg/... to MS-only standards, this kicks-off not only these other formats, but also non-Windows platforms. I don't care what player Windows users use (WMP, Winamp, or whatever), I know I can use XMMS, Xine, mplayer, or vlc on Linux to play most media files or streams, except those coming from MS (don't tell me I can use win32 dlls, I know that. But MS will do its best to stop this possibility).

    And what pisses me off most, is when I find internet radio stations streaming .asf files, because I know they choose this format for its ubiquity on the desktop, and that forced them to use MS on their servers.

  101. Re:How to Be an American by mangu · · Score: 1
    not all Americans are ignorant ...


    I guess that wasn't what he meant. His point was that enough Americans are so ignorant about history, geography, and spelling and grammar that this is "typical" in the USA. Of course, any classification must consider exceptions, but when one does a caricature a certain amount of exageration is OK.

  102. Re:Troll by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Luckily "waah!" plus throwing your toys out the pram isn't yet a legal argument. Though the Department of Justice nearly got away with using it.

  103. Re:How to Be an American by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There are no legitimate mental illnesses.

  104. Big distinction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    On the one hand, an OS should provide support for playing media. (This is what MS say that bundling WMP does and is the 'good' effect of bundling).
    On the other hand, an OS should not tie you, by default, to one proprietary media system (of protocols, file formats, server implementations etc.). (This is the 'bad' effect of bundling). You get WMP so you can play audio CDs, but it makes you a WMP-server customer too.

    The former is, at best, a product improvement/ innovation, at worst, a slightly non-transparent cross-subsidization of one product by another.
    The latter is pure abuse of power in one market to enter another (Real).

  105. MEMRI? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Who are MEMRI?

    Is that the same MEMRI that is an ofshoot of Israeli military intelligence?

    I'll believe them when hell freezes over.

    Having said that, European governments in general are purchasable, and European politicians mostly corrupt, though i doubt that they are any more venal than most US politicians.

    The importance of this initial decision is that it's by the European Commission, which is not a judicial body but has a long history of corruption, but that the second and third ports of call for an appeal are independent judicial bodies that do play by the rules of natural justice, and normally come to reasonable compromises when they don't kick the politicians in the teeth.

    Courts in most of Europe are independent, even perversely so if pressure is applied to them - see the pursuit of Pinochet by Spanish magistrates against the wishes of the Spanish government as a prime example, and the fudge by the British courts to allow the murdering bastard to go back to Chile as an example of judicial corruption inspired by Uk government pressure.

  106. Re:How to Be an American by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There are no legitimate mental illnesses.

    Go turn yourself in then.

  107. Re:How to Be an American by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    7 - Get a "shrink"
    Americans have a hard time dealing with their own problems in a mature manner, and prefer to spend hundreds of dollars sitting in front of someone and whinging. However trivial your problems may be, blast them out like a baby!
    Oh, but Freud and Jung were American now? Guess again. Europe exported their shrinks to the US.