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New Documents Shed Light on Microsoft's Tactics

Tigen writes "As the NY Times reports, even as MS prepares to face penalties from the European Union, testimony during the second week of trial in the consumer class-action lawsuit in Minnesota has revealed some embarrassing internal documents from Microsoft which were not disclosed in the 1997 federal antitrust lawsuit. Items include a 1990 letter from Bill Gates to Andy Grove, and Microsoft's illegal tactics against the Go Corporation, a Silicon Valley startup."

614 comments

  1. Article by BigDork1001 · · Score: 5, Informative
    Here is the Google link to the article.

    --
    "Armed forces abroad are of little value unless there is prudent counsel at home" - Cicero
    1. Re:Article by jimmyCarter · · Score: 5, Informative

      Whenever you append "&partner=google" to the end of a NYTimes URL, you're in sans registration.

      --

      -- jimmycarter
    2. Re:Article by AftanGustur · · Score: 5, Funny


      Whenever you append "&partner=google" to the end of a NYTimes URL, you're in sans registration.

      Well, whenever you append "&partner=[Anything]" you are in ...

      Try http://www.nytimes.com/2004/03/24/technology/24sof t.html?ex=1080709200&en=81be83eda9c09dad&ei=5062&p artner=AlQaida

      --
      echo '[q]sa[ln0=aln80~Psnlbx]16isb572CCB9AE9DB03273snlbxq' |dc
    3. Re:Article by flewp · · Score: 5, Funny

      Whenever you append "&partner=google" to the end of a NYTimes URL, you're in sans registration.

      But what if San wants to use his registration when we already are? Then what will he do?!

      --
      WWJD.... for a Klondike bar?
    4. Re:Article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Pipe the string gibberish into dc, the Unix desk calculator. Read this for more info about dc. By the way, Windows has an echo command and the pipe operator.

    5. Re:Article by mab · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      [mab@pluto mab]$ echo '[q]sa[ln0=aln80~Psnlbx]16isb15CB32EF3AF9C0E5D7272 C3AF4F2snlbxq'|dc
      rika

    6. Re:Article by psoriac · · Score: 3, Funny

      By revealing this information you are allowing people to circumvent the NYT's access protection mechanism. I'm going to have to report you for violating the DMCA. I'm sure the NYT lawyers will be in touch with you shortly.

      I'm being a good PATRIOT, see? See?

      --
      I browse Slashdot at +3, Funny
    7. Re:Article by willamowius · · Score: 4, Insightful

      BTW: Appending "&pagewanted=print" gives an even more readable page.

    8. Re:Article by Dolda2000 · · Score: 4, Informative

      In fact, the partner doesn't matter at all, you can remove it. Only the ex, en and ei parameters matter.

    9. Re:Article by AKnightCowboy · · Score: 4, Interesting
      Well, whenever you append "&partner=[Anything]" you are in ...

      Well I wish Slashdot would append that to the links by default. They link to the god damn NY Times so much that they might as well use a partner link. Thankfully kind people like yourself usually post a link within a few comments as long as the moderators don't come along and delete your posts.

    10. Re:Article by ykardia · · Score: 5, Funny

      And now that the link is on slashdot, the admins at the NY Times will wonder why AlQuaida suddenly is their biggest partner! Picture their faces when they run their log analysis tool...

    11. Re:Article by sangdrax · · Score: 4, Funny

      Isn't that forbidden by DMCA? :)

    12. Re:Article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There's a Windows port of dc available. It's part of the bc package.

    13. Re:Article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The printable page nice, however there is much-needed revenue from delivering ads (not that any of us clicks on those things and encourages them--right?!) IIRC, some lawsuits have been brought over linking directly to a printable story instead of the normal version of it.

      We don't want to push them too far, else they may actually do enforce the partner tag.

    14. Re:Article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please mod parent effing funny!

    15. Re:Article by sisco · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "In late 1993, Go was sold to AT&T where it was ultimately merged into the company's portable computer subsidiary. In 1994 the phone company shut down the effort in portable computing. Three months later Microsoft canceled its PenWindows project"

      As if this doesn't make it obvious what M$ was doing! They were only in the game to keep somebody else from innovating new technology. As soon as a potential competitor closed down, they stopped attempting to "provide a better solution for the customer." What a bunch of hooey!

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      DATA comments; PROC SORT DATA = comments BY score; PROC DELETE comments >> 1; RUN; DATA entertainment SET commen
    16. Re:Article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      His joke was funny, your reply was not, Mr. 700,000+ UID fuckstick.

    17. Re:Article by robnauta · · Score: 5, Interesting
      In late 1993, Go was sold to AT&T where it was ultimately merged into the company's portable computer subsidiary. In 1994 the phone company shut down the effort in portable computing. Three months later Microsoft canceled its PenWindows project"

      As if this doesn't make it obvious what M$ was doing! They were only in the game to keep somebody else from innovating new technology. As soon as a potential competitor closed down, they stopped attempting to "provide a better solution for the customer." Dude I think you got your history all wrong. When Apple announced the Newton in 1992, everyone wanted to jump onto the same boat. Several companies rushed development of similar devices, including Microsoft, Go, and several others.
      When the Newton was released in 1993, and proved to be a fiasco, many companies put their projects on hold or sold them off. That's why Go was sold, and that's why MS stopped development.

      The humiliating failure of the Apple Newton put mobile computers on hold for a few years, until Palm revitalized the once dead market.

    18. Re:Article by sisco · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I didn't realize this. Perhaps the writer of the article did not either. Thanks for the info!

      Though this makes me wonder...are we hyping this story for no reason?? Seems then like Go might not have failed because of Microsoft. After all, what was M$ SUPPOSED to do? Help the competition?! This is business. You want the consumer to buy your product, not the other guys!

      and yes, i might have changed my mind... but who knows, it may change back in the future!

      --
      DATA comments; PROC SORT DATA = comments BY score; PROC DELETE comments >> 1; RUN; DATA entertainment SET commen
    19. Re:Article by plj · · Score: 1

      And now that the link is on slashdot, the admins at the NY Times will wonder why AlQuaida suddenly is their biggest partner!

      So according to your logic, /. is bigger than Google now?

      --
      “Wait for Hurd if you want something real” –Linus
    20. Re:Article by banzai51 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Most likely. Many of the memos are dated from 1990. Microsoft was still becomming the giant we now know, not trying to maintain their dominance.

    21. Re:Article by WillAdams · · Score: 5, Informative

      Microsoft renegged on a promise to bundle Windows Pen Services w/ Microsoft Windows 95. They also withdrew form a consortium to allow the development of BIOSs for portable systems which would allow dual-booting between Pen Windows and PenPoint.

      This is business, one is supposed to honour one's commitments.

      They then went on a firesale buying spree of companies doing pen computing:

      - Aha Software's InkWriter once available for Windows and Penpoint? It's Microsoft Journal

      - some website markup tool company and a couple of other things.

      and most recently Creaturehouse Expression, and despite a promise that it'd be avialable again in November of _2003_ it can't be had for love nor money now.

      William

      --
      Sphinx of black quartz, judge my vow.
    22. Re:Article by kenthu · · Score: 1
      Whenever you append "&partner=google" to the end of a NYTimes URL, you're in sans registration.

      Are you sure about this? I've tried this a handful of times, and still got sent back to the page asking me to register.
    23. Re:Article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Holy shit, that's funny! ;)

    24. Re:Article by Speare · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Well I wish Slashdot would append [&partner=] to the links by default.

      When YOU abuse their lax partner system, the NYT isn't going to waste their time. When a company, OSDN, or its officers abuse their lax partner system, it is (1) a potential legal liability on the part of OSDN, and (2) going to make NYT change their whole system, probably for the worse.

      --
      [ .sig file not found ]
    25. Re:Article by whats_a_zip · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Appropriate choice of partner for NYT. AlQaida and NYT go together like Hitler and Leni Riefenstahl!

    26. Re:Article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hah! That works with Slashdot too!

      Woohoo, now even Internet Exploder users can have Sloshdat without advertisements...

    27. Re:Article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And in 2004 SCO claims they bought the rights from AT&T and everyone who uses a ball point owes them $399 in licensing fees.

    28. Re:Article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "and most recently Creaturehouse Expression, and despite a promise that it'd be avialable again in November of _2003_ it can't be had for love nor money now."

      Heh. Much like HALO, which MS bought. Amid the moaning and crying that the PC would never see HALO there was some talk along the lines of "It might come out for PC" ... yeah sure when they are ready to release HALO2 and render HALO obsolete.

      Is there really any question that MS is willing to step on whoever it sees any benefit in squashing (including the consumer)? No. The only real question is how much did MS need to pay GW Bush to get the antitrust biz called off?

    29. Re:Article by qualico · · Score: 0

      Just incredible.

      Very bad business ethics on the part of Micro$oft.
      Makes me sick.

      Our world really needs to grow up and stop being so fearfull.

    30. Re:Article by Herschel+Cohen · · Score: 1

      Let's say for a moment you are correct that MS still had not attained its monopoly status.

      Then, they used illegal means to become a monopoly.

      Remember having a monopoly is not <i>prima facie</i> evidence of breaking the anti trust laws. However, should your memory of the sequence be correct then MS should have suffered a much greater penalty than deemed by either the U.S. courts or the EU.

    31. Re:Article by Peaceful_Patriot · · Score: 1

      This sounds alot like the shinanigans of a year or so ago with the cell phone company. (I dont have time to find the link right now). It was widely discussed here on /. Most responses were along the lines of "If you do business with MS, you should expect that."

      Seems like nothing has really changed in 10 years.

      --
      There is nothing so powerful as an idea whose time has come.
    32. Re:Article by banzai51 · · Score: 1

      Hardly. There were still options out there. The OEMs went along with MS deals becuase that was the best way at the time to SELL systems. All the other OS systems out there had the opportunity and didn't take it. Many chose the Apple route and only Apple survived that.

    33. Re:Article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm not too worried about it. I bought a subscription to the NYT, so that I can see the articles no matter what.

    34. Re:Article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dude I think you got your history all wrong. When Apple announced the Newton in 1992, everyone wanted to jump onto the same boat. Several companies rushed development of similar devices, including Microsoft, Go, and several others.

      Dude you got your history all wong. Read the book "Startup" that they talk about in the article. The idea for the pen computer that became the Newton started when Apple made a counter offer to one of the co-founders of Go. He ended up staying at Apple, instead of leaving to start Go, and heading the Newton project. Apple even tryed to covince Go to drop their product and support the Newton.

    35. Re:Article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      going to make NYT change their whole system, probably for the worse

      Exactly how can NYT be even worse? It seems to me they're as bad as bad gets already today.

      The one thing we can do to change this is to stop visiting their dumbass site. If their uniques are down, they'll change back. It's only because of all you lameasses they're able to continue.

      So the fault isn't with the NYT - it's with the slobbering contributors to /. who have no character.

    36. Re:Article by obirt · · Score: 1
      The humiliating failure of the Apple Newton put mobile computers on hold for a few years, until Palm revitalized the once dead market.

      I suggest you read the book Defying Gravity before you believe what you've heard.

      Off the top of my head from the text: The Newtons handwriting recognition was fine. The problem was that Apple sent out protype test units that did not have functional handwriting recognition as demos to retailers. While this was the fatal mistake that tarnished the entire project, these faulty units should never have seen the light of day. The media simply latched on to this and never let it go. Probably writers and publishers on microsofts payroll to prevent a truely innovative product from taking hold.

      They also say that Apple's unveilings of the newton to the press and at macworld were done with hypercard showing on the newton screen. Was this a mistake, yes. But, the actual production units were not done. The book does a very good job of explaining it.

      No matter what the media says, the Newton, eMate, and Message Pad were all solid, innovative devices. Ask anyone who's used the real thing and they'll tell you it does as much as todays PDAs minus the cameras, mp3s and video. They were even trying to get a wireless internet standard off the ground in 1995.

      Its also interesting to note that the AT&T Hobbit chipset was developed by the Newton team, then later abandoned and then was quickly snapped up by competition.

      --

      I use to be indecisive, but now I'm not so sure.
    37. Re:Article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dude I think you got your history all wrong.

      Dude, Go Corp. started it all off in the 80's. Apple are considered a late player, even though they were the most successful in the early 90's.

      This should come as no surprise when you see the competition such as Tandy's Zoomer and it's ilk.

    38. Re:Article by robnauta · · Score: 1
      Dude I think you got your history all wrong. When Apple announced the Newton in 1992, everyone wanted to jump onto the same boat. Several companies rushed development of similar devices, including Microsoft, Go, and several others.

      Dude you got your history all wong. Read the book "Startup" that they talk about in the article. The idea for the pen computer that became the Newton started when Apple made a counter offer to one of the co-founders of Go. He ended up staying at Apple, instead of leaving to start Go, and heading the Newton project. Apple even tryed to covince Go to drop their product and support the Newton.

      I know that Go were already working on it for a few years, slowly. The increased competition of Apple announcing to get into the game meant that everyone tried to grab a piece of the share. Back then people believed the market was going to boom and make everyone rich.
      When the Newton failed (maybe not technically, but certainly commercially) it was the same as the dotcom bubble bursting, once-generously-funded startup companies suddenly found their investers lose interest. That happened to Go. In 1993 Microsoft made a modest income on selling DOS, yes using bundling deals, but there was no alternative anyway in the 80s. And Windows 3.11 sold OK but wasn't considered an OS, but an extra. No way was Microsoft considered a monopoly back then.

  2. No-pass required version by damieng · · Score: 0, Redundant
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    [)amien
  3. What's this? by TypoNAM · · Score: 4, Funny

    Microsoft has actually been a bad big corp? Tell me it isn't so...

    OK it's so, let the "Exchange server ate my email" excuse begin!

    --
    This space is not for rent.
    1. Re:What's this? by Alphix · · Score: 4, Funny

      dont you mean "the Exchange server wrote my email"?

    2. Re:What's this? by spellraiser · · Score: 5, Funny

      Recently overheard somewhere at One Microsoft Way:

      What's this: "New Documents Shed Light on Microsoft's Tactics" ?!

      I thought I told you guys to SHRED those documents, nod SHED them!

      --
      I hear there's rumors on the Slashdots
    3. Re:What's this? by SpaceLifeForm · · Score: 2, Funny

      They had no choice, the MS shredder had crashed.

      --
      You are being MICROattacked, from various angles, in a SOFT manner.
    4. Re:What's this? by trezor · · Score: 1

      MS never had a shredder. That was OS/2, remember?

      Guess that's why we never hear such storries about IBM..? :)

      --
      Not Buzzword 2.0 compliant. Please speak english.
    5. Re:What's this? by the_mad_poster · · Score: 1

      In my experience, Microsoft crashes ARE the shredder. And that's not even a Soviet Russia joke!

      Ooohhhh... my poor beautiful data! You were too good for this world!

      --
      Alito: A vote for Alito is a punch in the eye to put that bitch back in her place!
    6. Re:What's this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      In my experience, Microsoft crashes ARE the shredder. And that's not even a Soviet Russia joke!

      In Soviet Russia shredders crash YOU .

  4. Sounds like a Movie Script by sirdude · · Score: 2, Funny

    Sounds eeriely like a movie script minus Erin Brockovich..

    1. Re:Sounds like a Movie Script by Dashing+Leech · · Score: 3, Funny

      Which immediately makes the script more appealing.

    2. Re:Sounds like a Movie Script by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny
      Do you mean that MS killed a paranoid programmer to steal his stuff and his friend is going to go through a really bad script and will make Tim Robins all pissy and down right spooky?

      if so, i already suffered through that with my little sister. PLEASE let it not happen again.

    3. Re:Sounds like a Movie Script by Anonymous+Meoward · · Score: 1


      Obviously, sir, you have yet to see the sequel .

      --
      --- The American Way of Life is not a birthright. Hell, it's not even sustainable.
  5. The Microsoft Damage. by torpor · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I've contended for years that computing in general has been held back by Microsoft, not pushed forward, and this is an example of just how that has been the case.

    There are a lot of 'high order' dreams in the computing science. The CS holy grail of pocket, portable computing is only now coming to fruition (thank you Palm), but has been on the cards since at least the 60's as a design reference/specification. Go could've given us this in the late 1980's, early 90's. Microsofts' machinations, however, prevented that from happening.

    I understand now, why the Palm founders adopted their 'found and leave' strategy for PalmOS. In the light of Go, Inc's demise it makes sense to light 4 or 5 small fires that the enemy can't put -all- out, rather than making a very large target, like Go and Motorola did ...

    I stopped using Microsoft products in 1998. They'll not get one penny of $ from this consumer, and not one item of code from this programmer. I tell all my Microsoft-using friends to fuck off with their self-made problems, too, and get real operating systems, from real software companies ... and most of them do.

    --
    ; -- the corruption of government starts with its secrets. a truly free people keep no secrets. --
    1. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by MoonFog · · Score: 1

      There are a lot of 'high order' dreams in the computing science. The CS holy grail of pocket, portable computing is only now coming to fruition (thank you Palm), but has been on the cards since at least the 60's as a design reference/specification. Go could've given us this in the late 1980's, early 90's. Microsofts' machinations, however, prevented that from happening.

      I really have to disagree with you there. What would a pocket pc look like in the early 90's ? How effective would it be ?
      IMHO, it must have been limited on processor power and hardware more than the software. Besides, even as the article states, Go wasn't "going" until mid-1990 themselves, and even if they weren't held back by Microsoft they wouldn't have been able to release anything until 1 - 2 years later. Move your timescale a bit, and I agree more.

    2. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by pubjames · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I've contended for years that computing in general has been held back by Microsoft, not pushed forward, and this is an example of just how that has been the case.

      I think the clearest demonstrator that Microsoft has held back innovation is PowerPoint. Because it is virtually installed as default on all business machines, everyone uses it. Microsoft has had little motivation to update it, so it still functions like a piece of software from ten years ago. But ask any graphic designer about it and they will free out about how impossibly sh*t it is for creating presentations, especially bearing in mind the amazing graphics computers are capable of these days. And yet where is the strong competition for PowerPoint? There isn't one, because it is impossible to compete with the kind of product bundling Microsoft can get away with.

    3. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by prat393 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It's very interesting that as a consequence of Microsoft's domination of the market, people give you very weird looks when you tell them you don't use windows. Then they calm down, an idea hits them, and they ask, "Oh, so you use Mac, then?" The weird look, however, wrests itself upward from its grave where the pallbearers were finally resting with (they thought) the satisfaction of a job well done, and climbs back on to the poor user's face when you're forced to disillusion them.

      Using something other than windows is almost a stigma in some circles (circles the average slashdotter has little contact with, and avoids as much as possible), and it's the fact that most people only know and (ha!) understand how to use one OS that leads to this sorry state of affairs. A consuming fear of new ideas leads to stagnation, not innovation, and this fear is exactly what the Microsoft monopoly has led us into.

    4. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by robbyjo · · Score: 1

      Ah, yes...

      But remember that Microsoft also takes an important role on enabling joe6pack to use computers. Also, Microsoft research has contributed quite a lot to scientific community...

      --

      --
      Error 500: Internal sig error
    5. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I tell all my Microsoft-using friends to fuck off with their self-made problems, too, and get real operating systems, from real software companies ... and most of them do.

      I sure that it must be your effervescent personality that wins them over...

    6. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by jimhill · · Score: 1

      Yes, Microsoft takes an important role in enabling joe6pack to use computers. And given that joe6pack uses them to click on malware attachments and get himself pwn3d, perhaps it would be better if Microsoft hadn't "helped" so much. Heck, even a minor hurdle like installation and configuration of Trumpet Winsock to get online would cut down the riffraff by at least two orders of magnitude.

      --
      Learn to spell: nickel, missile, lose, solely, amendment, speech, kernel, probably, ridiculous, deity, hierarchy, versus
    7. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by NanoGator · · Score: 1, Insightful

      "I've contended for years that computing in general has been held back by Microsoft, not pushed forward, and this is an example of just how that has been the case."

      Yeah, never mind that Windows gave computers some much needed unity. Never mind that computer ownership skyrocketed after Windows 95 came out. Never mind that nearly every household has a computer in it, now. Microsoft held back computing. Anybody remember the Commodore days? Having a computer was like driving a moped.

      --
      "Derp de derp."
    8. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by pubjames · · Score: 3, Funny

      people give you very weird looks when you tell them you don't use windows

      Yes. I had to suffer my sister lecuring me about how clever Microsoft was to "invent" Windows and the web (Internet Explorer == web), and she rolled her eyes in disbelief when I tried to explain to her that they didn't actually invent them.

    9. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by Moonpie+Madness · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Man, you can always use macromedia flash and a web browser... that's what I do. hell even basic html and some good images are basically the same thing as powerpoint... and more compatible... Powerpoint is like AOL, its just very very easy to do but if you need a better presentation, do what the big companies do when they present to you, use a flashy sexy flash animation or alcohol, alcohol could sell a dead llama to a empty jar of butterranch

    10. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I sure that it must be your effervescent personality that wins them over...

      How much you want to bet that you're a chick?

    11. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by cmacb · · Score: 5, Insightful

      "I've contended for years that computing in general has been held back by Microsoft, not pushed forward, and this is an example of just how that has been the case."

      Same here. Only now I find people don't argue with me so much. While Intel has done a credible job of advancing the hardware, they probably would have done more had they not relied on the nod-nod-wink-wink relationship with Microsoft.

      The true agent of change is the hardware, and now software technology moving off-shore. Sadly, the cost of overcoming the Microsoft bottleneck will be America's loss of dominance in computing. Emerging economies have no desire to pay top dollar for a mediocre operating system, and with fabrication of hardware all going on elsewhere the PC is becoming close to a disposable device which means the OS needs to be that way too.

      History will lay a large part of the blame at Bill Gate's feet. Having squandered our technology lead for his own personal gains and ego is a distinction he well deserves.

    12. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by CBravo · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Dude, I'm glad that powerpoint has this 10 year old look and isn't updated (or degraded which would be more to the point).

      Powerpoint is at least a stable app which I, a linux user, need. I cannot get around it because presentations are often done on someone elses computer.

      --
      nosig today
    13. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by Dominic_Mazzoni · · Score: 4, Informative

      Frustrated with PowerPoint? Try Apple's Keynote. It's everything PowerPoint should have been years ago, and then some. Smooth drop-shadows and alpha-blending of everything. High-quality 2-D and 3-D transitions. Photo cutouts. Integrated chart support.

      All that, and it even imports and exports PowerPoint documents, so you don't have to start from scratch.

      Yes, it only runs on Macs. But if you give presentations a lot, it's nearly worth getting yourself a Powerbook just for Keynote!

    14. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by holy+zarquon's+singi · · Score: 2, Informative
      Powerpoint is at least a stable app which I, a linux user, need. I cannot get around it because presentations are often done on someone elses computer.
      For content based presentations (as opposed to style based presentations) Open office does the job fine. If they're more concerned with selling you some flashy animated message, then I'm all the better not being able to see it.
      --
      "...we should just trust our president in every decision that he makes and we should just support that." B.Spears 2003
    15. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by danheskett · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Heck, even a minor hurdle like installation and configuration of Trumpet Winsock to get online would cut down the riffraff by at least two orders of magnitude.
      Wow, you are a grade A prick. I tell you what, why not call up my parents and tell them they are "riffraff" and don't belong on the Internet.

      In the end you'd be huriting yourself, and I'll tell you why:

      Without the riffraff you hate:

      You wouldn't be able to afford broadband Internet access, becase common DSL/Cable technology wouldn't be cost justifiable. Your only option would be costly ISDN or a fractional T1

      All computer hardware would still be expensive, niche-ish, mostly proprietary and stagnant because of a lack of high-demand, high-profit incentives. Think IBM's MCA architecture as the baseline for what to expect from every manufacturer.

      Thousands, if not millions of excellent paying, very rewarding positions in software development, hardware development, IT, and computer related industries would be no more. Entry level positions would be no more.

      You and everyone else would still have to pay a graphic designer $100/hr to design a simple brouchure, business card, letterheard, or form. And don't forget expensive multi-color printing costs for virtually anything not able to be photographed.

      Online multi-player gaming, high-quality games, and amazing simulations would be gone, thanks again to low demand and crazy high cost-per-unit ratios.

      That's just a taste. To all the whiny "joe6pack" hating asshole nerds out there -- try to remember who subsidizes your low-cost, commodity hardware, low-latency high-speed connections, and increased social status. If Sun, or IBM, or other early players had their way the "average" PC would still cost $3500, require expensive manuals and training to operate, be based on closed proprietary hardware requiring expensive licensing to develop software or add-ons for and be out of the reach of the "joe6packs" out there.

    16. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by arivanov · · Score: 2, Interesting
      IMHO, it must have been limited on processor power and hardware more than the software.

      Nope. The difference between a 30MHz Arm used 12 years ago and a 75Mhz Arm used today is nearly nothing. Software is and will be the limiting factor. And it is not just software - it is the OS.

      At the time general purpose OSes that do power management did not exist. The reason we see devices now is the appearance of general purpose OSes which:

      Have power management and can make the portable really work

      Have a well known API which makes "industry standard programming" (one of my favourite swearwords) very easy.

      If these were developed 10 years ago we would have had portables at the time and market pressure would have dropped their prices to nearly nothing by now. At the same time the PC would have remained an expensive developer only specialized system.

      I am not sure what is better though, because this development would have meant that the hobbyist programmer would have become extinct by around 2000. Actually, from this perspective MSFT is definitely regretting the Go adventure. If they would have not been so shortsighted they would not have had to fund one three letter company now.

      --
      Baker's Law: Misery no longer loves company. Nowadays it insists on it
      http://www.sigsegv.cx/
    17. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by Bert64 · · Score: 3, Informative

      Actually, the commodore 64 was VERY widespread, as was the sinclair spectrum and a number of other systems, most big games were ported to multiple systems so the users had a choice, and porting games was much harder in those days.. nowadays with API's like opengl and such, porting games and other apps should be very easy

      --
      http://spamdecoy.net - free throwaway anonymous email - avoid spam!
    18. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by tarunthegreat2 · · Score: 1

      Nope. The fact the probably 99% of the world's population is not well-versed in computer science is what allows MS to dominate. You just aren't going to get 50 year olds to sit the fuck down, search out a Linux distro and set it up, forget use it. It's not happening now, it's not happening ever. And the only response people have to that is that they don't have time for people who are too "dumb" to use Linux. Well guess what, Microsoft spent the time and money to get at those people (by hook or by crook). So long as the Open Source community has that fucking Vietcong attitude, - "We're so cool and exclusively smarter than the rest of the world. We are smarter-than-thou because we use software named after some obscure animal or the other" you're never gonna get rid of Microsoft. Let's work on the fucking interface, distribution & marketing of the alternative solutions such that they are VISIBLE, EASILY ACCESSIBLE and IN-YOUR-FACE for everyone. Now some wiseguy is going to come along and say how much intelligence does it require to go to Google and type "Linux". The answer is not much for a software developer, or someone in a related field. But there are HUGE SWATHES OF PEOPLE out there who still think they'll get an electric shock if they try and use a computer. And not all of these people are in Sub-Saharan Africa. So let's try and fucking design software with these people in mind, and get the fuck over the fact that Microsoft has us all by the balls, temporarily, if we use our heads, and permanenently if carry on with the same shit attitude. Whether you want to admit it or not, to a first timer, Windows is easier to use than any of the other operating systems ('cept Mac, but there are other reasons behind Mac's failure).

    19. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by shaka · · Score: 4, Interesting

      What would a pocket pc look like in the early 90's ?

      Perhaps like this: Psion PDAs from 1986-1999
      Or like this: Apple Newton H1000 from 1993
      Or like this: HP 95LX from 1991

      How effective would it be ?

      About as effective as today's PDAs, minus the audio/video stuff, and some glitz. Oh, and less space. But all the apps, calendar, calculator, memos, spreadsheets, and syncing. Sometimes Internet functionality to boot.

      IMHO, it must have been limited on processor power and hardware more than the software.

      IMNSHO, this is a typical statement of some self-proclaimed "geek" who has written, maybe, a web application in the early 00s. If you didn't use computers ten years ago, don't babble away about how ineffective they were back then. Mmmmmkay?

      --
      :wq!
    20. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

      i tried keynote. in fact i bought a mac just so i would complete the triumvirate and be able to talk meaningfully about linux/win/mac debates instead of blowing fud. keynote's compatibility importing/exporting powerpoint documents was really disappointing. given that grant reviews require PPT slides to be left with them, i won't be using keynote, much to my chagrin; it does have a lot of extremely nice features that PPT can't match.

      although powerpoint isn't the perfect tool for my job, it meets my needs better than keynote. sorry. you bet your ass i'd use keynote if it would correctly export to PPT.

    21. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by pubjames · · Score: 0, Troll

      Yes, it only runs on Macs.

      Apple has about 5% of the desktop market doesn't it? Like I said, there is no strong competition for PowerPoint.

    22. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by Paradise+Pete · · Score: 3, Funny
      Go could've given us this in the late 1980's, early 90's. Microsofts' machinations, however, prevented that from happening.

      And flying cars. Don't forget the flying cars.

    23. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Never mind that computer ownership skyrocketed after Windows 95 came out.

      Yeah well, the "Inside-the-Egg-Shell Egg Scrambler (it makes the best french toast)" sold really well, too, but that doesn't mean we're better off because of it.

    24. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by betelgeuse-4 · · Score: 1

      She forgot to mention that Microsoft invented email, spreadsheets, the computer, electricity and gravity.

    25. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by Daengbo · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I want to debate your claim about unity, but first I'd like to say that if using a C64 was like driving a moped, then I don't want to know what you think my use of a Model I through to 1987 represents.
      Anyway, I think this unity argument is just propoganda that we've heard for years coming to rest as truth. Really, before Windows, there were a multitude of DOS variants, operating as the launcher for programs written directly to the metal, for the most part. MS owned this one from early on with IBM, but DR-DOS might've had a chance. These were all effectively neutral as far as the program went.
      Then we had the window managers which appeared on top of DOS. There were several, including the fledgling Windows, but I don't remember them, because my Model I had died, and I didn't own a non-DOS computer for several years after that. Anyway, MS didn't own that part for a long time, and programs were still pretty much DOS.
      But no matter what, it wouldn't have stayed that way. Toolkits other than MS versions would have appeared. We could have seen DOS cores with competing window managers and toolkits, and things would look pretty much like they do now on Linux.
      And, just like now, computer manufacturers would be integrating these components looking for consistent appearance and behavior, leading to standardized APIs, most likely.
      So, I don't think that MS brought unity to the computer industry, because I think that it was an inevitable result of market pressure. MS was simply in the right place at the right time (because of their contracts with OEMs) and used the right (aggressive) business tactics to own the whole thing.
      We can argue whether this is all true or not, and certainly whether the result under MS is better or worse than what I've laid out, but I do believe that, if MS had not taken the desktop, someone (probably several someones) would've done it in MS's place, and we'd have unity in the form of standard APIs.

    26. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by jawtheshark · · Score: 1

      Don't forget the Atari Portfolio . I owned one of those great little buggers back in the day. Heck, I still own it, but the screen is bust :-(

      --
      Ahhh...the great dumpster continuum. Many a free computer will be found there. -- sowth (748135)
    27. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by jimhill · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I may well be a grade A prick. Your doom and gloom scenario of what sorts of things we'd have to do without if not for the legions of clueless doesn't pain me too greatly, mostly because the loss of every item you listed wouldn't affect me a jot. However, that wasn't my point.

      My point, such as it was, is this: The oblivious and the clueless are capable of causing (or being used to cause, same effect) great damage to the 'Net as a whole. Almost invariably, those people are using a Microsoft Windows product as the base of their computing experience.

      In the US, just about everyone has a car. Even our poor people do. They are ubiquitous. That ubiquity has led to subsidies which lower the cost of vehicles, fuels, roads, and the like. And yet, we _still_ demand that people be licensed because if they get onto the public infrastructure without some basic skills they can cause enormous harm.

      Granted, getting your box pwn3d because you think someone you've never heard of sent you a calculator attached to a message consisting of random nouns doesn't quite rank up there with driving an 88 Buick through a preschool playground, but it has a cost. The burden on the infrastructure thanks to Windows machine is estimated to be billions of dollars. Identity-theft stories frequently involve vulnerabilities in IE or IIS.

      All I want is to see some basic skills. If you're the kind of person who clicks attachments from strangers then goddammit, you do not belong on the Internet with the rest of us. And yes, that extends even to your parents, who I am sure are delightful people and don't actually do that sort of thing because you know what you're about and they'd certainly listen to you.

      If a company invented a circular saw that was so "intuitive" that no one read the user's manual, indeed no manual came with the saw, there'd be a lot of injury. And no one would applaud that company for bringing circular saws to the masses, or for leading to a price drop across the board on power tools.

      Now I'm going to conclude with an admission that I've been awake for about 52 hours so if my initial message or this one are more incoherent than usual, it's not alcohol's fault.

      --
      Learn to spell: nickel, missile, lose, solely, amendment, speech, kernel, probably, ridiculous, deity, hierarchy, versus
    28. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So all but 10% of the world would be unable to install winsock?. Computers are not in high demand for their simplicity, as is proven by all of the calls tech support agents take every day, but by their usefulness.
      People that want to be online and enjoy it rather than ruin it, would probably go through the effort of say, having to setup linux, if the easier, "point and click" alternatives were not available. (I know linux is a lot easier to use now)

      It is those that exploit the ignorance that is bred with the simplicity of the internet that are the "riffraff" (most curious expression) not those that wish to use it socially

      You have to admit that life would be a little better if your computer didnt get hosed just because you clicked the 'yes' button when you should'nt have.

    29. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by jawtheshark · · Score: 1
      Hehe, this is kind of funny. When my girlfriend saw my iBook she was amazed. (note: she is not technical, okay...) She didn't know these things exist. She has quite some problems with her brand new computer (running XP Home) mainly due to her little brother, uhm, "researching the internet". Her explanation was kind of enlightening: "but I didn't know there were other kind of computers, when you look at the advertisements you only see Windows Machines, Macs are just not advertised". This is true for where I live: for every 100 PC's advertised, there is perhaps 1 Mac and usually only in speciality press. You see, for what she needs a computer for, even a low end eMac would have done the job quite well.

      I still wonder why she has a computer 10x more powerful than mine (not that I care, I have a nice dual-CPU setup): 2.8GHz P-IV, 512Meg RAM, CD-Writer and DVD-Writer, about any Smartcard slot you can think of, 160Gig HD and a real nice 17" LCD screen. I don't want to know how much she spent on it, but the machine really is overkill. (And no, she doesn't do any digital video editing or so and doesn't plan to do it)

      --
      Ahhh...the great dumpster continuum. Many a free computer will be found there. -- sowth (748135)
    30. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by Quatermass · · Score: 1

      So that's the look I get when I say I've been using a UK GUI OS like RISC OS for decades.

      --
      Stuart http://stuarthalliday.com/
    31. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by RAMMS+EIN · · Score: 2, Funny

      ``Using something other than windows is almost a stigma in some circles (circles the average slashdotter has little contact with, and avoids as much as possible)''

      That's just _so_ right. And it works the other way around, too. Imagine how astonished I was when I figured how many people WHO STUDY CS not only use Windows, but INSIST ON IT. It was simply shocking. I'm happy I don't have to work with them. Oh, and they accuse me of being a Linux zealot.

      --
      Please correct me if I got my facts wrong.
    32. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I've contended for years that computing in general has been held back by Microsoft, not pushed forward, and this is an example of just how that has been the case."

      Yes, by at least ten years. Don't forget Apple's Newton, they scraped it and did not even dare to sell the technology to their former manufacturing partner that bid for it. Will Steve Jobs ever tell us why?

    33. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by Cooper_007 · · Score: 1
      people give you very weird looks when you tell them you don't use windows

      It does have its perks though.
      If your ISP decides to act up for whatever reason and you need to call the helpdesk, goal #1 is always to ditch the 1st line helpdesk drone that wants to sound knowledgable by asking if the machine is on and stuff.
      Almost always the first thing out of their mouth once you've explained the problem is "When you right-click 'My Network'..." at which point you cut in with "I don't run Windows".

      Next stop: 2nd line helpdesk :)

      Cooper (and no, I've never seen an ISP that claimed to only support Windows)
      --
      Don't you just love the sounds of nature?
      - Ginger Snaps II -

    34. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by SnowDog_2112 · · Score: 1

      In the US, just about everyone has a car. Even our poor people do. They are ubiquitous. That ubiquity has led to subsidies which lower the cost of vehicles, fuels, roads, and the like. And yet, we _still_ demand that people be licensed because if they get onto the public infrastructure without some basic skills they can cause enormous harm.

      In the US, just about everyone has a child. Even our poor people do. They are ubiquitous. You tell me which is more dangerous, Windows XP or idiot parents.

      Yes, people should take some responsibility and learn more about these machines they use. But making the system harder is not the answer. Making the education easier is, and making the potential damage lesser is.

      It's too late to put the genie back in the bottle. We have to do what we can to make people smarter, and do what we can to make the software safer.

      Bitching about how we should have a "you must be this smart to get on this ride" sign at the gates to the net is as useful as wishing Enterprise had never been made :).

      --
      Not representing or approved by my company or anybody else.
    35. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by CmdrGravy · · Score: 1

      That's a very good point, I can remember playing games like Elite on my BBC and also playing it on my friends Spectrum. I'm sure it was available for alot more platforms than that as well.

      Personally I was waiting for the BBC's successor the Archimedes which I thought looked excellent but unfortunatley my Dad, who called the shots at the time, bought a PC instead. So far as I could see the Archimedes did everything the PC could do and was a lot better but what I do know, I was only a kid.

    36. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by gui_tarzan2000 · · Score: 4, Insightful
      I can't help but wonder why so many people think that Microsoft has been the driving force in computer innovation? Do you naysayers really think that Mirosoft has the only people in the world that can think up new things or advance technology? How bizzare. I would argue that people have always been the innovators, not companies. Since people make up the design teams it would make sense that no matter what company is in charge, innovators are everywhere. It's just a matter of whether or not Microsoft will let you bring your product to the market. If you have enough power to tell OEMs such as Dell, Compaq, etc. that they *will* only sell MS Windows on their systems you have the power to do just about anything including controlling the market, something Bill Gates excels at. I know that some companies like HP and IBM are now pushing Linux, but where have they been for the past 15 years?

      For those of you who are too young to remember, Microsoft's marketing people destroyed the market for GeoWindows (a far better GUI), DRDOS, WordPerfect Suite, OS/2 and many other far superior packages by either buying them or forcing them out of business with whatever tactics they chose to use. My gut feeling is that threats were part of that equation but alas, I have no proof other than what people inside a couple of companies have told me.

      There are resources on the 'net for a list of companies that Gates has purchase or "acquired" over the last 20 years and if you look at it closely, it's scary. I can't find the link, maybe someone else can.

      Yes, I hate Microsoft and everything it stands for. For the past 15+ years I've watched them devour everyone around them save a few early pioneers. If IBM hadn't failed so miserably at marketing OS/2 I think we'd be using that instead. But I have to use Windows for my job, much as I hate to. I can't even use a Mac because the software I have to use won't run on it. Virtual PC used to be an option but M$ bought that too. Linux isn't ready yet. It's close, but not quite there. I actually prefer that but again, not enough software.

      So until there are lots more packages that run on a web server that are easy to use, fast and reliable (and don't forget inexpensive) we're stuck.

      Bill Gates has accomplished something no one else ever has, and most likely never will again. He controls (or is close to controlling) most of the world's technology from computers to broadband to automotive to cel phones and is only getting bigger and stronger. Until our government does something to stop Microsoft from some of its illegal activities and other companies are able to stand up to them with legitimate, cost effective programs and hardware it will continue. As long as Washington is run by corporations, that will not happen.

      --
      Have you hugged your penguin today?
    37. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Commodore"!!!???

      We are talking about the present here, not ancient history?

      Do you consider that Microsoft DRM is a major advancement to computer science?

      Do you believe that Passeport is revolutionizing the whole computer world?

      The truth is that Microsoft has never made a single advance in computing or anything else! Everything that looks like an "innovation" turns out to be stolen from somebody else.

      Windows 95? Nothing more than CPM/DRDOS stitched badly onto the GUI from Apple/Xerox!!! The only original things were the Microsoft Win 95 bugs!

      And the list just goes on and on.

    38. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by iandunn · · Score: 1
    39. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by Beatbyte · · Score: 1

      Yeah also try explaining that Xerox invented the mouse and the GUI. I get great responses to that.

      Normally I explain that to people whom I no longer wish to do computer work for ;)

    40. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by rwebb · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Nope. The fact the probably 99% of the world's population is not well-versed in computer science is what allows MS to dominate. You just aren't going to get 50 year olds to sit the fuck down, search out a Linux distro and set it up, forget use it. It's not happening now, it's not happening ever.

      Errmm... Remember, today's 50-yr old codgers are many of the same ones who got a start playing with Godbout S-100 kits and the like in the late 70s. Link for those of you too young to remember hand-translating assembler mneumonics to write Z80 device drivers.

      And, as a bona fide 50+ fossil, I've had a lot of fun searching out and installing Linux distros. Even to the point of sprinkling a few Knoppix disks around the office to dazzle the unwashed masses with how fun (and easy) running Linux can be. (I don't mention things like Slackware until they're hooked...)

      --
      Trusted by cats.
    41. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      HTML + Flash do nicely.

      But perhaps the point was, where is the easy tool for creating them? The one to compete with Powerpoint?

      The corporate types won't care if it doesn't create "powerpoint" files, as long as the thingy is similarly simple to use, and their presentations work fine on the road... And wide compatibility is a plus if it is marketed to them right. But the ready-made, easy-to-use tool needs to be there.

      And when somebody creates that, for the love of God please do not add ".org" or some other incomphrehensible suffix in the app's name. (Which isn't and shouldn't be the developer's website addy, nor the filename in the target filesystem, nor any other geeky substitute -- but just the name of the app. Yes I'm thinking of OpenOffice...)

    42. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by norite · · Score: 1
      Heh...have you ever tried Microsoft Publisher 2000? That has got to be the biggest piece of shite I've come across recently.
      I was given two files that displayed a map - only the files were 45Mb in size each...they took ages to open, and someone externally wanted copies. (I do not know how the original creator managed to make a simple plan such a huge size) Save/export as a *.jpg file....nope. It did let me save it as a word document, or a text file, as useless as that was. Right-clicking and copying to the clipboard gave me a very, very poor quality image, so in the end I printed them off, (took a long time) scanned them in and saved them as a decent file size, and emailed those.

      Then I was given a small booklet that needed updating. When it came time to print it off, it was all back to front - totally different to what it was showing on the screen, and how it should have printed off. It was easier just printing it off and performing gymnastics with the photocopier to get the pages in the right order

      --
      -- Fuck Beta
    43. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by Hangtime · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Agreed. Back in high school I used Lotus SmartSuite. Pretty neat stuff except AmiPro held it back. Bad Word Processor = No Traction. The best application in the suite though and still to this day is better then PowerPoint is Freelance Graphics. So many interesting templates some even created by Zig Ziglar. You can design your own slide layouts instead of the crappy 20 that Microsoft will only allow you to have...Gee I don't want all of my text + chart displays to look like that, I'll just change my default for the presentation...BOOM! Done. Since I am in business I have to use PowerPoint, unfortunately, its the standard. As for working with something like Flash to do a presentation. PowerPoint's to damn easy to use then trying to build an entire presentation in it, I do not want to sketch out the entire process. Also, with Microsoft's dominance of the productivity applications they have no need to update PowerPoint because no one else will buy anything else.

    44. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by goatan · · Score: 1
      alcohol could sell a dead llama to a empty jar of butterranch

      Yeh get em drunk and then make the sale

      --
      Saying Apple is better than MS is like saying Botulism is better than rabies.

    45. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by f0rt0r · · Score: 1

      Lol, I had a Vic-20 and later a Commodore 64. My friends and I would trade games and talk about the how cool devices like tape drives and floppy drives were. :) Not popular? They had their own friggin' magazine for the C64 ( I can't remember the title ).

      --
      I can't afford a sig!
    46. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by no+longer+myself · · Score: 1
      You know I hear they have some pretty good anti-depressants on the market today. You could try a few... Might even help your karma... (Not that you care.)

      The goals of open source are open. They are not set in stone. If you ask 10 different Open Source users what the goal is, you'll likely get about 7 or more different answers.

      Some like to feel "1337" because they use Linux, and that's "OK" for now. Some are just jolly about the fact that they're stickin' it to ol' Gates and Company. Some have religious zealotry about using OSS, and some are just tin-foil hat sporting geeks who hear voices that tell them to use BSD. Some can't afford MS products, or did a cost analysis and found they could save money. Heck, some actually believe they like the interface better! Go figure!

      But to lump OSS users into a mass of froth-mouthed "Microsoft sux" group is just plain silly. Sure, MS Windows annoys the heck out of me these days when I have to go fix someone else's computer, but my own computer is more of what I want it to be than any of the previous MS run computers I've owned in the past...

      Except for the first one... You never get over your first love. :-)

    47. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by AgtSmith · · Score: 1

      Thank our lucky stars that we live in a world where we do have a choice in OSes. I still firmly believe that the greastest innovations will come out of someone's garage or room. Where they have gotten an idea and ran with it. Regardless of which OS you run, At the end of the day it's still all about choice.

      --
      Sig removed by order of FBI Patriot ACT
    48. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by JordanH · · Score: 2, Insightful
      • Never mind that computer ownership skyrocketed after Windows 95 came out.

      Hmmm... You don't think that maybe the skyrocketing computer ownership had something to do with that World Wide Web thing that was exploding right around the same time?

      Oh, and don't suggest for a minute that the Web grew because of Windows95 (or NT), MS had a microscopic Web Server presence in those days. The content was all on Unix servers and people wanted to get to it. You had to buy a computer to get to it. Windows95 computers were the cheapest available.

      Accidental empires, indeed.

    49. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by truthsearch · · Score: 1

      Yeah, never mind that Windows gave computers some much needed unity.

      Windows is the only OS which can be installed on more than one computer? Take any OS, install it on a variety of hardware, and you have what you may call unity. No OS has ever been installed on a wider variety of hardware than Unix (in all its flavors).

      Never mind that computer ownership skyrocketed after Windows 95 came out.

      First, that's only personal computer ownership. There are many more computers around than just those found in homes. Second, how does quantity of computer ownership relate to "pushing computing foward"? I define pushing computing forward as advances in technology (i.e. capabilities). How many people have the technology only relates to sales and motivation. Quantity is not the same as advances.

      Anybody remember the Commodore days? Having a computer was like driving a moped.

      My Commodore ran more stable than my DOS computer and had much more software available for a long time. I also didn't have to install and constantly tweak memory managers for my programs to work. If the Commodore was a moped, Windows is a tractor. I can do more with it, but I'm much bigger and slower.

    50. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by Mipsalawishus · · Score: 1

      Microsoft: Where do you want to Go today?

    51. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by pandrijeczko · · Score: 3, Informative
      Yeah, never mind that Windows gave computers some much needed unity.

      Sorry, why do you need unity?

      When home computing first took off in the early-to-mid 1980s, businesses were already using the first IBM PCs but very few people had them in the home - the reason being was that they were incredibly expensive machines then and most home users wanted a small, cheap home machine to play games on and to maybe do a little programming, type a few letters simply, etc.

      So what started out as Sinclair Spectrums, BBC Micros & Commodore 64s as 8-bit machines became Commodore Amigas and Atari STs as 16-bit machines in the late 1980s & early 1990s.

      Even at this point, with PCs getting cheaper, STs and Amigas were still in widespread home use because they had much better capabilities, at the time, than IBM PCs had for graphics and sounds.

      It was this point that Commodore made a big blunder, by not considering development of bigger and better Amigas that could compete with the 386 PCs that were now starting to get upgradeable graphics and sound cards. This was long before Windows, now at "Windows For Workgroups" stage, became a viable gaming platform - I for one cannot remember a game that was written specifically for WFW 3.11.

      The fact is that it was the modular nature of the IBM PC that meant it had an advantage cost-wise for upgradability - if you wanted to upgrade an Amiga, you had to buy a new one or buy a very expensive third-party addon. This was nothing to do with Windows, at least at this point in history.

      Never mind that computer ownership skyrocketed after Windows 95 came out.

      PC ownership was already increasing by the time Windows 95 came out. Windows 95 was a very clever marketing decision by Microsoft because it forever tied PC games to a Microsoft operating system by virtue of DirectX and forcing hardware manufacturers into writing Windows drivers. However, it crashed a helluva lot more times than MSDOS, OS2 or AmigaDOS and the Workbench ever did because Microsoft had no reason to make a stable OS anyway - it sold purely because of it had a stranglehold on the home computing market from the word go, not because it advanced computing in any way.

      Remember, when Windows 95 came out, it sold initially to home users - businesses took a long time to move from WFW and NT 3.51.

      Also, unless you ever used comparable OSes of the time, like OS2, AmigaDOS or a UNIX, you would not appreciate what proper multitasking actually meant. Windows 95 was *just* a GUI for MSDOS and still, technologically, far behind the other OSes - although it may have looked prettier!

      Anybody remember the Commodore days?

      Yes, a Commodore screwed up big time with bad marketing decisions - this happened despite Microsoft although MS would probably have killed them anyway had they laster longer - but again, this would have been through clever marketing and industrial sabotage.

      Having a computer was like driving a moped.

      In what respect? Again, if you'd have used the Amiga Workbench, the 14MHz 68000 CPU inside an Amiga gave Workbench a much slicker feel and speed than anything MS ever did on an Intel 486 running at anything up to 100 MHz - because the hardware multitasked properly and the OS was much slicker due to the tighter memory constraints on an Amiga.

      Don't get me wrong, I'm not an Amiga zealot in any respect but it wasn't until Pentium-class CPUs came out that I found any reason to change to an IBM PC. Even then, Windows was a step backward from Workbench and I'm pleased that I can now get similar reliability and usability on an IBM PC with Linux.

      The only good thing about Windows is that Microsoft have always been excellent at marketing it, not because it ever has been a technological leader.

      --
      Gentoo Linux - another day, another USE flag.
    52. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by poot_rootbeer · · Score: 1

      I tell all my Microsoft-using friends to fuck off with their self-made problems, too, and get real operating systems, from real software companies ... and most of them do.

      I assume that you mean most of your friends fuck off. I would too, if you were a "friend" of mine.

    53. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've contended for years that computing in general has been held back by Microsoft, not pushed forward

      I completely agree, and have been saying the same thing. A lot of people don't get that this is why there is a lot of hate for Microsoft. The give Microsoft credit for things that would have happened anyway, or things that Microsoft borrowed from others.

    54. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by psychoid · · Score: 1

      I don't want to be a jerk or anything, but I think you mean to refer to Geoworks Ensemble

    55. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by TCaptain · · Score: 1

      I'm with you there.

      My fiancee had never HEARD of linux until we met and now she's trying to use it (but still strongly favors Windows when its been a couple of days between crashes). She only knew Apple and Mac and Office in both.

      The best compliment I got tho, was when my dad showed off a new company laptop running WindowsXP (a PIII 1.6 Ghz with 256M of ram) and later that evening I had to use my own old lappy (a P2-333 with 192Megs of Ram) in Linux and he said "Wow, I wish MY laptop responded as fast as your does!"

      Since then, he's been easing towards letting me put linux on his home PC...he's still not QUITE convinced...but he's asking questions and getting curious.

      --
      "I'm not a procrastinator, I'm temporally challenged"
    56. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by TCaptain · · Score: 1

      Almost always the first thing out of their mouth once you've explained the problem is "When you right-click 'My Network'..." at which point you cut in with "I don't run Windows".

      I've learned to avoid that one because in most companies around here and until recently my ISP, saying "I don't run Windows" would get the response: "I'm sorry, but you really aren't able to use our service or access the net without Windows" and all attempts at solving my problem would stop.

      Customer support at HP of all places would NOT answer my questions until I had used the DAMN RESTORE CDS to wipe out my linux partitions (I was calling about a faulty AC adapter), saying "We don't support linux at all on this laptop, only windowsXP, please use your Restore CDs and call again if the problem isn't solved"

      --
      "I'm not a procrastinator, I'm temporally challenged"
    57. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by Darren+Winsper · · Score: 3, Interesting

      My team actually did that last year for a presentation. The front-end for our system was web-based, so we decided to use our own system for our presentation. I knocked up a slide template in HTML and used that for the slides. That way, we could easily jump from slides to product demo and back without switching applications. The judges thought our approach was far better than everyone else's approach of using bog-standard, generic Powerpoint slides and awarded us the prize for the best presentation.

    58. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by itsNothing · · Score: 1
      I have maintained for years that Gates will be villified in the future for having stifled computing with his tactics. He's rich, but only because, in large part, he was in the right place at the right time. Don't get me wrong, he worked hard create his empire. However, he's a robber baron, not a technologist. If any of 6+ things hadn't happened, he'd only be another multi-millionaire (IBM didn't negotiate its license agreement to be exclusive, Jobs didn't allow others to build the Apple platform, etc.)

      Your point about offshoring is interesting and probably very important. Because Gates has control of the US and its desktops, the fastest way to break his control is to move development out of this country. There is certainly movement to break the monoculture here (witness behavior in our own government), but the fastest way to do it is to operate outside of the control of our laws and his marketing spin.

      Now i'm certain he'll be villified.

    59. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So what you are saying is that you want to create the presentation in a superior presentation program, but only if it will allow you to export it to an inferior presentation program?

      Sounds like the fault is with your "Grant review" system, not Apple/Keynote.

    60. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by esarjeant · · Score: 1

      This is a good point, IMHO. I think the tide might turn against a commodity softare marketplace as more age groups express a hobbiest interest in computer software and operating systems.

      At that point, the barrier to entry for a non-commercial non-bundled software solution becomes quite small. With better than 75% of the population well educated on computer technologies, pretty soon everyone will feel comfortable downloading & installing an operating system.

      --

      Eric Sarjeant
      eric[@]sarjeant.com

    61. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by router · · Score: 1

      It may not have been "specifically" written for WfW 3.11, but it was damn sure a _requirement_ for running Doom II on LANs.... I installed WfW 3.11 and my first home network for that game. In fact, it caused almost everyone I knew for years to buy/have 10base2 (or combo) ethernet cards in their computers so they could hook up to all of the early-adopter home networks, because those houses had the LAN Parties!

      andy

    62. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by CristalShandaLear · · Score: 1

      You just aren't going to get 50 year olds to sit the fuck down, search out a Linux distro and set it up, forget use it. It's not happening now, it's not happening ever.

      But this is exactly what is happening. People are waking up to the fact that Windows is not the only 0S in the world. Of course the fact that they thought it was in the first place is really scary, but the wake up is nice. Is the Matrix about freeing your mind from M$?

      You're right about the holier-than-thou attitudes being intimidating. People who know more, help those who know less. It should almost be like drunk driving. Friends don't let friends use M$.

    63. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by pandrijeczko · · Score: 1
      I got to admit that I didn't really get into Doom networking until very late in the day - although when I did, it blew me away completely! :-)

      However, did it really need WFW? I do remember networking Duke Nukem 3D entirely in DOS using DOS network card drivers and IPX/SPX.

      WFW certainly brought in an MS TCP/IP stack but doesn't Doom network with IPX/SPX? I really must check on that next time I fire it up.

      I suppose WFW meant you could play Doom over the Internet with TCP/IP though.

      --
      Gentoo Linux - another day, another USE flag.
    64. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by naelurec · · Score: 1

      According to an IDC report, Apple had 3.2% of the 2003 sales market.. so lets assume macs are used on average, twice as long as PCs (doubtful), this would give them a 6.4% desktop market share .. more like it is between the two, so under 5%..

      Of course, the majority of those 5% are not corporate desktops, but content creation workstations (video, dtp, music, etc..) so lets say 20% of Macs are corporate desktops (unlikely, but good for comparison) -- and 50% of Windows desktops are corporate.. .95 x .5 = 47.5% of all desktops are Windows corporate desktops.. .5 x .2 = 1% of all desktops are Mac corporate desktops..

      Ultimatley 2% of all corporate desktops using these numbers off the top of my head are Mac corporate desktops.

      Now on a Mac you have a choice -- a brand spankin' new keynote program or PowerPoint or perhap a few other tools that escape my mind at this time.. so lets say at this time, keynote has 50% of the Mac marketshare -- your looking at 1% using Keynote versus the other 99% using powerpoint.

      Sure it might be a great program, but merely a speck on the landscape..... Now *hopefully* we see some innovative ideas show up in OOo Impress.. :)

    65. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      High quality games? Jeesh, man. Compare something like Zelda III on the SNES to the samey, derivative FPS games all around today.

      Great games have nothing to do with technology. Look at Tetris.

    66. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by jackbird · · Score: 1

      HIS grant review system? I suppose you'd like to rip .doc support out of OpenOffice, too, to make a political point at the expense of Things Users Need Now.

    67. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by 2nd+Post! · · Score: 1

      What the desktop usage model mean? There is extremely strong competition for PowerPoint as a tool, and it's called Keynote.

      If you're talking about the desktop market, then you really mean there isn't strong competition for *Microsoft*, but as soon as you give Keynote a try, I think you will agree: It's the *best* presentation software out there. If presentations are your business career, then getting a PowerBook just for Keynote pays itself back after one successful sales meeting!

    68. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by _Sprocket_ · · Score: 1


      Hmmm... You don't think that maybe the skyrocketing computer ownership had something to do with that World Wide Web thing that was exploding right around the same time?


      Excellent point. But I think you've mentioned the lesser motivation involving the Internet. The main driver for desktop sales and Internet adoption was email.
    69. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by router · · Score: 1

      Fsck man, you may be right...it might have been just to share out printers and stuff. It was all about the same time, but I may have just been talking out of my ass up there. Good catch. Doom was still the reason we installed the network tho! Which at this point is totally OT.

      andy

    70. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The real question is.... who invented ass photocopying. Was that xerox too?

    71. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by resignator · · Score: 1

      From the sounds of it you are anything but the average 50 year old. Take a good look around.

      --
      "At first, we thought it was just another snake cult."
    72. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But there are HUGE SWATHES OF PEOPLE out there who still think they'll get an electric shock if they try and use a compute

      ...say that to somebody who just liked the motherboard of a powered on computer.

    73. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      licked, dumbass

    74. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by blackmonday · · Score: 1

      Amen. I created my last powerpoint presentation in keynote, exported it as a powerpoint presentation, then emailed it to my Windows box.

      The beautiful high resolution quality of the powerpoint presentation became a flat looking turd compared to the original. This presentation was for someone else - I can't wait to give a presentation myself so I can show these people the power of good software.

    75. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by toasted_calamari · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I have relatives who use comcast cable internet.

      Comcast will not give them the time of day unless they are using Windows, Internet Explorer, and Outlook

      I use earthlink.

      When you call them up, you get a "press 1 for Windows, 2 for Mac" I press 1, since at least the processer architecture is the same as my x86 linux box. Then, 1 of 2 things happens:

      1) They lower their voice and say "well, we don't really support linux, but here's what you do..."

      2) (this has actually happened):
      Tech support: What version of windows are you running?
      Me: Actually, I run debian Linux.
      Tech support: So you arn't even running an opperating system.
      Me: ...

    76. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by Flyboy+Connor · · Score: 1

      History is written by the winners. Bill Gates is clearly a winner...

    77. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...or a queer...

    78. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by FuzzyBad-Mofo · · Score: 1

      Having a [Commodore] computer was like driving a moped.

      You mean it was fun to use while still getting you where you wanted to go? I agree!

    79. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by jawtheshark · · Score: 1
      Well, I didn't dare to speak about "that linux" thingy yet. I've just met her 2 months ago, so I'm not going to scare her away with Linux. For the moment I equated it with "Not Windows" and "See that Pinguin thingy, that's Linux". For now that's more than enough.

      I'm going to have a hard time explaining what OpenBSD is and that's Sun hardware I have lying around isn't going to be an easy one either ;-)

      And about the speed: I kept a P120 laptop alive (read: usable) by installing Linux on it and running WindowMaker. Granted I couldn't run OpenOffice but for plain surfing, chat and email it was more than enough. It kept me one more years from replacing it and I learned a lot. I wish I had a spare laptop to put Linux on.... the only laptop I now have is my iBook with OS X, which is great, but I also like Linux.

      --
      Ahhh...the great dumpster continuum. Many a free computer will be found there. -- sowth (748135)
    80. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by SDPlaya · · Score: 1
      The true agent of change is the hardware? How is that so?

      IBM has billions upon billions of dollars. They could not fund a single piece of decent software over tha past 10 years because of Microsoft? The open source community has not yet been able to put together a single compelling app in 20 years... why? Is this also because Microsoft keeps open source developers from thinking?

      Do you honestly think software would be that much different if Microsoft didn't exist? We'd all be using Macs right now, running OS9, and B/W displays, while the Linux community worked on ways to copy that interface.

    81. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by nsayer · · Score: 1

      You might consider starting to press "2" instead. I rather suspect you're likely to get a more clueful set of support reps. Besides, Linux has a lot more in common with OS X than Windows (for what that's worth).

    82. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by Danse · · Score: 1

      If ~95% of home and work computers can't run it, then it's really not any competition for PowerPoint either, is it?

      --
      It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
    83. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And when somebody creates that, for the love of God please do not add ".org" or some other incomphrehensible suffix in the app's name. (Which isn't and shouldn't be the developer's website addy, nor the filename in the target filesystem, nor any other geeky substitute -- but just the name of the app. Yes I'm thinking of OpenOffice...)

      Ditto Mozilla...

    84. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by Planesdragon · · Score: 1

      No OS has ever been installed on a wider variety of hardware than Unix (in all its flavors).

      And failing to properly use this advantage is Unix's greatest failing.

      If i cannot take my application from one computer to another computer without recompiling or installing a different version, then the two computers are "different" in the only way that really matters.

    85. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If any of 6+ things hadn't happened, he'd only be another multi-millionaire (IBM didn't negotiate its license agreement to be exclusive, Jobs didn't allow others to build the Apple platform, etc.


      I suggest an even earlier moment in Macintosh history as the turning point: Jobs wanted to charge $2000 for the original Mac, Sculley wanted $2700. Sculley won. Think of the difference this would have made! The Mac's reputation as "overpriced" probably started right then.


    86. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by geekoid · · Score: 1

      "... and most of them do."

      Is that becasue your microsoft friends switch, or you just have fewer friends?

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    87. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > History is written by the winners. Bill Gates is clearly a winner...

      Yes, the 20th century's history was written as BG being the winner. Future history is written by future winners, and the future of computing is rapidly moving away from Windows (and American software).

    88. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are on the whole correct, but you err in saying that Microsoft killed off Virtual PC after buying it from Connectix. On the contrary, it was not long ago that I was able to upgrade Connectix Virtual PC 6.0 (which has some security issues) to Microsoft Virtual PC 6.1 -- without providing personal information or even having a license to the old version -- by going to (guess which site?) microsoft.com. Microsoft is not a good company, but it is not a foolish one, and generally knows not to alienate its existing customers.

    89. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by dbc · · Score: 1

      bad analogy. circular saws *are* intuitive. nobody *needs* to read the manual. an illiterate framer is more likely to be hurt by the know-it-all homeowner his boss is contracting with, when said homeowner leaves tools he has "borrowed" lying in the hallway, pointy-end up.

    90. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by AbbyNormal · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but does it run on Windows?

      --
      Sig it.
    91. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by David+Rolfe · · Score: 1
      For those of you who are too young to remember, Microsoft's marketing people destroyed the market for GeoWindows (a far better GUI), DRDOS, WordPerfect Suite, OS/2 and many other far superior packages ...

      Geoworks Ensemble (as referred to in a previous post) for the PC was a derivation of the previous GEOS for Commodores and early Apples. It was a gui that was available prior to Windows 1.0 -- and at the same time was more advanced than Windows 1.0. It always befuddles me when I think about what happened back in the PC/XT days. I mean so many companies kind of rolled over - Geoworks was superior to the Windows of it's day up until about Win3.1 -- at which point without 3rd party vendors creating new software for Geos it just started to fade away. The Geos folks just weren't far sighted enough to publicly release api's etc. Having AOL and a couple spreadsheet guys just wasn't enough to keep them on the map. I'd say once AOL left Geos their coffin was nailed shut.

      I think everyone is familiar enough with the os/2 situation that I don't need to rehash it. Sheesh.

      --
      Read Heinlein's 1953 Revolt in 2100, now more than ever.
    92. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by PitaBred · · Score: 1

      Uhh... most 'support' people I've talked to barely know Windows. And almost everyone I've talked to that uses a Mac uses it because it's hip, or because it's so cute. They know even less.
      That being said, I don't trust any tech support, ever. I ask them for the relevant information, usually I can convince them that they don't need to go through the script, or if they insist, I just lie to 'em about doing the steps if they don't matter or aren't pertinent to the problem "Yup, done that."

    93. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by DrCode · · Score: 1

      That's the main reason I haven't switched from my 56K service to Comcast. My ISP seems to be one of the last surviving independents, has always run BSD, and provides a Unix login shell. If I want tech-support, I can email root@xxxx.com, and get a quick response from the owner of the place.

    94. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by cinderful · · Score: 1

      Actually, any self-respecting graphic designer will tell you that PowerPoint and its "colorful template" graphs and charts are the antithesis of communication.

      Read here as the information architect extraordinaire, Edward Tufte explains how PowerPoint is Evil .

    95. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by Ironica · · Score: 1

      Man, you can always use macromedia flash and a web browser... that's what I do.

      Macromedia Flaxh MX 2004 (Not professional, just regular): $499

      MS Office 2003 Professional, PowerPoint included: $499

      Sooo... how do you talk your boss into doubling your software expenditures (since you probably already bought Office) so that you can develop a niftier presentation?

      If you work in a place that already uses Flash, you'll have no problem. But for most folks, this is way out of reach. Creating flash animation is still a bit more complicated than PowerPoint, even if you use Swish to dumb it down. Finally, while the computer you're running your presentation with is almost certain to have at least the PowerPoint Viewer installed, you may have more trouble getting the Flash plug-in installed, especially if the system is locked down. (This isn't an issue if you're running off your own machine, but can be if you're using a built-in system in an auditorium.)

      If there had been a competitor for PowerPoint (for a while, a lot of folks were using Visio for that... I'm still not sure how it wasn't illegal market domination for MS to buy them), then we might have something like Flash-based presentation tools that work in a web browser that have the same ease-of-use and availability as PowerPoint. But we don't, and I'm quite sad about that.

      Hopefully, one of these days, I'll be able to spend some quality time with OO Impress and then submit a ton of bug reports/feature requests, in hopes that it will be a decent substitute. But to create stuff professionally, I still get stuck using PowerPoint for now.

      --
      Don't you wish your girlfriend was a geek like me?
    96. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by Ironica · · Score: 1

      There are resources on the 'net for a list of companies that Gates has purchase or "acquired" over the last 20 years and if you look at it closely, it's scary. I can't find the link, maybe someone else can.

      Try The Microsoft File by Wendy Goldman Rohm. She combined all the research she did about MS as a Washington Post (I think?) reporter and came up with a riveting book about broken contracts, industrial espionage, and all kinds of dirty deeds.

      --
      Don't you wish your girlfriend was a geek like me?
    97. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      pffft. Mod pubjames' post troll if you want, but he's right.

      Keynote might freakin rock my world but I'll never know because nobody within a mile of my computer desk has ever even heard of it or would care if they had.

    98. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      " I know that some companies like HP and IBM are now pushing Linux, but where have they been for the past 15 years? "

      hehe are you suggesting that HP and IBM should have been pushing Linux 15 years ago, in the late 80's?

    99. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      All I want is to see some basic skills. If you're the kind of person who clicks attachments from strangers then goddammit, you do not belong on the Internet with the rest of us. And yes, that extends even to your parents, who I am sure are delightful people and don't actually do that sort of thing because you know what you're about and they'd certainly listen to you


      No. They do belong on the internet. Opening mail, even attachments, should not be a hazardous activity. The problem lies squarely and solely on Microsoft.

    100. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by Macgrrl · · Score: 1

      Couple that with Apple simultaneously experiencing the debarcle which was Mac OS 7.5 - the least stable and most bug ridden version of the Mac OS ever AND the hardware flaws in the Performa 52XX/62XX and PowerBook 190/5300.

      7.5 smacked of being rushed to release to beat the launch of Win'95, it had numerous updates and patches released, most of them had to be applied cumulatively in the correct order. After the trim stability of 7.1 it put a lot of people off Macs, despite the raft of new features it promised.

      The Performa's had a number of issues, from faulty cache cards causing hardware bombs, the 52XX family had faulty monitor cables (an impurity batch fault with the actual cable), the PC cards complicated the issue, as did the requirement for new style matched RAM.

      The Powerbooks had screen and casing issues, and I recall something about a power board in the 5300 - but it's quite awhile ago now and I can't remember the details.

      Working as a service technician in Australia, I must have personally reshelled several hundred PowerBooks from that era - could do one in about 20 minutes. The best speed I ever got for the WallStreet inverter cable fault was about 15 minutes because of all the dicking around with the shielding.

      Personally, I believe it was a combination of these botched product rollouts and the proliferation of models from this era that caused Apple to lose so much market share - much more than the launch of W95 - a stable product base at that time would have done wonders for Apple's bottom line.

      --
      Sara
      Designer, Gamer, Macgrrl in an XP World
    101. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by Moonpie+Madness · · Score: 1

      Excellent point my friend, and the answer is.... KAZAA!!! no seriously, there are a few pretty good flash editors that are shareware. I mean, the raw power of Macromedia's application is far and away beyond powerpoint... you can do a lot of powerpoint stuff with a more simple flash program... for less money... but actually, if you are serious about doing business, you need to lay down the capital. If the better presentation makes only a few more sells, well, that's worth the money. Think about it. Flash says put together while .ppt says, I'm at least lukewarm active in the brain to operate this silly overdone and stagnant standard

    102. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by gui_tarzan2000 · · Score: 1
      My mistake, you're correct. I was really tired when I wrote that and I knew better. :)

      "I don't want to be a jerk or anything, but I think you mean to refer to Geoworks Ensemble"

      --
      Have you hugged your penguin today?
    103. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by gui_tarzan2000 · · Score: 1
      " You are on the whole correct, but you err in saying that Microsoft killed off Virtual PC after buying it from Connectix." As I said in a previous post, I was really tired when I wrote that this morning after a sleep study last night and it didn't come out right. What I meant to say was that since MS bought Connectix there's no affordable alternative in the open source world or with another company. The one choice that's left is based on an expensive subscription license and I'm not going to do that either. I don't mind paying a fair amount for something, but I will not be ripped off unless I have no other choice (checked gas prices lately?).

      I do appreciate being corrected without needing a flame proof suit. :)

      --
      Have you hugged your penguin today?
    104. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by spectecjr · · Score: 1

      Nope. The difference between a 30MHz Arm used 12 years ago and a 75Mhz Arm used today is nearly nothing. Software is and will be the limiting factor. And it is not just software - it is the OS.

      Except for, of course, power consumption, the thumb system to reduce code size, package sizes, a factor of 3 performance, faster, lower-power memory, smaller footprint and larger storage size non-volatile RAM, the fact that the new ARM CPUs were designed explicitly to handle WindowsCE multitasking for up to 32 processes (the original didn't have fast context switching), lack of on-chip peripheral control (such as LCD, touch-screen, PCM audio), and so on and so forth, I guess you're right.

      --
      Coming soon - pyrogyra
    105. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by Herkules · · Score: 1

      All this about brings back memmory of when my friend said it was time to move to the PC.

      He had writen a simple application in anci c for the amiga and was porting it to the PC. When he ran the program the first time he thought something was wrong. Becouse on the amiga (1200) loading and parsing a ~1 meg data file took about 1m while on his 486 100Mhz it took just secounds.

      It was quite funny =)

      --
      CIA Factbook 2002 (US):"Since 1975, practically all the gains in household income have gone to the top 20% of households
    106. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by FredFnord · · Score: 1

      Or, to put it in balder terms, most people are too stupid to buy an expensive new tool even if it would save them enormous amounts of time and money and get things done better than their current tool, as long as their current tool is 'good enough'.

      A Powerbook with Keynote on it is a competitor product to a Dell laptop with PowerPoint on it, but Keynote is not a serious competitor to PowerPoint.

      -fred

      --
      Sign #11 of Slashdot overdose: You see the phrase 'moderate Republican' and you wonder if that would be a +1 or a -1.
    107. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by Danse · · Score: 1

      Depends on what your needs are. If you need to be able to exchange the presentation docs with other people in your company, then again, Keynote is not even in the running. Unless you can convince your entire organization and probably your clients to switch to Macs. Even Apple can't do that and they have more incentive than anyone else.

      --
      It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
    108. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by nathanh · · Score: 1
      Yeah also try explaining that Xerox invented the mouse and the GUI. I get great responses to that.

      Because you're wrong. Doug Engelbart invented the mouse at Stanford university (actually SRI, the research institute). The GUI, now that's a gray area, but Memex and Engelbart and Sutherland and Sketchpad and Smalltalk have to be part of the story. Recall that Engelbart demonstrated live video conferencing inside GUI windows in the 1960s!

      In any event, both mice and GUIs predate Xerox PARC. The PARC is famous for making a product out of the ideas but they didn't invent the ideas.

      Preempting any comments about Apple and Xerox PARC. Although Apple definitely took some ideas from Xerox (paid for, not stolen) the Lisa and Macintosh weren't copies of the Xerox Star. Apple added a lot of GUI innovation (eg, spatial folders, dropdown menus). Also bear in mind that several of the ideas that Apple used from Xerox PARC were not invented at Xerox PARC! Windows and icons and scrollbars predated Xerox PARC as well. Xerox PARC simply integrated all the cutting edge ideas into a neat little package.

    109. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by torpor · · Score: 1

      yeah, my friends are 'allowed' to fuck off any time they want to, its generally not something i do or do not have any control over, but if they come to me one more time with pathetic windows virus-related problems they know 'i can fix faster than them, so should', i will enjoy encouraging them to fuck off yet one more time ...

      if a computer is a waste of time for you, don't make it so for another person!

      --
      ; -- the corruption of government starts with its secrets. a truly free people keep no secrets. --
    110. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by torpor · · Score: 1

      Atari Portfolio. 1989/90.

      --
      ; -- the corruption of government starts with its secrets. a truly free people keep no secrets. --
    111. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by drsmithy · · Score: 1
      The burden on the infrastructure thanks to Windows machine is estimated to be billions of dollars.

      You'd come across as a lot more rational if you remained consistent with the rest of your arguments and blamed "ignorant computer users" instead of "Windows". After all, you clearly imply that drivers - and not Ford, GM, or whoever - are responsible for dangerous use of cars. But for some reason Microsoft and Windows are responsible for the foolishness of end users.

    112. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by toasted_calamari · · Score: 1

      In retrospect, that makes more sense. but the funny thing is that the phone call in case two was just because I needed a different phone number.

    113. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by screeble · · Score: 1

      You've obviously never been on a construction site. The illiterate framer started as an apprentice with a gruff incharge who said "That's not how I fucking showed you how to do that!" anytime the gronk did anything wrong.

      Gronks don't need to read instructions because they get the equivalent of books on tape.

      Circular saws are NOT intuitive. If you've never used a circular saw before you couldn't even begin to understand the concept of kickback.

      Lots of people hurt themselves with power tools by not even knowing the directions.

      Even something as simple as unplugging a tool before changing blades doesn't occur to some people.
      http://www.handctr.com/powersawsafetytips.htm

      Why else would this site exist?

    114. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by Angry+Pixie · · Score: 1

      There are a lot of 'high order' dreams in the computing science.
      But it's the job of scientists in all disciplines to have high order dreams. Business people and governments just reign in the scientists with fancy talk of markets and consumer protections.

      I personally have no sympathy for Palm in this issue. It's genuine competition. It's part of the dirty business of consumer electronics. Palm is certainly no saint either. Just ask a BeOS user how they feel about Palm.

      Palm explains interests in Be.

      Palm bought Be Inc. and has been gutting it for parts to use in its own products with no intention of bringing back BeOS. Be finally did settle its lawsuit with Microsoft and got some money, so Be could have turned out a new release. Right now, BeOS users and fans are in the situation of having to beg for the opportunity to keep BeOS alive.

      I tell all my Microsoft-using friends to fuck off with their self-made problems, too, and get real operating systems, from real software companies ... and most of them do.
      I tell people to fuck off all the time for even lesser reasons. Hell, I just told someone to fuck off today, and I plan to do it again tomorrow! I like my Windows operating system, and I can live with my self-made problems. Virii, worms, and security holes occur on every OS, so it's more about how you address your own computing habits.

      Of course, I'd go Linux if it could handle my needs (read my journal), but not because Windows has failed me. In my opinion, all this DRM talk and the love of Windows developers to create apps that dial back home has me thinking that the privacy-minded pixie ought to go back to UNIX.

    115. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by dbc · · Score: 1

      You've obviously never been on a construction site.

      *bzzt* Sorry. Grew up in 'em. Thank you for playing.

    116. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by Ironica · · Score: 1

      if you are serious about doing business, you need to lay down the capital. If the better presentation makes only a few more sells, well, that's worth the money.

      Primarily I create presentations for non-profit organizations or government agencies. When your only goal is to let the FTA know you haven't been wasting their money for the last three months, it's hard to justify any capital investment. ;-)

      Presentations aren't only for selling things. They're for communicating all sorts of ideas, for all sorts of reasons.

      --
      Don't you wish your girlfriend was a geek like me?
    117. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by Moonpie+Madness · · Score: 1

      True True, if you need to do the job without the expense of Macromedia Flash, there are shareware utilities, but they generally stink. I understand that nothing really can replace Office, but still, an HTML page is a fine alternative. Heck, I'd rather present from frontpage than powerpoint, but when reality limits your options, that's life. You can always try HTML, with your graphs as .jpg's and such. I suppose it would be simpler to use powerpoint, and boy am I sorry for you.

    118. Re:The Microsoft Damage. by richard_za · · Score: 1

      it was not necessary to install wfw to network doom II. You could do it using DOS IPX/SPX drivers

  6. $1.5 billion..... by phillk6751 · · Score: 5, Interesting
    The new lawsuit, which contends that Microsoft overcharged Minnesota customers from 1994 to 2001, seeks almost $500 million from the company. If the company, based in Redmond, Wash., loses, it could also be forced to pay triple that amount under Minnesota state law.
    Looks like if Microsoft looses this case a fine of $1.5B would be imposed....THIS is the case Microsoft should be worried about, not the one from EU. Or do they think they can get away with this lawsuit?
    1. Re:$1.5 billion..... by MoonFog · · Score: 2, Insightful

      In the EU they may be forced to exclude Windows Media Player from the operating system in addition to heavy fines. I think they should be worried about both.

    2. Re:$1.5 billion..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      No, with more than $50 billion in the bank you shouldn't be to afraid. However you should be afraid if the reason for having this kind of money in the bank, that is, not giving information to your competitors about how servers and the desktops interact and bundling your own products with your operating system in order to force competitors out of the market, is attacked, as it is in the European Case.

    3. Re:$1.5 billion..... by ChrisTaylor2904 · · Score: 1

      The EU settlement is, AFAIK, a cash sum. Since the likely outcome for this case will be for that $1.5bn to be in the form of Windows discount vouchers, I wouldn't think they'll be too bothered.

    4. Re:$1.5 billion..... by surprise_audit · · Score: 1

      Would it be possible for the judge to levy a fine and insist that MS writes out a check, instead of simply printing their own money in the form of "discounts"?? After all, I though the point of 3x damages was to make the offender think twice about doing it again. If they can just print off vouchers in the sure and certain knowledge that: a) they won't all ever get used; and b) those that are used extend the monopoly, it doesn't really hurt them.

    5. Re:$1.5 billion..... by James+Durie · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The case in the EU isn't really about the money.
      If the fine were the only issue microsoft would have paid it and said "sorry we wont do it again" before going off and doing it again.

      The main issue in the EU case and the reason Microsoft is going to appeal it is control.

      Making Microsoft remove media player (and who knows maybe others will happen later).
      Making them provide *complete* specs such that other software companies can make totally compatible products.

      Those are the real issues. Efforts to control microsofts future not make them pay for wrong-doings in the past.

      The best thing that could come out of the EU case is the interoperability thing. Imagine if you could choose your html renderer and it slots itself into place so perfectly that anywher IE was used before your choice of renederer gets used now.

      How about an NTFS implementation for Linux with complete read/write compatibility.

      How about open office reading/writing all of Office's document formats perfectly.

      That is what microsoft is scared of.

    6. Re:$1.5 billion..... by jobbegea · · Score: 1

      Interestingly the fine is in . I am wondering if postponing paying up will make the amount in $ higher

      --

      Net sa best, mar it koe minder
    7. Re:$1.5 billion..... by albanac · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Making Microsoft remove media player (and who knows maybe others will happen later). Making them provide *complete* specs such that other software companies can make totally compatible products.

      How about an NTFS implementation for Linux with complete read/write compatibility. How about open office reading/writing all of Office's document formats perfectly.

      It should be pointed that the complete disclosure clause under dicussion by the EU Commission is of client-server application formats and APIs. That is, it only applies to stopping Microsoft leveraging control of the desktop into control of the server market. So neither of your examples would actually be covered by this penalty, but some other very useful things (SMB stuff, all the IE-only hacks which bad html authors constantly abuse, asp; this is not an exhaustive list) will be covered.

      ~cHris
    8. Re:$1.5 billion..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I am wondering if postponing paying up will make the amount in $ higher

      Nobody knows. If you can reliably predict currency movement, you should hustle your self up to Wall Street and get a job. You'll make more money than you can count.

    9. Re:$1.5 billion..... by anarchic_teapot · · Score: 1

      You could add: how about not having to use MS products if you want to access the Internet from behind a MS proxy.

      Yes, they did that.

    10. Re:$1.5 billion..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      lose / win
      LOOSE / TIGHT
      -1 / +1
      you / smart

    11. Re:$1.5 billion..... by Darth+RadaR · · Score: 1

      Looks like if Microsoft looses this case a fine of $1.5B would be imposed....THIS is the case Microsoft should be worried about, not the one from EU. Or do they think they can get away with this lawsuit?

      I'm sure Microsoft will do what they often do when they get fined: Dole out software and licenses to schools and such then write it off at full market value against their fine.

      --
      /*drunk.. fix later*/
    12. Re:$1.5 billion..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Apparently the outcome might be that if M$ publish their APIs, they can demand license fees in return from anyone making use of them. This is something the Open Source community should be scared of.

    13. Re:$1.5 billion..... by red+floyd · · Score: 1

      Nah, they'll just go forum shopping in Europe to get it overturned :-)

      --
      The only reason we have the rights we have is that people just like us died to gain those rights. -- Cheerio Boy
  7. Media BS by jag164 · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Consider the author and the source of the article. First, the NYTimes now has a history of embellishing and a keeping lying journalist n the payroll. Second, Markoff is the cat who made up stories about Mitnik breaking into NASA and other cracks and phreaks that Mitnik whole heartedly denies. Plus the jackass sold his soul to a book on Mitnik (a poorly written book at that). Now though many of you hate MS, consider the source to this story and take it with a grain of salt.

    1. Re:Media BS by castrox · · Score: 0

      Amen, brother.

      --
      Fight for your digital freedom, join the EFF *now*: http://www.eff.org/support/
    2. Re:Media BS by uncommonlygood · · Score: 1
      the NYTimes now has a history of embellishing and a keeping lying journalist n the payroll

      Do you mean "lying journalists" or "one lying journalist and a dodgy editor, who have both been sacked"?

      This story is also being carried by the Associated Press and you can see it has been used by a number of media outlets.

    3. Re:Media BS by Hellburner · · Score: 1

      Ah...you have made me chuckle.

    4. Re:Media BS by Jackdaw+Rookery · · Score: 1

      A good point, if oddly made.

      Thing is though how many do consider the source. The majority probably don't read the article prior to posting something they hope is +5 funny, let alone question the credentials of who wrote the article.

      You made the best damn comment of the day so far sir, may the karma rain upon you.

    5. Re:Media BS by Brataccas · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Um, can someone explain to me exactly why this "comment" is marked as Interesting? This story has been carried all over the place - far in advance of the NYT article - and it is based on court submitted evidence, some of which is already available on the court's website.

      And how do you sell your soul to a book? That just has some mightily amusing implications depending on one's literary choices...

    6. Re:Media BS by poot_rootbeer · · Score: 2, Insightful

      First, the NYTimes now has a history of embellishing and a keeping lying journalist on the payroll.

      For the former accusation, that could be said of any (ANY) media organization. For the latter, to whom are you referring? Surely not Jayson Blair, he left the paper in disgrace long ago.

      (a poorly written book at that)

      You want to talk poorly written, talk about your own post here. You seem to care about Kevin Mitnick quite a bit, but can't bother to spell his name correctly even once?

    7. Re: Media BS by KarmaOverDogma · · Score: 1

      This story has been covered elsewhere in the media, with similar statements being made.

      I made a previous submission under this subject earlier, and it was not a major publication covering the issue of these memo's. So unless you don't trust the media in general in terms of their quoted sources (a healthy skepticism I can understand, but an out and out distrust, no) it's reasonable to take these facts at face value.

      here are a few URL's to chew on:

      http://www.techweb.com/wire/story/TWB20040317S00 04
      http://in.tech.yahoo.com/040317/137/2c1dk.html
      http://customwire.ap.org/dynamic/stories/M/MICROSO FT_TRIAL?SITE=MIDTF&SECTION=HOME
      http://news.mpr. org/features/2004/03/16_horwichj_m icrosoftdayone/

      --
      uR iGn0ranc3, Their Power
    8. Re:Media BS by FredFnord · · Score: 1

      > And how do you sell your soul to a book? That just has some mightily amusing implications depending on one's literary choices...

      The bible?

      -fred

      --
      Sign #11 of Slashdot overdose: You see the phrase 'moderate Republican' and you wonder if that would be a +1 or a -1.
    9. Re:Media BS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Ah...you have made me chuckle.

      Sorry, I was just being a smart ass. But seriously, the last guy I can remember using that word is Sammy Davis Jr.

  8. But... by robbyjo · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Back then in June 1990 (as the date of the letter), Microsoft wasn't a monopoly yet, right? So, the anti-trust trial cannot use this as an evidence against them....

    I would say that this may lead to anti-competitive lawsuit... (btw, is such lawsuit allowable in the USA?) And of course, as usual, IANAL...

    --

    --
    Error 500: Internal sig error
    1. Re:But... by surprise_audit · · Score: 2, Interesting

      IANAL either, but is this something that should have been disclosed in the federal antitrust lawsuit?? If so, how much trouble are they in for not disclosing them??

    2. Re:But... by runderwo · · Score: 4, Informative
      Attempting to gain a monopoly in a market is also an antitrust crime under the Sherman Act. Abusing a monopoly one has already gained is wholly separate from that.

      Every person who shall monopolize, or attempt to monopolize, or combine or conspire with any other person or persons, to monopolize any part of the trade or commerce among the several States, or with foreign nations, shall be deemed guilty of a felony, and, on conviction thereof, shall be punished by fine not exceeding $10,000,000 if a corporation, or, if any other person, $350,000, or by imprisonment not exceeding three years, or by both said punishments, in the discretion of the court.

    3. Re:But... by Gadzuko · · Score: 3, Informative

      It's quite essential for the prosecution to show intent to attain a monopoly on Microsoft's part, which can only be done with this kind of evidence. By your logic, evidence in a murder trial establishing a motive would be thrown out, as the defendant was not yet a murderer at the time.

    4. Re:But... by Dolda2000 · · Score: 1

      Yes, they were a monopoly by 1990, and they have essentially been since IBM's invention of the PC. Have you ever heard of how they crippled DR-DOS in the 80's?

    5. Re:But... by Frantactical+Fruke · · Score: 1

      "...shall be punished by fine not exceeding $10,000,000 if a corporation..."

      Considering Microsoft's cash reserves, I'd say you forgot to stick your little finger in your mouth when you wrote "ten million dollars!"

  9. Re:ENOUGH WITH THE ANTI MICROSOFT FUD by torpor · · Score: 2, Insightful

    We've found one dead body, the criminal is in jail.

    We don't need to find any more. Even if they are out there, somewhere in the ditch, buried ... nah ... its 'not needed'.

    You should be marked "-1 Ignorant Buffoon", but alas thats ... only ... possible in the alternative /. universe ... in my head.

    --
    ; -- the corruption of government starts with its secrets. a truly free people keep no secrets. --
  10. what is going to happen by uv_light · · Score: 0

    from what I can see, MS is trying to make money, while other people try to sue them (again and again). very soon their product need to raise to cover their cost, at the end, the general public will have to pay more for the product. Is it a good thing? we don't know yet... it could cause more diversity on OS when pepole start thinking about other less expensive option. :)

    1. Re:what is going to happen by jonastullus · · Score: 0

      that's a bit like saying that prosecuting drug cartels and organized crime will in the end only be paid by drug consumers and those who come into contact with the "mob"!

      at some point the law/the morals will have to be enforced at any cost because otherwise the capitalist system would break down under the load of all-powerfull monopolies!

      jethr0

  11. I'm a little suspicious... by ewe2 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    ... after all it's a Markoff article.

    --
    insecurity asks the wrong question irritation gives the wrong answer
    1. Re:I'm a little suspicious... by Tore+S+B · · Score: 1

      Yeah, well, this has been reported all over the place, NYT isn't exclusive. (Not that I trust Markoff)

      --
      toresbe
  12. If only GO Penpoint software was open-sourced... by toesate · · Score: 5, Interesting


    If GO Penpoint software was open-sourced 14 years ago... as an attempt to counter Windows H agression...

    I wonder what would the landscape of mobile computing be like today?

    --
    Hey, that's my password you are typing
  13. Microsoft Crimes by amigoro · · Score: 5, Insightful
    From Analysing of the NY Times article: a letter in which Bill Gates, Microsoft's chairman, the chief executive of Intel at the time, that any support given to the Go Corporation,would be considered an aggressive move against Microsoft.
    If this is not anti-competitive, then what is?

    Microsoft violated a signed secrecy agreement with Go and showed that Microsoft possessed technical documents from Go that it should not have had access to.
    Industrial Espionage.

    Microsoft violated nondisclosure agreements with Go, and then used that information to build PenWindows, a competitor to Go's PenPoint operating system.
    GO has loyalty rights for PenWindows. GO should sue PenWindows licensee's individually. This is what Microsoft is trying to do to Linux users through SCO. GO has more legal grounds to stand on that SCO.

    Shortly after the letter was written, Intel reduced its planned investment in Go from $10 million to $2 million
    Intel was held to ransom, and they paid it.

    The advice read in part that the focus should be shifted from "killing the competitor" to "providing a better solution to the customer's problems."
    So they did believe in Killing Competition. A tiger never changes its stripes.

    I think some of these allegations could ammount to criminal offences. I do hope Mr. Gates does a time in a cell with No Windows

    Moderate this comment
    Negative: Offtopic Flamebait Troll Redundant
    Positive: Insightful Interesting Informative Funny

    --


    Nothing to see here
    1. Re:Microsoft Crimes by spacefight · · Score: 1

      Ah man...

    2. Re:Microsoft Crimes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you see that most of his comments get +5 interesting or informative? He's the new god of the geek world. I am off to build him an altar.

    3. Re:Microsoft Crimes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ROFL. You think the same ey ;) He is an idiot. Sorry.

    4. Re:Microsoft Crimes by goranb · · Score: 1
      I do hope Mr. Gates does a time in a cell with No Windows

      Wouldn't that be cruel? At least give him a Gnome desktop... :)
  14. Re:If only GO Penpoint software was open-sourced.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Pretty lousy. GO used "inkblot" style handwriting recognition, and wasn't very good at it.

  15. Login or Google link for story by Anubis333 · · Score: 1, Informative

    I was going to point to the Google link of the story, as I'm some people will do.
    But also remember the login/pass: slashdot1234/slashdot1234 to quickly log into a slashdot NY Times acct, which beats searching google for the other...

    1. Re:Login or Google link for story by gibbdog · · Score: 0

      The slashdot1234/slashdot1234 trick doesn't work anymore.... someone must've changed the password.

  16. PenWindows? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Maybe it's a bit before my time, but does anyone remember anything about PenWindows at all?

    Was it renamed Windows CE in a later life?
    Or was it just another MS experiment?

    1. Re:PenWindows? by ozric99 · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Maybe it's a bit before my time, but does anyone remember anything about PenWindows at all?

      Was it renamed Windows CE in a later life?
      Or was it just another MS experiment?

      From the article:

      In late 1993, Go was sold to AT&T where it was ultimately merged into the company's portable computer subsidiary. In 1994 the phone company shut down the effort in portable computing. Three months later Microsoft canceled its PenWindows project.

      In 1996, Mr. Kaplan wrote a book, "Start-Up: A Silicon Valley Adventure" (Penguin USA), in which he blamed Microsoft, in part, for the demise of Go. Two years later, Marlin Eller, a former Microsoft programmer who was part of the PenWindows project, wrote in "Barbarians Led by Bill Gates" (Owl Books) that the intent of the PenWindows project had been primarily to undermine Go.

    2. Re:PenWindows? by Secrity · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I think that PenWindows died, descended into hell, and then arose as PenWindows ver 2.0; which was too crappy and too late. Later, the carcass of PenWindows went on to become a part of the Tablet PC. See http://pencomputing.com/PenWindows/ and http://pencomputing.com/frames/tablet_pc.html

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

      I have a Compaq Concerto notebook computer running Windows for Pen 1.0.(Win 3.1 + extensions)

      It's a 486/25 version of what's now being called tablet computing, and like the modern tablets (at least the ones I've tried), the cpu lacks the horsepower to make it work comfortably, and the handwriting recognition doesn't seem to recognise any alphabet I'm aware of...

      Some serious expansions to pen computing were apparently planned for Win 95, but were withdrawn at the last minute.

      More info here:

      http://www.pencomputing.com/developer/winpen20_s ec ret.html

  17. slashbot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Typical slashbot FUD.

    Please explain how pocket, portable computing would have been possible even ten years ago. The hardware was the limiting factor. Microsoft had nothing to do with it - the state of the semiconductor industry did. We didn't have CPUs that worked withotu sucking *lots* of juice. NMOS CPUs were very power hungry.

    Today we have calculators with 75 MHz processors, powered off AAA batteries. Would that have been possible 10 years ago? perhaps, but the price would have been insane.

    Companies are always free to develop their own embedded OS; some do. Back then the hardware wasn't available. So quit the microsoft bashing.

    Typical slashdot groupthink

    1. Re:slashbot by LostCluster · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Companies are always free to develop their own embedded OS; some do. Back then the hardware wasn't available. So quit the microsoft bashing.

      You seem to have forgoten what Wintel is...

      OS writers are very much in a co-dependant relationship with the chip makers... the direction that the OS writers take their software and the direction the chip makers take their chips have to be in sync because one will not work without the other.

      Thus, research into chip design was up until recently funneled towards keeping up with the Moore's Law pace of faster and faster clock speeds. Research into creating a chip that could run on low power just wasn't done because there wasn't much of a market for it.

      In order to justify writing an OS for a handheld, you need to know what chip you're going to be running on. In order to build a chip geared for handheld use, you need to be sure somebody's actually going to make handhelds.... it's a classic catch 22, and Microsoft appears to have blocked the Go-Motorola partnership that would have made those advances a decade or so before they actually happened.

    2. Re:slashbot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Gee, PalmOS is going OK

    3. Re:slashbot by maxwell+demon · · Score: 4, Insightful
      and Microsoft appears to have blocked the Go-Motorola partnership

      Go-Motorola partnership? The article talks about an investment reduction from Intel. Given that Intel and Motorola are competitors, maybe Intel just didn't want to indirectly fund their own competitor?
      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    4. Re:slashbot by baldass_newbie · · Score: 5, Informative

      Please explain how pocket, portable computing would have been possible even ten years ago.

      What about the Newton, circa 1993?

      --
      The opposite of progress is congress
    5. Re:slashbot by pesc · · Score: 5, Informative

      Please explain how pocket, portable computing would have been possible even ten years ago.

      While Americans might think that Palm (or Apple/Newton) invented pocket computing, I suggest you take a look at Psion. This company made several successful pocket computers more than ten years ago. They released the Psio series 3 in 1991. In the later models they managed to include word-processors, spread-sheets, graphical software, games, web browsers, in a tiny ROM. The computers were truly innovative.

      Sadly, they recently decided to get rid of their innovative technology (Symbian) and focus on WinCE devices instead. No more innovation from Psion. From the leading edge to a me-too M$ slave. :-(

      --

      )9TSS
    6. Re:slashbot by ahunter · · Score: 5, Informative

      Not 75Mhz, but 30Mhz would have been easily possible: 10 years ago, the 30Mhz version of the ARM6/7 was available (and shipping in production hardware). Designed for low power consumption and low cost, not much different from the ARM processors we see in portable devices today, really. The Apple Newton was shipping too, and it had an operating system that would not have looked out of place in modern hardware. Plus the original Palm Pilot was shipping, and the OS there hasn't changed much in that time.

      As the ARM was shipping in hardware in those days, a full set of support hardware and software was available, Digital was licensing the technology in order to develop the StrongARM (1995/6 for the 200Mhz version IIRC - got a Palm on my desk that's powered by one of those). ARM didn't have quite the same profile in embedded systems markets in those days, but they were well aware of the potential of their CPU: the ARM6 was the first CPU they specifically designed for embedded applications.

      So no, the hardware was *NOT* the limiting factor. The main limiting factor was the will to make the devices, especially as the (ARM6 powered) Newton was not exactly setting the world on fire.

      See Here for example, discussing the ARM6 core - in 1991!

      I bet that calculator is powered by an ARM7/8. A direct descendant of a processor available in quantity 10 years ago, not that much faster, and it wasn't the only one around.

    7. Re:slashbot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      UK company called Psion had portable computing, including word processing, scheduler, database and a programming language with a keyboard you could actually type on in the early 1990s (Psion3 in 1991). They used Flashdisks for portable storage and you could even get modems for them to fax with and, if you connected them to a PC/MAC there were printer drivers to allow the Psion to print and just use the PC as a spooler. I used to use terminal softwatre on my Amiga to communicate and I could swap files between the Psion and my Miggy

      This device was pocket sized, heavy but not as bad as the Jornada 620/720 and used two "AA" batteries with a watch battery for backup.

      History of Psion here
      http://3lib.ukonline.co.uk/historyofpsion.ht m

    8. Re:slashbot by Xenna · · Score: 4, Interesting

      The current Palm-brain washed crowd seem to forget we had powerful PDA devices 10 years ago as well. In fact I bought an Intel 80186 based HP 100 LX palmtop 10 years ago that had all the power of an IBM PC + a bunch of very good PIM applications. Also don't forget the Psion devices that were very popular back then.

      Palmtop history

      I now own a Sony Clie TG50 but I must say its PIM features are still not quite as good as that old HP (BTW: I still have it and it *still* works for about two weeks on a pair of AA batteries).

      Of course doing e-mail and browsing with it was a real pain but I remember plugging it in in a Tokyo phonebooth to mail home with Compuserve.

      I got a 10MB PCMCIA flashcard (not compact!) for it that cost me $500.

      Also I remember beta-testing a hotsync type of application for a company called Palm software. I've always wondered if they took that hotsync technology and went on to make the Palm devices...

      Regards,
      Xenna

    9. Re:slashbot by RedBear · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Please explain how pocket, portable computing would have been possible even ten years ago.

      I'll tell you how it was possible. I used to own one. The Dauphin DTR-1. It wasn't exactly a pocket computer but it was a very small tablet with a pen-based version of Windows, which even included a nifty handwriting recognition system *gasp*. This was in ~1994, and I got it out of a discount catalog, so it must have been at least a year old at the time. I held it in my hands and got a lot of use out of it, so I'd say it was perfectly possible to have portable computing 10 years ago. Guess what, the software back then didn't need nearly as much power as it does now. Full size desktop computers at the time ran fine with a 486SX/33 and 4MB of RAM.

      I really miss that old computer. Had a 486SLC and a 40MB hard drive. Not much but it ran Windows 3.1 just fine. That thing was so cool. Everyone who saw it loved it. And I've always wondered why I've never seen anything like it in the intervening years. Well, this article about Microsoft and Go pretty much explains it. After Go Corp. collapsed, Microsoft dropped the whole PenWindows and portable computing project. I can only imagine what neat things we could have seen if Microsoft hadn't interfered as usual.

      Slashdot FUD, my ass. This is real damage to market innovation caused by a real monopoly. Put that in yer pipe and smoke it.

    10. Re:slashbot by SlashDread · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Typical MS FUD.

      Please explain how YET ANOTHER example of MS using dubious business practices to stiffle competition is not hurting progress.

      You alledge that it is not to blame MS for not being able to use AAA batteries 10 years ago, and you are right.

      That is however not the issue.

      The -issue- is how MS is illegaly extending its monopoly into other markets, and how this IS NOT promoting innovation, if only simply because if your new innovation gets eyeballed by MS, you basically lost.

      remember drdos?
      remember netscape?
      remember stack?
      remember Citrix?
      remember real? Oh well Ill ask that one in two years.

      So why start in the first place? THATS what software devolpers are thinking, and I alledge that this is the reason for the lack of innovation in the past 15 years.

      I alledge this is another reason for the dotcom bubble burst. I alledge this is the reason for the general dubious image ICT now has world wide.

      And I -know- it has cost many Office Automation specialists lots of lost happiness.

      "/Dread"

    11. Re:slashbot by zakezuke · · Score: 2, Informative

      Please explain how pocket, portable computing would have been possible even ten years ago. The hardware was the limiting factor. Microsoft had nothing to do with it - the state of the semiconductor industry did. We didn't have CPUs that worked withotu sucking *lots* of juice. NMOS CPUs were very power hungry.

      20 years ago, the Tandy corp had a number of portables on the market. First notable ones are the Tandy 100/200/300. These are slightly larger then a handheld, full sized keyboards, and the model 100 I believe offered 20 hours of battery life on AA batteries, at least according to my google search. Spread sheet, wordprocessor, and database I believe were all standard on the model 300, as well as basic.

      http://www.oldcomputers.net/trs80pc3.html
      The old Tandy TRS-80 PC-3 pocket computer. only one line * 24, but did offer basic, you could load it up with programs, and could do a vast number of things with it. I remember in 1985 I could buy one of these at my local radioshack for $100 or so.

      Keep in mind that these are examples from the early 1980s.

      --
      There is no sanctuary. There is no sanctuary. SHUT UP! There is no shut up. There is no shut up.
    12. Re:slashbot by heikkile · · Score: 2, Informative
      Please explain how pocket, portable computing would have been possible even ten years ago. The hardware was the limiting factor. Microsoft had nothing to do with it - the state of the semiconductor industry did. We didn't have CPUs that worked without sucking *lots* of juice. NMOS CPUs were very power hungry.

      Low-power 8-bit Cmos processors have been available since the 1970's. I sold software for the RCA-1802 in 1979, and had been playing with it for some years before that.

      The 1802 may not be nearly as powerfull as the chip in a modern Palm, but it certainly was enough to write a small calendar and phonebook application, if hand-coded in assembler. Battery-backed Cmos memory would have been possible too, at least to tens or hundreds of kb. Not sure of the input devices (pens etc) and displays, but even they were certainly available long before your "ten years ago".

      --

      In Murphy We Turst

    13. Re:slashbot by Dashing+Leech · · Score: 4, Insightful
      So quit the microsoft bashing.

      An odd statement to make given that the main article is about proof of anti-competitive and illegal activities of Microsoft, not to mention their recent European fines for similar activities.

      What exactly does Microsoft have to do wrong before you'll consider "Microsoft bashing" reasonable. Perhaps if they clubbed some baby seals?

    14. Re:slashbot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      > 20 years ago, the Tandy corp had a number of portables on the market. First notable ones are the Tandy 100/200/300. These are slightly larger then a handheld, full sized keyboards, and the model 100 I believe offered 20 hours of battery life on AA batteries, at least according to my google search. Spread sheet, wordprocessor, and database I believe were all standard on the model 300, as well as basic.

      Yes. I actually learn computing on one of those (TRS-80 model 100) in 1983.

      Life about 20 hours on 4 AA batteries
      A4-size
      Full size keyboard
      8x40 chars LCD (64x240 pixels) (The 200 had 16x40, IIRC)
      32Kb ROM: Basic (microsoft), Text Editor, Address Book, Scheduler and Terminal
      Integrated modem and compuserve account
      32 Kb RAM
      80c85 processor (sort of dumbed down 8080)

      This machine just rocked. It still work.

      If microsoft did not destroy the computing landscape in the last 20 years, we'd have incredible machines right now. (of course, chips would be much slower, memory would be smaller, as the unification of the market around wintel put all the efforts in that direction, but I beleive that we would have 5 times less [techinally] powerfull machines that would be 20 times more usefull. Come on, we don't really need a P4 3GHz to edit text documents)

    15. Re:slashbot by peragrin · · Score: 1

      Tablet PC's have been an idea of Computer Scienctist's for longer than MS has been a company. They have been less than ideal, it's taken time to get it right. apple's Newton is over ten years old and had hand writting recognition. Yes that's right MS is still ten years behind real Computer Scienctist's.

      The one and Only good thing MS has done for computer's is popularize the PC for indiviual's.
      That may of come out anyway.

      --
      i thought once I was found, but it was only a dream.
    16. Re:slashbot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well Atari got his Portfolio PC in mid 89' that's about 15 years ago. It was a nice machine with most of the features found on today PDA's, able to organize your data, run spreadsheets, word processors even before psion took out their famed Psion III series.

      And probably we could find even older examples, like the trs-80.

    17. Re:slashbot by mshiltonj · · Score: 0

      So quit the microsoft bashing.

      You're new here, aren't you? This is slashdot. "News for Nerds. Stuff that matters. Bash Microsoft."

    18. Re:slashbot by krumms · · Score: 1

      Perhaps if they clubbed some baby seals?

      or perhaps if they kill a dog

    19. Re:slashbot by blincoln · · Score: 2, Insightful

      remember drdos?
      remember netscape?
      remember stack?
      remember Citrix?
      remember real?


      Citrix is doing fine. MS adding Terminal Server into Windows doesn't remove the market for what Metaframe does.

      In the era of DRDOS, I was using an Apple IIe, but I suspect its failure had more to do with it not offering any clear advantage over MSDOS.

      Netscape killed themselves by not adding anything significant to their browser for years after they first released Communicator. Communicator was better than IE3, but not IE4, and included a whole bunch of extra junk (like that incredibly bad WYSIWYG HTML editor) that increased the download size for every update to ridiculous amounts for a dialup connection.

      Real is even worse than Netscape - their player is mediocre to begin with, but it also tries to assimilate your entire system, is covered with ads, and has a download and install process that tries to trick you into buying premium features.

      MS has certainly done some bad things, but I don't think that blaming them for the failures of companies like Netscape is fair. Netscape tried to base an entire corporation on selling what is a basic internet utility that should be included with every OS, just like a text editor or FTP client.

      I alledge that this is the reason for the lack of innovation in the past 15 years.

      There are plenty of companies making genuinely innovative products - look at Adobe, Alias, Discreet, Cakewalk, Steinberg, or Macromedia. They do well because they make powerful, complex products that fill specific needs. They don't try and fund major businesses by selling a single piece of software that should be included for free when you buy an operating system, then start complaining when someone else *does* give it away for free.

      --
      "...always new atoms but always doing the same dance, remembering what the dance was yesterday." -Richard Feynman
    20. Re:slashbot by maximilln · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It certainly is anticompetitive behavior.

      But is it really illegal? As others have touched on, is Intel required to fund Go just because Microsoft officials tell them not to in order to avoid a monopoly lawsuit? That seems to have been the point of Microsoft lending money to keep Apple up and running. It helps to have a competitor if one is trying to prove there's no monopoly.

      Really the whole thing is silly. The gov't here in the US has a habit of doing this sort of thing: building up an industry empire and then tearing it down. To most of us it looks like a horrible cycle. To the people who know what company is next on the government launch list, however, it's a great way to invest and make millions.

      If only I had known that AT&T would be propped up, and then known when it would be torn down.
      If only I had known that Bell would be propped up, and then known when it would be torn down.
      If only I had known that Microsoft and Intel would be propped up, and then known when they were going to be torn down.

      There are lawmakers making deals with Wall Street people who _do_ know these things. They're the ones who are holding all of your 401k money.

      --
      +++ATHZ 99:5:80
    21. Re:slashbot by SlashDread · · Score: 2, Informative

      "Citrix is doing fine. MS adding Terminal Server into Windows doesn't remove the market for what Metaframe does."

      Citrix developed Terminal Server AND Metaframe.

      this is how MS followed that up:

      MS: Say, this Metaframe hack you made is really innovative! Mind if we buy it or you?
      CTX: Ehh Yes?
      MS: Ew, that means we have to develop the thing ourself, mind you if we cannot buy it or you, we WILL.
      CTX: ... Err perhaps we can work out a deal?

      some whispering occured...

      MS + CTX: "We are now partners in cri^D^D^D business! MS now owns "Terminal Server" and Citrix can still sell "added functionality" and call it Metaframe! Eeeeveryone happy! Users will have Choice! (c)(TM)

      "/Dread"

    22. Re:slashbot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes but in Micro$oft land tabbed browsing, pop up blocking and secure computing are still a far and distant dream. So why would a M$ apologist ever believe that something was possible outside of his beloved monopolists clutches?

      Why do people still pander to this company? There products are 3rd rate shit and they behave like the Mafia.

      Something bad will happen to them, I guarantee it.

      As for the US senate getting all flustered over the EU ruling. TUFF FUCKING TITTIES, our laws and courts work, your's are as defective as the software it's trying to suck up to.

    23. Re:slashbot by Brataccas · · Score: 1

      Um, the courts have already ruled on this, the illegality of their behavior is not in doubt. I'm struggling to see where exactly the US government propped up Intel and MS...care to point me to a reference?

    24. Re:slashbot by Sethus · · Score: 1

      Not club baby seals, but maybe something more current? 14 years ago is a bit dated, and while it doesn't help MS's image, it certainly doesn't pain them at all. I mean, 14 years is a long time etc.

      --
      Posting with out proof reading since 2001.
    25. Re:slashbot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's an ARM9

    26. Re:slashbot by maximilln · · Score: 1

      You really don't think much, do you?

      A good portion of the startup capital for Microsoft came from large government contracts for hard drives which needed an installed OS. MS was subcontracted to license an OS for the drives. Large amounts of taxpayer dollars were funnelled into the MS coffers. If those hard drives had been fitted with VMS or *nix or OS/2 then MS might never have been given the startup capital to become the empire they are today.

      --
      +++ATHZ 99:5:80
    27. Re:slashbot by perly-king-69 · · Score: 2, Informative

      The Psion 3 went to market in 1991. That's 13 years ago. I feel old.

      --

      --
      This sig is inoffensive.

    28. Re:slashbot by jobbegea · · Score: 2, Informative

      Not exactly 20 years ago (16 actually), but the Z88 was a Z80 (definitly older than 16 years) based portably that ran for 20 hours on 4 AA batteries.

      --

      Net sa best, mar it koe minder
    29. Re:slashbot by no+longer+myself · · Score: 1
      Please explain how pocket, portable computing would have been possible even ten years ago.

      OK, here you go: Pocket Computer circa 1980-something... I had one. Still have the Tandy PC-6 as well. Built in BASIC programming language. Sure, it's not as nifty as the MP3 playing full color screen gadgets you've got today, but is was a real computer. It interepreted lines of programmed code. It even had a printer and a cassette storage device, and you could develop your own applications for them without having to synch it with a desktop computer.

      Yeah... Argue how underpowered they were, but those pocket computers were just as powerful as their full sized cousins less than ten years earlier, and quite frankly I'd rather have my Tandy PC-6 on a desert island than a Palm, beause the battery life is a heck of a lot better!

      I'm not saying MS killed the pocket computer market, but there's always been a demand for it, and no one's really ever been able to pull it off in spite of the fact that the technology really does exist and has existed for a very long time.

    30. Re:slashbot by Brataccas · · Score: 2, Insightful
      (witty yet personal attack ignored)

      Wha? Are you sure you're talking about the same company here? MS was established years before they acquired the rights to QDOS. They were already a successful company before the DOS licenses, certainly not as large, but successful. The US government can hardly be accused of "propping up" MS simply because they bought a product from them that they deemed useful. Certainly, at that time MS was hardly in control of anyone's destiny. Are you telling me I need to look out for the next world dominating commode corporation because the government might purchase some new toilets?

    31. Re:slashbot by linuxtelephony · · Score: 1

      Typical AC crap.

      Please explain how pocket, portable computing would have been possible even ten years ago.

      Someone else already mentioned the Newton. Anyone remember the AT&T EO (I think that's what it was). They had 3 models. It was in effect a 5x7 or and 8.5x11 (rough dimensions, it's been a while) tablet. The "high end" model had a built in analog cell phone and I believe limited data capabilities.

      Yes, it was held back by the processors available a the time, and it had software issues. But, so do most first generation products. The early adopters suffer, their feedback helps improve it, etc.

      And, don't forget, it was early-to-mid 90s when USR came out with the first PalmPilot.

      The point is, imagine where we would really be today with portable computing had Microsoft *NOT* held back innovation back then. Sure, we are just starting (last 3 years or so) to see some serious portable platforms, but most still complain about the software. I think it is pretty telling that M$ dropped their pen based initiative after Go disappeared. Shows what they (M$) were really after.

      I only hope the judge in the US case is paying attention. Too bad the scope of the US trial was fairly tightly wound around just a single issue or two. That might prevent the judge from being able to do anything with this.

      Hopefully more states will pick this up and use it for a new round of suits against M$. Imagine, all the money M$ has, a few serious settlements to the state coffers could help budget shortfalls, and if the settlements are large enough, lower taxes. :>

      Anyone remember the humorous text file from the early 90s about Microsoft Food for Windows? I think I first found this around 92 to 93. About when M$ announced they were leaving OS/2 and then announce NT. Their attack on Go reminded me of this.

      --
      . 62,400 repetitions make one truth -- Brave New World, Aldous Huxley
    32. Re:slashbot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      As for the US senate getting all flustered over the EU ruling. TUFF FUCKING TITTIES, our laws and courts work,

      $613 million? You call that working?

    33. Re:slashbot by Stween · · Score: 3, Interesting

      How about the Atari Portfolio, of 1989?

      Linkie.

    34. Re:slashbot by erktrek · · Score: 2, Informative
      seems like a Troll, subtle.. so I'll bite

      There have been reports that Microsoft created incompatibilities in Windows to prevent DRDos from running in the back-end.

      In the case of Netscape it was the fact that IE could be leveraged across Microsoft's huge installed base by being bundled with Windows.

      Real started out well but I agree they are the victims of their own crappy business practices. Still Microsoft has leveraged their monopoly over the desktop to promote their Media Player.

    35. Re:slashbot by perly-king-69 · · Score: 1

      Yup, had one of those as well.

      --

      --
      This sig is inoffensive.

    36. Re:slashbot by Richard_at_work · · Score: 1

      Actually, MS developed the initial versions of Terminal server, and sold the code and license off to Citrix. They then licensed back Terminal server after Citrix had done some development on it, giving Citrix a yearly payment in return. Citrix still owns metaframe and terminal server, and has rights to use it whatever way it wants. In what way is this different to what Intel does, IBM does or any other major business does?

    37. Re:slashbot by Trailer+Trash · · Score: 2, Interesting

      remember netscape?

      Remember NCSA Mosaic? Didn't think so...

    38. Re:slashbot by mbbac · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Please explain how pocket, portable computing would have been possible even ten years ago. The hardware was the limiting factor. Microsoft had nothing to do with it - the state of the semiconductor industry did. We didn't have CPUs that worked withotu sucking *lots* of juice.
      The Newton was released in 1993; it is currently 2004. That would be 11 years ago.

      "Released in 1993, the Newton was one of the first PDAs (personal digital assistants) on the market."
      --

      mbbac

    39. Re:slashbot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Now, what is wrong with clubbing baby seals? If you don't club them, they'll grow up and eat the fish, which there isn't enough of, and then they get into the nets used for fishing, because they get desperate.

      So, better club them while they are young than starve them in nets while older.

      The current balance relies on clubbing seals, if we don't do it, there will be a significant imbalance.

    40. Re:slashbot by struberg · · Score: 1
      > Actually, MS developed the initial versions of Terminal server, and sold the code and license off to Citrix.

      I think you are wrong here. MS licensed the rights of the windows 'kernel' to Citrix. Citrix then at first developed a multiuser kernel out of the original MS kernel. And this multiuserkernel has been licensed back by MS and have been used as base for Win2k and the following MickySystems.

    41. Re:slashbot by groot · · Score: 1

      The list of products that were:
      1) Not originally invented by Wintel...
      2) ...but crushed by their marketing programs are:

      1) windows (not-TM) - invented not by MS nor Apple but Xerox

      2) 32-bit microprocessor, not Intel but Motorola

      3) Most of NT, not by MS but teams from Dec -> Compaq -> HP -> (?)

      4) Multiple instruction processing and pipelining: not Intel (actually stolen from) DEC, they even had to "pay" restitution

      5) Web browser: the death of Netscape, what more needs to be said.

      6) Current battle lines:

      OS: Linux vs MS Windows: MS "lost" this battle, (bad,bad Monopoly), and was ordered by the courts to give away software to our youth in schools to "prevent" this from happening again. If the judge had any brains he would have ordered to pay for installation of Linux and MacOS products.

      Media Player: Real, Musicmatch, Apple, etc vs. MS Media Player: MS is "losing" this battle in Europe, but see the outcome for OS see if it really matters.

      Ok let me stop writing, I am getting (more) depressed.

      --
      "Just remember, it takes a village idiot." -- The Motley Fool.
    42. Re:slashbot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is insightful?

      10 years ago we didn't need 75MHz. The Amiga ran beautifully on a 12 MHz proc. GUI and all.

      The hardware was perfectly adequate 10 years ago. Even use an HP 48 SX? I doubt it.

    43. Re:slashbot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As far as I know Psion has gone for Linux now.

    44. Re:slashbot by Mateito · · Score: 0

      > Atari Portfolio

      Best minature QWERTY keyboard every produced IMHO. You could actually touch type on it with a little practise.

      Has yet to be surpased, and due to pen technology, probably never will.

    45. Re:slashbot by maximilln · · Score: 1

      Perhaps they were successful as a QBASIC manufacturer but their Windows operating system never would've gotten the required boost if it weren't for lucrative government contracts.

      I don't think anyone who was even remotely involved with signing the bottom line for the contracts ever deemed DOS to be useful product. The contract requirement was to have an OS on the hard drives. It was merely a matter of social connection to determine which OS manufacturer was gifted with the privelege.

      If you value your hard earned tax dollars you should be concerned that this sort of thing happens. The positive aspect is that if you can cozy up to the politicians writing commode contracts then you can make lots of money on this sort of system. The negative aspect is that the politicians writing commode contracts don't typically cozy up with people unless they can afford expensive dinners and good vacation deals. It's this sort of thing that caused the 90s stock market boom and bust.

      Build it up, milk it for all it's worth, and then leave the taxpayers/401k/social security contributors/average stock investor holding the steaming bag of poop.

      --
      +++ATHZ 99:5:80
    46. Re:slashbot by grub · · Score: 1


      would have been possible even ten years ago.

      Apple sold the Newton from 1993 to 1998. More info on Wikipedia

      --
      Trolling is a art,
    47. Re:slashbot by MyFourthAccount · · Score: 1

      I agree with pretty much all you said, except this little one:

      I alledge this is another reason for the dotcom bubble burst.

      The end of the dotcom era had (practically) nothing to do with MS. It had everything to do with overvalued companies and skill-less people going home with >70K salaries.

      Some people actually tried to inovate during that period, but quite frankly, it was not what the investors were looking for.

      I worked for a company with a solid product (and nice prototypes to prove it) and a solid market (it still is). We did however need money to grow. We couldn't find any funding because according to the VCs "we didn't fit the .com picture".

      On the other hand, a lot of my friends worked for .coms, all of which pretty much had NOTHING, except for millions of dollars which they couldn't spend quick enough (hey the biz plan says we got to hire 40 people in one month, so let's just offer a bunch of kids that read "HTML in 8 hours" 70K a year...). Man, the parties they'd take me to. I had great times, but it was infuriating, the money spent on the parties that I've been to would have probably been more than enough to bootstrap our company...

      Anyways, I don't see how MS was even remotely responsible for the investors stopping dumping money into a bottomless pit. It had to happen.

      In any case, ending the .com era did not stop innovation. I would argue to the contrary. Maybe the funding will go to _real_ innovation now.

    48. Re:slashbot by RailGunner · · Score: 1
      I think the hardware would still be where it's at today, for one reason: games. Admit it - games is one of the primary reasons most people buy a PC. How many of you (just raise your hands) bought a new 486 just so you could play Doom? Wow.. that's a lot of hands. OK, how many of you bought a Voodoo card for Quake? Wow.. even more hands. OK, last question - how many of you now own a high end Radeon or Geforce card? Ok, I can't count that high.

      Another reason that hardware would have advanced is image processing. OCR is being used for a lot of reasons (sorting mail) and the faster OCR is the more mail can be sorted faster and the less cost there is to the consumer (you don't get a rate hike in stamps).

      And another reason - because we Americans like things faster and cheaper. And if Intel wasn't pushing the hardware forward back then, Motorola would have.

      And while we might not need a 3Ghz P4 (or a new Athlon FX) to edit a text document... I certainly enjoy builds not taking an hour. The compiler can and does take advantage of that raw speed.

    49. Re:slashbot by JimDabell · · Score: 1

      Netscape killed themselves by not adding anything significant to their browser for years after they first released Communicator. Communicator was better than IE3, but not IE4, and included a whole bunch of extra junk (like that incredibly bad WYSIWYG HTML editor)

      Netscape added quite a bit of stuff to their Gold edition that they were making a profit on. Then Microsoft bought Mosaic to catch up, and by around Internet Explorer 3, had caught up enough to make the Gold edition nonprofitable to Netscape, that was the point when they bundled it with the normal edition.

      that increased the download size for every update to ridiculous amounts for a dialup connection.

      False. There was always the standalone Navigator bundle that didn't include the extra stuff.

      I don't think that blaming them for the failures of companies like Netscape is fair.

      Microsoft used the funds they gained from their monopoly in operating systems to buy Mosaic, develop Internet Explorer, and give it away freely, and as a result, the market for their competitor Netscape's flagship product (who was threatening to remove OS lock-in with web applications) disappeared. If that's not blatant abuse of monopoly power, I don't know what is.

      Netscape tried to base an entire corporation on selling what is a basic internet utility that should be included with every OS, just like a text editor or FTP client.

      Just because everyone is used to it coming with the operating system now, it doesn't mean that it is sensible or that it was usual at the time.

      If you look back at Microsoft's history, you will see that they have had a history of identifying competitors, developing an alternative to their flagship product, and bundling it with the next version of Windows.

      It happened with web browsers, drive compression, MP3 players, IP stacks, firewalls, and it is happening now with virus scanners and popup blockers.

      Sure, sometimes it makes sense to include certain features with an operating system. But that doesn't mean that it's always a good idea, or that the way Microsoft goes about it is.

      Take the FTP client example you gave. None of the companies that are a threat to Microsoft have an FTP client as their flagship product. The FTP client Microsoft provides is about as basic as you can get, it doesn't provide many useful features at all.

      Now look at the web browser example. A threat to Microsoft was making money by selling web browsers, and so the original Mosaic, which was basically just a rendering engine with back forward and home buttons, ballooned into a 100MB+ monster application with multiple client-side scripting engines, newsfeeds (remember Microsoft's aborted attempt at "channels"?), plugin interfaces, etc, etc.

    50. Re:slashbot by Bombcar · · Score: 1

      Pocket portage computing has been usable since the release of the HP 95/100/200LX beginning in 1991.

      See here and the Palmtop Paper.

      These little clamshell devices are the size of a check book but about an inch thick, and are little 1MB 186 DOS machines, and the 200 LX can run any software designed for DOS 5.0 and CGA graphics. They're quite useful, and I still use mine over higher powered "Palm" devices. The entire though small keyboard is usable for notetaking, and the standard PCMCIA card allows for much expandability.

    51. Re:slashbot by banzai51 · · Score: 1

      No, no, no. You don't see it? These Silicon Valley money and idea men can't BE WRONG! Hardware limitations be damned! Our inablity to market to the consumer be damned! Lack of compelling reasons to buy these geewiz devices be damned! It couldn't be that WE miscalculated. It must be Microsoft's doing! Burn them! Buuurrrrrrrrrrrn them!

    52. Re:slashbot by banzai51 · · Score: 1

      Perhaps you never heard of Newton?

    53. Re:slashbot by Bombcar · · Score: 1

      Amen, brother!

      I'm still using mine; if you don't want yours, drop me a line! :)

      I still love having the FULL version of Lotus 123 on there, easily beats little toy versions of Excel.

      And the improvements that they have made (double speed - more RAM, etc) are very nice. Someday I'll have to get an upgraded one.

      Palmtops forever!

    54. Re:slashbot by banzai51 · · Score: 1

      Actually, he is right. Microsoft contracted Citrix to clean up their implimentation of TS and as part of the deal Citrix got to create Metaframe.

    55. Re:slashbot by ab762 · · Score: 1

      HP-67/97 calculator in 1970's. Nice computer.

    56. Re:slashbot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      (fujitsu) Poqet PC. 80 character wide screen, 2 AA batteries, external floppy drive (4 AA batteries). Keyboard was so-so but useable, good feedback/clickety response, not so great for fat fingers though. Ran DOS 3.3, I think, with standards for PCMICIA 1.0 cards.

    57. Re:slashbot by torpor · · Score: 1


      10 years ago, we could've built pocket portable computers that served PDA functionality in a similar fashion to the current market crop. No questions about it. I myself worked on prototypes for 2 different systems, using the hardware that was available at the time.

      Today we have calculators with 75 MHz processors, powered off AAA batteries. Would that have been possible 10 years ago? perhaps, but the price would have been insane.


      It is a sign of your ignorance that you consider that we would have needed such performance in a handheld computing device.

      But then again, with Microsoft and its fleet of .DLL thugs around to prop up Intel, it surprises me not one iota that such ignorance is prevalent.

      Computers do not need to be fast, have a lot of RAM, or extensive 'modern' peripherals in order to actually be useful for work. The PDA's designed in the 80's were functioning, working PDA's. They worked.

      --
      ; -- the corruption of government starts with its secrets. a truly free people keep no secrets. --
    58. Re:slashbot by CrazyLegs · · Score: 1
      I'll go one better. Back in 1982, the Tandy/Radio Shack folks sold a palm-ish computing device here in Canada called the TRS-80 PC-3. Built by Sharp, this little gem run run BASIC apps and could dock with a thermal printer and tape drive.

      My friend's dad - an engineer - bought one of these and my friend and I used it regularly to complete our CS degrees back then. A wonderful piece of tech for its time.

      See more here

      --

      CrazyLegs

      "Pork!!" said the Fish, and we all laughed.

    59. Re:slashbot by molarmass192 · · Score: 1

      It's about 1 1/4% of their cash reserves, not even 1Q's cash flow. A more appropriate fine would have been a full 10% of their cash reserves. The tobacco industry has been nailed with $B fines, no reason MS shouldn't have their hand slapped just as hard.

      --

      Good people do not need laws to tell them to act responsibly, while bad people will find a way around the laws-Plato
    60. Re:slashbot by TravisWatkins · · Score: 1

      Of course, you could also say that Microsoft wanted to keep Apple running because those guys seem to be the main innovators in the PC market. Sure, keep some competition around to help them save face could be a possibility, but just look at how Microsoft seems to get 'inspired' by Apple technology.

      --

      "But I'm still right here, giving blood and keeping faith. And I'm still right here."
    61. Re:slashbot by null_session · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Here is the illegal part :

      Other evidence presented by the plaintiffs' lawyers at trial yesterday gave an account of how Microsoft violated a signed secrecy agreement with Go and showed that Microsoft possessed technical documents from Go that it should not have had access to.

      So Microsoft stole product documentation. They either snuck in themselves and started pulling stuff of desks, or they paid someone to do the same. Or, perhaps they used a known vulnerability in their own software to steal it off a hard drive.

      What isn't illegal about that?

    62. Re:slashbot by maximilln · · Score: 0

      I'm going to be a devil's advocate. I agree that MS business practices are reprehensible but let's consider what it is about the US system of justice that makes it all work:

      We can't sue Microsoft for theft of intellectual property unless the material was patented/copyrighted and MS used patented/copyrighted material in the production of their own products. Microsoft as a corporation can't steal a document. Only a person can steal a document. Those documents were obviously found in a filing cabinet which was used in the spare cubicle for newly hired employees. A vast majority of those people never stay for longer than two or three months. It's impossible to track where those documents came from. While Microsoft may have been housing questionable documents on their premises the presence of two or three questionable documents hardly tarnishes their reputation as a productive and valuable company.

      Besides... if Go is already dead then it can't file any lawsuit against Microsoft. No public defender is going to stick up for a dead company. Case dismissed.

      --
      +++ATHZ 99:5:80
    63. Re:slashbot by _Sprocket_ · · Score: 1


      Given that Intel and Motorola are competitors, maybe Intel just didn't want to indirectly fund their own competitor?


      Yet, they did fund Go. Although that funding went from the origional $10 mil to $2 mil after urging from Bill Gates himself.
    64. Re:slashbot by FuzzyBad-Mofo · · Score: 1

      They're the ones who are holding all of your 401k money.

      I already cashed out my 401K to pay bills. Hah, that'll show 'em!

    65. Re:slashbot by cshark · · Score: 1

      There are lawmakers making deals with Wall Street people who _do_ know these things. They're the ones who are holding all of your 401k money.

      You've got to let me have a little of what ever it is that you're smoking.
      --

      This signature has Super Cow Powers

    66. Re:slashbot by Tore+S+B · · Score: 1

      Please explain how pocket, portable computing would have been possible even ten years ago.

      Allright, then, I'll share with you the delights of the HP100LX. My dad got it as a company gift (He was a Dept. Mgr. at HP Norway). It had full CGA, clamshell design, full PC compat, and it was basically one sweet machine. I still sweep eBay for them - you could connect them to the net, you could do anything. It even had PCMCIA. Ah, the memories.

      --
      toresbe
    67. Re:slashbot by Foolhardy · · Score: 1

      Windows NT3.51 added the internal support needed for a multi-user gui, IE WindowStation objects. The first version of Citrix MetaFrame was for 3.51, it wouldn't have been possible without MS's cooperation. Later, MS bought from Citrix or created their own implementation to use in NT4 terminal server edition.

    68. Re:slashbot by macdaddy · · Score: 2
      That seems to have been the point of Microsoft lending money to keep Apple up and running.

      How fucking obtuse can one person get? It was a settlement you idiot! After all these years people like you are still spreading this FUD. The $150mil was for non-voting stocks in Apple. The conditions were that Apple would drop its patent-infringment lawsuits against Microsoft and Microsoft would continue developing Office and IE for Mac. Microsoft doesn't own Apple. Microsoft doesn't own a controlling piece of Apple. Microsoft didn't "lend" Apple money or bail them out. This was six and a half years ago. Can't you idiots get it straight by now?!

    69. Re:slashbot by HidingMyName · · Score: 1

      Psion's corporate history page states that they have been making small form factor devices for 20 years. About 15 years ago, if memory serves (this would be about 15 years ago or so) some Psion devices were targeting inventory management applications and warehousing. The idea was that people would carry around a large PDA form factor (or sublaptop form factor) device with an inventory entry system and then hot sync (wireless and internet weren't so widely available back then). I'm not sure if their mindset was really geared toward consumer devices, but they've been in the small form factor mobile computing area for a long time.

    70. Re:slashbot by killerkalamari · · Score: 1

      What are you talking about? My Casio wristwatch from the early 90's uses a single watch battery and lasts for years & years. It has a calculator, memory storage, scrolling lcd display, alarms. It only cost around $60 brand new.

      The technology for a low power chip was clearly available and used. This watch wasn't programmed in C, though.. I doubt it even uses ASM/ML, probably microcode in the chip.

      Handheld companies could do a lot if they really tried. People accepted having to plug things into the wall every day, and so companies don't have a reason to care anymore. Also, it looks impressive to list a high MHz value for the chip. I doubt my watch is very fast at all, but it gets the job done, so why does it matter?

    71. Re:slashbot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      People bash Microsoft because they're Microsoft. They're a large, powerful corporation that currently dominates the OS market. As a result, their anti-competitive behavior is treated as worse than other companies' anti-competitive behavior. So MS wrote software that directly competed with another piece of software being written. That's how you stay competitive. You stay competitive by offering an alternative to a good piece of software. You do your best to improve upon the idea of other software. That's essentially what software developers do. See a product, mimic its good features, improve its bad features, add new features. When MS saw the competing product go under, they had to think to themselves:
      If they were to make money on this, we could make money on this. But if they can't make money or market a viable product, is it worth our while to continue development of our product? Will we be able to market it? Will it gain or lose money in the long run?
      MS probably runs dozens of such development units at a time. They'll see a technology, and try to put forth their own version of it, if they consider it viable to do so. That's what they do.

      When it comes to anti-competitive behavior, you don't see quite as many people bitching about Apple, or worse companies. A few chess servers have EULA clauses which state that even mentioning the competition in conversation to be a punishable offense. Is it right? no. Can people really change this? Only if they run the server.
      The point here, fellow slashdot readers, is that we must look at what is worst, and do something about it. If you think MS is the worst thing out there, switch to an alternative, and try to convince others to do so. If you think Apple is worse, usually the best thing you can do is go to your local school board and request that they remove all Apple hardware from local schools (they probably make most of their money off of the government). If you think a certain MS product can be better, set up a development team to improve upon what they wrote, and GPL it. It won't hit the mainstream the way MS does, but you might be able to pull a few users away from it.

      I'm not saying MS is right for doing all of this, and the whole thing with Intel is pretty nasty, but there are worse things in the world. Like carnies.

    72. Re:slashbot by maximilln · · Score: 1

      Wow. You're an angry customer. You also think of the world in very simple terms defined by narrow lines which can never be crossed.

      I never said that MS owned any part of Apple. I only said that MS loaned Apple some money. You're saying it was a payoff to drop patent infringement suits. In your world the patent infringement lawyers, and the monopoly lawyers, and the business practice lawyers all sit in their individual little cubes and don't talk to each other. In your world public relations people never leave out important details. In your world the reasons for CEOs to approve deals are always the same reasons that the local newspaper publishes.

      If the real world were as simple as your world you wouldn't be so angry.

      This explains much. I see counseling and thorazine, perhaps an aneurysm, in your future.

      --
      +++ATHZ 99:5:80
    73. Re:slashbot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mmmmmm... baby seal...

    74. Re:slashbot by Derekloffin · · Score: 1

      >But is it really illegal? As others have touched on, is Intel required to fund Go just because Microsoft officials tell them not to in order to avoid a monopoly lawsuit? I don't know about the states, but in Canada it is. In fact, you're a in big trouble in Canada if you try pretty much anything with the intent to put a competitor out of business. Exclusive dealing (as this would be) is one such tactic that is considered a nono here.

    75. Re:slashbot by Ironica · · Score: 1

      In the era of DRDOS, I was using an Apple IIe, but I suspect its failure had more to do with it not offering any clear advantage over MSDOS.

      And MSDOS offered no clear advantage over DRDOS... except that, as far as anyone could tell, it was more compatible with Windows. This was based on error messages that Windows beta testers got if they tried to run Windows on machines with DRDOS. Error messages that were, by the way, completely fake.

      Netscape killed themselves by not adding anything significant to their browser for years after they first released Communicator. Communicator was better than IE3, but not IE4,

      How is it that everyone totally forgets that, while IE4 was in development, IE3 was being given away for free and Netscape was suddenly out a revenue source? This has everything to do with the sudden drop in innovation. MS had entire operating system and office productivity departments to fund their browser with; Netscape had their server software (which was still doing quite well at the time). "Here, we're going to give our competing product away for free... *now* try developing yours!"

      Truth is, Communicator should have been open-sourced right about then, and then it would have kept pace nicely. But, seriously, taking away a company's revenue stream and then jeering at *them* for not innovating is a bit... er, misguided.

      --
      Don't you wish your girlfriend was a geek like me?
    76. Re:slashbot by Quila · · Score: 1

      For Netscape, add that they messed with DLLs so that Netscape wouldn't work anymore.

    77. Re:slashbot by Inominate · · Score: 1

      Or the HP-95LX, of 1990...
      And it's newer siblings the hp100lx, and 200lx.

      All of which still have significant following.

    78. Re:slashbot by Pope · · Score: 1

      Adobe and Macromedia both bought their major applications from 3rd parties. Adobe didn't create After Effects, PageMaker or Audition, and Macromedia didn't create Freehand, Flash or Director.

      --
      It doesn't mean much now, it's built for the future.
    79. Re:slashbot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It certainly is anticompetitive behavior. But is it really illegal?

      If you have a monopoly, then yes, it is illegal. The courts have already determined, repeatedly, that Microsoft's behavior was illegal. I've read tons and tons of transcripts of the trials. Microsoft is as guilty as they come. What was unbelievable to me was that despite all that, the DOJ let them off the hook, yet again. Some of the states didn't play along (probably because they didn't get their wheels greased the way the new administration did, but it all amounted to another playful slap on the wrist. Oh Bill, you naughty boy. Don't tease the other children.

    80. Re:slashbot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      IE3 was only worth free.

      I suspect most of Netscape's market share was in the academic realm, and thus equally free.

    81. Re:slashbot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "remember real? Oh well Ill ask that one in two years."

      Hell yeah I remember Real. They don't need MS's help to suck.

    82. Re:slashbot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Um, the courts have already ruled on this, the illegality of their behavior is not in doubt. I'm struggling to see where exactly the US government propped up Intel and MS...care to point me to a reference? "

      Howsabout when GW Bush called off the antitrust proceedings?

    83. Re:slashbot by slipnslidemaster · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Here are some priceless quotations from emails by Bill Gates regarding DRDOS:

      "DOS being fairly cloned has had a dramatic impact on our pricing for DOS. I wonder if we would have it around 30-40% higher if it wasn't cloned. I bet we would!" (August 6, 1989)

      "I doubt they [Digital Research] will be able to clone Windows. It is very difficult to do technically, we have made it a moving target and we have some visual copyright and patent protection. I believe people underestimate the impact DR-DOS has had on us in terms of pricing." (May 18, 1989)

      For a considerably more indepth analysis of the DRDOS question from the Caldera lawsuit checkout: http://www.oreillynet.com/pub/a/network/2000/02/07 /schulman.html

      What originally annoyed me about the parent post about DRDOS was the "AARD" code that was present in the beta versions of Windows 3.1. Schulman wrote a book called Undocumented DOS 2 which went into great depth to expose this seemingly unnecessary code in WIN.COM.

      Here is a link that has an article: http://www.ddj.com/documents/s=1030/ddj9309d/

      There are a lot of examples of Microsoft abuse but DRDOS is one of the most obvious that exist in recent memory, IMO.

      --


      "What the hell is an aluminum falcon?"
    84. Re:slashbot by Xabraxas · · Score: 1

      On a side note to that, I worked at a department store part time when I was in college and the handheld inventory devices displayed "SCO UnixWare" on startup and communicated via 802.11.

      --
      Time makes more converts than reason
    85. Re:slashbot by drsmithy · · Score: 1
      1) windows (not-TM) - invented not by MS nor Apple but Xerox

      Windows is a product. "The GUI" is a concept. Xerox might have done a lot of work on "The GUI", but they didn't invent Windows (or MacOS, for that matter). You're claiming to talk about products, but in this case you're actually talking about a concept.

      2) 32-bit microprocessor, not Intel but Motorola

      Uh, how has the 32 bit CPU been "crushed by their marketing programs" ? Heck, who with a modicum of historical knowledge actually says intel invented the 32 bit CPU ?

      3) Most of NT, not by MS but teams from Dec -> Compaq -> HP -> (?)

      People from DEC who were *hired by* and *working for* Microsoft at the time. Sheesh, can a company only be considered to have invented stuff if the employee that did it has been there since they were in nappies ?

      [snip more of the same]

      Ok let me stop writing, I am getting (more) depressed.

      If this trivial crap depresses you, you're in drastic need of a perspective adjustment.

    86. Re:slashbot by drsmithy · · Score: 1
      I think you are wrong here. MS licensed the rights of the windows 'kernel' to Citrix. Citrix then at first developed a multiuser kernel out of the original MS kernel. And this multiuserkernel has been licensed back by MS and have been used as base for Win2k and the following MickySystems.

      NT has always had a multiuser kernel.

    87. Re:slashbot by drsmithy · · Score: 1
      There have been reports that Microsoft created incompatibilities in Windows to prevent DRDos from running in the back-end.

      Speaking as someone who actually used DRDOS a lot back then:

      There *were* incompatibilities with DRDOS. Usually games, but also some other software. It was not, despite what anyone from DRI might try to tell you, "100% compatible" with MSDOS. Anyone who ran high end games back then - particularly Origin games - should be able to remember.

      Windows 3.x worked on top of DRDOS. Some beta versions posted a warning at install, but they still worked.

    88. Re:slashbot by drsmithy · · Score: 1
      Netscape added quite a bit of stuff to their Gold edition that they were making a profit on. Then Microsoft bought Mosaic to catch up, and by around Internet Explorer 3, had caught up enough to make the Gold edition nonprofitable to Netscape, that was the point when they bundled it with the normal edition.

      IIRC the only difference between Navigator and Navigator gold was the HTML editing tools of the latter. IE has never had such tools and I'm pretty sure Microsoft have never distributed any such tools for "free".

      Microsoft used the funds they gained from their monopoly in operating systems to buy Mosaic, develop Internet Explorer, and give it away freely, and as a result, the market for their competitor Netscape's flagship product (who was threatening to remove OS lock-in with web applications) disappeared.

      One should not forget that while Netscape might have been removing OS lock-in, they were working very hard to create *web server lock-in* via proprietry (and copyrighted, IIRC - one of the reasons IE uses different tags to do the same things) HTML tags and the like.

      Just because everyone is used to it coming with the operating system now, it doesn't mean that it is sensible or that it was usual at the time.

      One could say the same things about GUIs, TCP/IP stacks and text editors. You'll have to work hard to convince more than a minority of people any of those things shouldn't be included as "part of the OS".

      If you look back at Microsoft's history, you will see that they have had a history of identifying competitors, developing an alternative to their flagship product, and bundling it with the next version of Windows.

      You mean like, say, financial tools, office suites, image editors, sound editors, typesetting tools, HTML editors, and the like ? Oh, wait, none of those tools are bundled into Windows...

      It happened with web browsers, drive compression, MP3 players, IP stacks, firewalls, and it is happening now with virus scanners and popup blockers.

      So, you mean, basic and fundamental tools for which integration into an OS package is sensible and better for the consumer ?

      Take the FTP client example you gave. None of the companies that are a threat to Microsoft have an FTP client as their flagship product. The FTP client Microsoft provides is about as basic as you can get, it doesn't provide many useful features at all.

      Most (if not all) of the "bundled" applications in Windows are basic and don't provide advanced functionality. Microsoft can't win, of course - they either get blasted for leaving out functionality (no tabbed browsing ! no popup blocking !) or they get blasted for putting it in (anti competitive ! abusing monopoly power !)

    89. Re:slashbot by drsmithy · · Score: 1
      Please explain how YET ANOTHER example of MS using dubious business practices to stiffle competition is not hurting progress.

      The hysteria and dubiousness of the example, perhaps ?

      remember drdos?

      Killed by incompatibilities (and not just with Windows), irrelevance (post 1995) and a company who bought it primarily for the purpose of sueing Microsoft (Caldera, who became SCO - see a pattern there ?)

      remember netscape?

      Killed by their a combination of arrogance, stupidity and a poor product.

      remember stack?

      Killed by the explosion in hard disk capacities. You'll note [Double|Drive]space and Superstor aren't exactly common these days either.

      remember Citrix?

      Still going strong.

      remember real? Oh well Ill ask that one in two years.

      Given the sheer crappiness of Real's product, I'm amazed anyone could even try to say their death might be Microsoft's fault, with a straight face. I've never met anyone - even amongst clueless newbies - who actually enjoys using Real's player, or uses it for any reason except absolute necessity.

      So why start in the first place?

      Why not ask the people at Quicken, they seem to be doing ok.

    90. Re:slashbot by Angry+Pixie · · Score: 1

      OS writers are very much in a co-dependant relationship with the chip makers... the direction that the OS writers take their software and the direction the chip makers take their chips have to be in sync because one will not work without the other.
      I'd agree that this is true today, but it's easy today. I think chip developers and chip programmers have an easier mechanism for finding each other and then communicating.

      But back in the 70s when Steve Wozniak was working on the first generation of Apple computers, was this still true? I thought part of Woz's glory was in being a hacker who had strung together a bunch of generic computer parts to build a computer?
      There is one valid barrier to handheld-computer that still exists today that I can't see being Microsoft's fault, and that's battery power. There are a lot of cool features we can have for mobile computing but I don't want my cell phone or PDA to last the whole of an hour because of resource-hungry chips and resource-hungrier operating systems... Windows CE I'm looking at you!

    91. Re:slashbot by SlashDread · · Score: 1

      Answer your own questions if you will, but I do remember Mosaic. Why would I not?

      "/Dread"

    92. Re:slashbot by SlashDread · · Score: 1

      "Anyways, I don't see how MS was even remotely responsible for the investors stopping dumping money into a bottomless pit. It had to happen."

      By holding back innovation... so expectations on what software would change did not happen.

      "/Dread"

    93. Re:slashbot by SlashDread · · Score: 1

      Labeling an opinion as hysteria, is not proof the opinion is wrong. Your not even trying. You just attack the messenger.

      I never said, part of some products demise was not also to blame on themselfes. It most likely was.

      I however claim, that all mentioned products suffered, more or less, from MS anti-competitive behaviour. For some it ment death. For some it ment lost revenue. Sure Netscape could be labeled arrogant, bad product, and stupid. It however does not take away the influence of MS and its responsiblity in that matter to hasten the process so to speak.

      You claim drdos was killed by incomatibilities. Indeed. As Darl showed us, intentionally brought to us by Microsoft, and was susequently fined over it. A hard cold scientific fact that a judge thought MS played faul. What more proof do you need? A constitutional amendment?

      Seeing what MS is doing with mediaplayer Im telling you with a straight face, if they can continue on that path: It will kill real.

      "/Dread"

    94. Re:slashbot by The+Conductor · · Score: 1

      Thus, research into chip design was up until recently funneled towards keeping up with the Moore's Law pace of faster and faster clock speeds. Research into creating a chip that could run on low power just wasn't done because there wasn't much of a market for it.

      It appears that the advent of truly mobile microprocessors (beyond calculator specs at least) conincided with the development of digital cellular handsets. So perhaps Palm[$RANDOMCOMAPNYSUFFIX]'s success, where others had failed before, was a result of piggybacking on chip fabrication technologies whose development costs were justifed by the cellphone market.

    95. Re:slashbot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      remember quarterdeck? memory management and gui

      remember central point? backup, defrag and file recovery

      remember trumpet software? tcp/ip stack

  18. Re:Andy Grove intimidation? by Hektor_Troy · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Well, Mr. Obvious, would you be as kind as to point us to some references to these kidnappings?

    --
    We do not live in the 21st century. We live in the 20 second century.
  19. MS word.doc by ratfynk · · Score: 2, Funny
    I just wonder if there are MS word docs out there ready to reveal more about the evil empire. It would only be fitting if Intel and IBM leaked some old word.docs from Redmond.... naw Microsoft couldn't be that stupid.

    --
    OH THE SHAME I fell off the wagon and use sigs again!
    1. Re:MS word.doc by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The same company that forgot to renew there domain name, ya there that stupid, lol

  20. Re:ENOUGH WITH THE ANTI MICROSOFT FUD by Amiga+Lover · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Right. and if you equate some company's lawsuit loss over anti competitive practices to be the same as MURDER then my friend you are plain and simply psychotic.

    What next do you want to call for EXECUTIONS when people don't pay a PARKING FINE?

  21. A simple solution by dodgyville · · Score: 5, Funny

    Microsoft would not leak so many embarrassing documents if they never wrote anything down. But, I hear you say, surely people will just record what they say and leak the recordings. Well, not if they conduct all their business in mime. So that is my suggestion. Microsoft should do everything by mime.

    -

    --
    apt-get install deathstar && deathstar alderaan && echo "You're far too trusting"
    1. Re:A simple solution by apdt · · Score: 1

      Yes, but if you do it all in mime, you back to email, and that will be leaked.....

      I'm sorry, that was a truly awfull joke...

      --
      I lay awake last night wondering where the sun had gone, then it dawned on me.
    2. Re:A simple solution by Too+Much+Noise · · Score: 2, Funny

      and the app that will open the application/ms-mime files will show Ballmer frantically dancing his mime-encoded message on your desktop.

      Can't wait for it to happen ... a Mozilla plugin in linux too, please ^_^

    3. Re:A simple solution by damgx · · Score: 1

      How would that work?

      Didn't you see the Monkey boy dance video?

      --
      I only read slash. for the articles...
    4. Re:A simple solution by prockcore · · Score: 3, Funny

      So that is my suggestion. Microsoft should do everything by mime.

      text/funny

    5. Re:A simple solution by pubjames · · Score: 2, Funny

      So that is my suggestion. Microsoft should do everything by mime.

      But then someone might video it! Of course if they switched the lights off then you could still video it with an IR camera.

      So I really think that Microsoft executives should conduct their business in mime, with the lights off, wrapped in tin foil.

    6. Re:A simple solution by Karem+Lore · · Score: 1

      There not leaks as in bucket, but leaks in code...WE TOLD YOU TO PATCH, BUT WOULD YOU LISTEN?

      --
      When all is said and done, nothing changes...
    7. Re:A simple solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But there is this invention called mini camera to record all mimes. I'd suggest Microsoft use telepathy for their communication, but not everyone is telepathic. Perhaps psychic channeling suits them better, after all they already have deals with the devil.

    8. Re:A simple solution by JasonAsbahr · · Score: 1

      Maybe that would explain this:

      http://www.ntk.net/media/developers.mpg

  22. So does this mean he... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    ... made it all up, including this:

    The plaintiffs contend the new documents show that Microsoft violated nondisclosure agreements with Go, and then used that information to build PenWindows, a competitor to Go's PenPoint operating system. The documents included Microsoft's internal e-mail messages showing that it had detailed knowledge of Go's product plans.

    and this:

    Shortly after the letter was written, according to Mr. Kaplan, Intel reduced its planned investment in Go from $10 million to $2 million, and stipulated the investment be kept a secret.

    and this:

    In late 1993, Go was sold to AT&T where it was ultimately merged into the company's portable computer subsidiary. In 1994 the phone company shut down the effort in portable computing. Three months later Microsoft canceled its PenWindows project.

    I kind of doubt Markoff did make all this up. Ignore the rest of the article, these facts makes one think, perhaps M$ is targeting all its potential competitors and burying them before any competition actually takes place?

  23. Great Friend... by jimmyCarter · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I tell all my Microsoft-using friends to fuck off with their self-made problems, too..

    Surely there's a way you can express your displeasure with MS products to your friends with a little more tact?

    --

    -- jimmycarter
    1. Re:Great Friend... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What do you expect from a slashbot? M$ is teh sux!!!!!11

    2. Re:Great Friend... by cmacb · · Score: 5, Funny

      Well, I've tried telling my Windows support leaches that I don't remember much about Windows any more, but it doesn't seem to help. They go on and on anyway about all the things they have already tried and still they get this message on start-up that doesn't stay up long enough for them to read but tells them that something is missing.

      I suppose I COULD give them outright bogus advice... "Try deleting some of your registry keys. Too many of those can cause problems like that." But then, that wouldn't be very nice would it? On the other hand, once their system was totally toast maybe they'd be more inclined to give a true manly operating system a try.

      "Dat girly-man operating system should be a ting of de past" - Ahnuld

    3. Re:Great Friend... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, you are quite right. Alas I was sadly lacking any tact. I can see that now. Now I have seen the error in my ways I tell them to, Pppuuuurrrrllllleeeesssseeee ***** off!

    4. Re:Great Friend... by Ender+Ryan · · Score: 2, Funny
      Surely you wouldn't presume to tell someone how to behave with their own friends, would you?

      Maybe in the circles he runs in, that is tactful :)

      --
      Sticking feathers up your butt does not make you a chicken - Tyler Durden
    5. Re:Great Friend... by slipstick · · Score: 2

      Maybe he's not just displeased with MS but with his so called "friends" that don't have the tact to not ask a highly paid professional for free work.

      I wish I had his guts. I'm sick of fixing Window's problems for my friends as well. I don't use this shit why should I be subjected to it's problems just because I have an aptitude for thinking and I work in the computer field.

      If I was a mechanic and my friends asked me to fix their cars as much as I have to fix Window's problems, without pay even, I think I would be justified in telling them to "go f**k themselves".

      I don't know about the other guy, but I've moved far past fixing computers for a living. I've moved up in the world and I don't care to toy with broken pieces of bile anymore it's a complete waste of time!

      --
      Sure information wants to be free, but how much are you willing to pay for the packaging?
    6. Re:Great Friend... by orkysoft · · Score: 1

      "Gutentag, Doctor Cmacb!"

      "Your system has too many registry keys. I'll remove some, and on the next reboot, your system will either be healthy, or dead! But the important thing is, we'll know!"

      --

      I suffer from attention surplus disorder.
    7. Re:Great Friend... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      OK, I'm sick of this. I really am.

      Business practices aside, give me one technical shortcoming of Windows. Just one. C'mon, if it sucks so badly, it can't be that hard.

      I'm really tired of elitist asshats like you running about, waving around your preference for Linux like it's a goddamn medal or something. Look how smart you are! Good for you. As a lowly Windows user, I'm not even worthy of trimming the hair on your ass.

      Manly operating system, my ass. Linux does what it does very well, but it's very deficient in certain areas: only a truly sadistic asshole would give a copy to his grandmother, for instance.

      Perhaps you should spend more time writing brilliant code that reflects your intimidating level of genius and less time acting like a fucking mongoloid on Slashdot.

    8. Re:Great Friend... by Ironica · · Score: 1

      Maybe he's not just displeased with MS but with his so called "friends" that don't have the tact to not ask a highly paid professional for free work.

      So, do what I do: set rates, and charge everyone. My *mom* pays me $40 an hour to fix her computer issues. And usually makes me dinner, too. If she recommends me to a friend, I know that she's told them my rates already.

      Not only does it cut down on the stupid stuff, but if they're paying for your time, they're more respectful of it, and what you do. If they don't want to pay, tell them to go pay CompUSA to do it instead or something. Ask them for free [whatever] from their business... works even better if they're a doctor or a lawyer.

      --
      Don't you wish your girlfriend was a geek like me?
    9. Re:Great Friend... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Surely there's a way you can express your displeasure with MS products to your friends with a little more tact?

      U
      S
      E

      L
      I
      N
      U
      X

  24. pirates of silicon valley by dncsky1530 · · Score: 1

    If this is embarrassing then what does bill gates think of the scene in pirates of silicon valley when he gets high and steals a steamroller.

  25. Re:Andy Grove intimidation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    Yeah, and I heard that ObviousGuy can't orgasm unless he kills a dog.
    Of course, that's just what I heard.

  26. Go by damian · · Score: 5, Interesting

    It is too bad that the Go Penpoint OS never made it. In my opinion it was a very nice system and well designed. The Apple Newton came close, but not quite.

    I read the book "The Power of Penpoint"
    by Robert Carr, Dan Shafer but never had one of their computers myself (they are pretty rare in Europe). I nearly bought one on ebay recently though.

    Some images: http://www.ojisan.com/penpoint/index.shtml

  27. PDA by KeelSpawn · · Score: 1

    True...I'm a Palm advocate and I had my first handheld back when the first one came out in 1996. It was the PalmPilot Personal/Professional, I believe. But he was close though, saying it was 10 years ago. But I'm sure 1994 they already had some of the ideas and design for a PDA. It's just that the hardware technology hasn't caught up yet.

    --
    http://www.palmzone.net
  28. How History Repeats Itself by Crash+Culligan · · Score: 5, Insightful
    It's over. The antitrust trial has gone by. A decision was made and we've stuck to it.

    A decision was made, but a lot of people believe that decision was just so much tepid crap. Courts have been overturned in the past; perhaps if enough new evidence comes to light, the case can be reopened.

    What now? does dragging this stuff up accomplishe anything more? It's just for microsoft bashing.

    Yes, it does serve a purpose. It serves to dig up more facts and evidence should someone in the judiciary ever get wise and reevaluate that case.

    Even if the trial never reopens, the Court of Public Opinion is always open. The more people learn what kinds of jiggery-pokery Microsoft has been up to, the more likely Microsoft will gets its just desserts sooner or later, and the less likely anyone else will ever pull such stunts again.

    Honestly. I'm trying to figure out your attitude. "Microsoft did it, they got away with it, and that's good enough for me!" Are you always this doggedly complacent?

    This whole story should be market -1 FLAMEBAIT

    Need something burned down in a big hurry? Then come on down to the Flamebait Market, for all your pyromaniac needs!

    --
    You cannot truly appreciate Dilbert until you read it in the original Klingon.
    1. Re:How History Repeats Itself by term8or · · Score: 1

      The antitrust trial has gone by.


      One antitrust trial has gone. But Microsoft is still a proven monopoly, and is therefore subject to US monopoly laws. If it breaks them in future, then there can be a new case. Microsoft has to be careful in future. Plus, if Microsoft can be brought to court over netscape, why can't it be brought to court on Media Player too? or past offences?


      Microsoft is now a proven monopoly in the EU. (subject to appeal). That is far more significent than a fine of 300 million euro would suggest. For example, copyright law in the UK includes limitations on protection for monopoly's that allow the UK government to require a monopoly to distribute copyrightable material at a fixed price on fixed conditions.

      This reminds me a bit of the tobacco trials. All it needs is one big verdict, and Microsoft could find itself against hundreds of golddiggers and class actions.

      --



      "As a writer / novelist you might want to spellcheck your sig. :) " - AC
    2. Re:How History Repeats Itself by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      jiggery-pokery

      *Giggle* You said pokery.

    3. Re:How History Repeats Itself by TheDanish · · Score: 1

      just desserts

      just deserts

      --
      Danish != nationality
  29. spin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    While I don't think anyone will deny Microsoft is guilty of non-competitive behavior, there is certainly some spin on the part of the author regarding this story. The quote doesn't say "this is agressive and we'll come back at ya," but it says, somewhat sensibly, that Intel would weaken the i386 platform by dividing its support between Microsoft and Go. I wouldn't use this as any evidence for non-competitive behavior.

    There's plenty of that all over the place, it's just a question of whether 500,000,000 Microsoft users give a damn.

    Come up with an argument that Microsoft is holding back the floodgates of technology and then you'll see some grumbling. Replace them with a superior alternative and they will become obsolete by definition.

    I don't think Linux is successful because it is technically special. But it is more immune to Microsoft's monopoly powers than closed-source efforts. If Microsoft didn't exist perhaps we'd have many snazzy OS's out there and computers would resemble video game consoles more than computers. If Microsoft didn't snuff out these alternatives we wouldn't care about smelly hippies and free software.

  30. Microsoft might stolen IP by goatan · · Score: 3, Insightful
    the plaintiffs contend the new documents show that Microsoft violated nondisclosure agreements with Go, and then used that information to build PenWindows, a competitor to Go's PenPoint operating system. The documents included Microsoft's internal e-mail messages showing that it had detailed knowledge of Go's product plans.

    Every time Microsoft goes on about piracy hurting them damaging innovation etc they should be reminded of this that they are IP thieves themselves and if SCO can ask for $1million from IBM then what can the former executives of Go sue Microsoft for? All hypothetical of course the documents have yet to prove this is the case.

    --
    Saying Apple is better than MS is like saying Botulism is better than rabies.

    1. Re:Microsoft might stolen IP by phillymjs · · Score: 4, Interesting

      You should read the books mentioned at the end of the article to see just how blatant it was. Microsoft sent people to a PenPoint demo given for the Boston Computer Society. They brought a video camera and taped the presentation and analyzed it when they got back to Redmond. Anytime a PenPoint feature drew a positive crowd reaction, that feature was on the 'must add' list for Pen Windows.

      Yes, the argument can be made that it was dumb to allow anyone to bring a video camera into that presentation, but still-- this is complete and total thievery, perpetrated by Microsoft. I got angry just reading about it, more than a decade after the fact. Go had some neat stuff back in 1989-- I can only imagine how technological advances between then and how would have improved their product, had Microsoft allowed the company to exist.

      In this day and age, I don't see how any company with a promising new product doesn't take great pains to hide the thing's existence from Microsoft to keep from getting ripped off. After all these years it's clear they had and still have absolutely no shame about it.

      ~Philly

    2. Re:Microsoft might stolen IP by blamanj · · Score: 2, Insightful

      In this day and age, I don't see how any company with a promising new product doesn't take great pains to hide the thing's existence from Microsoft to keep from getting ripped off.

      Actually, if you read Kaplan's book "Startup" (and it's been a few years since I revisited my copy), you'll see that they were very worried. So much so that they signed agreements with Microsoft to allow them to see the technology only if they wouldn't copy the feature of GO in their Windows OS code.

      IIRC, Microsoft pulled the extremely sleazy trick of sending the specs to the application division and called Pen Windows an application built on top of the Windows OS.

      If you look at the dead corporate bodies that litter the foundation of the MS monopoly, you'll find that the fatal wounds have come from a knife to the back.

  31. Re:Andy Grove intimidation? by tbdean · · Score: 4, Informative

    For those of you wondering about the refernce:

    http://www.penny-arcade.com/view.php3?date=2004-02 -23

    --
    tbdean
  32. Re:Andy Grove intimidation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://www.antiwar.com/lobe/?articleid=1426

  33. Re:ENOUGH WITH THE ANTI MICROSOFT FUD by NanoGator · · Score: 2, Insightful

    "What now? does dragging this stuff up accomplishe anything more? It's just for microsoft bashing."

    One man's flamebait is another man's insightfu.

    --
    "Derp de derp."
  34. Re:Andy Grove intimidation? by Moonpie+Madness · · Score: 3, Funny

    Im submitting this from my gitmo cage right now! It's not so bad really, though this tablet PC is just junk. I mean seriously! Damn thing only gets 12 fps on counterstrike.

  35. Re:Newsflash! by Moonpie+Madness · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Newsflash, they have made a lot of mistakes and set the tech industry back quite a ways by destroying innovation with subpar crap, but they also did a great deal to advance us. Sometimes the world needs a hegemon. so many programs written for Dos and Windows. Could any programmer have made as much money without that large compatible market? Its too bad they have been and become concerned with competitors rather than innovation... but it isnt a joke, its just too bad for you and me and billy g

  36. Not relevant... by Coryoth · · Score: 4, Funny

    From the article:

    A Microsoft spokeswoman said that many of these newly disclosed documents were not relevant to the trial, which focuses on Microsoft pricing actions.

    Oh, of course, sorry. Yes, these documents aren't relevant for the current trial, so we should just ignore them completely and pretend they don't exist.

    "These are not the documents you are looking for..."

    Jedidiah.

  37. microsoft abuses power by Moonpie+Madness · · Score: 1

    but what monopoly? i see macs, i see red hats, i see real players and firebirds they are dominant, but in what way am I even inconvienienced for avoiding ms? not that ms isnt culpible for its crimes, but thanks to creative and intelligent and bored middle class programmers, we finally are able to overcome and avoide monopolies.... or im just a moron

    1. Re:microsoft abuses power by runderwo · · Score: 1
      Being a monopoly does not mean that you have 100% market share. A monopoly is defined as being the producer of a product for which there are no substitutes. In order to substitute (say) a Linux distribution for Windows, it would have to read NTFS, open your document formats, participate on your Samba/Active Directory network, etc. If it cannot do those things, it is not a substitute.

      Some functionality along these lines has been attained by reverse engineering, but the fact of the matter is that Microsoft does everything it can to keep competitors from producing software which interoperates with the Windows platform. In the end, what this accomplishes is to prevent competitors from developing substitutes to Windows. Thus, such behavior fits the definition of conspiring to monopolize a market.

      Note that just because a substitute product to Windows *could* be developed, doesn't imply that it *would* be developed (though there is strong evidence to suggest that it would). Regardless of whether or not a substitute _would_ be developed in the case that Microsoft didn't try to prevent it from being developed, the key issue here is the fact that Microsoft is _attempting_ to prevent substitutes from being developed, through its hidden APIs, secret file formats and protocols, and software patents.

    2. Re:microsoft abuses power by Alsee · · Score: 5, Informative

      what monopoly?

      Legally Microsoft is a Monopoly. Microsoft was shown in court to control nearly 100% of it's market. Obviously a single person running a different OS does not alter the fact that Microsoft has monopoloy power. Even 5% of people using non-Microsoft not enough to signifigantly diminish that monopoly power.

      Monopoly is not defined as absolute 100% perfection. It is (roughly) defined as an overwhelming dominance and control of the relevant market.

      Microsoft was further shown to have (1) illegally abused that monopoly power to maintain their monopoly, and (2) to have illegally abused that monopoly power in an attempt to extend their monopoly into other markets (and thus exterminating competitors and competition in those markets).

      Examples from the court case include Microsoft abusing it's Monopoly power to force all major computer sellers to sign contracts forbiding them from selling dual-boot machines. Computer sellers could have included Window/Linux dual boot option at essentially zero additional cost (or Windows/OS2 dual boot at merely the cost of an OS2 licence). The public would have greatly benefited from a completely FREE additional Linux system on their machine, and from the option for a low-cost OS2 (or other) second boot option. Illegally maintaing a Monopoly.

      Micrsoft further worded that contract such that the seller had to pay Microsoft for EVERY machine they sold. If they offered a system without an OS, or with Linux, or with OS2, they STILL had to pay Microsoft for that machine. That has the twin effects of increasing the cost to the consumer to buy a Linux or OS2 machine, and it allows Microsoft to effectly collect a tax on its competitors products. Illegally maintaining a monopoly.

      Microsoft also illegally leveraged it's OS monopoly in an attempt to create a new monopoly for itself in the web browser market. InternetExplorer has obtained a somewhat overwhelming dominance, but that doesn't matter. Even if InternetExplorer failed and had merely 1% of the market, the tactics they used in the attempt were themselves illegal. Illegally attempting to abuse a monopoly to create a monopoly in another market.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    3. Re:microsoft abuses power by DoctorMO · · Score: 2, Informative

      A monopoly in UK law is defined as 25% or more.

  38. Re:If only GO Penpoint software was open-sourced.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    I used to work at a start-up specialising in pen computers in the early '90s (my first job
    after leaving university) and PenPoint was actually a pretty good system IIRC.

    The primary development language was 'C' with an OO facade used to build the windowing libraries -
    rather like GTK in that respect in fact.

    There were also tools enabling development in ObjectiveC instead of 'GO' C if you preferred. (though
    I think these were from a third party (Slate?))

    All in all if my hazy memory serves 10 years later, it was a pretty damn good mobile computing
    solution.

  39. Funny, they needn't have bothered. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In 1991, the hardware for portable computing just wasn't there. It.. just... WASN'T. I mean, where did PenWindows go? Yep, right into the dumpster. If Microsoft had just not done anything, Go would have released their software, gotten a lot of "ooh nifty!" reviews in the trade press, and disappeared without a trace.


    1. Re:Funny, they needn't have bothered. by phillymjs · · Score: 4, Informative

      In 1991, the hardware for portable computing just wasn't there. It.. just... WASN'T. I mean, where did PenWindows go? Yep, right into the dumpster.

      Here's a loose quote (I don't remember it exactly) from Marlin Eller's book referenced at the end of the article: "This wasn't about 'grow the market,' it was about 'block that kick.' Go Corp spent $(millions) creating their product, we spent $4 million shooting them down. They'll never sell their shit again." That's not the exact quote, but it's pretty close. I remember it so clearly because I was completely shocked to read such a thing.

      IIRC, this was said in response to Eller expressing his opinion that Pen Windows was a failure because it didn't take off, and the person who spoke the words above explained that Pen Windows was a success because all it was supposed to do was cock-block Go Corp from building a presence in the market.

      ~Philly

  40. GO by marksilverman · · Score: 4, Informative

    If you want the whole story of GO, read Startup: A Silicon Valley Adventure by Jerry Kaplan. It's a great book. And it shows just how evil Microsoft really is!

  41. Re:embarrassing! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Holy heck, that's the second photo of Bill Gates I've seen where he's not smiling. (The previous one was the one about EU fines.)

    Completely creepy. I mean, Bill smiled even in the damn police photo.

  42. Lets wait for groklaw shall we? by SmallFurryCreature · · Score: 5, Insightful
    As others have pointed out the journalist in question is not 100% reliable and I rather trust Groklaw. At least people there know law. If these documents are real it should be trivial to verify having been shown in a courtroom.

    IF it is true then it just goes once again to show how fucking rotten the legal system is. Tell the whole truth and nothing but the truth eh? So will these be grounds for a new case? Wasn't Martha Stewart found guilty of lying to an officer instead of insider dealing? Can they get MS on withholding evidence? Perhaps even going after people who can be jailed? I personally don't believe for a second that this could be accidental (IF of course it is real)

    Some posts seem to mention that attempting to create or abuse a monopoly is a felony. Doesn't this mean that MS is a criminal? So how exactly is it still allowed to do business as usual? Companies seem to want all the perks of being treated a real people but none of the bad stuff like oh say being punished for committing crimes.

    Oh well at least we can snigger at all the microsoft apologist trying to wriggle out of this one. This must be one of their worst weeks. Embarrising papers, being fined and if you look at groklaw yet more hypocrasy by claiming that the EU has no right to tell it how to behave while MS itself is asking the EU to tell Lindows how to behave.

    I almost pity the MS fans. Almost.

    --

    MMO Quests are like orgasms:

    You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.

    1. Re:Lets wait for groklaw shall we? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      >>If these documents are real it should be trivial to verify having been shown in a courtoom.

      Voila!

  43. Those MS tactics in full.. by Channard · · Score: 0

    1. Dominate OS market.
    2. Profit.
    3. Get fined by EU.
    4. ????

    1. Re:Those MS tactics in full.. by VisiX · · Score: 1

      1. Dominate OS market.
      2. Profit.
      3. Get fined by EU.
      4. Ham

      I know it is offtopic and random, but that is kind of the point.

  44. Microsoft - Still as anti-competitive as ever... by OwlWhacker · · Score: 5, Interesting

    "All of Microsoft's conduct was designed to acquire and hang on to their monopoly,'' said Eugene Crew, a lawyer at Townsend, Townsend & Crew, based in San Francisco.

    Many companies would desire to maintain a monopoly. The problem here is that after so many years of knowing that Microsoft has this attitude, nobody has done anything effective to stop it.

    People can complain about the EU being anti-American in its anti-trust case, but personally I feel that the US should have imposed far more restrictions on Microsoft than it has thus far. Microsoft continually gets away with anti-competitive practices, everybody knows this - although some Microsoft apologists vehemently deny/excuse it.

    "Consumers were harmed by being deprived of choice. The greatest harm out of the Go story was the suppression of innovation and new technology by Microsoft."

    The extent of consumer harm can't really be known. People seem to be relatively happy with Windows. Then again, people just accepted that computers needed regular rebooting after running Windows 95, it just goes to show how most people just accept things without question. I guess we'll never know how far things could have progressed if it wasn't for Microsoft preventing competition by abusing its position.

    Consumers are harmed, so are competing businesses.

    Look how things are flying now because Microsoft has a bit of competition from Linux/Open Source. Of course, Microsoft can say, "Hey, we're doing this because we love you all, not because we're scared of Linux", but why does Microsoft care now when it obviously didn't give a damn for years (judging by the poor quality of Windows up until now)? If there's no competition then you work at your own pace, and as long as it appears that there's progress, people seem to be satisfied.

  45. Embarassing Public Document... by jesseblue · · Score: 2, Funny

    ...can be seen here: Link

  46. Re:good morning slashdot!! by goatan · · Score: 4, Insightful
    I'd love to see a large company not go down in flames, we certainly don't need to see MIcrosoft need to lay off anybody, the tech sector is suffering enough.

    Perhaps if companys where less like Microsoft and Enron Etc. and the senior managers actually punished when do act like that then you wouldn't see so many go down in flames.

    --
    Saying Apple is better than MS is like saying Botulism is better than rabies.

  47. Re:News snippet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Geordie : Data?

    Data : That was..

    Geordie : Not funny!

  48. Link to Trial Exhibits by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    The trial exhibits (including the documents mentioned in the NY Times article) are being posted on the court's website.

  49. HAHAHA by dolo666 · · Score: 3, Funny

    SO.... for all ye programmers... // what they must have coded
    if($partner) $access = 1; //should read

    switch($partner){
    case 'google':
    $access = 1;
    break;
    case 'slashdot':
    $access = 1;
    break;
    default:
    $access = 0;
    break;
    }

    1. Re:HAHAHA by si618 · · Score: 1

      /anal mode/

      $access = ( $partner == 'google' | $partner == 'slashdot' )

      --
      Sometimes I doubt your commitment to Sparkle Motion
    2. Re:HAHAHA by dolo666 · · Score: 1

      Sweet. :)
      switches soak up resources but in my small sites, I hardly notice the .000002 seconds lost. :)

    3. Re:HAHAHA by si618 · · Score: 1

      Ahhh but if you have a scripted language like PHP, those extra lines of code also soak up time to read and interpret.

      The single line example was cleaner (IMO) but also less extensible.

      Eeeesh, you'd think i'd have better things to write about on a monday morning :)

      --
      Sometimes I doubt your commitment to Sparkle Motion
  50. Re:Andy Grove intimidation? by ScouseMouse · · Score: 2, Funny

    Oh i dunno, never been to an MSCE camp have we?

  51. MoSt whaaaNTed list by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    when too much is never enough. lookout bullow.

    Robert Wexler
    Peter King
    Dan Burton
    Gregory Meeks
    Steve Chabot
    Joseph Crowley
    Jo Ann Davis
    Adam Schiff
    Mark Green
    Chris Bell

    http://www.nytimes.com/cnet/CNET_2100-1012_3-517 89 64.html

    more LIEk a who's who of who isN'T?

  52. Re:ENOUGH WITH THE ANTI MICROSOFT FUD by DrMrLordX · · Score: 0

    My Insight-fu is better than yours!

  53. Re:Andy Grove intimidation? by Ed_Moyse · · Score: 3, Insightful

    How in the HELL was that insightful? We had *PICTURES* of Guantanamo bay detainees, we had released prisoners talking about it, the fucking US government admitted that they were there (perhaps not thousands, but cetrainly hundreds). It is fucking THERE.It's not that people aren't asking for proof ... they've already seen it!

    I have (personally) NOT seen proof of Andy Grove keeping IBM employees in a cellar, and I would damn well like some evidence of it if I'm expected to take that seriously.

  54. Your a knee jerk slashbot by goatan · · Score: 3, Interesting
    His goal was to develop a 4-pound, easy-to-use computer that would appeal to a wider audience than the bulky desktop computers and 20-pound luggables then available

    The Whole point of Go was to create the software and hardware together remember that IBM and Intel where involved. Microsoft persuaded Intel to reduce its contribution to the project which they did which killed the hardware side resulting in the failure of the software side. Once this happened neither IBM nor Intel would have wanted to work with Microsoft thus no hardware for PenWindows either.

    Back then the hardware wasn't available. So quit the Microsoft bashing.

    Again the point was to develop the hardware Microsoft stopped Intel from helping. It would only be Microsoft bashing if it was untrue. Quit the knee jerk response and find the facts.

    extra note ran this through the spell checker and PenWindows is in there it even corrected the capitals

    --
    Saying Apple is better than MS is like saying Botulism is better than rabies.

  55. Re:timeframe is wrong, but the point still stands by Dashing+Leech · · Score: 1
  56. Re:MOD SPAMMING PARENT DOWN! by Inda · · Score: 1, Offtopic

    He posts under other names too - not recently though. I'm guessing 50 accounts that have been karma whored, each one used to mod up his daily spam posts.

    If you log in and 'disrespect' him, he adds you as a friend. I feel honoured, I honestly do.

    --
    This post contains benzene, nitrosamines, formaldehyde and hydrogen cyanide.
  57. It's over? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Apparently not. The real fun is just beginning!

    Let's see, $613 million to the EU and being forced to make their server APIs open (WOO HOO!), maybe $1.5 billion to Minnesota.

    That MCSE of your's is starting to look a bit less useful, eh?

  58. A desensitized public? by thodu · · Score: 5, Insightful

    At times I wonder if people have become so desensitized to people in positions of power lying to them that they no longer care. People have to accept wrong behaviour from politicians, businessmen, the media and everybody else. It does not matter if George Bush lies, or Bill Gates bullies his way through or Wall Street analysts pump up a stock - this type of behaviour does not shock or surprise - it is expected of them.

    1. Re:A desensitized public? by pandrijeczko · · Score: 1
      when it comes to their personal business like having "sex" with an intern

      Great comment!

      What's even funnier is that when the likes of Clinton go do this, you actually start to feel a little respect for them because at least you realise that they're subject to the same human weaknesses that the rest of us are.

      --
      Gentoo Linux - another day, another USE flag.
    2. Re:A desensitized public? by Raven42rac · · Score: 1

      I do not think the public is desensitized to people in power lying and being scumbags, at least not yet. We (the public) may be a little numb, but it still hurts us. Where are the role models? In music? Sports? Business? None of the above. Everyone thinks only about themselves anymore, IMHO. The point is, these people are supposed to be up on a higher plane than us, they are supposed to be infallible. The Greek Empire started deteriorating when the gods became fallible and human, and the people had nothing to aspire toward. The desire to better oneself is universal, if you have nothing to aspire toward, what is the point of doing the right thing?

      --
      I hate sigs.
    3. Re:A desensitized public? by The+Queen · · Score: 4, Insightful

      We (the public) may be a little numb, but it still hurts us.

      I would argue that you overestimate the majority, and underestimate the minority. I think most sheeple still do look up to Bush, and simply assume that America MUST be right to do what it's doing, because well, we're America. (Look at all the US flag stickers on all the cars around you...) But I think those of the public who are still thinking, reading, researching and really paying attention are hurt WAY more than any numbness could negate.

      I do, however, agree about the role models. I have no doubt that there is a Benjamin Franklin, a Jimmy Hendrix, and a Marie Curie among us, but the climate is very inhospitable to them right now. It's impossible to rise to any sort of power or recognition unless the government tells the media conglomerates to LET you (for whatever reasons they have). Real radical thinkers and revolutionaries are in hibernation, and all we have to look up to are basketball rapists and Vin freaking Diesel.

      I think I feel my breakfast coming back up...

      --

      The House Between - Original Sci-Fi Series
    4. Re:A desensitized public? by Raven42rac · · Score: 1

      I think the US is the greatest country on earth. Do I have an American flag on my antenna? No. Do I look up to George W. Bush? No. Do I think that we are taking away civil rights faster than you can say "1984"? Yes. The point is, that if we do not like someone, we can get rid of them, come November. The original poster was implying that we were immune to any pain because we expect bad behaviour from those in power. I was trying to rebut by stating that we may be a little numb, but it certainly does hurt us. I agree, the media will build you up to break you back down, if they see it fit. They would rather report murders and fires than scientific breakthroughs and things of that nature. I think our media foments way too much paranoia. Contrast that with pretty much any news programme from any other civilised country, and you will see the difference. If we think of everyone other than ourselves as "stupid" and "out of the loop" and "sheeple", as you succinctly put it, then we have lost the battle to convert them to a more cynical, realistic, rational way of thinking. If all else fails, look up to Woz. He created a remote (the Cloud 9) with a freaking programming manual, then gave the telephone number from that company to a center for troubled teens, after the company went under. Although I am not sure if it's current owner was the one he gave it to.

      --
      I hate sigs.
    5. Re:A desensitized public? by I+Be+Hatin' · · Score: 1
      The funny thing is, we impeach such "people in power" over a lie (that too, coming from a misunderstanding of terminology)

      A lie under oath, of course, which is otherwise known as perjury. And you can't seriously believe that this was an innocent misunderstanding of terminology. Puh-lease. Here was the chief executive of the US extending his middle finger at the judicial branch. In his oath of office, he pledged to respect the constitution, and he broke that oath. Therefore, he was impeached (and rightfully so).

      when it comes to their personal business like having "sex" with an intern

      Can you imagine what the women's groups would be saying if it was George W. Bush who had sex with an intern? They would be screaming for his head on "sexual harrassment" charges (since he is technically the superior of a White House intern).

      but nothing gets done about a President lying to the world and taking a country to war for no reason.

      It certainly wasn't for "no reason", it just wasn't for a very good reason. And you're absolutely right that something should be done, but nothing will...

      --
      I know god exists. I read it on the internet, so it must be true.
    6. Re:A desensitized public? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Can you imagine what the women's groups would be saying if it was George W. Bush who had sex with an intern?

      Sure I can. What I'm having trouble imagining is the family values Republicans attacking George over that as viciously as they went after Clinton.

    7. Re:A desensitized public? by RdsArts · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Well, is it really any suprise? Look at movie ratings; tons of death and murders? PG-13. Show some skin? R or NC-17.

      Kids watching grown men run at each other and violently push one another around or tackle eachother into the ground for hours? Perfectly fine. Show a nipple for 2 seconds? Public outrage and a exploritory commision.

      There seems to be a very large, unnatural fear of sex.

    8. Re:A desensitized public? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "The point is, that if we do not like someone, we can get rid of them, come November."

      Can you?
      2 words: electronic voting
      1 word: Diebold
      0 word: [no need to be said, draw your own conclusion]

    9. Re:A desensitized public? by I+Be+Hatin' · · Score: 1
      Can you imagine what the women's groups would be saying if it was George W. Bush who had sex with an intern?

      Sure I can. What I'm having trouble imagining is the family values Republicans attacking George over that as viciously as they went after Clinton.

      Good point. There's boatloads of hypocrisy on both sides of the aisle. That's why the only good choice is to vote independent/3rd party.

      --
      I know god exists. I read it on the internet, so it must be true.
  59. PenGWindows? by Cpt.+Fwiffo · · Score: 1

    I just read pengwindows. Now there's a nice tux reference for you...

    Let's just call the next OS windows manager penguindows.
    At least they can't call out for a copyrighted 'windows' in there.
    (or really call it PenGwindows, where G stands for Gnu?)

    anyway. useless brainbabble.

  60. Psion Lives on in Symbian by SenseiLeNoir · · Score: 5, Informative

    Their innovation continues to exist in Symbian Devices.

    I own a SonyEricsson P800 UIQ based Mobile Phone. Based on the Symbian 7.0 platform, you can still see the Psion/Epoc influence underneath.

    The result, a sold stable computing platform, which arguebly crashes FAR less than equivelent MS Smartphones. (this is from personal experience amongst me and my collegues)

    A MultiTasking/Multithreading operating system that is easy enough to use (MAC/Palm style), yet DOES allow you access the filesystem (C drive, ddrive, etc), and other system details via freely downloadable software shoudl you wish to tinker.

    Its Handwritign recognition is exemplar, and far better and more "user friendly" than Palm's old Graffiti system which was very good for what it was.

    I use it as an Ogg player (who needs an MP3 player, its sound quality is excellent), a PDA (it synchs with Outlook contacts/mail/tasks/diary/notes, and has dynamic contact spaces (it dynamically adds new fields even when they are not provided in the main set of fields, try that with palm its its infuriating 5 max fields for numbers/fax/email/web and one address field)

    For those not wishing to submit to Outlook, it also has excellent vCard and SyncML support. You can back up the contacts by selecting "send all" and pointign the Infrared or bluetooth at any computer (Win/Mac/Linux) and selecting send. it will create a standard vCard file with all contact details stored in it. and to send it back to the phone, just send the single file. Even outlook on the PC cannot handle a vCard with numerous contacts so simply and elegantly, heaven help Mobile Outlook users!

    it is simply the best PDA i have ever had, and does follow to some extent Jerry Kaplan's original vision...

    Oh and i forgot to mention, its a damn good phone too! :)

    --
    Have a nice day!
    1. Re:Psion Lives on in Symbian by rokzy · · Score: 1

      what do you use to play Oggs? (I'm getting a P900)

    2. Re:Psion Lives on in Symbian by NickFitz · · Score: 3, Funny
      Its Handwritign recognition is exemplar,

      Except with the words "handwriting" and "exemplary" :-)

      --
      Using HTML in email is like putting sound effects on your phone calls. Just say <strong>no</strong>.
    3. Re:Psion Lives on in Symbian by SenseiLeNoir · · Score: 1

      Search for a program called Oggplay for both P800 and P900, and a version available for the Nokia Series 60 (though only later models, as earlier ones didnt have enough memory/processing power). the Px00 version is significantly bettter, especially thanks to the 5 way jogdial on those phones (pause/play - push dial in, next/previous - push dial forward and back, volume - scroll up or down), and also the large 208x320 screen on the Px00 series means there are some really hot skins for it.

      Its actually very good quality, but does use virtually all of the P800's processing power (the P900 has a littel more omph) but with skinning, playlist support, etc, it is easily one of the killer apps for the P800...

      Ohh it works AMAZINGLY in flip closed mode...

      Its open source (i think GPL)...

      http://www.geocities.com/p800tools/

      or sourceforge
      http://sourceforge.net/projects/symbi anoggplay

      Its really good, and sounds great with the headphones supplied, which is surprising, because most standard headphones are pants.

      --
      Have a nice day!
    4. Re:Psion Lives on in Symbian by Slicebo · · Score: 1

      "Its Handwritign recognition is exemplar. . ."

      How are it's spelling and grammar checkers?

    5. Re:Psion Lives on in Symbian by rokzy · · Score: 1

      thanks.

      I haven't bothered with ogg so far because space is irrelevant on a hard drive, but if it can double the number of songs on a mobile it'll be worth it.

    6. Re:Psion Lives on in Symbian by SenseiLeNoir · · Score: 1

      "handwritting" was an honest mistake... typing too quickly on a laptop that I am not used to.

      "Exemplar" is intentional and a CORRECT spelling (check your dictionary), maybe Americans dont use that word much?

      --
      Have a nice day!
    7. Re:Psion Lives on in Symbian by SenseiLeNoir · · Score: 1

      yes, a 64Kpbs Ogg Vorbis file certainly sounds almost as good as a 128Kbps MP3 file, certainly when played on a "portable" player like the phone...

      --
      Have a nice day!
    8. Re:Psion Lives on in Symbian by NickFitz · · Score: 1

      "Exemplar" is indeed a word; however, it is a noun, and I assumed from the context in which you used it ("Its handwriting recognition is exemplar") that you meant the related adjective, "exemplary".

      Being English, I'm not sure what words Americans use, although I understand that they spell them in an unusual way.

      Ah well, there goes all my karma for being a grammar Nazi. Have a nice day :-)

      --
      Using HTML in email is like putting sound effects on your phone calls. Just say <strong>no</strong>.
    9. Re:Psion Lives on in Symbian by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I definately meant the noun :)

      and dont worry about loosing karma for being a "grammar nazi", as i have also lost karma for assuming you were American! :) I am english too!

      You have a nice day too.

    10. Re:Psion Lives on in Symbian by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      OH THE IRONY!

      "it's"? For fuck's sake!

  61. Re:ENOUGH WITH THE ANTI MICROSOFT FUD by Secrity · · Score: 1

    What do you mean "We've found one dead body, the criminal is in jail." in reference to Microsoft? Microsoft has been found to be an illegal monopoly (a felony) by both the US and the EU. The US has done virtually nothing about it and Microsoft is squirming trying to get out of any sanctions by the EU. In this case the criminal is not in jail, and the convicted criminal seems to be quite adept at buying it's way out of jail after each conviction.

  62. If you're going to bring facts into this .... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I just don't see how we can have a discussion.

    I mean just because Intel became what it is today in large part through the success of Operation Crush which was intended to steal 5000 Motorola customers, where do you get the idea, they wouldn't be happy to help fund their business ventures or even that they might be competitors.

    Microsoft is evil. Look around, everyone in this essentially cloistered community thinks so, except for the dissenters who no one takes seriously. Just because the EU has used specious arguments to sue and obtain technology in the past in no way should suggest that this is what they are doing now. Microsoft only offered to include 3 rival media players with every copy of windows. Everyone knows if they were really serious, they'd have offered 5.

  63. Re:Microsoft won by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    sure they did : http://news.netcraft.com/archives/web_server_surve y.html
    aint a victory ? ;)
    Come to your senses, as a recent european study showed, microsoft had in fact lost, worst than that for them, they are inevitably dying, and not only because of the OSS movement, but because of the net itself. Just keep in mind, 5000 developers, maybe 10000 if you like, and watch what we -the OSS movement- are up to, 1M ? 10M ? more ? the real new flamebait is "MICROSOFT IS DYING". Thanks for reading.

  64. Re:Andy Grove intimidation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Maybe that's because the USA government has repeatedly shown itself to be untrustworthy, same as Slashdot comments.

  65. Shut up about Netscape. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They repackaged Mosaic, until mosaic began to outpace them because they spent too much time tracking their stock options and fiddeling with their new top of the line office chairs. Mosaic was actually the best browser until the project came to an end, by which time Microsoft had caught up to and surpassed Netscape. Which died the ignoble death it deserved. Small wonder Andressen's new venture it talking other companies into paying him to help them outsource.

    Netscape died because they started counting their stock options before they'd won the war and entrenched themselves. They weren't even competitive with the project that spawned them, and was still free. Small wonder they couldn't get everyone to buy their garbage.

    And Real, they're damn lucky to have survived their most recent giant PR gaffe. Hell, look at their site today, they still seek to mislead their customers. Who would want to do business with asshats like them?

    Look at google for comparison. They've won. They are a fucking verb! And are they content to rest on their considerable accomplishments, while companies with billions in cash look to enter their industry where there is a low to virtually no barrier to entry? No, they still churn out clever new tools frequently. Netscape died for want of a brain, Real may well for lack of a heart. Microsoft might have been, and soon will be the wolf feasting on their carcasses, but rest assured their respective congenital defects are what struck the killing blow.

  66. $1.5 bn+ ... has been paid, it's just the start by fw3 · · Score: 3, Interesting
    From the article:
    Microsoft has already paid $1.6 billion in its efforts to settle consumer antitrust claims filed in 10 states.

    In both the US Fed. and EC cases the fine/penalty/remedy is not really the big economic point.

    Once a company has a gulty verdict against it in a federal anti-trust case the door is open for all kinds of civil cases.

    Realistically, materially punitive federal judgements would hardly fly even in the EC, let alone the US (where an amazing majority of people actually like the applications that MS produces and a highly vocal segment figure if they're so successful they must be 'good' both technically and in customer service).

    So really this kind of suit could sink MS, and in fairness to the feds (even the shamefully inept way the Bush administration runs the show) There is a case to be made that letting the market take care of itself is more efficient in the long run.

    As the 'market' has access to the courts MS can look forward to more of these.

    Coupled with the likelihood that more and more of their products will become materially irrelevant due to opensourcing of better alternatives I think MS's future isn't as gold plated as it surely looked before the whole anti-trust thing started.

    --
    Linux is Linux, if One need clarify their dist: <Dist>/GNU Linux
    bsds are of course just BSD
  67. business 101 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    this is business 101 and it is revered in the corporate world.

    there are no morals in the corporate world it is just me, myself, and I.

    Microsoft sucks and I will never buy another one of their products again (windows nt was the last one I bought). I am forced to use it at work but yet I risk my job by putting linux on my laptop. I just can't go into a place everyday and use microsoft. It just sucks. Use to be an mcse also but I am not taking four tests just to renew my certification. I'll go get a unix one if I have to do that - it would also be more respected by my peers than a mcse.

    fsck off Microsoft and SCO.

    1. Re:business 101 by Hassman · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      I am forced to use it at work but yet I risk my job by putting linux on my laptop.

      You are retarded to risk your job over something so trivial. Moron.

      --
      -Mark
      Dovie'andi se tovya sagain.
    2. Re:business 101 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hah. Flamebait...sound like common sense to me.

  68. newton by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    apple newton would have fit the bill ten years ago (or so). And by 98 it was 162 mhz speed. Too bad it was dropped.....

    zogger

  69. assuming that u had some respect for M$ by verrol · · Score: 1

    after many cases and revealations like these. how could you? how could any reasonable person not feel that they were and are getting the short end of the stick becuase of M$ business practices?

    linux, BSD, or any other OSS/FS is not your only choice if u don't want to mess with M$. You have Apple and some others. but people who have a love for M$ should really look at why the like them, what they have been doing to the industry, and whether or not M$ business practices benefits you and your friends in the long term.

    i know, that seem like just too much for really busy people to think about. but like politics, it may not be fun, but ignoring it will get you and idiot for a leader. as for M$, it will limit your choice if they get thier way, u probably won't have Linux, BSD, Apple, BeOS (which kind of don't exist thanks to them), etc.

    1. Re:assuming that u had some respect for M$ by pedicabo · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      The reason I use MS software is quite simple. It works out of the box. I have several PCs. Some run Linux of some description. One runs XP-Pro and Office. It also has a few games and a variety of development apps. That's the one I am using now. The others are for playing with. None of them are online because there are no drivers for my broadband modem, even for the distro which cost 70BP+ (about $100 US) this year. I plugged the modem into my windows box and I was online. Just like that.

    2. Re:assuming that u had some respect for M$ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How the Hell is this Offtopic?

  70. Re:Newsflash! by kilgortrout · · Score: 1
    Could any programmer have made as much money without that large compatible market?
    I think they could make more money if the standards were open and they could write cross platform compatible apps. By using their monopoly power to create defacto closed standards, MS has created a market where it is only profitable to write for the MS platform and ofcourse you have to buy the MS OS to run those apps. Open source breaks that strangle hold because the contributors don't need to make a profit from selling ther code. Their profit comes from value added services to the customer in implementation. This is what has MS so freaked about open source; it breaks their business model and they are painfully aware of it.
  71. Re:The Microsoft Damage. (aka Microsoft Research) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Also, Microsoft research has contributed quite a lot to scientific community..."

    Please be more specific here! Or are you just being sarcastic?

  72. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  73. Re:ENOUGH WITH THE ANTI MICROSOFT FUD by Brataccas · · Score: 1

    Huh? Um, in case you haven't noticed, MS is engaged in at least a dozen legal battles right now. This isn't a case of "digging stuff up", this is evidence as submitted in a current legal proceeding, hardly irrelevant. Furthermore, there is still some question as to whether or not MS has, in fact, stuck to the agreements made in the recent DOJ case. They've certainly broken prior consent decrees. And finally, wouldn't you, as an employee of MS (as your post seems to indicate) want to know if your employer has a history of unethical or illegal behavior? Or do you subscribe to the see-no-evil philosophy?

  74. Re:Andy Grove intimidation? by eclectro · · Score: 1

    Trying to intimidate the guy who would kidnap misbehaving Intel employees and keep them locked in his cellar in Oregon for weeks on end?

    I really think that it shows the resiliency of the human spirit the way that those employees were able to tunnel out 30 feet to freedom using nothing but a broken glass shard from a bottle of Dom Perignon 1959 (that was a good year).

    That is another story in itself. But I think it shows why Intel is able to produce a quality product that keeps up with Moore's law year after year.

    Some call it intimidation, I call it innovation.

    Microsoft obviously doen't intimidate^H^H^H^H^Hinnovate enough, as their product is still crap.

    --
    Take the cheese to sickbay, the doctor should see it as soon as possible - B'Elanna Torres, "Learning Curve"
  75. Perception of Penpoint in 1991.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Found this old cache in Google on the perception of Penpoint in 1991..

    Quote: PenPoint emphasizes handwriting recognition, and GO has designed PenPoint from the ground up to support 32-bit memory and preemptive multitasking.

    c'est la vie

  76. A simple solution!!! Yea, indeed! Think about it! by imr · · Score: 1

    They would probably use the sign language, then create proprietary (read ununderstandable or usually used to say something else) extensions to it, then try to force all deaf persons to stop using it with fud and other bullying tactics, or to buy a microsoft Hand(TM) license to have the right to use it.
    Of course, watching anyone using it or merely waving your hand without a licence would soon be illegal, since a patent is on its way:
    "a method to communicate by signs in order to, eh!, say something, without actually, uh!, say something".

  77. It was achievable by hereticmessiah · · Score: 1

    Yes, there *were* processors of a suitable kind ten years ago. Take the various ARM processors as an example.

    And even then, there's lots of other processors from around that time that would have given sufficent processing power _and_ the needed power-efficiency.

    Just because most machines contain baroque tech from the 60s (the x86 series), doesn't mean everything works so badly.

    --
    I don't like trolls and mod against me if you like, but I'd prefer if you'd reply.
  78. Re:Andy Grove intimidation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No, genius. He was referring to the claims that there are a whole bunch of innocent "secret" prisoners that the U.S. has arrested for no reason and hasn't told anybody about. That story gets passed off as true all the time, despite the logical problems (i.e., there aren't hundreds of missing people).

    The guys in Guantanamo Bay are there because they're guilty. They belong there. Everybody knows they're there. Different set of people.

  79. Re:ENOUGH WITH THE ANTI MICROSOFT FUD by torpor · · Score: 2, Interesting

    You. Completely. Missed. The. Point.

    The point is, the original poster said "we already know they're criminals, we don't need to look at any more evidence".

    Well, duh. A crime is a crime, whether its a stiff-in-the-ditch or a battle-order-from-the-boss. Just because one crime has been discovered, doesn't mean we should stop looking for more...

    --
    ; -- the corruption of government starts with its secrets. a truly free people keep no secrets. --
  80. Could have been achieved even earlier. by hereticmessiah · · Score: 1

    Who needs the ARM6? Even the ARM2, ARM250, and ARM3 would have been more than sufficient.

    If I remember correctly, Acorn built a Tablet PC in the early 90s running RISC OS, and powered by the ARM. It was damned good (saw a demo), but, as with so many Acorn-related things (ARM being the exception that proves the rule), they didn't have the capital investment to mass produce it.

    Oh well, there's always Psion...

    --
    I don't like trolls and mod against me if you like, but I'd prefer if you'd reply.
  81. Most destructive "innovation" from microsoft.. by ztom · · Score: 3, Interesting

    ..in my programmers opinion, is that..

    most ordinary users think, that it's perfectly normal, that your computer crashes few times a day. they just let it go as "well, that happens" not knowing, not expecting and not caring for any particular reason.

    this only single fact gives "excuse" for millions of lines poorly written code, (who cares, it happens anyway) and keeps thousands of "hacky" programs and viruses alive, while most of those crashes may be their "natural" side-effect, not nessecerily something, that would "normally" happen with healthy system..

    ..but it's NORMAL, that windows machines crash, so let's all thank microsoft for this "innovation" too!

    1. Re:Most destructive "innovation" from microsoft.. by Hassman · · Score: 2, Insightful

      WHo's computer crashes a few times a day? I run XP at home very often and it never 'crashes'. I run 2000 at work all day (8 - 10 hrs) and it never 'crashes'...

      I think you need to revise your comment, as it is totally bogus.

      You want to know what is funny? When I ran Linux, it would 'crash' every now and then...but that was cuz of shitty hardware / drivers...not the OS.

      Don't blame MS here, most of the time when a computer hangs up or whatever it is becasue of the hardware or drivers...not the OS (at least now-a-days...this probably doesn't apply to the Win 95 or 98).

      --
      -Mark
      Dovie'andi se tovya sagain.
    2. Re:Most destructive "innovation" from microsoft.. by cubic6 · · Score: 1

      Strangely enough, my Linux machine crashes about once a day, requiring a complete reboot. Usually, it's XFree86 related. I'm sure for a few of them, I could pop open a Mindterm on my roommate's computer, ssh in, and kill X, but seeing as how all my programs will die anyways, I might as well restart. In terms of productivity loss, restarting X is just as bad as rebooting. I'm not arguing with your point, but for many of us, daily lockups still are a reality, whether we use MS software or not.

      --
      Karma: Contrapositive
    3. Re:Most destructive "innovation" from microsoft.. by ztom · · Score: 1
      Should have seen it coming..

      I was not saying, that computer crashes are microsoft-specific anomaly or that every single windows does that regularly.

      those who know how to "keep it" manage to run pretty stable systems, even for years. but you gotta see what an average teenage girl can do to a fresh installation within a month!!

      My point was, that when crashes happen, it's considered "something, that just happens" instead of something worth of investigating and finding a cure.

      and in today's aggressive internet traffic this translates probably to few instances of spyware or it can be (and usually is) something far more nastier

    4. Re:Most destructive "innovation" from microsoft.. by Hassman · · Score: 1

      I gotcha now. I totally agree! I just misinterpreted your intent before.

      --
      -Mark
      Dovie'andi se tovya sagain.
  82. Coupons anyone? by Ridgelift · · Score: 1

    Microsoft has already paid $1.6 billion in its efforts to settle consumer antitrust claims filed in 10 states

    Paid $1.6 billion? In cash? Somehow this doesn't ring true to me.

    Didn't Microsoft "pay" for their sins in credits for Microsoft software? Anyone know for sure?

    1. Re:Coupons anyone? by dtfinch · · Score: 1

      Probably paid in copies of Microsoft products to public schools, valued at the full retail price.

    2. Re:Coupons anyone? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe that includes the $750 Million they paid AOL?

  83. Thats so Awesome. by Bill,+Shooter+of+Bul · · Score: 2, Interesting

    There are two ways to view mircosoft. There is the traditinal Slashdot Micro$oft is evil and sucks opinion, and my view that Microsoft is evil and is really cool. Think about it. The mobsters in The Godfather movies, and the Sopranos are evil, but they don't suck. Admit it, you Love playing GTA Vice City. Its not always easy being so evil. You have to admit Microsoft does a very good job ( at being very evil) and in my book that makes them the coolest company in the world.

    --
    Well.. maybe. Or Maybe not. But Definitely not sort of.
    1. Re:Thats so Awesome. by geekoid · · Score: 2, Funny

      You can't have Bill Gates haircut and be cool.
      No matter how evil or how much money.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  84. death by a thousand cuts by codepunk · · Score: 0, Troll

    The thing MS is worried about now is that this is setting the stage for massive suits against them. It is going to be death by a thousand cuts.

    Oh yea and all you windows loving trolls remember this site is called slashdot not c colon backslash.

    --


    Got Code?
  85. But what if ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... the mimes escape?

    Oh, right.. they wouldn't be able to tell anyone. It'd be like a really deranged version of Microsoft Charades (tm).

  86. Thanks, Microsoft by ballpoint · · Score: 3, Funny

    for removing the shameless hype about Go Corp from the IT press.
    During a few months you couldn't open a computer magazine without Go Corp being hyped in every article.
    Every article during that time had Go Corp hyped in every paragraph.
    I got so fed up of reading about Go Corp in every paragraph in every article in every computer magazine that I cancelled a few subscriptions.
    Then good enough access to the internet came along, and I didn't need those subscriptions anymore, and Go Corp was but a vague memory.
    Can we stop bringing up daemons from the past, and leave Go Corp for once and for all behind us ?

    --
    Flourescent (adj): smelling like ground wheat.
  87. pwned! by Ender+Ryan · · Score: 0, Offtopic
    Hahaha! Dude, you got pwned!

    --
    Sticking feathers up your butt does not make you a chicken - Tyler Durden
  88. Government-enforced monopolies by Loundry · · Score: 2, Informative

    Many companies would desire to maintain a monopoly.

    All companies would, because all people would like to have a job in which a) they can never be fired, b) they can change the price of their sold goods/services with impunity, c) customer opinion is irrelevent, and d) the wealth you make is limited merely by your sense of pity.

    And we need the government to protect us from people like this, right? Well, guess again! The government supports people like this in many, many ways!

    Case in point: I am in the process of opening a restaurant in Georgia. (This process has earned me a fresh, new hatred for all things government as they are rackets that "skim off the top" of the efforts of people who are believed to have money, and I dare anyone to point out to me the "government services" that these looting taxes are allegedly providing me.) If you want to buy Budweiser in Georgia (for resale, that is), then you will buy it from one distributor. Every institution in Georgia that sells Budweiser to consumers has bought that beer from one distributor. Just take a guess at what his margins are.

    Oh, why can't we buy from another? Because the law forces us to buy Budweiser from one distributor. That's right, the law. The alleged arbiter of fairness and justice.

    The reason that the law can exist in this state is because I live in a state that is replete with conservative Christians who believe (or pretend) that alcohol is "sinful" and thus those who trade in it deserve to be persecuted by the state.

    --
    I don't make the rules. I just make fun of them.
    1. Re:Government-enforced monopolies by router · · Score: 1

      Hey man, that's just competition in action. If Georgia has useless laws like this (read: all alcohol laws in the south; not being able to buy keg beer in Auburn even in bars, Sunday laws, etc) then change states. You have 49 competitors to Georgia to choose from. That's why the framers were so adamant about protecting state's rights; if all states choose to forbid something then the people had spoken. If one or several states didn't forbid something, then people who wanted that "something" would gravitate to the states that allowed it. In California, we can buy hard alcohol in the grocery store (no ABC, period). Guess how much less I pay for a fifth of kickin chicken?

      andy

    2. Re:Government-enforced monopolies by Red+Rocket · · Score: 1


      I agree with you that the single distributor model is unfair. But your anti-government ranting is off base. It is, in fact, the people of the state of Georgia who have decided to distribute beer this way. Your beef is with the people of Georgia not with the institution of government. Governments allow us to do things collectively that are impossible for individuals to accomplish and unprofitable for corporations to invest in (transportation, fire and police protection, justice, etc.) These are necessary things for a functioning society. Government (ostensibly) is the process by which the people express their will for a workable society. Most government is, however, currently broken due to neglect, misplaced animosity (you do realize you oppose your own power when you oppose government, right), and corporate meddling.

      --
      - Hail to our fearless misleader! Fool speed ahead!
    3. Re:Government-enforced monopolies by Loundry · · Score: 1

      It is, in fact, the people of the state of Georgia who have decided to distribute beer this way. Your beef is with the people of Georgia not with the institution of government.

      Incorrect. Most of the people in Georgia do not even have an inkling of an idea about the liquor laws in Georgia. They span thousands of pages. The reason why they don't know that they are passed is because the laws don't affect non-business owners. It's "doesn't affect me!" syndrome again. My beef is with the legislators who passed these laws, not with "the people" who had no clue that these laws were passed. Should the government have the right to deprive me of arbitrary amounts of my property if someone else doesn't care if that happens? What about "the people" who didn't vote? Should my "beef" be with them? The perpetrator here is the legislators who passed the laws. I won't let them off easy like you will.

      Governments allow us to do things collectively that are impossible for individuals to accomplish and unprofitable for corporations to invest in (transportation, fire and police protection, justice, etc.)

      No, government doesn't allow us, government does. And what it does, it does poorly. Pick your favorite government program (Social Security, TSA, Medicare, welfare) and rate it A to F. I will grant you that government is generally very good and destroying and killing.

      Furthermore, I'm not talking about fire and roads, am I? I am talking about the unnecessary meddling of government in business. Their increased taxes on "the rich" allow them to set up new vote-buying programs. The formula is simple: take money by force from the people whose votes you don't need, and give it to the people who promise to vote for you. It's power through force rather than power through hard work and good decisions.

      Government (ostensibly) is the process by which the people express their will for a workable society.

      So what! That doesn't mean that government does a good job. People vote for whomever is giving them the money.

      Most government is, however, currently broken due to neglect, misplaced animosity (you do realize you oppose your own power when you oppose government, right), and corporate meddling.

      "Government would work if just...." Government fails because it is a monopoly (monopolies are bad, remember?) based on force. Since they don't have to compete to survive, they don't have to work hard. Sine providing government jobs is a form of welfare, growing the size of government is a way to secure political power. And since the government can legally destroy my business or me at a whim for no reason whatsoever (for example, the local cops can choose to shine their lights on every person who walks in or out of my restaurant), your claim that my opposition of government is a means of opposing my own power is not reasonable.

      I notice that you didn't have anything to say about a person whose monopoly over a product is protected by the government. Are you okay with that, or is it just that that crime is so petty compared to the horrible blasphemy of my dissing of government in general? I maintain: Leftism is a religion, and its God is the State.

      --
      I don't make the rules. I just make fun of them.
    4. Re:Government-enforced monopolies by Red+Rocket · · Score: 1


      Most of the people in Georgia do not even have an inkling of an idea about the liquor laws in Georgia. They span thousands of pages.

      That's why we elect representatives to represent our wishes and compose or wade through those thousands of pages to determine if they're in the peoples' interest. If they aren't doing their job and representing the people accurately then we're electing the wrong people to represent us. And we are electing the wrong people because corporations are using their financial power to ensure that only their people are allowed to be representatives.

      The reason why they don't know that they are passed is because the laws don't affect non-business owners.

      Yes they do. The laws cause their beer to be more expensive. That's an effect on non-business owners.

      My beef is with the legislators who passed these laws, not with "the people" who had no clue that these laws were passed.

      Now you're getting it. The legislators are doing their jobs poorly. This is how government is broken. It's not that government is bad. It's that the people representing us are corrupt. But maybe they are accurately representing us. Maybe we are a corrupt society. Maybe more people are interested in participating in corruption than in ending it.

      Should the government have the right to deprive me of arbitrary amounts of my property if someone else doesn't care if that happens?

      This is what I mean about government being broken partly due to neglect. Since the government is there to represent the peoples' wishes then it's up to us to make it work. If we neglect it then it gets wacked.

      What about "the people" who didn't vote? Should my "beef" be with them?

      Hell, yes. By not voting they allow powerful interest groups (like a certain beer distributor) to control the system. Neglect leads to corruption.

      The perpetrator here is the legislators who passed the laws. I won't let them off easy like you will.

      I just called them corrupt, didn't I? Who's letting them off easy?

      No, government doesn't allow us, government does. And what it does, it does poorly.

      Government should only do what we collectively want it to do. When it doesn't then that's the definition of corruption. The corruption is mostly our fault because we neglect and deride the system instead of taking control of it the way our founders did. It's like a big open source project. You have to participate and provide your input or things fall apart. It's called democracy. Look into it.

      And, besides, what do you propose replacing government with? Monarchy? Anarchy? Yeah, that'll be good for the economy. Get real, dude. You have to have some kind of system. Whiny complainers that just want to burn the joint down just add to the problems.

      Furthermore, I'm not talking about fire and roads, am I? I am talking about the unnecessary meddling of government in business.

      Whenever government and business mix you get corruption. Large businesses use their influence over government to disadvantage small businesses and individual citizens. Look at the example you provided, yourself. Some corporation with a lot of influence convinced (read: bought) government "representatives" to give them a monopoly over beer distribution. That disadvantaged small business (bar owners) and citizens because it drives up prices. I'm all for overturning the court ruling that granted personhood to corporations so that they don't have that kind of corrupting influence over government in the future.

      Their increased taxes on "the rich" allow them to set up new vote-buying programs. The formula is simple: take money by force from the people whose votes you don't need, and give it to the people who promise to vote for you. It's power through force rather than power through hard work and good decisions.

      But the one thing you're missing in that e

      --
      - Hail to our fearless misleader! Fool speed ahead!
  89. HP 100 LX by whoami-ky · · Score: 1

    These things ran DOS and were actually quite sturdy. I developed some very nice CLIPPER apps (a dBase descendant) for these for use in manufacturing environments. They were quite nice. The batteries really did last a week under heavy use, or two weeks under light use. I wish I still had one.

    --
    See my blog at Who's Who
  90. Lotus SmartSuite by sLaSheDagain · · Score: 1

    AmiPro was the best WYSIWYG word processor there will ever be, at least it was when Samna owned it, by the time Lotus bought it, 'updated' it to look like other Lotus apps, and crammed it into their 'office suite', it was well and truly lobotomised.

    So I agree, AmiPro as it appeared in Lotus SmartSuite was crap, but it wasn't that AmiPro started out that way, it was the morons at Lotus that turned it into crap.

    I'm sure that same was true of Word before microsoft got their grubby little hands on it.

    1. Re:Lotus SmartSuite by realnowhereman · · Score: 1

      I don't agree, it was certainly buggy, it certainly crashed. But the interface was second to none. All the formatting dialogs where in one modeless window. When you deviated from style the item got a small red dot next to it. It successfully distinguished between styles in the template, styles in the document and styles in the paragraph and made moving them about very easy. All WordPro needed was some bug fixes and it would have been perfect. At the time, MS Word was only slightly more reliable - certainly not to an acceptable level.

      WordPro should have won that battle IMHO; I felt the weakness was the awful Lotus-1-2-3 that was in SmartSuite. My goodness that was an apalling application. I think MS Office was saved by Excel, not by Word.

      On the plus side, I feel that the places where OpenOffice has deviated from Word in their interface choices are similar to the choices that WordPro made. It's all going swimmingly.

      --
      Carpe Daemon
  91. Re:Newsflash! by RetiredMidn · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Newsflash, they have made a lot of mistakes and set the tech industry back quite a ways by destroying innovation with subpar crap, but they also did a great deal to advance us.

    Sigh. The whole point here is that they destroyed innovation by wielding their influence as a major player in the industry to starve potentially competitive emerging technologies of support by threatening companies (like Intel in this case) that were otherwise inclined to support it.

    You can't "destroy innovation with subpar crap." You can certainly flood the market with crap, but that has relatively little effect on someone else's ability to create something better. Market dominance can certainly make it more difficult for someone to overtake you, but it's not impossible.

    The point many of us make is that Microsoft has, in fact, done relatively little to "advance us." (Exactly what has it done, by the way?) Instead, it has abused its relationships with other companies to obfuscate and intimidate, stifling emerging technologies until they (MSFT) can move into the space. Every time it is successful at this, it gains even more power to throw around the next time.

    Take a closer look at Go. They chose to build a new platform in part because they judged that they could create a more effective pen-based experience by starting from scratch around a new design center. Rather than tolerate an emerging new platform, Microsoft intimidated potential partners and, according to the emerging evidence, made and violated agreements with Go to take their ideas for Pen Windows. Now, years later, people will point to pen computing as one of the many things Microsoft supposedly did "to advance us."

    Microsoft created nothing here; they just bullied and destroyed.

  92. Making goods vs making money by RoboOp · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Check out Veblen's Theory of Business Enterprise. It argues that the entrepreneur is the antithesis of the engineer who wants to make cool stuff. In the desire to make as much money as possible, they end up interfering with progress rather than accelerating it.

    Veblen's businessperson makes profits not by providing an outlet for the forces of industrialization and social evolution but by distorting them: by engaging in monetary manipulations, by restricting output to keep prices artificially high, and by interfering with the engineers who actually produce goods and services.
    American Philosophy

    Microsoft is a classic example of this. One would be pressed to think of a single innovation from Redmond.

    --
    "First you get the Linux, then you get the power, THEN you get the women"
  93. The content wouldn't have been on webservers.. by AzrealAO · · Score: 1

    if there weren't people looking for it. It would have remained the realm of academia, research papers in shitty fonts on plain gray backgrounds. Content appearing on the web went hand in hand with people on the web looking for content. What kind of mental deficient puts up a billboard (or builds a library) on a country trail in the middle of nowhere where 6 cars a day pass by?

    1. Re:The content wouldn't have been on webservers.. by _Sprocket_ · · Score: 1

      A good point. However, you're missing something. At that point in time, you didn't need Windows to view a web page. You could use almost anything that managed a 'net connection and run a browser. There's nothing magic about Win95 there (with the exception that it was used to drive cheap(er) hardware).

      As for moving away from plain gray backgrounds - credit Netscape for that.

    2. Re:The content wouldn't have been on webservers.. by JordanH · · Score: 1
      Which came first? The WWW content or the people looking for it?

      You weren't really using the web in '96, were you? There was a lot of good content in those days. Not like today, sure, but people were obviously attracted to it. All the best libraries were and still are academic.

      Microsoft had almost nothing to do with AOL, Compuserve, or local ISPs, that provided the highways. The use of Windows 3.1 with Winsock stacks was exploding before Windows95 came out. The browser experience in this environment was pretty much the same as the browser experience you had using Windows95, especially in the early days of Windows95. Windows95 sold so well because of the Internet, not the other way around.

  94. Re:Andy Grove intimidation? by LilMikey · · Score: 3, Informative

    Didn't we just set a bunch of foreign nationals free because they were wrongly imprisoned? I think they also had some young children imprisoned. This report indicates 88 of the 100 people transfered out of Getmo were released to be freed (the other 12 remaining in detention in their home nations).

    It would be one thing if these were prisoners of war being held until the war ended, as per the Geneva Convention, but this is an ongoing 'war against terror' (except Iraq, the terrorists followed us there) basically giving Bush the ability to hold these people indefinitely. Besides 'Mission Accomplished' has already been declared in Iraq and there are plenty of Iraqis in the camps.

    Now, it would be one thing if there was any accuracy at all in the determination that the detained people are terrorists or terrorist supporting individuals. And noone is asking to 'open the floodgates' and let em all run free and noone would be complaining if all of these people were dangerous. But we've already seen plenty of cases where people were improperly detained and without any representation at all bad things happen to good people... 88 of them so far and counting.

    --
    LilMikey.com... I'll stop doing it when you sto
  95. PARENT IS TROLL. DO NOT CLICK LINKS by rokzy · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    mithuro, what's dat all about? is it good, or is it whack?

    it's WHACK!

  96. In other news.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Fire call at Minnesota court house today.

    Court system administrator Melvin Plunk stated, "I was just walking through the computer room at 5 in the morning, and the IIS server just burst into flames. I think it was those Al-Slashdot terrorists."

    The blaze had almost extinguished itself, by the time the local fire companies had responded. Experts attribute this to the posting of a Natilie Portman article on Slashdot at that time.

  97. OT: Greek empire? by Brown · · Score: 1

    The Greek Empire started deteriorating when the gods became fallible and human, and the people had nothing to aspire toward.

    I'm curious as to this Greek Empire of which you speak - the only Greek Empire I can think of was that forged by Alexander, and that fragmented due chiefly (and shortly after) to the death of Alexander himself, lasting barely a decade or two as an empire. Do you mean the Byzantine Empire - which was of course Roman in origin, rather than Greek?

    -Chris

  98. Legal definition of monopoly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    1. Having the power to fix prices.

    2. Having the power to exclude competition.

    For once, the legal definition is better than the ones you find in the dictionary. It focuses right on the essance of what a monopoly is. Market share doesn't define a monopoly, but being able to exclude competition or fix prices does. That's the control that matters, that's the kind of dominance that's at issue.

    A company can have 100% of the market, but if they can't fix prices or exclude competition, then they don't have a monopoly. If they can fix prices or exclude competition then they have a monopoly even if they don't have anywhere near 100% market share.

  99. Clear Channel by rf600r · · Score: 1, Troll

    Clear Channel has been doing this kind of crap and worse to their competition for years. Oddly enough, nobody ever seems to go after them. Think radio sucks nowadays? It does, and you can blame it on the ugly monopoly that has gone pretty much unchecked in that industry.

  100. Re:Andy Grove intimidation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    I'm assuming the exclusive look at the Guantanamo Bay facilities on NBC was actually done on a sound stage, complete with middle-eastern actors, and convincing-lookng military personnel.

    They used the same sound stage that they used for the moon landing footage. Coincidence? Only if you don't wear a tin foil hat.

  101. Yep by CaptainZapp · · Score: 1
    After learning how to program mainframes in the late 80's I was thankfully transferred to a departement which used VAX/VMS. The first VAX I worked on was an 8700 (the 8800 with two processors (!) was the most powerful VAX at that time).

    It served 80 concurrent users quiet nicely and probably had the processing power, which would put a Gameboy to shame nowadays.

    No snazzy videos, no doom and no music playback, though, but a development environment, which was a true pleasure to work with.

    --
    ich bin der musikant

    mit taschenrechner in der hand

    kraftwerk

  102. Re:Andy Grove intimidation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    MCSE camps are hard! They won't give you a "diploma" until you can colour completely inside the lines.

  103. hehe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    that's really interesting; how did people know you were a troll? they must have followed the link expecting goatse.cx stuff

    GrimRC

  104. & now we're all suspected terrorists by obtuse · · Score: 1

    And if that/NYT Al-Quaeda partner link gets as much traffic as I expect, everyone who reads Slashdot will be on a Department of Justice suspected terrorist list.

    Notify your family that you will soon be arrested and held incommunicado for a few months or years.

    --
    Assembly is the reverse of disassembly.
    1. Re:& now we're all suspected terrorists by andalay · · Score: 1

      That stuff is not even funny. I'm a Canadian that visited the states b4 9/11 and that happened to me. I will never go back to the states.

    2. Re:& now we're all suspected terrorists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sure it is. Like everything else, it's freakin' halarious until it happens to me. That's why the phrase "Sucks to be you" was invented.

      By the way, if you're pissed that a foreign country's customs and immigration officials had the gall to assert their sovereignty by delaying you and asking you a few questions, DON'T TRAVEL. Just stay in Moncton and forget about the rest of the world.

    3. Re:& now we're all suspected terrorists by Phragmen-Lindelof · · Score: 1

      I have visited U. Waterloo (and other places) over the years and the Canadian "custom" officials can be much worse than those in the US. I had to pay about $40 (and fill out a bunch of forms) one time (1995 or 97) at the border because U. Waterloo was going cover my expenses (and I said the wrong thing). Canadian friends make fun of Canadian customs. (To a Canadian citizen - "Sir, please tell me how many liters of petrol you had in your tank when you entered the US and how many you have now.")

      I will agree that getting a US visa is now a royal pain and can take a long time. I also wonder why they (or their machines) want to smell my shoes or socks (e.g. Dec. 2003). (BTW: Why is security tighter at smaller places - e.g. College Station, Phoenix, Portland, Toledo, Wichita - than at larger places - e.g. Chicago, Dallas, DC (National), Frankfort, London (Heathrow), Milan, Rome ?)

    4. Re:& now we're all suspected terrorists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      By the way, if you're pissed that a foreign country's customs and immigration officials had the gall to assert their sovereignty by delaying you and asking you a few questions, DON'T TRAVEL. Just stay in Moncton and forget about the rest of the world.
      I think he was saying that something like this happened to him:
      "Notify your family that you will soon be arrested and held incommunicado for a few months or years."

      If that happened to me anywhere, I wouldn't be visiting that place anytime soon.
    5. Re:& now we're all suspected terrorists by andalay · · Score: 2, Informative

      Ok you totally missed my point.

      I got detained incommunicado. The reason: Three white guys (two of whom I'd never seen) claimed I threatened one of them (I had only seen one briefly about getting luggaage which had disappeared prematurely, and the conversation was not threatening).

      Once the cops arrested me, they lied to me about what was going on. They told me I wouldnt be able to get out for weeks. They wouldnt let me call anyone let alone make any type of bail. They never even charged me with anything.

      I caught them trying to steal my money (~400 cdn), burn my watch (newly gifted by my gf). Luckily, I am a calm guy. Other people would have cracked. They were trying to tell me I set a B-O-M-B in the airport. What the hell is that?

      All of this, while leaving my girlfriend stranded in a foreign country, in a foreign airport, late
      at night.

      Luckily, she met a sane american (maybe the only one?) who came and yelled at the cops for being such f*ckups.

      So no, I'm not coming back. Thanks.

    6. Re:& now we're all suspected terrorists by Phragmen-Lindelof · · Score: 1

      You claimed this happened before 9/11 (so I guess I cannot blame "W"). When did it happen? How long were you held? Why does it matter that "Three white guys" made false claims? (Would it matter if they were green?)

      Some of your story does not sound believable (which may only reflect your style of writing and not the facts of the case). For example, if you are in one room and your money, etc. are in another room, then how do you catch "them trying to steal my money (~400 cdn), burn my watch (newly gifted by my gf)"?
      If your story is true, then you were treated badly and I am sorry this happened. Since every single word written on Slashdot is true, I offer my appology for your treatment.)

    7. Re:& now we're all suspected terrorists by andalay · · Score: 1

      It happened early september 2000, the night before my first day of university!

      Why white vs green makes a difference:

      a) Because the police chief asked where I was born (not my citizenship) before having me brought in. Why did this matter?
      b) Because the people accusing me *were* white and their word (which was a complete blatant lie) was taken as gospel over mine (and my gf's).

      If I had been white, you can bet your mom's early retirement that this never would have happened.

      Stealing the money: it was at the point where they were doing an inventory of what I had when I arrested me, the cop doing the inventory "accidentally dropped" the money (all in 50's and 20's). When I insisted that I had more and I repeatedly enumerated how much of each denomination I had and the total value, he eventually gave up and said "Oh look, it fell down".

      Burning the watch: The station was a small one and I was in a holding cell. I could see everything they were doing. I saw one of the cops put a lighter to my watch, I started banging on the cell doors and yelling at them. Then they stopped.

      I'm glad you asked. While I wish I was kidding, I hope this opens your eyes to the kind of stuff that goes on in your country. As a teenager, I got into a lot of shit in Canada but never once did I get this kind of treatment.

    8. Re:& now we're all suspected terrorists by hysma · · Score: 1

      Reminds me of the time I was staying in Boston for a conference... I wanted a drink but didn't want to pay double price for one from the hotel, so at about midnight or so I wondered outside to find a nearby gas station (turns it there was one maybe a half a kilometre away). Anyway on the way back a cop flipped his lights on and drilled me on why I was outside at that hour, wanted to know where I was heading, and when I said the hotel he started demanding why I had left -- all in a rather interrogative tone.

      Experiences like that and stores like yours are many reasons why I will never choose the US as destination. On infrequent instances I will travel there for business, but never just for the fun of it.

    9. Re:& now we're all suspected terrorists by andalay · · Score: 1

      There is no doubt in my mind that this happens all the time. I have been to the states 3 times for visits, the last time was when the stuff happened.

      If that goes on in a "civilized" country, imagine what is happening to those poor iraqis right now. I just think it's sad. Then they wonder why people dont like us.gov

    10. Re:& now we're all suspected terrorists by Phragmen-Lindelof · · Score: 1

      In 1993, I received a ticket for going too slow in Oregon. (The Oregon car in front of me did not get a ticket, but I did.) Since I was on my way to Stanford, I just mailed in the cost of the ticket with objections (and they reduced the fine by half and refunded it to me). Bad things happen. They happen in the US. They also happen in Canada, the UK, Germany, Italy, etc. They even happen in third world countries. Life sucks. Get used to it. (Or try arguing if a utility in Ireland screws up your bill.)

    11. Re:& now we're all suspected terrorists by andalay · · Score: 1

      "Trapped" by Tupac: ...
      They got me trapped, can barely walk the city streets
      Without a cop harassing me,
      Searchin' me, then asking my identity
      Hands Up throw me up against the wall
      Didn't do a thing at all
      Tellin' you one day these sucka's gotta fall
      Cuffed up, throw me on the concrete ...

      Nothings changed.

    12. Re:& now we're all suspected terrorists by Phragmen-Lindelof · · Score: 1

      I am just curious; what university do (or did) you attend?

      There is certainly tension between French and English speakers in Canada. In Alberta and BC, the Meech Lake (sp?) accords were very unpopular (in '93 ?). There is some bad feeling between the east and west and between various groups in Canada; French and English are (were) required on (some) signs in the west while only French was allowed on signs in the east. "Native Canadians" ( ... peoples ??) are very unhappy with the government there right now. (Also true in the US.)

    13. Re:& now we're all suspected terrorists by andalay · · Score: 1

      University of Toronto. last year of Comp Sci. 3.57/4 - if you're THAT curious :)

      The "tension" between french and english is not a violent tension (as far as I, or the people I know have experienced). It is mostly a case of wanting to keep their own culture which is fine by me (and most other canadians).

      Bad feelings between east and west is too vague for me to comment on.

      I am also saddened by the treatment of the native canadians. IANANC so I cannot speak for their experience, but I have heard not-so-good things in the past. Speaking as an outsider, I would not be able to comment on areas such as nunavut and whether or not the native canadians like the agreement there. But I think/hope things are getting better.

      us.gov is getting progressively worse. There was an episode on the fifth estate on the CBC about the "conspiracy theories" surrounding 9/11. I suggest you take a look at it.

  105. pawned or powned? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    big debate

    GrimRC

  106. Re:MOD SPAMMING PARENT DOWN! by cubic6 · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    If you wanna mess with him, copy his links and put them in each of your posts, but change them so they all point to "Troll". That should help his ratings...

    --
    Karma: Contrapositive
  107. The big fakers by Udo+Schmitz · · Score: 4, Interesting
    From Article:

    Two years later, Marlin Eller, a former Microsoft programmer who was part of the PenWindows project, wrote in "Barbarians Led by Bill Gates" (Owl Books) that the intent of the PenWindows project had been primarily to undermine Go.

    In the same book he describes how they put together a presentation for their PenWindows for a computer fair (Comdex?) to show that they could do the same stuff as Go. When in fact they had absolutely nothing. It was all smoke and mirrors.

    I always remember that story when watching another cool Longhorn presentation. And I wish others would too, especially journalists ...

  108. UID by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    His joke was funny, your reply was not, Mr. 700,000+ UID fuckstick.

    At least he has a UIC, AC.

  109. Except for the fact ... by AzrealAO · · Score: 1

    that Win95 OSR2 put a web browser into the hands of the masses with every computer they bought. It drove the demand for content.

    1. Re:Except for the fact ... by JordanH · · Score: 1
      But, why did MS put a web browser into Win95 OSR2? Because there was already so much great content that people were going around MS to get.

      You still had to get an ISP to connect to the Internet and every ISP provided a browser before this was available.

      It wasn't all just crappy academic papers in bad fonts either. A lot of creative and interesting people were churning out content at Universities before the AOL crowd discovered the Internet. In fact, the average quality of content went down dramatically after the masses invaded the Internet.

    2. Re:Except for the fact ... by _Sprocket_ · · Score: 1


      Win95 OSR2 put a web browser into the hands of the masses with every computer they bought. It drove the demand for content.


      Win95 OSR2 was late in the game. By then, Internet adoption had already began its infamous surge. Major media outlets already had a web presence. AOL had embraced the Internet (to an extent)and began the process of being quasi-ISP and indistinguishable from the "real Internet" to neophyte users.

      Win95 OSR2 was a part of Microsoft's amazing recovery from a potentially fatal dismissal of the Internet in general. They were tapping in to a movement. People would be getting web content from Netscape or AOL if not IE.

      Of course, we're ignoring the real driver for Internet adoption: email.
    3. Re:Except for the fact ... by bns_robson · · Score: 1

      But, why did MS put a web browser into Win95 OSR2? Because there was already so much great content that people were going around MS to get.

      In 1994, when the world cup was played in the USA the Web was already in such widespread use that EDS, Sprint and Sun Microsystems produced a web-site for it.

  110. MOD PARENT UP by wurp · · Score: 1

    I wish I still had points to give ya.

  111. C'mon, Get real by worldcitizen · · Score: 2, Informative

    Companies compete aggresively to squish their competitors, anybody surprised? (not me)

    Monopoly control laws try to prevent abuse when a company is too large. Before that, aggressive competition is more or less regular business.

    1990 is the time of DOS 4 and the launching of Windows 3.0. There was a considerable variety of machines and operating systems (Macs, Amigas, DR-DOS, IBM's "home-remade" PC-DOS4, Coherent, etc). Microsoft was large but I honestly don't think that they were a monopoly back then.

    1. Re:C'mon, Get real by Tore+S+B · · Score: 1

      BS - Dos 4 had 99.9% market share on clones back then.

      --
      toresbe
    2. Re:C'mon, Get real by Red+Rocket · · Score: 1


      Microsoft was large but I honestly don't think that they were a monopoly back then.

      Microsoft had a monopoly on PC operating systems from day one. IBM PCs shipped with DOS. That was Bill's master stroke. Once PCs shipped with DOS then clones had to run DOS or they wouldn't be "IBM PC compatible" and couldn't run the application software written for IBM PCs. MS rode the PC platform to power. Never did it use innovation or product quality to succeed.

      --
      - Hail to our fearless misleader! Fool speed ahead!
  112. Oops - How embarrassing! by PetoskeyGuy · · Score: 1

    Shouldn't that be incriminating? It isn't like forgetting someones name or something. This is serious and shouldn't be taken so lightly.

  113. Virgins by Sophrosyne · · Score: 1

    After reading this debate all I have to say is: prepare to live the rest of your lives as virgins.

    1. Re:Virgins by danheskett · · Score: 1

      FYI, I am getting married in less than a month.

      There goes yet another sterotype.

    2. Re:Virgins by dr.newton · · Score: 1

      maybe not - you had to get married to lose your virginity.

      --
      Just another proletarian malcontent.
  114. Who's on First? by Tablizer · · Score: 2, Funny

    and Microsoft's illegal tactics against the Go Corporation

    Bill: Go stop Go

    Lackie: What?

    Bill: Stop the Go company

    Lackie: Oh, go and stop a company, but which one?

    Bill: THE Go company

    Lackie: Oh! Go!

    Bill: Yeah, now go!

    Lackie: You mean they renamed it from something else?

    Bill: No, I mean you. You go.

    Lackie: Okay, I'll go and stop Go

    Bill: Stop it!

    Lackie: Yeah, stop Go.

    Bill: No, I mean stop repeating me.

    Lackie: Maybe I should go.

    Bill: Okay, but don't forget to stop Go.

    Lackie: Got it! I will stop It.

    Bill: It's Go, not it.

    Lackie: Me or the company?

    Bill: Nevermind, I'll do it myself, now GET THE HELL OUT!

  115. This is business by Melantha_Bacchae · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Yes, this is business. Not to be confused with highway robbery.

    Business: Microsoft was supposed to build their own competing product, follow all legal and ethical guidelines, and fairly compete with Go. Hopefully if they both have good business plans and a good product, they both make a profit. The good natured rivalry between the two causes each to put for their best effort to make their product better. Their customers have a choice of who to give their money to, and high quality products from which to choose from. Everyone benefits.

    Highway-robbery: Microsoft violated a non-disclosure agreement (a contract). They took Go's technology and used it to compete with Go. They used their monopoly and bullying tactics to try to frighten investors away from Go. Regardless of the fate of the Newton, this was breach of contract, and potentially a violation of antitrust laws (IANAL). In short, Microsoft's actions were unethical, and possibly illegal.

    Btw, Apple canceled the Newton in order to streamline their product line so they could concentrate on OS X (and staying afloat). The Newton still has users today.

    "At this moment, it has control of systems all over the world.
    And...we can't do a damn thing to stop it."
    Miyasaka, "Godzilla 2000 Millennium" (Japanese version)

    1. Re:This is business by prshaw · · Score: 1

      >> They used their monopoly and bullying tactics to try to frighten investors away from Go.

      This was in 1993.

      Were they a monopoly then? When did they become a monopoly? I find it hard to think that Windows 3.x was a monopoly.

    2. Re:This is business by Bun · · Score: 2, Informative

      Apple had 20% market share then. I can't think of any other operating systems available for x86. I'd say Microsoft in those days was as close to a monopoly as anyone would like to see.

      --
      "Anyone that has ever gotten an idea based on any of my work and done something better with it-good for you."--J.Carmack
    3. Re:This is business by sisco · · Score: 1

      This is starting to sound like a risk game wherein you allow it within the rules to create treaties (contracts) and then when it's right at that good moment, one of the players breaks all his treaties and takes everyone elses land (business).

      That isn't cool. Not even one little bit.

      --
      DATA comments; PROC SORT DATA = comments BY score; PROC DELETE comments >> 1; RUN; DATA entertainment SET commen
    4. Re:This is business by zsz2k · · Score: 1

      The seemed to certainly have enough clout: -- quote from the article -- "I guess I've made it very clear that we view an Intel investment in Go as an anti-Microsoft move, both because Go competes with our systems software and because we think it will weaken the 386 PC standard," Mr. Gates wrote. Shortly after the letter was written, according to Mr. Kaplan, Intel reduced its planned investment in Go from $10 million to $2 million, and stipulated the investment be kept a secret. -- end quote --

    5. Re:This is business by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Remember, back then IBM and the old-school Unices and other non-x86 PC manufacturers were still in the game.

      MS didn't thrash everyone else until late 1995.

      For instance, in 1997, MS had a 20% share of the browser market. Netscape had an unshakable monopoly, right?

    6. Re:This is business by Minna+Kirai · · Score: 2, Informative

      Apple had 20% market share then.

      No. In 1993 Microsoft had 88%, Apple had 10%, Commodore had 1% and others split the rest.

      I can't think of any other operating systems available for x86.

      There were a few, including GEM and DR-DOS (which competed independently against Windows3.x and MS-DOS). Ironically, if Novell had given away DR-DOS for free in 1992, instead of continuing to charge for it (but making no profit), they could've killed the MS monopoly.

    7. Re:This is business by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Did Novell own DR-DOS in 1992?

      I didn't think they had anything to do with it back then. Hint... What did the DR stand for?

    8. Re:This is business by Richardsonke1 · · Score: 1

      Yes, it was sold in 1991 to Novell: source

      --
      "Men lie."
      "Yeah, about sleeping with other women, but never about bioluminescent plankton."
      -Dan Brown
    9. Re:This is business by drsmithy · · Score: 1
      Apple had 20% market share then. I can't think of any other operating systems available for x86.

      Uh, hello ? DR-DOS, GEM, OS/2 - ever heard of them ?

    10. Re:This is business by Angry+Pixie · · Score: 1

      Let's not forget IBM's PC-DOS and OS/2. Was Atari running GEM? I only remember a roommate having a desktop that looked like a console. :)

      I don't think that DR-DOS would have had any effect on the MS monopoly. I remember the lawsuits involving Microsoft adding code to Windows that would screw with DR-DOS users. If IBM had distributed PC-DOS on non-IBM computers, it probably wouldn't have helped much either. When people thought DOS, they meant MS-DOS. I had PC-DOS so I dealt with the burden of not having EDIT.COM available for my friends to use. I actually had a superior editor, the name of which escapes me now.

      MS-DOS had a slew of undocumented features plus QBASIC. Yeah, it's not C/C++, but If you had the compiler version or even the interpreter version, you could really extend your system. I've never liked DR-DOS. PC-DOS had REXX, which I never used. But why would I? I had already copied QBASIC and had friend who could write some pretty advanced batch scripts.

      I never cared for DR-DOS. I thought memory management under MS-DOS and PC-DOS was much better. Then again, I've always hated Novell. Those guys just really piss me off just like those Hello Kitty people do.

    11. Re:This is business by Bun · · Score: 1

      " Let's not forget IBM's PC-DOS and OS/2. Was Atari running GEM? I only remember a roommate having a desktop that looked like a console. :)"

      Yes, Atari ran GEM, and it was on a MC 68000, not an x86 CPU.

      --
      "Anyone that has ever gotten an idea based on any of my work and done something better with it-good for you."--J.Carmack
    12. Re:This is business by Bun · · Score: 1

      "No. In 1993 Microsoft had 88%, Apple had 10%, Commodore had 1% and others split the rest."

      Well, that just helps my point, really.

      I can't think of any other operating systems available for x86.

      "There were a few, including GEM and DR-DOS (which competed independently against Windows3.x and MS-DOS). Ironically, if Novell had given away DR-DOS for free in 1992, instead of continuing to charge for it (but making no profit), they could've killed the MS monopoly."

      AFAICR, GEM only had a foothold on the Atari computers. I never once saw GEM running on a PC. The Unix workstations had market share in corporations, but they were hardly in the consumer/small business space.

      Win 3.1/.11 ran on top of MS/PC/DR DOS. And almost everyone who had a PC was running Win 3.1/.11. Even though it wasn't considered an OS, it went a long way to solidifying the MS monopoly. When Win95 came out, it was like an atom bomb on the competition. The war was over. All that was left was to mop up and occupy the territory.

      --
      "Anyone that has ever gotten an idea based on any of my work and done something better with it-good for you."--J.Carmack
  116. Microsoft is being treated unfairly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Regardless of some execs in microsoft and their motives or what they think their motives are, MS has done alot for this industry and will continue to catapult this industry forward. I run W2k, WXP, W98 and 2 Solaris boxes at home and I normally will only ever use XP. Its is crafted for usuability and expedites my tasks.

    I always equate it this way... Just as the standardization of screws and bolts led to great strides in automobiles and the entire industrial industry, Microsoft's .Net and other technologies will do the same for the computing industry.

    Splitting our top talent in this country into two camps that support either unix or microsoft leads to a competitive environment but alot of redundant code. (And a lot of, Hey lets port this, and this and this... Which is ultimately busy work)

    1. Re:Microsoft is being treated unfairly by PitaBred · · Score: 1

      The thing is, anyone can make a screw to a standard. They know what the standard is. MS is the only one that knows what the standards they create actually are, which makes them a monopoly, which in turn lessens their ability to 'innovate'
      Of course, this is a troll. Had it been a real post, the AC's head should have imploded by now because of the vacuum between their ears.

  117. This is why I love living here. by xgamer04 · · Score: 1

    Most Minnesotans (the ones who think for themselves, anyway) pretty much think like this. If Bill wants to argue, I'll slap him with a rather large muskie/walleye/northern.

    --
    When you look at the state of the world, how can you not become a radical, liberal anarchist?
    1. Re:This is why I love living here. by chickenrob · · Score: 1

      This is going down in the hennepin county court, where I live too. I had the week off work, I should have gone down there to check it out for a day... I could have brought a linux pda to take notes...

      --
      People say my sig is the best thing about me.
  118. Did Microsoft kill the Amiga? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Strange. I would think that given your userid -- Amiga Lover -- you would want to know everything about Microsoft's criminal activities, past and present.

    Has it never occurred to you how much of a threat the Amiga was to Microsoft?

    Have you not thought that when Microsoft made deals to block DR-DOS and OS/2 out of the retail channels, Microsoft may have done the same to the Amiga, thus causing a sudden reduction in Commodore's revenue, and contributing to its bankruptcy?

    I think it's important to remind people that Microsoft is a criminal, and that it will be extremely harmful if a criminal like Microsoft is allowed to control Internet and multimedia protocols.

  119. Tax based remedy by Pivot · · Score: 0

    I suggest the following remedy for *any* company holding a monopoly in a market segment.

    Take its market share in the market segment and subtract 50%. The number you get is the additional taxation imposed on the earnings of the company.

    I the case of microsoft having, say 90% market share in the pc operating system market, this would impose them a hefty 40% extra taxation on their earnings.

    1. Re:Tax based remedy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I suggest the following remedy for *any* company holding a monopoly in a market segment.

      Take its market share in the market segment and subtract 50%. The number you get is the additional taxation imposed on the earnings of the company.

      I the case of microsoft having, say 90% market share in the pc operating system market, this would impose them a hefty 40% extra taxation on their earnings.


      Yes, it's time for the blood sucking lawyers, the state legislature and our dear governor to find a new cash cow to pull the state out of its budget deficit. After blowing all the windfall from the tobacco settlement and cutting the health benefits it was supposed to provide, it's time for Count Taxula to find another victim.

  120. I'll be blunt, but you're full of shit by melted · · Score: 1

    I've yet to see my Windows XP box crash ONCE or catch any virus, or cause me any other headache. Yes, Win 9x and SE were crap, but let's give the credit where it's due - W2K and WXP are solid, robust products that just let me do my job and don't get in the way much.

    1. Re:I'll be blunt, but you're full of shit by ztom · · Score: 1

      I'm most happy for you!

      I'm most happpy for myself too. I havent had active virus in my machines since '95.

      then again I installed clean XP for a family i know. two teenage girls started to use it and I promised to educate them about internet and viruses next day.. I was late for about half hours. They managed to download some emails with screensavers named "pammypussyfuck.scr" and later explained, that they came from a friendly email and well, we wanted to see what it was! "luckily" antivirus updates for this particular worm were ready in server and automatic download would have updated them NEXT DAY

      so you see, we can't be happy for everyone else.

      my point is still: if you know how, you can keep XP healthy and happy, but you have to know very little to break it. people just do it. it's so easy. after that it's just the legacy of previous crashing windowses, that KEEPS it broken.

    2. Re:I'll be blunt, but you're full of shit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My gripe with most "user-friendly" software - not limited to, but surely including, Microsoft software - is ineficciency. Everywhere legions of developers write programs while believing that resources are unlimited or inexpensive. I never used Windows XP, but I was surprised with its hardware requeriments. Same with Gnome and KDE.

      IMHO software could and should be a lot more unbloated, faster and simpler.

  121. The set back pen computing for a decade... by gmezero · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Look I was all impressed with Microsoft's XP Tablet Edition when it came out recently until I one day came across the IBM ThinkPad 360P, 360PE and 750P laptops.

    Holy shit these were 486SX and 468DX touchscreen systems where the screen flipped over on top of the keyboard making the laptop a thick tablet computer.

    Running OS/2 Warp 4 with full pen functionality enabled, these systems are absolutely amazing. I never use the keyboard, even from a DOS window as the handwriting recognition is pretty darn good all across the OS (even with Win-OS/2 aps, etc...). ...the systems even seem to have support for pressure sensitivity but apparently that was never added into the full driver support because sometime around when Microsoft "decided" that pen computing was dead, everyone inlcluding IBM quit developing the format. It just makes me see red to think that this technology had to sit and stagnate for 10 years until Microsoft got off their ass and decided that *THEY* should be working on it again... and they shut down everyone else in the meantime. Man, I am so sick of this crap.

  122. Was moderating, but had to set all back to Normal. by BigBlockMopar · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Why did I stop moderating? Why did I do that?

    Because I *simply* had to respond to this.

    If I had to bet on it, I would wager that 90% of the devoted Microsoft bashers that infest Slashdot are either devout liberals or aspiring socialists.

    Not this particular M$ basher.

    Actually, I'm mostly a Libertarian. I am a fiscal conservative but a social liberal. I wish to see as little government meddling in free enterprise as possible, because it almost always backfires. As an example, I'm quite convinced that the government Corporate Average Fuel Economy regulations which killed the full-size station wagon are, in fact, the very reason why we now have full-size station wagons built on even thirstier (CAFE-exempt) 4x4 pickup truck chassis choking our streets.

    But I make an exception for Microsoft. Without government intervention, there'd be nothing to stop monopolistic behaviors. Linux is an aberration unique to computers: if one car company had more than 97% of the market and was abusing its monopoly, there wouldn't be open-source cars because the product is not intangible and easily duplicated. Normally, the free market will work things out on its own. But Microsoft lucked its way into a position of power initially, and has ruthlessly used that power to squash anything which could become a threat.

    Micrsoft, it seems, has become a symbol for "corporate greed", "bullying", etc, etc and bashing it serves as a substitute for bashing capitalism - the real target of their enmity.

    Microsoft is a symbol for corporate greed and bullying. If they're not, I can't imagine what they'd have to do to get that name. Maybe Bill and Paul would be abducting competitors' children in a non-descript white van.

    As for capitalism, yeah, it sucks. Some people starve while others get rich. But it's also a lot better than anything else anyone has come up with. I do hate capitalism. But I hate socialism and communism even more.

    Indeed, bashing capitalism is considerably less "fashionable" than bashing MS (or Wal-Mart, or any other large and successful company), so why not use MS as a proxy?

    I love Wal*Mart. Usually, after I've been shopping there, I compare prices with their competition (key point, that) and determine that I've saved a couple of bucks with each shopping trip. Case in point: was going to buy a small level, checked out Home Depot. Found a level that I liked for $19.95, which seemed a little steep. Went to Wal*Mart, found exactly the same make and model of level for $4.99. I do not begrudge Wal*Mart their success, because unlike Microsoft, it seems they've actually done something to achieve it. The very first thing Wal*Mart has done is somehow create a discount department store that I'm not embarrassed to go into. The next thing is almost always having what you want in stock, and usually at the same price or a little better than the competition.

    So, all you MS bashers out there, why not just admit that you are, at the very least, liberal Democrats and voting for Bush would be as inimical to your creed as using Windows?

    A vote for Bush is evil, pure and simple.

    • He appealed to me because he was allegedly a fiscal conservative. But even through the bad times of the past few years, he's proven that he's not.
    • His social platform was repellent, even from day one. After all, if I wanted to live in a religious state, I'd move to Iran.

    Al Gore was no better. His liberal fiscal policies would have punished me for my financial success rather than enticing me to expand my business and hire more employees. His pro-union stance drives up the cost of labor artificially to a point where a person who makes brake pistons all day gets $25/hr while a McDonalds employee whose job requires far more intelligence and skill gets minimum wage. But, on the other hand, at least Gore was intelligent and secure enough with his masculinity to know that gay people aren't going to hurt him.

    Furthermore, why not just say that capitali

    --
    Fire and Meat. Yummy.
  123. Re:If only GO Penpoint software was open-sourced.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, I don't think it would've been as big as Linux. Mainly because 14 years ago, barely anyone had net access.

  124. Re:$50 billion..... by mdfst13 · · Score: 1

    Remember when people asked Microsoft why they had $50 billion of cash reserves? One of the reasons that they gave was to pay off lawsuits. They aren't afraid of paying off lawsuits. They have already budgeted for it. They are afraid of being forced to change their business practices as a result and of losing their effective monopoly on desktop computing.

    Microsoft doesn't care about the money that much. Even if they paid both fines (EU and Minnesota) in the same quarter, it would only take them from ridiculously profitable to break even point *for that quarter* (even if the Minnesota fine is the full $1.5 billion). Their big worry is that they might lose the ability to make $2 billion profits in a quarter. In that respect, the EU case is far more dangerous than the Minnesota case. The EU case involves actual changes in business practices (Media Player bundling and secret APIs). The Minnesota case is just money. They'll probably just have to pay in software vouchers again anyway.

  125. Re:good morning slashdot!! by mdfst13 · · Score: 1

    "we certainly don't need to see MIcrosoft need to lay off anybody"

    Yes, India would be devastated. Seeing as how that's where Microsoft is moving its (always outsourced) development now.

    If a competitive market developed, this would increase jobs. With Microsoft, they only work on one system. What if there were two competitive systems? Twice as many jobs. Maybe more, as Microsoft would have to try to innovate rather than obstruct.

    Jobs don't necessarily disappear when companies do. Some friends and I were kicking around the idea of starting a windmill farm, so I did some product research. One of the main products was from GE Wind, which used to be ... Enron Wind. Same people; same jobs; new name.

    If the market really exists, they will continue to build products, which requires employees. If it does not exist, better to know now than later. Get those people moved out of the tech sector and into a more appropriate employment.

  126. DR-DOS blitzed MS-DOS across the board by leonbrooks · · Score: 1
    In the era of DRDOS, I was using an Apple IIe, but I suspect its failure had more to do with it not offering any clear advantage over MSDOS.

    Where do I start?

    DR-DOS did a lot of things right that MS-DOS didn't. All of their command options were consistent in a way that MS-DOS only dreamed about. The help messages were actually informative.

    The diskcopy program could use a file as a source or target. Single-disk copies actually used all available memory instead of a fixed chunk and force the user to swap. All of the command-line utilties could draw on all of available memory (not just the first 640kB) at will. FIND was actually useful (not by any stretch of the imagination a grep clone, but still way more useful than MS-DOS's FIND). You could do useful things with disk labels. XCOPY (remember that?) had twice as many options. The batch language, while still .BAT compatible, was streets ahead. The multi-user (TaskMax) and printing stuff worked more smoothly and reliably. If you installed Windows 3.11 under MS-DOS then overwrote it with DR-DOS everything sped up and it crashed less often. Most of the command would recurse. A real disk cache. A CURSOR program to do cursesy things from batches. Twice the debugger (SID). Undelete (DELWATCH). A better editor (certainly crapped all over EDLIN, anyway). A laplinky thingy (FILELINK). Semi-serious disk fiddling (mirroring etc): DISKMAP. A directory renamer. A SORT that was actually useful. A clever extended deleter (much more useful than DELTREE) called XDEL. And so on...

    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
  127. mods: Troll? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just curious why.

  128. Bullshit by geekoid · · Score: 1

    Crappy software is the reason for this, not bad users.

    If a computer gives the user a way to destroy there computer, or get virus, through an easy, friendly means that looks like it's what your suppoe to do, it is the softwares fault, not the user.

    If you put a button on a blender that started flashing and said 'push me' and when someone did, it exploded into a thousand pieces, it is NOT the users fault, it is the products fault.

    I am convinced that if there where real competition in the GUI level, we could all open any attachment without worry, because they would open in there own sandbox, and be unable to effect any other program or file on the system.

    People want the convience of opening an attachment without jumping through hoops, and they should be able to do so. Microsoft gave them that, but didn't bother to build any safty features.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  129. Microsoft - National Security Damage by The-Dalai-LLama · · Score: 1

    Speaking of the Newton: Did Microsoft's monopolistic policies actually hurt our national security? Are there Al-Qaeda / Redmond links? Did Microsoft weaken our anti-terrorist defenses enough to allow 9/11?

    Ummm... prob'ly not. But if the idea of a bunch of grunts with Newtons intrigues you, you might find these interesting:

    http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/ops/hunter- warrior.htm

    This one's PDF, takes a while to load:www.cadrc.calpoly.edu/pdf/feat4_brochure.pdf

    The Dalai Llama
    I got your Sea Dragon right here...

  130. Huh?!?!?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Huh?!?!?!
    Ok, first of all, the documents would be copyrighted under the Berne convention. Secondly, if Microsoft actually paid someone to steal them, that's corporate espionage. Thirdly, if they violated their contract with Go on this, then the former shareholders certainly could sue. Fourthly, considering where Microsoft stands in the marketplace, violating their contract like that does count as anti-competitive behaviour worthy of anti-trust investigation. Fifthly, Public Defenders defend the accused, not the accuser. Sixthly, just because the crime finished off the victim does not stop it from being a crime. You will note that prosecutors still prosecute assault cases when the victim of the assault dies as a result, they just change the charge to murder.

    Honestly, I don't want to descend to aspersions on your character, but you already did it to another poster. So, I have to say that, based on the things you've written in this thread you appear to be the worst kind of pragmatist.

  131. Once again by geekoid · · Score: 2, Insightful

    there is nothing wrong with a Monopoly, Only how you wield it.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  132. What happened to... by bckrispi · · Score: 2, Funny
    The advice read in part that the focus should be shifted from "killing the competitor" to "providing a better solution to the customer's problems."

    Well, we saw how long that corporate strategy lasted...

    --
    Xenon, where's my money? -Borno
  133. I love Microsoft...maybe - maybe not by CanadianMikey · · Score: 2, Interesting

    10 years ago I had an Amstrad PC with Dos and GEM as a GUI...

    now I've got WinXP...but I don't remember GEM ever asking me every 5 minutes if I wanted to send an error report...

    Sometimes I wonder...did we ever innovate, or did we just move to one provider.

    Which leads us to another question...if a word is not recognized by Microsoft's spellchecker, is it really a word?Have you looked to see if monopoly is a word in the Microsoft spell check lately?

    Did anyone just hear that tree fall in the forest?
  134. I raise you a voila by SmallFurryCreature · · Score: 1
    This seems to be it. I don't know who wrote this but the wording is exactly like it was written in the article.

    Reading all the image files it just makes it totally clear that the US was bought and sold in the original trial.

    People who voted for Murray, a sock puppet for washington state, should feel so proud.

    --

    MMO Quests are like orgasms:

    You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.

  135. Hi MS lacky, the evidence. by SmallFurryCreature · · Score: 1
    TADAAA! Thanks to the help of another slashdotter that showed me the site, wget and showimg.

    You can easily get all the scanned documents. Site is even very fast. Just go one dir up on the link and you will find a simple dir listing. Download, make sure you rememeber to tell wget not to travel up and read and be horrified.

    --

    MMO Quests are like orgasms:

    You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.

  136. Illegal copies of DOS killed the competitors. by Futurepower(R) · · Score: 1


    My opinion:

    DOS killed the competitors because Microsoft allowed illegal copies of DOS to be sold and circulated. Back then, it was DOS for a considerable payment, or DOS for free.

    At that time, there were at least 6 computer distributors in the Portland, Oregon area that were selling illegal copies of DOS.

  137. Duh. by 2names · · Score: 1

    All governments are untrustworthy.

    --
    "I'm just here to regulate funkiness."
  138. They set back more than that by krray · · Score: 1

    Around the same time I remember working on many a NeXT. Couldn't justify the price (ie: afford one). Fortunately today I can afford a Mac. OS.X, well, smokes anything I've ever seen Windows able to do (and all at the *same time* mind you :).

    Of course having a couple of computing degrees and starting out on AT&T SysVr4 I know not what I am speaking about when I say, "Windows? Mickey-mouse platform."

  139. You know what? This is ridiculous by bonch · · Score: 1

    This is ridiculous. Nobody held a gun to people's heads and forced them not to make their own ventures into personal computing. Nobody held a gun to Netscape's head when they put out crap browsers that allowed IE to take over.

    I'm sick of this victimhood mentality. "Microsoft is a monopoly, therefore nobody is allowed to attempt anything!!" Uh, yes they are, and if their product is better, people will switch.

  140. Should be Slashdot by cft_128 · · Score: 1
    Editors should append
    &partner=Slashdot
    Seems a bit more appropriate.
    --

    Underloved Movies and Pub Quiz: donotquestionme.org

  141. HA! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    " by selecting "send all" and pointign the Infrared or bluetooth at any computer (Win/Mac/Linux) and selecting send"

    Yeah, smartguy, select anything you want and point your infrared at MY computer! I don't have an IR port!

    HA HA! Your Dawson's Creek Trapper Keeper won't assimilate ME! BILL COSBY has protected us!

  142. capitalism vs. greedism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    --I'm a conservative, probably closest in todays terms to what is called a paleo-conservative as opposed to the socialist/globalist techno-feudalist neoconservatives, which is the top leadership of the R party. And newsflash, the US has been a socialist nation by DEED since FDRs time, and heavily. A military/industrial autocracy, which throws slops at the rest of the people in a socialist manner using phony money and promises.

    With that said, I would NEVER vote for that lying scumbag, and I didn't last time. Last several elections I vote constitutional party, reform or libertarian. To me, the RNC and the DNC both need to be grand jury investigated under RICO at a minimum. You could spend days listing crimes committed by both those political gangs (and their lobbyists/bribers/blackmailers).

    Microsoft doesn't engage in capitalism, they are CROOKS and engage in greedism. There's a big difference there.

    zogger

  143. Lying Scumbag? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You mean Clinton right? No, I guess you mean our current president, Bush. So, exactly, what has the "scumbag" lied about anyway? Do you have any evidence to substantiate your assertion?

    1. Re:Lying Scumbag? by Some_Llama · · Score: 0

      Read anything on salon.com, it might be left slanted but at least every point is backed up with sources....
      or you could read the countless times he lied here: http://www.house.gov/appropriations_democrats/caug htonfilm.htm
      http://www.bushwatch.com/bushlies.htm what did clinton lie about? oh yah, getting a BJ, how many people did that hurt? oh yah maybe 5 what did Bush lie about? oh yah 100s of things, how many people did it effect? oh yah like EVERYONE IN THE US!!. sorry for off topic..

  144. Sad .... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    not long after Go went under I was part of a startup that moved into their old premises .... embedded in the ceiling tiles above my new desk were about 40 pencils .... all I could imagine was some sad engineer left in the dieing remains of the company throwing them up and not really caring where they fell back down ...

  145. Crazy ideas based on crazy precedents in law by edraven · · Score: 0

    Here's a wacky idea. Take the precedents that have established the "personification" of corporations in American law (that is to say, that have defended the rights of corporations to any protections extended to individuals under the law) and apply them to situations like this. When a person takes actions intended to result in the dissolution of another person, the word we use is murder. In this case, there is documentation to prove that the actions taken were premeditated. Should Microsoft be brought to trial for murder one in the death of corporations? As persons under the law, do corporations like Go have this right?

    While we're on the subject, can corporations get married as an alternative to mergers?

  146. Re:Article - Lawyerness by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    me: So, are you a lawyer?
    Speare: No... but i did stay in a holiday inn express last night.

  147. Re:Was moderating, but had to set all back to Norm by shadowbearer · · Score: 1

    Case in point: was going to buy a small level, checked out Home Depot. Found a level that I liked for $19.95, which seemed a little steep. Went to Wal*Mart, found exactly the same make and model of level for $4.99.

    Great post, but I have to comment here, being in the DIY biz;

    Walmart has great prices on a lot of stuff, but just try finding an employee who not only knows how to *use* that level/tool but can teach you some of the finer points WRT to how you're going to use it :) That's one of the reasons many dedicated hardware stores have higher prices (yes, I'm aware of exceptions)

    Great post in any case BBM

    SB (not card carrying but libertarian nevertheless )

    --
    It's old. The more humans I meet, the more I like my cats. At least they are honest.
  148. Compatibility by skybuck · · Score: 0

    I'll just add my post to this thread, since it is a pretty interesting thread. The best thing microsoft has brought forth in my opinion is compatiblity. If everybody on this planet uses microsoft windows and microsoft word and microsoft internet explorer etc then people can easily exchange each other's documents and talk about it. Let's imagine a world without microsoft. How would that world look like ? Well take the linux world for example. That is a world I hate ! Truely. How many linux distrobutions are there ? How many linux gui's are there ? I as a programmer say: "NO" to that. If I as a programmar say: "NO" to that, just Imagine how every day users will say: "HELL NO" to that. Computer Life would become very difficult. Now how could somebody post a reply to this: I would expect replies to say: Well that can be solved with open standards. That's true... open standards are good in this view... like the internet, like xml, etc, etc. That's good. Still the operating systems are different, the gui's are different, the hardware is different, everything that makes open standards work is different. Having a layer on top of that that makes it all the same is good. Windows is the solution to that. I rest my case :D

  149. Info on the Go corporation by BlightThePower · · Score: 1
    is available in dead tree form. The founder wrote a book about his experiences. I bought it just the other day second hand.

    Start Up: A silicon valley adventure by Jerry Kaplan, published by Warner Books (ISBN: 0751517135). Warning: This is the UK edition of the book.

    Apologies if this is redudant; I have to pop out now and don't have time to check if this has already been mentioned.

    --
    Plays violent online games as: Nerfherder76
  150. Newton Users by Macgrrl · · Score: 1

    The Newton still has users today. You've obviously never had to pry a cold dead Newton from the fingers of a distraught Newton user to send it off for repairs. The Newton doesn't have users, it has addicts.

    --
    Sara
    Designer, Gamer, Macgrrl in an XP World
  151. Re:If only GO Penpoint software was open-sourced.. by retinaburn · · Score: 1

    I am guessing it would be the heaven you had in mind. Multiple forks, feuding camps, a veritable holy-war, which the Linux Newbie PenPoint customers do not understand, and are only left with questions and no answers.

  152. Okay Mods, I guess it's your show by Moonpie+Madness · · Score: 1

    but I'm a bit remiss as to how that's flamebait. I mean c'mon, socratic irony n stuff

  153. NY Times Linkages by WindBourne · · Score: 1

    If I were NYTimes, I would consider giving a partner status to slashdot so that they can find out where hits are occuring. Right now, I suspect that we skew the google linkage by quite a bit.

    --
    I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
  154. Are you an idiot or something? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You seem to think Microsoft recognizing it was no longer a monopoly, and abandoning monopolistic pricing, in that limited space is somehow equivalent to dumping.

    That's not what "dumping" is. What you described are known as responsible business practices.

    They had to give up margin to remain competative, but the margin wasn't negative. They still made money. And why on earth would a company want to make it's products compatible with a direct competators product. That's just insane.

    1. Re:Are you an idiot or something? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What you described are known as responsible business practices.

      Business practices for which MS was found guilty in a court of law.

      why on earth would a company want to make it's products compatible with a direct competators product

      Ask Adobe, Corel, Sun, Cisco, Jupiter, BAN, every car manufacturer, every machine shop, every rod and reel mfr, most electronic equipment mfrs etc.

      The only time there is really a percentage in deliberately introducing compatibilities is when you control a monopoly share of the market. Such incompatibilities are always to the detriment of the consumer and, for that reason, are illegal in the US and enlightened countries.

      Here's a few questions to ponder: do you produce a product? Is your TV made by Zenith or just compatible? How about your stereo and speakers? are all the components by the same mfr? Are they compatible? Have you turned a screw lately?

    2. Re:Are you an idiot or something? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, they found something quite different. That netscape was entitled to profit from selling a product that was inferior to another product provided by free by the government. It's the same kind of reasoning that lets private companies copyright public laws. Otherwise known as bullshit.

      Outside of MOPAR, which exists specifically to take advantage of economies of scale, you are what we call "full of it."

      I don't see IBM making better compilers for Intel chips. According to you they should be happy to do so. And there's no requirement that they do.

      Just as many programs that were available ran well on DR and MS DOS, not all must. My Sony remote doesn't work with the Sharp TV in the other room. Word and wordperfect for a while didn't do the best job with each others files, not every wordprocessor can write a PDF.

      You're a moron. Get over it.

      None of that is illegal. MS pre-installing IE might be, if the government didn't make a free version available to whomever, or if a network connection, and rendering data from said connection wasn't a responsability of an OS. But since they did and it is, it shouldn't be. But once again, the powerful enemies of MS, and the greedy states flush with cash from their victory over the tabacco companies didn't care. They bought their own brand of justice.

      BUT SPEAKING OF SCREWS YOU FUCKING RETARDED WASTE OF SPACE! HOW MANY STAR SHAPED HEADS WITH HOLES (TO RECIEVE A POST) DO YOU HAVE?! The stars are to increase the area overwhich to distribute the fucking torque, but the posts, those are to prevent more common tools from working so as to prevent people from fixing a problem. Now that you've been proven completely in error, please go kill yourself. We reasonable people are weary of you car-seats for airplanes idiots ruining everything.

  155. Care to revise history much? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah, IE was free. So was Mosaic, which was the best browser available up to the end of the project.

    Netscape was trying to sell for money, what the US Government was trying to give away for free, source included, OH and was better quality product.

    Netscape was trading, and only trading, on people's ignorance.

    Why should Microsoft be prevented from taking this free software, which the government has already paid for, and giving it away to its customers? And even monkeying with it, experimenting on how it can be used to make their existing products better.

    Netscape didn't innovate anything. They just assumed they were entitled to money for nothing.

    By your reasoning, Linux should be illegal, because Microsoft is entitled since they got there first with a commercial product. Yeah, doesn't sound so reasonable when your logic is applied there does it?

    1. Re:Care to revise history much? by Ironica · · Score: 1

      Netscape didn't innovate anything. They just assumed they were entitled to money for nothing.

      Netscape invented multi-threaded browsing, didn't they? I thought that was the whole point of "mozilla..." it was mosaic, only bigger, and capable of doing more at once.

      By your reasoning, Linux should be illegal, because Microsoft is entitled since they got there first with a commercial product. Yeah, doesn't sound so reasonable when your logic is applied there does it?

      Er, no, that's not my logic at all. I'm not even sure how to begin explaining why, since it bears no resemblance to what I said. "Linux" is not a huge company with a domination over a given market, pouring lots of money into trying to shut down Microsoft. The Sherman Act has absolutely nothing to say about Linux. There's a lot more to it all than "One is free, the other costs money."

      --
      Don't you wish your girlfriend was a geek like me?
  156. As a Pinko Lefty Whiner, let me be the first 2 say by spun · · Score: 1

    We love you Libertarian fiscal conservative/social liberals. You guys are so cute: "I do hate capitalism. But I hate socialism and communism even more." That is SO close to how we think, if you can ever get us to admit it ;-)

    Let's get over this whole label thing. Let's focus on the 90% of things we agree on. Find yourself in a tizzy over what some 'idiot' in the 'opposite camp' thinks? CALM DOWN! Move on. Find something you agree on. If you are both thoughtful people there will be something.

    I think social programs do some good. I think corporate regulations work more often than they fail. Okay, we disagree on those things. So what? I bet you and I agree that corporate welfare sucks, that people should be able to do what they want with their own bodies and with consenting adults, and that divisive punks obsessed with labels and ad-hominem attacks need a good talking to.

    --
    - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
  157. TRS-80 Model 100 Link by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hehe, went to look this up, hoping to be the first to give that particular bit of refutation. Now I'll just have to settle for giving a link. Came out in 1983, suckas!

  158. Yeah, it's easy to break Linux, too by melted · · Score: 1

    Joe Clueless downloads a program for his linux distro called pammypussyfuck. He launches the program. The program says "I need your root password to run, otherwise I can't access the screen". What Joe Clueless does in response to this? That's fucking right, enters the root password! So if users are clueless, how exactly is Linux more secure than Windows, anyway?

  159. Article-Rebutal. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well I have two things to say about this whole situation.

    One I've signed up I don't know how many times. But for one reason or another it forgets, and I have to sign up again. That's INCONVIENT.

    Two now why can't OSDN become a NYT partner? Lord knows we certainly have the traffic (slashdot effect anyone?).

    Put some of that subscription money to use.

  160. Re:Was moderating, but had to set all back to Norm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Not to defend MS or anything, but I have my Windows 2000 MCSE, and I know what a differential equation is, and how to solve many types of them.

    However I learned that at a University, not from Microsoft Press.

  161. Conditioned response and MS. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I noticed you're getting chewed out by the "my computer doesn't crash" and "Linux crashes now and then". I think that both groups are missing the big picture. If you look over the entire history of Microsoft, for the majority of it, they did indeed have a reputation for crashieness. Remember the pavlov experiment were the dog gets conditioned to a particular response when the bell rings? The same thing happened with the computing public, and with a 90% market share that group was a large one. One can argue that Microsofts present offers don't crash anywere that much (I would agree. I run W2K and Linux). However reputations are hard to shake, just ask ATI. Also we have several living generations fearful of their computers. Afraid that they will break it. How many people do you know that are afraid of their cars? Afraid they will randomly spin out of control, killing them, and harming others. THAT is Microsoft's legacy, and even if they shake it, people will not forget what was, anymore than an abused child will forget it's past, no matter how healed it is presently.

  162. prediction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    --I doth predicteth that all currencies based on "borrowing into existence" will always drop in the long run against tangible coined precious metals "money", and that what you can trade the coined money for will rise in real value as opposed to drop with the intangible.

    I've had this notion since the 60's when real silver change was still in my pocket.(well, I DO still carry silver and gold in my pocket, but I know that is rare...)

    Example, personal: As a young nerd going to mickey D's (when the sign said just a few million served) one paper dollar OR one silver dollar would be traded to the mickster for 5 regular burgers, one shake, one fry, and I would get one nickle back in change. Today that paper dollar gets you what-one burger and some change? Whereas a silver dollar (I'm being sort of loose here but you can get my point) is worth approximately 7 to 12 big macs perhaps.

    Stocks-no idea, I stay away. Government paper ditto. Seems like gambling to me. Government paper is a tax in advance, a lot of it on the next generation, and I feel it's ..well.. it's a crime, it's pure theft from others. Stocks (for most purposes once past IPO) are no longer *investments*, they are gambling chips. Perhaps if there was a rule/law that stocks must be held for one calendar year before being sold or traded, they might still represent an "investment" in a company, because for sure, no company can produce a widget and sell it during the time frame of "buy in the morning before the sucker rally run-up, then sell early in the afternoon". That's just gambling.

    I also think usury should be civilly illegal. It leads to parasitism, IMO, and the phony money scam all the big banks use.

    (Yes, I hold a few old testament-styled views of things).

    To get back to today's currencies, the euro will do moderatly well (partially Au backed), the new moslem gold dinar will do fabulous, the green (peach) back will continue to drop--we've lost the produced wealth that made it valuable. The oil producing nations used their received petrodollars to purchase US goods, when we still manufactured everything-now, no need. They are losing interest and dumping bucks as fast as they can-but still slow enough to not have them lose even more value than they have. There's also the dilemma of foreigners to the US hoplding the bulk of the mortgagenotes (way up the scambank food chains), and most of the dotgov paper, so they have to be cirumspect as well, but really, the dollar will continue to decline, give it a high %90 percentile rating on that occurring. I also give a high 90% rating to china soon doing some straight swaps, no currency involved, manufactured goods for oil, eliminating the banking middleman and being tied to the dollar. They will still USE dollars, but only (mostly) to continue to purchase machine tools and other high tech gear from the US and some other western nations.

    They are smart, think long term. I hate their dictatorship, but you have to admire a system that can so completely bamboozled so many alleged "smart" westerners.

    People think we get cheap stuff from china, when it's really the reverse-china is getting the means to become even more wealthy (and quickly, too)for pennies on the dollar, and even those pennies are donated/given to them. They got to be laughing every day about it....

    Wealth is either mined, grown, or it's a combination of the two in some manufactured form, and that's it. Everything else is a wealth-rearrangment.

    zogger

  163. Mirror, mirror, who's the most moral of all? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "there are no morals in the corporate world it is just me, myself, and I."

    There's just one small thing wrong with the above. not the sentiment mind you, but the expectation that morals will somehow arise from a corporation, naturally.

    Here's the secret to having a moral corporation. You build it using moral people. Here's the secret to building a moral government. Build it using moral people. Here's the secret to building a moral country. You fill it with moral citizens.

    We have as individuals, neglected our morals, and since everything is built upon the individual citizen. Well "Ye reap as yea, shall sow."

  164. Re:Microsoft - Still as anti-competitive as ever.. by Sj0 · · Score: 1

    people just accepted that computers needed regular rebooting after running Windows 95

    Don't look at me, I used OS/2 Warp until I got a copy of win95 OSR2 in '97. It wasn't until 99 or 2k when I got a copy of 98SE that I switched to that. Now I'm using 2k, and will be until I see if longhorn is worth the effort. If it isn't, I'll be upgrading late to yet another Microsoft OS to avoid the hassles. :)

    --
    It's been a long time.
  165. Makes ya wonder... by Ogman · · Score: 1

    It makes you wonder how Microsoft continues to get away with these things. And then, yesterday the U.S. government says that it thinks it did enough to Microsoft and that the EU should not be levying such a high fine! Who the heck are they kidding?

    --
    But Officer, I DID read the f**king article!
  166. Re: FrontPage Express by Domo-Sun · · Score: 1

    IIRC the only difference between Navigator and Navigator gold was the HTML editing tools of the latter. IE has never had such tools and I'm pretty sure Microsoft have never distributed any such tools for "free".

    Not true. MS bundled FrontPage Express into win98 along with other little IE tools. Personal Web Server, Web Publishing Wizard, Web-Based Enterprise Mgmt...

    Most (if not all) of the "bundled" applications in Windows are basic and don't provide advanced functionality. Microsoft can't win, of course - they either get blasted for leaving out functionality (no tabbed browsing ! no popup blocking !) or they get blasted for putting it in (anti competitive ! abusing monopoly power !)

    They should be blasted for both. MS only bundles MS products and locks out other vendors at the OEM level, and almost every other level.

    Another thing MS bundled was DOS and Windows into win95 to block DRDOS and kill the DOS competition.

  167. sounds like a microshill by Domo-Sun · · Score: 1

    Given the sheer crappiness of Real's product, I'm amazed anyone could even try to say their death might be Microsoft's fault, with a straight face.

    Easily. MS can be a factor independent of the quality. Your excuse seems to be "All of those products deserved to die," blame on others, and denial that MS is even a factor.

    What would it take for you to be convinced that MS was a monopoly or has committed crimes? Is there any scenario that MS would be doing something as charged, and can you please describe it to me? As far as I can tell, there is absolutely nothing that would convince you. This would help all of us in determining if it's worth arguing with you at length.

    I've never met anyone - even amongst clueless newbies - who actually enjoys using Real's player, or uses it for any reason except absolute necessity.

    Yes, the windows-bundling effect on a product is interesting. It increases the market share of a product even when it's crap. Just like with AOL. The cost for this bundling was that AOL had to drop Netscape and use IE as their browser. What was the cost to Real? I forget.

  168. For Thursday Next... by zooblethorpe · · Score: 1

    Try The Eyre Affair , a quite fun read wherein you could just about sell your soul to a book... or at least to the characters in it, be they written in or only visiting...

    Cheers

    --
    "What in the name of Fats Waller is that?"
    "A four-foot prune."
  169. Largely Depends by dolo666 · · Score: 1

    I believe the type of code used in any online system has to be balanced against ease of use, extensibility and speed. When you really have to pay attention is when you've got the traffic Slashdot has... That's when every nanosecond counts, not on some blog site that gets 800 hits a day. :-)

    So for me, I code for quick neutral-coder interpretation, ease, and portability. I don't use switches that much, as I prefer if/elseif/else combos, as they are easier to manage and they take less of a hit than switches. Another thing I like doing, is finding alternate methods to using if statements; for example I had a page that checked the values to rule out hack attempts. It was growing to a large size of checks that I became concerned of the length of the whole if-loop. It hit me that due to the nature of the data, running in_array and stuffing the accepted values into an array ($this[]= 'value54443';$this[]= 'value54444';) sped things up significantly, with the added benefit of being easy to add accepted values. Liberal use of Unset() also helps. :-)