Slashdot Mirror


Microsoft Pays $536M to Novell

_mArk writes "This morning Novell announced that it had settled a potential law suit with Microsoft related to its NetWare product line. Microsoft agreed to pay $536 million to Novell, but this is not the end as there is another litigation against them pertaining to WordPerfect."

291 comments

  1. easy handout by Sv-Manowar · · Score: 5, Funny

    perhaps SCO went after the wrong people ?

    1. Re:easy handout by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny
      Don't forget to pay your $536,000,000 licensing fee, you cock-smoking teabaggers!

      HAHAHAHAHAHA!

    2. Re:easy handout by mordors9 · · Score: 1

      Perhaps Novell is going to become the anti-SCO. They will sue Microsoft and SCO or any of that cabal for every time SCO sues the other side.

    3. Re:easy handout by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      Positioning yourself with a market strategy of kicking Microsoft in the balls will probably get you lots of goodwill in certain sectors. I don't know it that would translate into actual sales, though.

    4. Re:easy handout by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just look at how the ball kicking strategy worked out for Sun...

    5. Re:easy handout by Zork+the+Almighty · · Score: 1

      Come on people, this is hysterical.

      --

      In Soviet America the banks rob you!
    6. Re:easy handout by zonker · · Score: 0

      yeah but if this is like any other microsoft payout, they are going to pay them in copies of windows and office, not cash. ;p

  2. "mirror" by someguy456 · · Score: 3, Informative

    It was already slow for me, with 0 posts, so here it is:

    WALTHAM, Mass. -- Nov. 08, 2004 -- Novell today announced an agreement with Microsoft to settle potential antitrust litigation related to Novell's NetWare operating system in exchange for $536 million in cash. Novell also announced that by the end of this week it will file an antitrust suit against Microsoft in the United States District Court in Utah seeking unspecified damages in connection with alleged harm to Novell's WordPerfect application software business in the mid-1990s.

    Under terms of the settlement, in exchange for the cash payment, Novell has agreed to a general release of claims that it has as of the date of the agreement, with certain exclusions that include patent claims and claims associated with Novell's WordPerfect business. The agreement also includes a release by Microsoft of claims that would have been compulsory counterclaims to the NetWare claims asserted by Novell. Finally, Novell has agreed to withdraw its intervention in the European Commission's case with Microsoft.

    "We are pleased that we have been able to resolve a portion of our pending legal issues with Microsoft," said Joseph A. LaSala, Jr., Novell's senior vice president and general counsel. "This is a significant settlement, particularly since we were able to achieve our objectives without filing expensive litigation. While we have agreed to withdraw from the EU case, we think our involvement there has been useful, as it has assisted the European proceedings and facilitated a favorable settlement with Microsoft. With the EU case now on appeal, we are comfortable with our decision to withdraw from the proceeding. There is simply not much left for us to do.

    "We regret that we cannot make a similar announcement regarding our antitrust claims associated with the WordPerfect business. We have had extensive discussions with Microsoft to resolve our differences, but despite our best efforts, we were unable to agree on acceptable terms. We intend to pursue our claims aggressively toward a goal of recovering fair and considerable value for the harm caused to Novell's business," LaSala said.

    The WordPerfect suit that Novell will file seeks unspecified damages arising from Microsoft's efforts to eliminate competition in the office productivity applications market during the time that Novell owned the WordPerfect word-processing application and the Quattro Pro spreadsheet application. The suit is based in part on facts proved by the United States Government in its successful antitrust case against Microsoft. In that suit, Microsoft was found to have unlawfully maintained a monopoly in the market for personal computer operating systems by eliminating competition in related markets.
    Legal notice regarding forward looking statements

    This press release includes statements that are not historical in nature and that may be characterized as "forward-looking statements," including those related to future financial and operating results, benefits and synergies of the company's brands and strategies, future opportunities and the growth of the market for open source solutions. You should be aware that Novell's actual results could differ materially from those contained in the forward-looking statements, which are based on current expectations of Novell management and are subject to a number of risks and uncertainties, including, but not limited to, Novell's ability to integrate acquired operations and employees, Novell's success in executing its Linux strategies, Novell's ability to deliver on its one Net vision of the Internet, Novell's ability to take a competitive position in the Linux industry, business conditions and the general economy, market opportunities, potential new business strategies, competitive factors, sales and marketing execution, shifts in technologies or market demand and the other factors described in Novell's Current Report on Form 8-K filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on July 2, 2004. Novell disclaims any intention or obligation to update any forward-looking statements as a result of developments occurring after the date of this press release.

    1. Re:"mirror" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      oh yeah - because www.novell.com can't handle a slashdotting.

      news flash - it was slow for you because you have a shitty connection

      karma whore

    2. Re:"mirror" by cyberchondriac · · Score: 1

      oh yeah - because www.novell.com can't handle a slashdotting.
      news flash - it was slow for you because you have a shitty connection


      You haven't visited Novell's website all that often, then. There are days when their support knowledgebase page is either seemingly running off a a 56k modem connection or down alltogether. This isn't to bash Novell, just observations from experience from the past 5 years. Their site has never been terribly perky to begin with, on average.
      Having said that, it actually seems decently perky today.

      --

      Look back up at my post, now look back down, you're on the Internet. Now look back up. I'm a signature.
    3. Re:"mirror" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Somebody fucking mod this obvious KW down. Trust me, Novell can handle whatever traffic you can throw at it. Behold the power of BorderManager or some shit.

  3. So Novell is going to let the EU case die? by Sikmaz · · Score: 5, Interesting

    "Finally, Novell has agreed to withdraw its intervention in the European Commission's case with Microsoft."

    1. Re:So Novell is going to let the EU case die? by bfree · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Personally I cannot believe this is legal. EU takes a case V MS and MS can pay off the prosecution witnesses. Is this not in itself evidence that it is an dominent abusive monopoly which will run wild without legal restraints, the exact thing "anti-trust" laws are for. Imagine you were a witness in a blackmail trial and you were called into an appeal, when asked to give evidence you say "sorry, but I made a deal with the defendant for loads of cash to not say anything so I'm withdrawing my statement". End result, you should presumably be tried to perverting the course of justice and/or the defendant tried for witness intimidation. For a business isn't the ultimate intimidation "if you don't do what we want we won't give you buckets of cash"?

      --

      Never underestimate the dark side of the Source

    2. Re:So Novell is going to let the EU case die? by aristus · · Score: 5, Insightful

      What's more, the 536M is about the size of the EU fine... so it's not really about the cash (what's a billion dollars to them?) it's about not letting *anyone*, any entity or government *anywhere*, tell them what to do.

      --
      Sometimes seventeen/Syllables aren't enough to/Express a complete
    3. Re:So Novell is going to let the EU case die? by danheskett · · Score: 4, Informative

      First off, this isn't a criminal case per se. MS is involved with the EU in a civil case - meaning no one is going to go to jail if the case goes one way or the other. Your choice of terms "prosectuion witness", etc do not jive with what the case is. The judicial world is more complex than a 40-minute episode of Law and Order let's on. What the EU is doing would be closer to investigation here. There isn't a big dramatic trial going on, or anything like that. This is a regulatory issue.

      Secondly, you say that "[MS should] be tried to perverting the course of justice". You assume that what they've done here is plainly illegal, when it's not. Filing a regulatory complaint against a competitor is a technique that is perhaps hundreds, if not a thousand years old. Commonly used for leverage, and to force settlements on other issues. Filing a complaint or statement should never cause a person - regardless of your opinion of the group being targetted - to assume guilt.

      Thirdly, you say "Imagine you were a witness in a blackmail trial and you were called into an appeal" . Again, your analogy displays a lack of understanding of what is going on. The EU hasn't tried MS. This isn't an appeal of a criminal or civil conviction, but rather, a regulatory setting where the word "appeal" means very little.

      Finally, your argument displays a clear bias against MS without examining any side of the argument other than your own. It is much more likely in this case that Novell, knowing of MS's legal trouble with the EU, decided to file a complaintant for the sole purpose of using it against MS in financial settlement negotiations. This is a tactic which has been used since literally the dawn of commerce. A similiar version is used in divorce cases aka "He beats our daughter.. but if he ups his alimony payments 50% then I will withdraw my legal complaint".

      For a business isn't the ultimate intimidation "if you don't do what we want we won't give you buckets of cash"?
      It is much more likely that in this case Novell said to MS: "look, you are going to owe on this issue anyways. If you don't pay up what we want when we want it, we will make your life more difficult with regards to the EU case, and that could cost you WAY more than this piddly $500M."

      MS here is the one being blackmailed, almost certainly.

    4. Re:So Novell is going to let the EU case die? by cayenne8 · · Score: 1
      "Imagine you were a witness in a blackmail trial and you were called into an appeal, when asked to give evidence you say "sorry, but I made a deal with the defendant for loads of cash to not say anything so I'm withdrawing my statement"."

      Well....this looks to be similar to what happened in the Kobe Bryant case....she pretty much got bought off...which may have been her intentions anyway. At least that's how it looks...

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    5. Re:So Novell is going to let the EU case die? by arivanov · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Illegal or not - who cares. The new competition commissioner has a history of being vehemently pro-Microsoft. So getting a payout before she dismisses the case may be a jolly good idea.

      In btw, Americans have most likely missed this one around the election, but the "powerless" EU parliament managed to torpedo a well-known mafia puppet (The Lituanian candidate) along with a Catolic Bush clone (Italy). While I am not sure that the replacements are much better, this is still a reason for some selebration.

      --
      Baker's Law: Misery no longer loves company. Nowadays it insists on it
      http://www.sigsegv.cx/
    6. Re:So Novell is going to let the EU case die? by GSloop · · Score: 1


      Finally, your argument displays a clear bias against MS without examining any side of the argument other than your own. It is much more likely in this case that Novell, knowing of MS's legal trouble with the EU, decided to file a complaintant for the sole purpose of using it against MS in financial settlement negotiations. This is a tactic which has been used since literally the dawn of commerce. A similiar version is used in divorce cases aka "He beats our daughter.. but if he ups his alimony payments 50% then I will withdraw my legal complaint".


      You give no evidence of your case - man is that ever persuasive.

      If there isn't any evidence of MS misbehavior, then they should be able to win in front of the EU just fine.

      I don't condone any "extortion" but you haven't gone to any effor to prove any. So, I guess I'll say this...If Novell is playing the game you say they are, and you provide no evidence to back up such a claim, I feel that's unethical on Novell's part. However, if MS isn't guilty then can fight it. If they are, it's hard to find sympathy for them either.

      It's kind of like a drug dealer complaining he was robbed. Well, you prey on others, you comitt illegal acts, and then want the full protection of the law? Right... (It doesn't make the robbery right, but it sure makes it hard to have sympathy for the drug dealer too. Often it just seems like "what comes around goes around.")

      Cheers,
      Greg

    7. Re:So Novell is going to let the EU case die? by 0racle · · Score: 1

      Think of it this way. With this settlement between Novell and Microsoft, Novell no longer has a problem with whatever MS was doing, they just settle it after all. Therefore, as an acknowledgement of that fact they withdraw all their ations against Microsoft. Nothing illegal has occured and only people who look for excuses to proclaim MS evil will see anything wrong with that.

      --
      "I use a Mac because I'm just better than you are."
    8. Re:So Novell is going to let the EU case die? by danheskett · · Score: 1

      The evidence is that Novell got the money. Extortion works. MS can fight it, but Novell has a good point. MS has more to lose from the EU than from Novell. MS getting Novells help in the EU matter is more important and more valuable than the money they paid Novell.

      The fact that Novell withdraws it's claim in the EU proceedings is not an indicator of guilt or innoncence of Microsoft. The tactic about going to a government body investigating your competitor is age old. That is all.

    9. Re:So Novell is going to let the EU case die? by vpetersen · · Score: 1

      It's simply a private cash settlement. Saves public money to run the courts.

    10. Re:So Novell is going to let the EU case die? by ClosedSource · · Score: 1

      Companies like Novell aren't so much witnesses as they are plaintiffs. If it weren't for all the lobbying by US competitors of MS, there wouldn't be any EU action (or US Justice Department action either).

      The fact that Novell appears to be poised to sue MS yet again proves the old wisdom that if you pay off an extortionist, they'll just try it again.

    11. Re:So Novell is going to let the EU case die? by GSloop · · Score: 1
      Goodness...

      So, the fact that someone pays compensation for torts is evidence of extortion?


      extortion Audio pronunciation of "extortion" ( P ) Pronunciation Key (k-stôrshn)
      n.

      1. The act or an instance of extorting.
      2. Illegal use of one's official position or powers to obtain property, funds, or patronage.
      3. An excessive or exorbitant charge.
      4. Something extorted


      No, I don't think it's extortion and your "evidence" is simply bogus.

      If MS has a huge risk of loss in the EU affair, it can only mean that there is likely a large substance to Novell's complaint and that facts and reason are going to sink MS. (This doesn't mean that MS does face huge risk, but it begs the question, why settle for half a billion if they don't?)

      MS is a *convicted* thug. When you see a thug paying off someone - it doesn't make much sense to finaggle ways to believe the thug is innocent. The likelyhood is greatest that the thug is guilty of some misdeed, and is trying to cover it up.

      Sure, the thug might be innocent, but given the past record, it make much more sense to assume the thug is consistant with their past record - not some new "white-as-a-lilly" one.

      Cheers,
      Greg
  4. You realize what this means for Microsoft? by burgburgburg · · Score: 5, Funny
    $536 Million?
    No new boxes of tissue until Tuesday!

    Oh, the nasal anguish!

    1. Re:You realize what this means for Microsoft? by NoSuchGuy · · Score: 1

      that means: raise all prices by $ 4,95!

      --
      Grundgesetz * 23. Mai 1949 - 30. November 2007 - http://www.vorratsdatenspeicherung.de/
    2. Re:You realize what this means for Microsoft? by Degrees · · Score: 4, Insightful
      On a more serious note, this income for Novell is the 'payoff' for a multi-year hemorrhaging of market share....

      Almost half a billion dollars seems like a lot of money, but compare that to the loss of customers: at one time, NetWare *was* 70% of all business networks (not the internet, obviously).

      So what is that $536 Million? Something like 20 cents on the dollar?

      Not that they could have gotten any more. I'm just saying, it is kind of like discounted severance pay: nice to have, but continued income would be better.

      --
      "The most sensible request of government we make is not, "Do something!" But "Quit it!"
    3. Re:You realize what this means for Microsoft? by ClosedSource · · Score: 1

      Too bad every failing business can't get 20 cents on the dollar from their more successful competitors.

      Novell made a lot of money on networking PCs, but they were really a one hit wonder.

    4. Re:You realize what this means for Microsoft? by ghjm · · Score: 1

      No kidding. It took them until about 1998-99 to figure out that a server operating system needed a credible Web server platform. Don't blame Microsoft, Novell did it to themselves.

    5. Re:You realize what this means for Microsoft? by Degrees · · Score: 1
      I think every failing business could get 20 cents on the dollar from their more successful competitors - providing the competitor: a) was going to lose more than that in court, or b) was so flush with cash that outgo of half a billion dollars was worth ridding oneself of the nuisance.

      I'd give them two hits: 1) writing a DOS & Windows redirector to add drive letters to a machine, putting the files on the network, and 2) Directory Services. That one logged into the network and not individual files servers (and wrangling all the near- realtime behind-the-scenes file system permissions to back it up) was ahead of its time.

      --
      "The most sensible request of government we make is not, "Do something!" But "Quit it!"
  5. It's Slashdot Novell Day! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

    I bet the sysadmin is having a case of the Mondays.

  6. Don't Care Who or Why by DigitalRaptor · · Score: 0, Troll

    I don't care who or why Microsoft loses a lawsuit to someone, I just like to see them lose.

    After all the little guys they've screwed over getting to where they are now, and since they're patenting everything under the sun whether they had anything to do with it or not, I'm happy to see them have to fork over the loot.

    --
    Lose Weight and Feel Great with Isagenix
    1. Re:Don't Care Who or Why by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Unfortunately, they didn't "lose" anything here. They simply bought their way out of trouble yet again...

    2. Re:Don't Care Who or Why by stratjakt · · Score: 2, Insightful

      That's because you're a dope.

      Novell et al are firing the first shots in the patent wars, and are forcing Microsoft into this recent patenting blitz.

      Everybody loses in the end. But you're happy because Microsoft has to pay out a little pocket change to a dying company that has turned to IP litigation as it's last chance for revenue.

      If SCO sued MSFT instead of IBM they'd be slashdot heroes.

      --
      I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
    3. Re:Don't Care Who or Why by stanmann · · Score: 2, Informative
      If SCO sued MSFT instead of IBM they'd be slashdot heroes.
      They did, and they were.
      --
      Food not Bombs is a nice platitude but it breaks down when you notice that the Bombees are usually well fed
    4. Re:Don't Care Who or Why by Andy_R · · Score: 1

      Microsoft did NOT lose this lawsuit. They simply paid off one of the the victims of their crime.

      --
      A pizza of radius z and thickness a has a volume of pi z z a
    5. Re:Don't Care Who or Why by erick99 · · Score: 1

      MS hasn't lost anything yet and is not likely to lose. Buy paying $500M now they get Novell off their backs for the international case and will probably avoid a much bigger fine down the road. It's a cost of doing business. If they didn't want to pay Novell the $500M they could have tied them up in court until Novell was a penny stock with two employees left. If MS paid out, it's because they have a strategy that makes it worthwhile in the long run.

      --
      http://www.busyweather.com/
    6. Re:Don't Care Who or Why by DigitalRaptor · · Score: 4, Insightful

      First shots?

      You think this war started today? And Novell started it?

      Go to the US Patent Office website and do a patent search for "Microsoft" and one for "Novell" (under the field "Assignee Name").

      See who has been doing it more, and longer. I'll save you the trouble:

      Microsoft: 3,520, since March 21, 1985
      Novell: 243, September 24, 1990

      Microsoft has Novell beat by an order of magnitude and then some. To give you some perspective, Amazon.com are famous for their patents, and they only have 41.

      Microsoft is the poster boy for patenting anything and everything, and trying to use their "licensing" schemes to control and monopolize the market.

      Nobody but William Gates is "forcing" Microsoft into this patent war. They are the agressors, not the victims. And they know exactly what they are doing.

      --
      Lose Weight and Feel Great with Isagenix
    7. Re:Don't Care Who or Why by j-pimp · · Score: 1

      They did, and they were.

      Well there were heroes many protoslashdotters. However, there was no slashdot during that lawsuit.

      --
      --- Justin Dearing http://www.justaprogrammer.net/ We're just programmers.
    8. Re:Don't Care Who or Why by alw53 · · Score: 1

      This cost Microsoft about 3 cents in earnings this quarter, taking their earnings from 23 cents to 20 cents. So it might depress earnings by 4 percent for one year. Not a bad price to pay for blowing away yet another competitor.

    9. Re:Don't Care Who or Why by TangoCharlie · · Score: 1

      So who would you back in a Microsoft vs. SCO case?

      Maybe the only case where I don't mind the Lawers
      being the only ones to win :-)

      --
      return 0; }
    10. Re:Don't Care Who or Why by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Heaven forbid Microsoft should do something it has a legal right to do... last I checked, patenting things was legal.

    11. Re:Don't Care Who or Why by coolsva · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Not to troll, but what 'innovations' can we honestly think of coming from the Novell camp in the past decade, apart from Netware?
      Wordperfect lost out to Word due to one plain and simple reason, GUI version. I still remember back in early 90s when people were still sticking to simple text mode WP without WYSIWYG v/s the appeal of word for windows. That plus the fact that word did try to help migration by providing same/simillar keystrokes, templates, conversion etc.

      Also, microsoft has to patent their ideas lest someone else patents it and holds it for a ransom (we all remember the lawsuit on plugins) once it becomes commonplace.

    12. Re:Don't Care Who or Why by jav1231 · · Score: 1

      I agree. I just view Microsoft as evil, inherently. I only they had a hundred more such payouts then they could really feel it.

    13. Re:Don't Care Who or Why by powerlinekid · · Score: 1

      Microsoft is the poster boy for patenting anything and everything
      *cough*
      IBM may have something to say about that...

      --

      can't sleep slashdot will eat me
    14. Re:Don't Care Who or Why by RedWizzard · · Score: 1
      Microsoft: 3,520, since March 21, 1985
      Novell: 243, September 24, 1990

      Microsoft has Novell beat by an order of magnitude and then some. To give you some perspective, Amazon.com are famous for their patents, and they only have 41.

      Microsoft is the poster boy for patenting anything and everything, and trying to use their "licensing" schemes to control and monopolize the market.

      I have only one thing to say about that:

      AN/"international business machines": 37931 patents.

  7. Sue sue sue, it's the American way! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Interesting

    All these whiny dinosaur software companies need to quit blaming Microsoft for their lack of success and come up with something innovative on their own. WordPerfect became the market leader, then they got all fat and lazy, providing the opportunity for Microsoft to come along and eat their lunch with just a few new features that the folks at WordPerfect were too lazy to implement.

    Novell should have moved into the operating systems market long ago, since NetWare basically existed just to make up for the Windows networking components being shitty at the time. Once Microsoft figured out how networks operate, there was no more need for Novell NetWare.

    Well, you know what they say. Those that can't innovate litigate.

    1. Re:Sue sue sue, it's the American way! by grasshoppa · · Score: 2, Funny

      No, wait, I thought we liked Novelle now.

      Damn it, did I miss a meeting again?

      --
      Mod me down with all of your hatred and your journey towards the dark side will be complete!
    2. Re:Sue sue sue, it's the American way! by megarich · · Score: 1

      hey if whining gets me a cool half a bill sign me up!!!! anywho i have some small stock in novell so news like this is good news to me....

    3. Re:Sue sue sue, it's the American way! by barc0001 · · Score: 5, Informative

      NetWare basically existed just to make up for the Windows networking components being shitty at the time.

      Not up on your computer history, are you? You *must* have meant to say:

      "NetWare basically existed just to make up for the Windows networking components being NON EXISTANT at the time."

      Novell Netware predates ANY Microsoft networking. For most of the late 80's/early 90's until Windows for Workgroups came out, Netware and Banyan Vines were the only way to get a bunch of PCs to form a network. I am presuming you didn't actually work with computers and networks during this time frame, because if you did, there's no way you could have made such an erroneous statement.

      And Novell has innovated quite a bit. Or were you just being ironic? Where do you think Microsoft got the "inspiration" for Active Directory, among other things?

    4. Re:Sue sue sue, it's the American way! by paesano · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Gee, I don't know. Maybe some of the failures of Word Perfect (and every other competitor) had something to do with Microsoft's ability to lock them all out of every large Enterprise by their bundling practices. Innovate? Microsoft? Your kidding, right? Their only innovations have been with slimy business practices. No one can dispute their absolute genious there.

    5. Re:Sue sue sue, it's the American way! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      more like screw, screw, screw: it's the billy bathgates way. Jeaze, only a paid billy bathgates astroturfer says "Those that can't innovate litigate"? The last time billy bathgates innovated was the time they offered free lubricant for their business competitors.

    6. Re:Sue sue sue, it's the American way! by squiggleslash · · Score: 1
      In the late eighties, I remember our school network (a bunch of Research Machines 80186 based machines that ran DOS (3.1, IIRC) but were otherwise PC-incompatable) running some sort of Microsoft networking software (complete with "NET" command, as visible in today's stuff) over our 10Base-2 network (mmmm coax...) Pretty much the only thing an end user could do with this was access shared file servers, assigning a drive using the NET USE command.

      I think it's fair to say Novell's software was better than Microsoft's, not that Microsoft didn't have any. Microsoft's was crude, but it most certainly did exist.

      Windows for Workgroups was rather more powerful than what had been before, in part because it supported more standardized protocols such as TCP/IP together with dial up systems.

      --
      You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
    7. Re:Sue sue sue, it's the American way! by subsolar2 · · Score: 5, Informative
      WordPerfect became the market leader, then they got all fat and lazy, providing the opportunity for Microsoft to come along and eat their lunch with just a few new features that the folks at WordPerfect were too lazy to implement.
      Ummmm WordPerfect got locked out of the OEM market because of agreements with PC manufactuers limiting what non-Microsoft sotware could be sold pre-installed.

      Not being able to get WordPerfect pre-installed and being forced to take Office or crappy Works pretty much killed WordPerfect. Wordperfect is still a better product than Word ... Quattro and Paradox have been exceeded by their MS counterparts, but WP is still better in my opinion.

    8. Re:Sue sue sue, it's the American way! by antiMStroll · · Score: 1

      How could anyone forget Artisoft's LANtastic? WfW was so cludgy on release we stayed with Artisoft until Win 9x.

    9. Re:Sue sue sue, it's the American way! by Andrewkov · · Score: 1
      WordPerfect became the market leader, then they got all fat and lazy, providing the opportunity for Microsoft to come along and eat their lunch with just a few new features that the folks at WordPerfect were too lazy to implement.

      Steve Balmer, is that you? I've only ever heard Microsofties use the term "eat your lunch".

    10. Re:Sue sue sue, it's the American way! by danheskett · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Maybe some of the failures of Word Perfect (and every other competitor) had something to do with Microsoft's ability to lock them all out of every large Enterprise by their bundling practices.
      That's untrue in this case. MS has never truly "bundled" Offce in the same since it bundles other products. It's always been a very expensive add-on for Windows. My research shows that at no time was Office ever required as a requiste for getting a Windows license.

      MS's success at killing Wordperect came from good old competition: MS offering discounts to new users, students, lawyers, creative types, Mac users, and the like. MS aggresively marketing Works and then later Word. MS aggresively discount their product and offering it as an add-on for Windows to business PC OEMs.

      Word Perfect died because of a lack of vision, a lack of management, and being passed around to crappy vendor after crappy vendor.

    11. Re:Sue sue sue, it's the American way! by jav1231 · · Score: 1

      Why should they? M$ didn't "innovate" on their own. The bulk of their products, new products anyway, are from purchased and sometimes "borrowed" code (JVM?). Why should that have carte blanche and everyone else have to "innovate?"

    12. Re:Sue sue sue, it's the American way! by paesano · · Score: 1

      I guess that depends on your definition of "bundled." :-) Seriously, MS gave huge discounts on Windows to PC manufacturers that "bundled" Word with their hardware. WP was completely locked out. They couldn't get anyone to bundle WP with their computers. Since all these new computers came out with Word installed, no one needed to buy WP anymore. BTW, I'm not arguing that this was tne only thing that killed WP. There were many other contributers, including mismanagement on both WP and Novell's part. The fact that MS wouldn't make API's available to WP could be a contributing factor as well.

    13. Re:Sue sue sue, it's the American way! by namekuseijin · · Score: 1

      Those that can't innovate litigate.

      Or those who don't have the money to buy out threatening innovative small companies and technologies. Or those who haven't made a monopoly out of a lie, a lot of luck, a poor ludibriated schmuck and millions of ignorant consumers.

      --
      I don't feel like it...
    14. Re:Sue sue sue, it's the American way! by Tran · · Score: 2, Informative

      Well, I for one bought computers for a company around that time. We still had standardized on WordPerfect/Qpro and Paradox. Buying a computer from Gateway at the time highlighted MS bundling to me. Basically it ran soemthing like this - Gateway had a a machine with certain specs that met our requirements. Salesperson first ( the numebrs are not exact, but the gist is): "That will $1950." "Oh, ok. I see that MS Office is included with that." "yes" "We dont use MS office we use Wordperfect office, can we get that instead?" "Sure, that would be $2200". "Umm but WP office is cheaper than MS Office" "Well MS gives us a special deal". "Oh, ok. How much is the machine without MS Office?" "That would be $1950". "What?, It costs the same with office or wiotout?" "Yes, MS will not allow us to sell a machine cheaper. It is a special arrangement for using Windows." So if that doesn't constitute bundling, I do not know what is. Yes i know this is anecdoatal to everyone else - but it certainly happened to me. It certtainly showed that Microsoft's success at that time had little to do with superior product.

    15. Re:Sue sue sue, it's the American way! by SillyNickName4me · · Score: 1

      > Gee, I don't know. Maybe some of the failures of Word Perfect (and every other competitor) had something to do with Microsoft's ability to lock them all out of every large Enterprise by their bundling practices.

      Not really. They did have a better product then WP (after trying and failing a few times first)

      The lock-in only comes when they have a large enough marketshare and is used to not allow others to overtake them even if they'd have a theoretically better product.

      > Innovate? Microsoft? Your kidding, right? Their only innovations have been with slimy business practices. No one can dispute their absolute genious there.

      Their business is to create a strategy for getting peopel to repeatedly give them money, then go buy the technology for it one way or another (they do valid research also, but a lot of their products are bought from others)

    16. Re:Sue sue sue, it's the American way! by ahodgson · · Score: 1

      Wordperfect died because Wordperfect for Windows sucked. I hate MS as much as the next guy, but seriously, Wordperfect for Windows was slow and buggy as shit.

    17. Re:Sue sue sue, it's the American way! by SillyNickName4me · · Score: 1

      While what you say about bundling is somethign I experienced as well (try to get vendors to preload OS/2 for example, which happened to be part of my job at the time), but around 1995, word was also a better product.

    18. Re:Sue sue sue, it's the American way! by fubar1971 · · Score: 1

      come along and eat their lunch with just a few new features that the folks at WordPerfect were too lazy to implement.

      IMHO Novell/Wordperfect has/had put out a much better product with the same if not better features than M$. Unfortunatelly, they lost all of their market share to M$, becuase in typicall M$ fashion, they spent a large fortune in marketing to get their products known. It wasn't that Novell was lazy, it was that Microsoft had a better marketing department and bigger marketing budget.

      NetWare basically existed just to make up for the Windows networking components being shitty at the time.

      Netware was around a lot longer than M$ was making NOS'es. They used to have 70% of the NOS market share. As for Windows networking components being shitty at the time, how has that changed from today? Don't get me wrong, they have come a long way, but once again, they rode Novell's coat tales by implementing a Director Service for their product (Of course the big red N stole NDS from LDAP. but I digress). I loved using NDS, unfortunatelly M$ stole their market share, and now I am stuck being a Windows Admin.

    19. Re:Sue sue sue, it's the American way! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      late 80's/early 90's ... I am presuming you didn't actually work with computers and networks during this time frame, because if you did, there's no way you could have made such an erroneous statement.

      I certainly was using computer networks during this time frame. Early 80s is when TCP/IP became popular and Telnet, FTP and email even predated that. In school (mid 80s) almost all the computers were networked.

      Windows, or PCDos or whatever it was called at the time may not have had networking then; but not all computer users at the time would have been aware of it. (I, for example, wouldn't know - used computers since 82; but didn't try PCs til the mid 90s).

    20. Re:Sue sue sue, it's the American way! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Steve Balmer, is that you? I've only ever heard Microsofties use the term "eat your lunch".

      Then you need to get out more, it's a very common expresssion (for the last several decades).

    21. Re:Sue sue sue, it's the American way! by NecroPuppy · · Score: 1

      Tell me about it.

      To this day, it takes me 20 minutes per attempt to get Word to do columns the way I want, not the way it wants.

      I can do the same thing in WordPerfect in 30 seconds.

      --
      I like you, Stuart. You're not like everyone else, here, at Slashdot.
    22. Re:Sue sue sue, it's the American way! by SirLanse · · Score: 1

      And don't forget the forced incompatabilities that MS put into the OS. MS has looked at what APIs Wordperfect used and changed they way they worked between versions of the OS. Ooops it looks like your software is crashing. Ooops it looks like MS wins the benchmark race again.

    23. Re:Sue sue sue, it's the American way! by anomalous+cohort · · Score: 1
      Where do you think Microsoft got the "inspiration" for Active Directory, among other things?

      I thought that the ISODE Consortium invented LDAP. They're the ones credited on the RFC. One of their partners is Novell but that's a far cry from saying Novell invented Active Directory.

    24. Re:Sue sue sue, it's the American way! by danheskett · · Score: 1

      So what? At the time, niether WIndows nor Word was a monopoly. They were just another competitor in a world with 10-15 vibrant platforms and a dozen word processing packages. Lotus was openly hostile to Microsoft and its Windows platform, which they wanted to see done away with. The fact that MS killed WP isn't a crime.

    25. Re:Sue sue sue, it's the American way! by ClosedSource · · Score: 1

      Your memory of that time is different than mine. I don't think OEM's bundled MS Office much in those days.

      For one thing, WordPerfect was the market leader not MS Word. Also spreadsheets were not commonly used for non-accounting purposes in those days.

      Most OEM's were competing on price and basic features like how much RAM and Disk space they had. The last thing they would want to do was jack up the price by hundreds of dollars with an expensive software suite that probably wouldn't fit on the hard disk of most of their systems.

    26. Re:Sue sue sue, it's the American way! by ClosedSource · · Score: 1

      Funny how hundreds of companies didn't have these problems when programming for Windows. Wordperfect for Windows crashed a lot on its very first version. How was MS able to look at which APIs Wordperfect for Windows used before it was released?

      You're going to have to give me a lot more specific info and timelines before I'd buy into your claim.

    27. Re:Sue sue sue, it's the American way! by ClosedSource · · Score: 1

      MS Word won the competition with Wordperfect long before Novell had anything to do it. It was over even before Corel owned it.

    28. Re:Sue sue sue, it's the American way! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      LDAP is a lightweight communication protocol for talking to X.500.

      Novell Directory Services (NDS) is Novell's implementation of directory services based on the X.500 specification.

      I couldn't really tell you what spec Microsoft had in mind when they created Active Directory-- It's too entangled in the backwards compatibility required by domain controllers.

    29. Re:Sue sue sue, it's the American way! by fubar1971 · · Score: 1

      Doesn't matter who won, the point I'm trying to make, is that they are better products and M$ has a better marketing department.

    30. Re:Sue sue sue, it's the American way! by twiddlingbits · · Score: 1

      LDAP is not the same as AD. They share some common features but AD does more than implement the RFC. LDAP = Lightweight Directory Access Protocol as was based on the X.500 protocol as I recall. But it was "lighter" for the web. LDAP has been implemented all over the place on many different OSes. See http://www.gracion.com/server/whatldap.html for some history on LDAP. AD=Active Directory which is a MS ONLY service, and it controls a whole lot more than LDAP does, such as setting your PC security, firewall configurations, access permissions, etc. Last time I looked AD had something like 300 plus configuration settings for an NT box.

    31. Re:Sue sue sue, it's the American way! by ClosedSource · · Score: 1

      I haven't used WordPerfect for many years, perhaps it's better now. I didn't like the DOS versions (long before I used MS Word, by the way) and the early Windows version was buggy, so I'm not likely to try it now. That ship has already sailed.

    32. Re:Sue sue sue, it's the American way! by cryogenix · · Score: 1

      You missed the point of this. Microsoft deliberately locked out a Novell product from their operating system and then refused to allow them the information to make it work thus killing it off. That's not innovation. The people controlling the OS intentially broke a product that runs on that OS in order to hurt that company. We know they have done it before. This time they had to pay for it. FYI eDirectory is still a far superior directory compared to Active Directory. Doesn't matter if it's running on Netware, Windows or Linux. (And it will run under all 3 unlike AD)

    33. Re:Sue sue sue, it's the American way! by cryogenix · · Score: 1

      Not true. Microsoft Bob was an innovation. One developed totally in house. And we can see how well that did :)

    34. Re:Sue sue sue, it's the American way! by emjoi_gently · · Score: 1

      The old DOS WordPerfect 5.1 was based around remembering complex combinations of Function keys. Very powerful if you had the right kind of mind to remember the Secret Codes. Or had that nifty template. Hell to teach to Beginners though. Anyway, with that in mind, I could understand it would have been popular to Linux users.

    35. Re:Sue sue sue, it's the American way! by ClosedSource · · Score: 1

      I think if you spend 90% of your time working with a single application, memorizing command-line and function key combinations make sense (of course, for many DOS applications there was no choice).

      I think one of the reasons that Unix fans cling so strongly to familiar tools is that they don't want to learn a lot of new keystrokes and keywords despite the fact that they celebrate the command-line. It's the command line one already knows that is powerful.

    36. Re:Sue sue sue, it's the American way! by barc0001 · · Score: 1

      I wasn't talking about LDAP. I was more referring to parts of AD that seem inspired by stuff I had seen in Novell Directory Services.

    37. Re:Sue sue sue, it's the American way! by Matt_Joyce · · Score: 1

      "Where do you think Microsoft got the "inspiration" for Active Directory, among other things?"

      x500 the same as Novell did.

      I joke, NDS rocked, and possibly still does.
      My memories of NDS Manager tell me MS Active Directory Users and Computer sucks.

    38. Re:Sue sue sue, it's the American way! by dave420 · · Score: 1
      Or, maybe that Word was a better word processor than Word Perfect? Ever think of that? Maybe, and this might not apply to you, that most people PREFERRED the MS product over the competitor?

      Remember - Microsoft was a tiny company once. They couldn't price people out of the market or use their weight when they only had 30 employees. They are the most popular, as they offer the best balance of price, functionality, and effectiveness. Of course, you can bitch/moan/whine about how bad MS is, but they're still producing everything the OSS community is trying to emulate. If the OSS community is so much more inspired than Microsoft, how come linux is constantly playing catch-up to windows? I don't get it. You can't have it both ways.

  8. Good for Linux Desktop by syntap · · Score: 1

    Maybe now they can change the "eval" flag to "fully free"

    1. Re:Good for Linux Desktop by j.blechert · · Score: 1

      1. the distro is fully free in all regards, only the online update is limited to 30 days 2. The limit is logical, novell wants to -sell- a product, they are not selling linux, the only thing they are selling is their support. And they -have- to sell it because bandwith and support staff both cost money. I guess I just fell for a bad joke

  9. Beware the Microsoft settlements by IGnatius+T+Foobar · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Generally, whenever Microsoft settles with anyone it's bad for the free world.
    • Microsoft settles with DOJ. Result: Microsoft doesn't get broken up like it deserved, and now wants to "license" standard Internet protocols to you.
    • Microsoft settles with AOL. Result: the final nail in Netscape's coffin, and the Mozilla developers all get fired. And of course, the dream of seeing Gecko in AOL client is dashed.
    • Microsoft settles with Sun. Result: anti-Linux collusion between Microsoft and Sun.
    • Microsoft settles with Novell. Result: We don't know yet, but I'm expecting something ugly. Maybe some bizarre legal cross-licensing to prevent non-commercial software from existing?
    --
    Tired of FB/Google censorship? Visit UNCENSORED!
    1. Re:Beware the Microsoft settlements by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The dream of seeing Gecko in AOL? Who cares? Microsoft remains completely dominant on the desktop because people like Windows. Gecko changes nothing. If Microsoft put significant resources to upgrading their aging Explorer, it would stem the tide of Firefox. AOL is only important to AOL.

    2. Re:Beware the Microsoft settlements by SpaceLifeForm · · Score: 1

      But, if it really smells, then why did Novell buy SuSE?

      --
      You are being MICROattacked, from various angles, in a SOFT manner.
    3. Re:Beware the Microsoft settlements by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Microsoft settles with Novell. Result: We don't know yet, but I'm expecting something ugly. Maybe some bizarre legal cross-licensing to prevent non-commercial software from existing?

      And let's not forget the recent resignation of Chris Stone from Novell. Maybe it's just a coincidence.

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
    4. Re:Beware the Microsoft settlements by winse · · Score: 1

      This isn't a LETS-BE-FRIENDS-NOW type settlemenet. This money is blood drawn from M$. I think LaSala has just won the M$ most pesky people award. From what I understand this only settles a portion of the ongoing litigation Novell has had pending against M$.

      --
      this sig is deprecated
    5. Re:Beware the Microsoft settlements by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      My take on Chris Stone is that he had a falling out with Waltham in September when he was 'sent' to harvard business school. His 'resignation was just a formalization of Messmen et al. giving him the axe

    6. Re:Beware the Microsoft settlements by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And there's, like, that lil' company Novell bought some time ago.. What was the name? Mmmm, t'was something like SuSE... I think so, but can't seem to remember very clearly. I think they were into something like Linux... Lenux, Lanux, Lunux? Must have some email about it somewhere...

    7. Re:Beware the Microsoft settlements by saur2004 · · Score: 1

      Even though I, like some others here have already mentioned, dont think Novel is a member of the Borg just yet, I agree with you that this still pegs my tinfoilhat-o-meter, and that Novel needs to be watched closely now.

    8. Re:Beware the Microsoft settlements by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Anti-Linux collusion between Microsoft and Sun? Could you please cite some references?

  10. Woo Hoo! by santiag0 · · Score: 0, Troll
    I was loading up on NOVL stock friday on that selloff over Chris Stone leaving.

    Thank You Mr. Gates! I now officially forgive you for all the hours I've spent fixing spyware and virus ridden Windows boxes for my friends and family over the last few years (I've been on Linux for 5 years, still can't seem to get away from fixing windows boxes though).

    BTW: the new Novell Linux Desktop aimed at corporate customers looks slick: http://www.novell.com/products/desktop/

    1. Re:Woo Hoo! by dprust · · Score: 1

      Well, let's be fair though -- the only computer that is truly secure is unplugged, locked-up in a warehouse, and guarded by very hungry dogs. Since the bewilderingly large majority of people use Windows, it makes sense to target Windows for things like spyware, viruses, etc. If the Macintosh had more than 2% of the market, those spyware/virus makers would spend more time on the Macintosh. I'm old enough to remember the days when Macintoshes had /more/ viruses than Windows did for this reason -- Mac used to be on top.

    2. Re:Woo Hoo! by happyemoticon · · Score: 1
      I now officially forgive you for all the hours I've spent fixing spyware and virus ridden Windows boxes for my friends and family over the last few years (I've been on Linux for 5 years, still can't seem to get away from fixing windows boxes though).

      I know exactly how you feel.

      The trouble is, for all the downfalls of Windows, I still wouldn't recommend Linux to anyone who isn't already very proficient in computers, has a lot of free time, and remembers DOS. This whole paradigm reminds me of the buzzword "killer app" that you used to hear so much, and not at all nowadays. That used to be Wordperfect, for those of us with short memories - it was that product which Microsoft destroyed that allowed Microsoft to succeed in the first place, because it alone justified the purchase of the computer.

      Microsoft has spent the last ten years turning Windows itself into a killer app, and that is only magnified by Office. If Linux is ever going to gain any significant market share, it needs to be approximately as easy as windows, along with its current security superiority, have enterprise capabilities, and Star/OpenOffice needs to be clearly superior to MS Office.

      Or, everyone will have to switch over when the security compromises reach some kind of critical mass and even looking at a WinPC means your identity has been stolen. I have a bottle of expensive vodka waiting for that day.

  11. Yawn. The river flows. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I know this means a lot to Novell, but big money moves in this industry (like in so many others) like a river. Microsoft has a viable, long term strategy for survival and success. Novell has a viable, long term strategy for survival -- maybe. Part of the Microsoft strategy is legal payoffs as the cost of doing business. Things change when companies fail to innovate. IBM was too slow to keep up so they went through a bad time. Microsoft innovates not in the realm of technology, but in the realm of selling technology. No one does it better.

  12. Shazbot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Informative

    We appear to have slashdotted Novell. That's how we repay them on a Monday morning, huh? Oh wait, here it is.

    Novell Settles One Antitrust Claim with Microsoft for $536 Million, Plans to File Suit on Second Claim
    Press Release

    • Novell and Microsoft settle potential lawsuit related to Novell's NetWare operating system for $536 million
    • Novell announces it will file antitrust lawsuit against Microsoft related to WordPerfect claims

    WALTHAM, Mass. -- Nov. 08, 2004 -- Novell today announced an agreement with Microsoft to settle potential antitrust litigation related to Novell's NetWare operating system in exchange for $536 million in cash. Novell also announced that by the end of this week it will file an antitrust suit against Microsoft in the United States District Court in Utah seeking unspecified damages in connection with alleged harm to Novell's WordPerfect application software business in the mid-1990s.

    Under terms of the settlement, in exchange for the cash payment, Novell has agreed to a general release of claims that it has as of the date of the agreement, with certain exclusions that include patent claims and claims associated with Novell's WordPerfect business. The agreement also includes a release by Microsoft of claims that would have been compulsory counterclaims to the NetWare claims asserted by Novell. Finally, Novell has agreed to withdraw its intervention in the European Commission's case with Microsoft.

    "We are pleased that we have been able to resolve a portion of our pending legal issues with Microsoft," said Joseph A. LaSala, Jr., Novell's senior vice president and general counsel. "This is a significant settlement, particularly since we were able to achieve our objectives without filing expensive litigation. While we have agreed to withdraw from the EU case, we think our involvement there has been useful, as it has assisted the European proceedings and facilitated a favorable settlement with Microsoft. With the EU case now on appeal, we are comfortable with our decision to withdraw from the proceeding. There is simply not much left for us to do.

    "We regret that we cannot make a similar announcement regarding our antitrust claims associated with the WordPerfect business. We have had extensive discussions with Microsoft to resolve our differences, but despite our best efforts, we were unable to agree on acceptable terms. We intend to pursue our claims aggressively toward a goal of recovering fair and considerable value for the harm caused to Novell's business," LaSala said.

    The WordPerfect suit that Novell will file seeks unspecified damages arising from Microsoft's efforts to eliminate competition in the office productivity applications market during the time that Novell owned the WordPerfect word-processing application and the Quattro Pro spreadsheet application. The suit is based in part on facts proved by the United States Government in its successful antitrust case against Microsoft. In that suit, Microsoft was found to have unlawfully maintained a monopoly in the market for personal computer operating systems by eliminating competition in related markets.

    Legal notice regarding forward looking statements
    This press release includes statements that are not historical in nature and that may be characterized as "forward-looking statements," including those related to future financial and operating results, benefits and synergies of the company's brands and strategies, future opportunities and the growth of the market for open source solutions. You should be aware that Novell's actual results could differ materially from those contained in the forward-looking statements, which are based on current expectations of Novell management and are subject to a number of risks and uncertainties, including, but not limited to, Novell's ability to integrate acquired operations and employees, Novell's success in executing its Linux strategies, Novell's ability to deliver on its one Net vision

  13. 1994? Should have sued them then. by garcia · · Score: 4, Informative

    The WordPerfect suit that Novell will file seeks unspecified damages arising from Microsoft's efforts to eliminate competition in the office productivity applications market during the time that Novell owned the WordPerfect word-processing application and the Quattro Pro spreadsheet application. The suit is based in part on facts proved by the United States Government in its successful antitrust case against Microsoft. In that suit, Microsoft was found to have unlawfully maintained a monopoly in the market for personal computer operating systems by eliminating competition in related markets.

    Now, I can't stand MSFT's business tactics as much as the next Slashdotter but WordPerfect missed the fucking boat on a lot of shit when it came to the migration from DOS to Windows...

    Novell bought out WordPerfect 3/94. They were supporting legacy versions of WordPerfect for DOS and updating several versions for Windows. How they expected to compete against Word was really beyond me. Any software application that basically required a function key explanation chart at the top of every keyboard was doomed when GUI took hold.

    I have fond memories of WP5.1 for DOS but I am so glad that we have moved away from SHIFT+ALT+CTRL F11 for foo. WordPerfect took over from WordStar because of superior interface and design. While many people adore WP I wonder if it is more of a holdover from years gone by rather than actual superiority.

    Personally, Word is easy to get and use and it happens to be better than what Corel/Novell was offering at the time and that's why it won out. Maybe this lawsuit was better served 10 years ago in 1994 and not now in 2004.

  14. Hopefully by BlackEyedSceva · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I would like to see Novell overpower Microsoft more often. From the looks of Novell's new linux product lineup, it appears they may be a major competitor against microsoft in the future.

    1. Re:Hopefully by stratjakt · · Score: 1

      Yep.. Embrace linux, then sue the hell out of whoever in the industry has money.

      It worked for SCO. It can work for Novell! Go Novell!

      --
      I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
    2. Re:Hopefully by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Novell Desktop Linux. The answer to the question that nobody's asking.

    3. Re:Hopefully by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The question is, "is there a vendor supported desktop that integrates with my servers?"

      Now, the question is, will anyone believe the answer?

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

      After seeing a preso by Novell of their "Enterprise Solution", you may have to wait a long time. The whole thing was peppered with "that's version 0.9b" and "that'll be done in about 9 months". So, it's off to Windows we went...no non-vaporware products available to replace Novell Cluster F%&^ Services.

  15. Now they can claim funding by bblazer · · Score: 3, Funny

    Paying off these lawsuits is just the cost of doing business for MS. But given their perversion of reality, I wouldn't be surprised if I soon see Balmer giving one of his heart attack speeches claiming that they love open source and that by paying these law suits that they are really funding it.

    --
    My .bashrc can beat up your .bashrc!
  16. WordPerfect by clinko · · Score: 2, Interesting

    WordPerfect... The OTHER Monopoly. Several Law, Insurance, & State departments are still forced to use WordPerfect because they archived in WPDs.

    I really don't feel for WordPerfect's side on that suit.

    1. Re:WordPerfect by stratjakt · · Score: 1

      Wahhhhh..

      MSFT stoled *our monopoly* by introducing a superior alternative! They even made it aware of all of our keyboard shortcuts to help people migrate!

      Wahhhh gimme money.

      --
      I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
    2. Re:WordPerfect by Lxy · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      You're a fscking idiot.

      Wouldn't "monopoly" imply that they have a significant user base?

      I work in a Wordperfect shop. We have since started moving to Word. The users have literally started a mutiny against us, because we're taking away the superior WP product and giving them inferior Word. Some are to the point of taking their documents home and working on them in WP there, because they don't want to have to use Word. Word is an inferior product, no doubt about it.

      Also, there is no such thing as WPD lock-in. WPD is one of the nicer formats out there, and if you've looked at Abiword or talked to the WP OO.o developers, you'll know that it's a lot easier to work with than .DOC. The WP format hasn't changed much since WP6.1, and opening up a WP6.1 files on Corel WP 12 is pretty slick. Try opening a complex Word document from even one version ago. Yeah, right. You'll be reformatting for hours. WP stays pretty standard on their format.

      Let me guess, you've never used WP, and you've been brainwashed into thinking Word is better. Idiot.

      --

      There is no reasonable defense against an idiot with an agenda
      :wq
    3. Re:WordPerfect by blether · · Score: 1

      WordPerfect did have the monopoly, the mind share and the lock-in back in the late eighties, early nineties. That they managed to lose it (and it wasn't because they were playing nice) is one of the classic stories of atrocious mismanagement.

    4. Re:WordPerfect by Reziac · · Score: 5, Interesting

      And "monopoly" would imply *lack* of choice. People used WP by choice back then even more than now -- in WP's heyday, WP had direct competition from Wordstar, MultiMate, and numerous other word processors of varying capability. WP cornered what was then a very competitive market because of several factors:

      1) support for every printer known to man
      2) features that users wanted (notably, features for lawyers, which no other product bothered to include)
      3) excellent free tech support for one and all (legal user or not)
      4) Reveal Codes (the ultimate timesaver for complex documents)

      WP only lost the market lead by being slow and lame to the Windows bandwagon, and I think more critical, by radically reducing their free tech support.

      Until WPWin8, where WP got its Windows act back together, WinWord was prettier to look at, but Word has *never* been superior in any way, and as you say about file formats -- lordy!!

      BTW, tho I have (and use, and collect) most WP versions, I still use WP5.1 as my everyday workhorse, and I lurk on the WP OO.o mailing list. :)

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    5. Re:WordPerfect by stratjakt · · Score: 1

      You collect WP versions?

      Forget LARPers, furries and cosplay! That trekkie guy should make a movie about you.

      Comedic gold.

      --
      I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
    6. Re:WordPerfect by Reziac · · Score: 1

      LOL!! Bring him on -- maybe that'll get me donations of hard-to-find early editions :)

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    7. Re:WordPerfect by Jeff+DeMaagd · · Score: 1

      Huh? Are Word .docs OK because other companies and groups managed to reverse engineer it somehow, and wpds aren't because no one seems to care?

    8. Re:WordPerfect by antiMStroll · · Score: 1

      If much less 10% of the total installed user base is defined as a monopoly in your book, I'm dying to see the rest of your dictionary. Is Cobol listed under "monopoly" as well because of all the banks 'forced' to maintain it?

    9. Re:WordPerfect by jbarr · · Score: 1
      WordPerfect... The OTHER Monopoly. Several Law, Insurance, & State departments are still forced to use WordPerfect because they archived in WPDs.

      I really don't feel for WordPerfect's side on that suit
      Um, that's not WordPerfect's fault. Maybe the several Law, Insurance, & State departments that chose to archive using WordPerfect should have thought out the process a bit more. Maybe if they had relied more on function than form by using something a bit more portable like standard ASCII files, they wouldn't have this problem. That's the problem with standardizing on a proprietary format. Don't forget that Word is still aproprietary format--it's just more popular. Besides, there are quite a few avaiable .WPD viewers and .WPD to .DOC converters. I don't know the legality of converting archived documents, but there certainly seems to be both migration and access paths....
      --
      My mom always said, "Jim, you're 1 in a million." Given the current population, there are 7000 of me. God help us all!
    10. Re:WordPerfect by DaveJay · · Score: 1

      Nothing says "I am debating your statements, not attacking you personally" like starting a reply with "You're a fscking idiot". Heh.

    11. Re:WordPerfect by Planesdragon · · Score: 1

      Maybe if they had relied more on function than form by using something a bit more portable like standard ASCII files, they wouldn't have this problem.

      Turning a WP or MSW file into plain-text for archival purposes would be horrific. Part of the reason why these files are kept is so that various footnotes, references, citations, and whatnot will remain and be auto-updated as a document is quoted, revised, and altered.

      An open archive format that retained all of the information would be useful to an extent, but it'd have to come from Novel & Microsoft, not the end-users.

    12. Re:WordPerfect by Lxy · · Score: 1

      Yeah, you're probably right. My Bawls fridge is empty this morning so I had to go find some of that "other" caffeinated product.

      --

      There is no reasonable defense against an idiot with an agenda
      :wq
    13. Re:WordPerfect by cryogenix · · Score: 1

      That's somewhat of a silly statement. If you use any product chances are you have files stored in that file format. At least WP will open current word files, what's the last version of WP that word supports, 5.1?

  17. Re:Novell is a dead company by paitre · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Novell is "reinventing" themselves as a Linux company.
    Specifically, who do you think owns SuSE these days? It's Novell.

    IMO - I think Novell has a couple of very nice products that they simply need to redeploy - a lot of the technology behind netware is actually pretty cool, but they allowed themselves to become marginalized (IOW - they sat on the laurels they built for themselves in the late80's and early '90s and it's almost put them out of business).

    Once they finish this turn around, I expect them to regain some competitiveness, but getting back into "their" market is going to take some doing.

  18. Chris Stone? by wcdw · · Score: 3, Interesting

    So is *this* the reason that Chris left Novell on Friday?

    http://www.theboyz.biz/Your source for hardware, software, video games, small appliances, electronics and more!

    --
    If you're not living on the edge, you're just taking up space!
  19. Shouldn't this be posted AC... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Interesting

    ... to prevent obvious karma whoring?

  20. Re:1994? Should have sued them then. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    I am so glad that we have moved away from SHIFT+ALT+CTRL F11 for foo.

    I take it you're not an Emacs user... :-)

  21. Re:$ sign in front? by TheRealMindChild · · Score: 4, Informative

    It is one of those things that are supposed to help you read by preparing the reader for what they are reading.

    It is similar to having the upside-down question marks and such in spanish... it is so the reader knows up front that they are reading a question.

    --

    "When life gives you lemons, don't make lemonade. Make life take the lemons back!" -- Cave Johnson
  22. Round and round... by tod_miller · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Someone make a nice chart with who paid who what...

    I have a snakeing suspiscion that the IT world, for all thier intelligence and success, are being played by sleeping agents of lawyers who deliberately steer companies to collide, and the resultant lawsuites just move money around, while the lawyers skim the cheddar off the top...

    So, to draw sides:

    Novell, Sun, IBM, AMD

    versus

    Microsoft, SCO, Intel and... erm...

    Man this hurts my head, who to trust...

    I noticed Novell came from nowhere (IMHO) recently exposurewise, they really built themselves up as a player (IMHO) and this linux offering is becoming the dotCom tradition now, make a any company, and you have to have your own distro! (Yeah yeah I know about novell and unix)

    Maybe one day Microsoft will have thier own linux distro...

    Oh, I forgot, they are buying licenses off SCO, and rewriting gnu code into longhorn (true!)

    Well done those guys.

    Now who hates kodak?

    --
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    1. Re:Round and round... by I+confirm+I'm+not+a · · Score: 1, Interesting

      they [Microsoft] are buying licenses off SCO, and rewriting gnu code into longhorn (true!)

      Much as I'd love to believe that, it'd (a) be against the terms of the GPL, and (b) if/when they were caught - they'd be so badly screwed it wouldn't be funny[1]. And they'd be caught just as soon as they refused to pay an employee a raise. So - got any proof?

      [1] Oh, alright. It would be funny. Very.

      --
      This is where the serious fun begins.
    2. Re:Round and round... by teamhasnoi · · Score: 1
      Oh, I forgot, they are buying licenses off SCO, and rewriting gnu code into longhorn (true!)

      I don't put it past them, as the evil aura that surrounds MS is enough to be confused with Northern Lights in Redmond. Do you have a source for this?

    3. Re:Round and round... by stratjakt · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Do you have a source for this?

      Yeah, he read it in some users comment on slashdot, that's his source.

      The code MS already has is in almost every case superior to any GPL equivelant.

      Either this is slashbot idiocy at it's zenith, or YHBT, HAND.

      --
      I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
    4. Re:Round and round... by micromoog · · Score: 1
      it'd be against the terms of the GPL

      Not if they're rewriting it, as the parent poster said. This is copyright law, not patent law.

    5. Re:Round and round... by Reziac · · Score: 1

      The money is like the legendary Christmas Fruitcake -- in reality there is only one; it just gets redistributed every year. Similarly, there is only one lump of money in all the M$/Novell/SCO/Sun/Whoever world; it just changes custody occasionally.

      One does have to wonder how much more money each of these companies would have if they hadn't spent it suing and paying off one another. That, and the lawyers' cut-per-suit, would make an interesting chart indeed.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    6. Re:Round and round... by Blitzenn · · Score: 1

      rewritting code does NOT circumvence copywrite, trademark or patent. Legally it is even more difficult to circumvence a signed license agreement, as demonstrated by the upholding of the EULA last week in court, posted here on Slashdot. The previous comment stands, MS would not do this without risking it's ability to continue as a viable business. In that light, I have a hard time believing this gutteral rumor.

    7. Re:Round and round... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Isn't that what the SCO suit is all about? They're claiming ownership of parts of Linux. If MS licence the parts that SCO claim they own and use them in Longhorn they're in the clear. The dangerous part of the whole thing is the terms of the Unix licences that say derivative works belong to SCO, this means anything based on the IBM code (since that code may or may not become SCO's code) will also belong to SCO. Developers may be able to pull their code, and may be able to sue IBM (good luck), but without a licence from SCO it sets Linux back quite a long way. Pretty much everyone involved is tainted with the IBM/SCO code and with the derivative works clauses things can (and probably will) get messy if SCO win.

    8. Re:Round and round... by civilizedINTENSITY · · Score: 1

      Wasn't MS's Posix layer Cygwin? Isn't that GPL? So its not that its *better* so much as it is the very same thing? Or did you mean Interix? But isn't that Cygwin too?

    9. Re:Round and round... by stratjakt · · Score: 1

      Oh, that irrelevant shit that was never used and was only included to satisfy some government regulations? Yeah, theres possibly some GPL in there. Especially if some indian name sent some email on some forum saying so, that's proof positive.

      I was talking about the code that actually sells the software.

      --
      I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
    10. Re:Round and round... by tod_miller · · Score: 1

      You don't have to put it past them, grep the web for unix tools for windows (caontains gpl code) and look at how thier is evolving into longhorn, and how they are rewritting gpl code to include into longhorn

      wierd - I don't know why, and I lost the link, but yes, call it the unixski. (re: concorde and concordeski)

      Blighters, all of them!

      --
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    11. Re:Round and round... by tod_miller · · Score: 1

      I am pretty sure they are doing it open and above board somehow - look at unix tools for windows (windows 2000 up I think) and the links from an article to how longhorn will have this package (probably they will start going ministry of truth on this)

      I can only base this on the legitimacy of the article, although unix tools for windows really is gpl stuff I think (they redist it)

      --
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    12. Re:Round and round... by tod_miller · · Score: 1

      http://www.dashes.com/anil/2004/01/19/microsoft_ni x

      And speaking of scripts, SFU includes Perl 5.6.1. There's even the full complement of standard Unix utilities, including awk, grep, sed, tr, cut, tar, cpio, less, at, cron and batch. Essential applications like bind, sendmail and ftp? Present. Even gcc, gdb, and make are in the package.

      Now I did read something about how this will be totally different an integrated into longhorn.

      So Microsoft are speaking out violently against open source , linux, pressing bad associations, while just writting thier code so when the world says, aha, look what it can do, they can say, hey they must have copied us!

      --
      #hostfile 0.0.0.0 primidi.com 0.0.0.0 www.primidi.com 0.0.0.0 radio.weblogs.com
  23. Re:Novell is a dead company by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    I'd love to agree... except, with the aquisition of Suse, I think they will quickly become the number 2 commercial linux distro, perhaps even number 1 over redhat.

    Why do I say this, novell still has name recognition. Sure, they were destroyed by MS in the server arena, but they never lost face in the eyes of us Net Admins. So, as a administrator, if I had to pick a linux distro for my business I would be all over Novell/Suse.

    Just my $0.02

  24. Re:$ sign in front? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yup we do.

  25. Re:$ sign in front? by stratjakt · · Score: 1

    What would you say, "536 dollar million"?

    --
    I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
  26. But do they do Windows by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    It's a nice looking package and the indemnification is certainly nice for the corporate market they're targeting but have they got the "playing nice with Windows" down like the Xandros Linux desktop. Do they handle interacting with Windows shares seamlessly and is authentication through an Active Directory server or PDC domain as seamless as with the Business Edition of Xandros Desktop. If you don't have the seamless windows compatibility in a sea of Windows boxes, your Linux machine is going nowhere.

    Have to try it and see I guess but I'm not too optimistic.

    1. Re:But do they do Windows by stratjakt · · Score: 1

      Which browser/file manager/whatever can browse a windows share the same way explorer does?

      That is, I can type \\servername\share\folder into the "address bar", or equivelant, and be able to browse it? Or browse the entire network to discover shares with a "network neighbourhood" type of equivelant?

      I can't get LISA to work properly, and don't particularly care for KDE. LISA all works around pinging hosts, and as a rule my boxes all ignore ICMP. No reason to ping stuff on my lan at home.

      Is there such support actually built into any file manager, that doesnt require some wonky daemon in the background? Mounting the share to access it is awkward, and you have to know the fully qualified path to the share (no browsing or discovery).

      Printers too. I want to browse the network, find a printer, and click on it to install it, just like in windows. Can such things be done yet?

      --
      I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
    2. Re:But do they do Windows by man_ls · · Score: 1

      IIRC, on Windows, there is a daemon that handles this.

      "Computer Browser" service: "Maintains an updated list of computers on the network and supplies this list to computers designated as browsers."

    3. Re:But do they do Windows by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      While OS X lacks the address bar, I just have to click the big network icon and browse my way to the machine I want. When I find it I get a list of Shares, and I can mount them. All without a single keystroke (unless there is a password).

      When they're mounted they join network and my local drives in the top left hand corner of the finder... I actually prefer it this way becuase unlike on a PC I only mount the network drives that I want, or that are actually around. At work, I mount my work drives, at home my home shares; with a PC laptop I'd have all sorts of broken shares at home and at work.

      As for printers, I've never found anything easier to use than Rendevous. If I'm near a Rendevous networked printer it just shows up in my pull down list of printers (the one you get when you click print in an application). I don't even need to install it, it's just there and it just works. When I leave the network, again no broken icons, the printer just goes away.

      YMMV

    4. Re:But do they do Windows by stratjakt · · Score: 1

      That's basically it's component that acts as the local master browser, you can operate without it. Read up on browser elections and all that crap in the SAMBA docs if you care more.

      I don't care if it's a daemon or what, I just want to be able to peruse smb shares without a hassle. Setting up lisa on anything but the most simple networks is a hassle.

      I open up a VPN to my office, and I want to browse the shares on the machines in the office. Lisa's whole "ping every machine evar" approach doesn't work, unless I'm supposed to have it constantly pinging an entire subnet that isn't currently connected?

      I'll settle for being able to type \\server\share\customer_notes.txt and having the file just pop up on the screen, ready for editing and saving. If I need a password, it prompts me for one.

      The fact that theres a network at all is transparent under windows. Right now under linux I have to do all this horseshit despite the fancy shmancy GUI: "mkdir /mnt/tmp" "mount -t cifs //server/share/ /mnt/tmp -o Username=Administrator;Password=hithere" "nano /mnt/tmpshare/customer_notes.txt" "umount /mnt/tmp"

      --
      I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
    5. Re:But do they do Windows by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Printers too. I want to browse the network, find a printer, and click on it to install it, just like in windows. Can such things be done yet?

      LOL! Dunno about the whole Novell/Microsoft thing, but I do know that there's been quite a row at a studio about getting a networked printer to actually show up on a few Win 2000 machines. Browse the network...no printer? But the other one "sees" it, and it's there on the server...but...but....

      Just like Windows indeed.
    6. Re:But do they do Windows by bone_idol · · Score: 1

      Konqueror and paths like
      smb://server/share/customer_notes.txt
      works perfectly for me every time.. if there is a password it prompts me for one

  27. Re:$ sign in front? by I+confirm+I'm+not+a · · Score: 1

    I can't speak for the US, but New Zealand certainly puts the $ up-front. We'd say "536 million dollars", though.

    Ditto for the UK and most of the rest (all?) of the EU: the Pound (Sterling) or Euro symbol would go up-front, but they'd say it with the currency last.

    Just out of curiousity, which currencies don't follow this system?

    --
    This is where the serious fun begins.
  28. Re:1994? Should have sued them then. by julesh · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I have fond memories of WP5.1 for DOS but I am so glad that we have moved away from SHIFT+ALT+CTRL F11 for foo. WordPerfect took over from WordStar because of superior interface and design. While many people adore WP I wonder if it is more of a holdover from years gone by rather than actual superiority.

    Perhaps it's because once you've learned it, the interface style you're "glad that we have moved away from" is actually superior to most modern interfaces, at least in terms of operator efficiency. It's just the learning curve that's a bitch.

  29. Here's hoping... by KrackHouse · · Score: 1

    ...Word is based on Wordperfect so even if OO.o Writer is copying Word it'll be free and clear unless Novell decides to sue which is unlikely I'd guess.

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    1. Re:Here's hoping... by stratjakt · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Here's hoping Novell loses big, and no judge is stupid enough to think that a word processor (one of the first functions PCs were designed to be able to do) is a market you can hijack with patents.

      Word had a sensible GUI, WP stuck with cryptic keyboard shortcuts. WP lost on the usability front. They once had a monopoly on word processing, just like Netscape once had a virtual monopoly on browsers. And they both lost it by never adapting their sucktastic products.

      --
      I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
    2. Re:Here's hoping... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      On the long term, "cryptic" keyboard shortcuts are a big win.

      At the time, the market was undergoing huge growth, so long term benefits were not a deciding factor; the rate of assimilating new users was.

  30. Half a billion by truthsearch · · Score: 3, Funny

    "We are pleased that we have been able to resolve a portion of our pending legal issues with Microsoft"

    Well, duh! You're going to get a check for over half a billion dollars. I'd be more than "pleased."

  31. Tinfoil hat time... by kuwan · · Score: 1

    I was loading up on NOVL stock friday on that selloff over Chris Stone leaving.

    With news of this big settlement comes the question: Why did Chris Stone leave?

    Was it because of the terms of this settlement? What concessions did Microsoft get from Novell to make the settlement work for them? Will this now affect Novell's Linux strategy?

  32. Re:1994? Should have sued them then. by garcia · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It's just the learning curve that's a bitch.

    For regular users of the software the learning curve is worth the time. For those that just want to type a quick document but still want to be able to perform operations on the document want to do so without having to look at cryptic key combinations or find options buried in hidden menus.

    Most computer users these days are "casual users" and don't care to learn more than point and click. The "power users" might be offended by the fact that they are being left out but the simple fact of the matter is that the "casual users" are the ones in the majority and the ones that the companies cater to.

  33. Re:$ sign in front? by julesh · · Score: 2, Funny

    No. But the sign still goes in front.

  34. Ah haa... by T3kno · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    I guess we now know why microsoft was holding all of that cash.

    --
    (B) + (D) + (B) + (D) = (K) + (&)
  35. Re:$ sign in front? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Actually in an international forum, the $ would be pre-pended to show the currency symbol, and USD would be appended to show _which_ dollars were involved.

    But as someone already pointed out, this is a standard convention for currencies world-wide, and would be spoken as "536 million dollars" or "536 million US dollars".

  36. Did MS make them fire Chris Stone Too? by N8F8 · · Score: 1, Redundant

    Or did he quit in protest? From last weeks story: Open Source Advocate VP Chris Stone Leaves Novell

    --
    "God fights on the side with the best artillery." - Napoleon, Marshal of France - speaking truth to power
  37. No, by bnavarro · · Score: 1, Informative

    Microsoft had LAN Manager, which was direct, if crappy, competition to Netware and Banyan, before they incorporated into WfW as peer-to-peer filesharing. Indeed, if you peek at even the NT networking layer dlls, I believe you will still see ID strings titled "LANMAN" -- showing that there still either exists some LAN Manager code in Windows, or at least that the NetBEUI layer is still codenamed after what it originated from.

    1. Re:No, by paesano · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I think you'll see that NetWare pre-dated LanMan, which, by Novell Engineers, was often referred to as "LandFill." Novell created the market (very innovative). Banyan innovated with their Directory component. Novell improved on the Directory (a huge gamble and innovation). Microsoft just kept trying to catch up. Eventually they had an inferior product that worked just well enough to compete. Then the FUD and marketing took over. The rest is history (notice the absolute lack of techincal innovation).

    2. Re:No, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Microsoft had LAN Manager

      Pathworks had LAN Manager. Microsoft licensed the technology for WfW. The relevant README files even mention Pathworks in the copyright and trademark statements.

      Novell wanted complete control over the netware stack, and wouldn't touch NetBUI, which Microsoft was already pretty well roped into supporting at the time. This doomed any more deals with them.

    3. Re:No, by civilizedINTENSITY · · Score: 5, Informative
      First a little history:
      1983: Novell introduces NetWare X and NetWare S
      1985: Novell introduces Advanced NetWare 2.0
      1987 Apr: Microsoft introduces OS/2 Lan Manager, an network operating system to compete with Novell's NetWare. It's a patched up rehash of IBM's old PCNet.
      1988: Novell introduces Advanced NetWare 2.15.
      1988 Oct: 3Com introduces the 3+Open network, based on Microsoft's Lan Manager (based on IBM's old PCNet). In 1990 a famous "shoot out" was held between 3+ and Novell NetWare. 3Com dropped out of the network software business in Dec 1990.
      1992: Novell purchases Unix from AT&T
      1993: Novell introduces NetWare 3.12 and NetWare 4.0. 4.0 introduces Novell Directory Services in place of the Bindery.
      1994 February: Microsoft released Windows for Workgroups 3.11, adding networking to the product. The network, derived from IBM's primitive PCNet, is so totally piss poor people continue to buy Lantastic instead.
      1994 October: IBM released OS/2 version 3.0, an operating system far superior to anything Microsoft had, or would have for years. IBM launched a major campaign to get software developed for it. Many major software houses signed up to port their applications, but nearly all had to drop OS/2 development when they read the NDA (Non-Disclosure Agreement) for the Windows95 development kit. If you were developing anything for OS/2, you could not participate in the Windows95 program. The NDA itself required total secrecy, so the reason everyone dropped OS/2 development was only rumored for years.
      1994: Novell purchases WordPerfect and Quatro Pro.
      1998 October: Novell introduces NetWare 5.0. NetWare gets great reviews, and Microsoft feels the heat, especially from comparisons between NetWare 5.0 (shipping, works great) and Windows NT 5.0 (very, very late; very, very buggy, not shipping yet), so renames Windows NT 5.0 to Windows 2000 to stop the 5.0 vs 5.0 comparisons.
      2000 Jan: Novell introduces NetWare 5.1. Windows NT 5.0 still not shipping.
      And, yet again, it wasn't MS inovation:
      "Network Basic Input/Output System was designed for IBM by an organization named Sytek, Inc. It was created to provide an easy-to-use programming interface for connections between computers over a network. Microsoft began developing products for the MS-Net and LAN Manager (the predecessor to Windows NT) using the NetBIOS interface, anticipating the popularity of the standard. Ironically, the standard is only popular today because of Microsoft's implementation of it."
    4. Re:No, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you have used winsock 2 lately, you'll notice that MS is still doing a shitty job at networking...

    5. Re:No, by SillyNickName4me · · Score: 2, Informative

      A little additional info to this quite correct (tho somewhat biassed) overview.

      OS/2 LAN Manager from MS and OS/2 LAN Server from IBM both derive from the original IBM PC LAN program. Interestingly however, the smb protocol in its ancient variations that we see in those were published by MS, and not by IBM.

      Both share a lot of code, and by 1989, both were available.

      The codebases started going their own way at around the time of OS/2 1.3 and Lan Server 1.3, I guess that would be somewhere in 1990/91.

      For the record, I was involved in that bit of history as engineer and tester for IBM's OS/2 and Lan products.

  38. Strategy on Microsofts part to legitimize lawsuits by 3770 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Is it a strategy on Microsofts part to legitimize software related lawsuits?

    They have really deep pockets. They can afford to pay. When the pay they achieve two things:

    1) They can stop worrying about the lawsuit and continue with their business.
    2) They also legitimize the claim of the other company, in this case Novell, thereby setting a precedent.

    When Microsoft sets a precedent it means that the next company that Sun or Novell or SCO sues will almost certainly have to pay. There is a precedent after all. But that company might not be able to pay. And then Microsoft has one competitor less.

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  39. Re:Novell is a dead company by Zorilla · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Looking at Novell's product line, they seem to be a dead company... or a totally restructured one from the past...

    Better check and be sure first:

    www.netcraft.com

    --

    It would be cool if it didn't suck.
  40. w00t! by pr0nbot · · Score: 2, Funny

    That's the executive pay more than taken care of, now they can get nice fat "performance"-related bonuses too!

    Ah, just kidding, they're doing good stuff.

  41. You meant "partnered" by gosand · · Score: 1
    perhaps SCO went after the wrong people ?

    Don't you mean partnered with the wrong people?

    --

    My beliefs do not require that you agree with them.

  42. Re:$ sign in front? by Moby+Cock · · Score: 1

    In french the symbol is written after the digits. i.e:

    English: $25
    French: 25$

    I'm really indiferent to it in most cases. I suppose it is easier to understand when reading the french way. I say that because the symbols apppear in the order you'd say them aloud.

    "Twenty-five dollars" = 25$.

  43. Re:$ sign in front? by Zorilla · · Score: 1

    While the international Japanese symbol for yen comes before the numerical value, I believe the Kanji comes after the number when money is expressed in Japanese, matching up with the way dates and times are expressed.

    --

    It would be cool if it didn't suck.
  44. Re:WordPerfect (and Oo.org) by gosand · · Score: 3, Interesting
    Also, there is no such thing as WPD lock-in. WPD is one of the nicer formats out there, and if you've looked at Abiword or talked to the WP OO.o developers, you'll know that it's a lot easier to work with than .DOC. The WP format hasn't changed much since WP6.1, and opening up a WP6.1 files on Corel WP 12 is pretty slick. Try opening a complex Word document from even one version ago. Yeah, right. You'll be reformatting for hours. WP stays pretty standard on their format.

    This brings up a question I have had - how come I can open up Word documents in OpenOffice, but not WordPerfect documents? OpenOffice has conversion tools built-in for many formats, but not WP.

    --

    My beliefs do not require that you agree with them.

  45. Business practice by Golobarti · · Score: 1, Funny

    1. Develop word processing software
    2. Attempt to compete with Microsoft
    3. Watch the share prices take a dive
    4. Fire sell software to Corel for $186 Million
    5. Watch Corel's share price take a dive
    6. Sue Microsoft
    7. Settle with Microsoft for $536 Million
    8 Profit!

    --
    Do not look into the laser with remaining eye.
    1. Re:Business practice by schatten · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You might be a little young to remember, but Word Perfect has been around for quite a while. MS Word always seemed to be the competitor up until Office 95 and more so after Office 97. WP was quite slick in 5.1/5.2 and prior.

    2. Re:Business practice by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      bah... when I grew up my dad made me use AmiPro...

    3. Re:Business practice by vasqzr · · Score: 1


      Actually, I had to use PFS:FirstChoice

      Although, I really liked Appleworks.

    4. Re:Business practice by NeoSkandranon · · Score: 1

      Wow, someone else who knows their way around FirstChoice. Dad used it at work because thats what our computer tech (Before i became "our computer tech") reccomended. I've gone to agonizing lengths to get that program to fire up in win98 and WinXP Compatibility mode because my parents (who are self employed and use it for records) didn't want to learn Word.

      --
      If you can't see the value in jet powered ants you should turn in your nerd card. - Dunbal (464142)
    5. Re:Business practice by KiloByte · · Score: 1

      Yeah... but who says having superior products over your competition means anything in the software world?

      --
      The creatures outside looked from Alt-Right to Antifa; but already it was impossible to say which was which.
  46. Novell Ran WP Into The Ground! by spockman · · Score: 0

    The biggest problem I saw was that Novell basically did nothing with WP. They had what at the time was arguably the best product and did nothing with it but sell it to Corel, I think 3 years later?? who got it too late.

    1. Re:Novell Ran WP Into The Ground! by paesano · · Score: 1

      Agreed. There were lots of misteps by Novell concerning WP. The first one was buying it. The second was dismantling the WP sales force and trying to sell it through Novell's sales channel. However, you could also argue that Novell got it too late. WP had already screwed up by not moving to Windows quickly enough. Then, when they did, they released a poor product. WP was in big trouble when Novell bought them, already having had massive layoffs. The carnage just continued after the purchase.

  47. Re:$ sign in front? by Nosher · · Score: 1

    I vaguely remember that Thai Baht generally has the symbol at the end. And of course, pretty much all currencies put their fractional sign (usually hundreths, such as (p)ence, (c)ent, etc) at the end...

    --
    It's too late for me to die young
  48. Re:$ sign in front? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just out of curiousity, which currencies don't follow this system?

    Most eastasian currencies don't follow that system when written in the local language -- this is probably why many non-native English speakers place the currency symbol in the wrong location.

  49. Re:1994? Should have sued them then. by stratjakt · · Score: 4, Insightful

    There are still keyboard shortcuts for everything in Word, if you want to go ahead and learn them to improve efficiency.

    That's what they teach you in those MS Word courses at the local community college (at least thats what the good ones should teach you).

    I don't know them, because I don't use Word but maybe twice a year.

    With WP I had to know them, which sucked, until 5.1 came out and you could use a mouse to access pulldown menus.

    That is, before WP 5.1 came out, I would actually do school reports and stuff in GEOWrite on my old C64, leaving the PC collecting dust. I'd rather wait for the screen to refresh than spend forever scanning over the template to look for the "italics" hotkey.

    --
    I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
  50. Re:1994? Should have sued them then. by dosius · · Score: 1

    WordPerfect 5.1 had pulldown menus and 6.0 had a toolbar similar to Word's. Corel WordPerfect 6.2 for DOS is still a great word processor even now, imho, and to me no harder to get running with as a n00b than Word.

    Moll.

    --
    What you hear in the ear, preach from the rooftop Matthew 10.27b
  51. Possible Bribe? by freaksta · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Finally, Novell has agreed to withdraw its intervention in the European Commission's case with Microsoft.

    --


    Hrrm... I usually just sign my name.
  52. Re:$ sign in front? by kahei · · Score: 1


    Well, when using a symbol, the symbol comes first, for pounds, dollars, yen, won. When using a word (and that includes the kanji 'en'), the word comes last, again for pounds, dollars, yen and won. So I think the rule is pretty near global.

    --
    Whence? Hence. Whither? Thither.
  53. Re:$ sign in front? by ahodgkinson · · Score: 1

    Just out of curiousity, which currencies don't follow this system?

    • Disclaimer: I realize this is off topic, but does give a partial answer to the parent's question.

    In Switzerland we write 10 Fr. (Franks) or 10 CHF, where CHF is the ISO currency symbol for the Swiss Frank.

    Prior to the Euro, many of the European currency 'symbols', which were usually one or more letters, followed the currency amount. I think that Spain even used a ligature of 'Pts' for their Pesetas. It followed the amount.

    A simple minded rule would be that real symbols, $, Euro, etc. all precede the currency amount and 'symbols' composed of normal letters follow it. But I believe that the Japanese Yen symbol follows the currency amount.

    Ultimately the syntax used for stating a currency and amount is simply a practice, derived from custom and culture, that has evolved over many centuries. Thus, there is no general rule. Attempts have been made to standardize (e.g. ISO currency designators), but universal acceptance, by shopkeepers and the man on the street, has been low.

    Internally in banks, in Europe anyways, amounts of money are written as a value followed by an ISO currency symbol. The ISO symbol is used to ensure that no mistake is made, say by assuming that '$' means US dollars (USD) instead of Hong Kong dollars (HKD).

    You can read more that you even wanted to know about currencies at the Oanda web site. It in includes a forum where you and ask about currencies and a gallery of scans of various international bank notes.

    --
    ---- It won't be as bad as you fear or as good as you hope, but it will take twice as long as you plan.
  54. Troll or dumbass - I can't tell. by bayerwerke · · Score: 1

    Too close to call for me.

    1. Re:Troll or dumbass - I can't tell. by Alsee · · Score: 1

      Troll or dumbass - I can't tell

      Looks like AstroTurf to me.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
  55. Actually... by Ironsides · · Score: 4, Insightful

    WordPerfect became the market leader, then they got all fat and lazy, providing the opportunity for Microsoft to come along and eat their lunch with just a few new features that the folks at WordPerfect were too lazy to implement.

    Actually, what happened is that when Microsoft came out with Windows they refused to give the WordPerfect programmers access to the Windows GUI APIs. This prevented them from making a version of Word Perfect that would run in a window instead of through MS-DOS. Microsoft released their MS-WORD with Windows support and became the market leader because no one wanted to stick with a DOS only aplication. It wasn't until later when MS-WORD was the leader that they finally let the WP Programers have access to the APIs. That is why they have a case against Microsoft.

    --
    Fly me to the moon Let me sing among those stars Let me see what spring is like On jupiter and mars
    1. Re:Actually... by Dr.+Evil · · Score: 1

      Don't forget that at the time, it was not a fordrawn conclusion that the most technically inferior GUI environment would reign supreme. Wordperfect tried OS/2 and I think Desqview/X. I also don't think it would have been wise for Wordperfect to target the OS of a competitor's wordprocessor...

      ... to which they slew both Wordperfect and Lotus by mucking up LIMS and bundling the second-best of both products together... leaving 123 and WP as buggy memory-limited apps which can't work together.

    2. Re:Actually... by Reziac · · Score: 4, Insightful

      That's interesting, and given that, I hope Novell wins.

      At the time, the statement from WPCorp boiled down to "Windows is a flash in the pan and we hate it anyway, so we're not doing it". But one does have to wonder how much of that was sour grapes.

      And it certainly does explain why early WPWin versions were pretty poor and not real stable -- they were literally groping in the dark.

      But WP's demise started before Windows became ubiquitous and long before Word ever got a market foothold -- it began when WPCorp ceased offering free tech support to one and all, back in early 1994. They'd previously even supported pirated copies, and had a large steady market of upgraders from that (happy pirates frequently *buy* the next version, and WP's support made 'em deleriously happy).

      Of course, with the state of tech support now, it kinda looks like WPCorp was precocious :/

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    3. Re:Actually... by Reziac · · Score: 1

      BTW, what idiot modded you flamebait? I'da called it interesting or informative. Geesh.

      Slashdot, land of the underdog, where it's politically correct to bash Microsoft, but somehow not PC to bash Word -- nooooo, it's much more PC to bash WP, because after all they were once a market leader, and ALL market leaders past or present are to be bashed, lest thy karma rise up and smite thee.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    4. Re:Actually... by JohnFluxx · · Score: 2, Interesting

      "It wasn't until later when MS-WORD was the leader that they finally let the WP Programers have access to the APIs. "

      Is this true? Very interesting if so.

      The MS Word coder that started a blog said in his blog that basically this was wrong. That in MS the windows team and office team didn't even talk to each other, let alone have secret api's, and that wordperfect used this api conspiracy theory to cover up that their code sucked.

    5. Re:Actually... by ClosedSource · · Score: 1

      MS didn't release API info for GUIs? Petzold published his first Windows programming book in 1988. There were other sources as well.

      Ironically, Corel Draw (who later briefly owned WordPerfect), had released its first version around 1987 which was much more GUI-intensive than Wordperfect for Windows.

    6. Re:Actually... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mod parent up, he knows of what he speaks. Grandparent seems to be repeating Slashdot-friendly received wisdom to get karma.

    7. Re:Actually... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dude, read this post. The grandparent is just parroting received wisdom without any supporting evidence.

    8. Re:Actually... by Ytsejam-03 · · Score: 1
      But WP's demise started before Windows became ubiquitous and long before Word ever got a market foothold -- it began when WPCorp ceased offering free tech support to one and all, back in early 1994.
      Actually, it started before that. Wordperfect 6.0 was released sometime around late '93/early '94, and this was supposed to be the big full-featured Windows release. At the time I was the guy who ran the high-volume laser printers that printed the license numbers individual license certificates during graveyard shift. In preparation for 6.0, we pre-printed a ton of 6.0 license certificates - something in the neighborhood of three of four pallets worth, as I recall. A few months later all of these pallets except one were shreded because the orders were not comming in. A short while later, 25% of the company was laid off.

      IMHO, the decision to get rid of the free tech support was a good thing, and should have been made a lot sooner. WP was seriously mis-managed in the early 90's, and tech support was just one example. At the time, 25% of the employees in the company were in tech support! I don't know what this was costing the company, but it had to be one hell of a lot of money.
    9. Re:Actually... by Reziac · · Score: 1

      Parent has a point, but as I point out in another post, there were other factors, largely that WPCorp's owner hated Windows.

      Goes to show what OS bigotry will do for your company... there are slashdotters who should be paying close attention to that statement.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
  56. Re:1994? Should have sued them then. by Reziac · · Score: 2, Insightful

    WPDOS5.x had a mouse-enabled menu; no need to use the F-keys. The problem was that later builds of WP5.1 shipped with the menu disabled by default, so a lot of people never knew it existed. It was enabled by default in WPDOS6.

    I've generally had concurrent versions of of both Word and WP (in both their DOS and Wincarnations), installed side by side. Word is easier for very simple documents, but if you need anything more complex than an office memo, Word rapidly falls behind WP; conversely WP can handle anything up through real typesetting jobs. But WP isn't really designed for novice users. (Which I'd think would make it MORE attractive to a linux-oriented crowd, not less. ;)

    --
    ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
  57. Re:1994? Should have sued them then. by julesh · · Score: 1

    There are still keyboard shortcuts for everything in Word, if you want to go ahead and learn them to improve efficiency.

    Yeah, and I know most of them. I still think WP's interface was more efficient (although I'll admit it's been well over 10 years since I used it last, and I only used it for about 6 months at the time). Even commonly used features that require two keystrokes in Word (e.g. bold & italic) could be done with one in WP, if memory serves.

  58. Re:1994? Should have sued them then. by Ironsides · · Score: 1

    Reason why Word Perfect didn't have a GUI for windows: Other post

    --
    Fly me to the moon Let me sing among those stars Let me see what spring is like On jupiter and mars
  59. NO precedent set by Blitzenn · · Score: 3, Informative

    Legal precedents ARE NOT set by out of court settlements. That is the big problem with them. The suits continue without any legal platform until a judge rules in a case somewhere. Just like when RIAA started writting letters to ISP's demanding names of subscribers they wanted to sue, they continued the practice without anyone stopping them until verizon stood up and forced the courts to make a decision on this practice. Only after the 'legal' precedent was set did the action on RIAA's part actually stop. NOw they have to go to court themselves to garner a supeona before enumerating the suit with a defendant's name. The only way to legitimize a claim is to have it heard in court. Otherwise it is illigegitimate and without precednce. That is actually exactly the way MS wants it too. They don't want precedence set and therefore making it easier for them to be sued. NOw the next person who presents a suit carries the entire burden of proof and evidence where legal precedence would provide much of that for you.

  60. What ever happened to.... by Leto-II · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Novell's lawsuits regarding DR-DOS?

    --
    Do not anger the worm.
    1. Re:What ever happened to.... by tbuskey · · Score: 1

      Settled out of court. I don't have the URLs, but it was a few years ago

    2. Re:What ever happened to.... by sconeu · · Score: 1

      Caldera inherited them and won.
      When Caldera became SCOX, they tried to blackmail IBM, on the theory that it worked against MS.

      The difference? Against MS they really did have a case, and won on the merits. Against IBM, they've got nothing.

      --
      General Relativity: Space-time tells matter where to go; Matter tells space-time what shape to be.
  61. Re:1994? Should have sued them then. by Reziac · · Score: 1

    It serves you correctly. (I still use WP5.1 every day.) And for those who couldn't remember the keystrokes, there was always the mouse-enabled menu (see my other post upstream in this thread).

    --
    ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
  62. Why WP Lost by Ironsides · · Score: 1

    And again, see other post The didn't lose it cause they didn't jump on the windows bandwagon, but cause MS would liscense them the GUI APIs.

    --
    Fly me to the moon Let me sing among those stars Let me see what spring is like On jupiter and mars
    1. Re:Why WP Lost by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wrong; see this post. The normal Windows GUI APIs have never required any licensing and were well understood back then. I think WordPerfect just sat on their laurels.

  63. To lazy to implement? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As I recall it, the turning point came when Word Perfect took several months to get around the ways that Microsoft deliberately broke them with Windows 95.

    So it was laziness on their part that they didn't have advance access to Windows 95 like the Microsoft Word team did? Was it also their laziness that kept them from having access to the undocumented internal calls that the Microsoft folks reserved for themselves?

    Or was it just another episode in Microsoft's ongoing abuse of their monopoly?

    1. Re:To lazy to implement? by ClosedSource · · Score: 1

      Wordperfect for Windows didn't work properly under Windows 3.0 and 3.1, Windows 95 wasn't required.

  64. Re:Strategy on Microsofts part to legitimize lawsu by ChrisMDP · · Score: 1

    They have really deep pockets. They can afford to pay.

    They might be able to afford to pay for a couple of these, but this sort of cash is going to hit any company in the world pretty hard, even one the size of Microsoft.

    If they are trying to set a precedent, they'd better hope it doesn't take too many of these payouts...

  65. Re:Yawn. The river flows. by antiMStroll · · Score: 1

    It will be interesting to see how that stands up against companies offering free technology and selling support. My prediction is Microsoft will transition to an IBM style operation, maybe when the the dynamic duo of Gates and Balmer eventually pack it in.

  66. Re:$ sign in front? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sorry to burst your bubble, but the dollar sign is put first to prevent someone from adding digits to an amount (in a contract and such). This is not necessary when writing a dollar amount in articles and publications, but the habit stuck.

  67. Re:1994? Should have sued them then. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    Exactly. Novell brought WP not because it was the market leader (by then Word and Ami Pro had overtaken it), but because Novell wanted a cheap quick office suite to compete against Lotus and Microsoft with.

    Wordperfect for Windows was a dog, theres more chance of finding a pro SCO supporter in a Linux User group than a good review of that product.
    From memory Quatro has always been the runner up spreadsheet to 1-2-3 (and it could be argued that if Lotus hadn't got distracted with Improv, 1-2-3 would still be the market leader).

    So we have a lawsuit settled that Microsoft could have won, a protagonist in its EU problems brought off, and we all know what companys that settle with Microsoft in their favour end up doing...... In other news Novells Linux architect/strategist moves on to other challenges :-)'s

  68. Re:1994? Should have sued them then. by ValourX · · Score: 3, Interesting

    WordPerfect is superior to Word in the same ways that Mozilla is superior to Internet Explorer. More relevant and modern features, greater stability, tabbed document views, better writing tools and extensions, export to PDF functionality, legacy compatibility modes (WP12 can be made to look and feel exactly like WP51/DOS). WP also has legal-specific functions that make it the standard among judges and lawyers.

    It's also cheaper individually, and bigger businesses can do volume licensing deals with Corel.

    WP is hands down a better product than Word. This is coming from a professional writer who has used both programs since their first versions. I'd use WP all day if I could, but WP for Linux kind of sucks, and I have this thing about not using proprietary software if a free alternative is available.

    -Jem

  69. My thoughts exactly by apankrat · · Score: 1

    It must be related, it cannot be just a coincidence.

    --
    3.243F6A8885A308D313
  70. Re:1994? Should have sued them then. by Shadowhawk · · Score: 1

    You're new here, aren't you?

    (For the humor impaired, yes, I see his id number is lower than mine. It's a joke. Get over it.)

    --
    My mind works like lightning. One brilliant flash and it is gone.
  71. Re:Strategy on Microsofts part to legitimize lawsu by 3770 · · Score: 1


    They have more IP and more patents than most software companies I should think.

    If it came to a shake down they'd own all software companies in the world. Well, that was an exaggeration, but you get the idea.

    --
    The Internet is full. Go Away!!!
  72. Re:$ sign in front? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Rubles (or is it Rubels?)

  73. More Mac viruses? by Jussi+K.+Kojootti · · Score: 4, Interesting
    This is really off-topic, but was there really a time when there were more Macintosh viruses than DOS/Windows ones?

    AFAIK, the first viruses were spotted in 85-86 and they were on dos. The first 2-3 years were pretty quiet (well, there was the Robert Morris internet worm).
    Then in the beginning of the 90s or so there were Brain, the Jerusalem-family, Michelangelo, and most notably the first kits, Dark Avenger and VCL. All for DOS/Windows. According to my memory, at this time viruses were already 'Microsoft country'.

    So was the Mac virus hegemony between these periods, or does one of us have a memory fault?

    1. Re:More Mac viruses? by SillyNickName4me · · Score: 1

      I don't know about MACs, but I used Amigas in the 2nd half of the 80s, and there was quite a virus problem there, with a quite nice variety, and a nice variety fo anti virus programs as well.

      Most used to spread thanks to an exitensive warez and demo scene that swapped floppies, and would use the boot record of floppies as infection vector. Later when modems became more readily available and BBSes were abound, most linked into scripts or binaries to spread.

      Even back then the Amiga platform had nowhere near the number of users the at the time rather crappy pc/dos platform had.

  74. Sure, it just couldn't be that... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Microsoft Word has NEVER had the legal features that serious lawyers still need, which is why WordPerfect became so entrenched there.

    Sure Bill Gates father was still using WordPerfect quite long into the game.

    Blows a hole in your theory about WordPerfect dying because it sucked.

    Word has always sucked, especially in a legal environment, but the war was never about a good implementation of features, but about control and forcing all industries to the same stupidity.

    I had this conversation just a few days ago with lawyers who had current versions of Word which they knew how to use and have used for a long time, but still went back to WordPerfect to get many important things done. Word never properly understood, for example, a table of authorities, ir if it did, kept it a big secret.

  75. Re:Strategy on Microsofts part to legitimize lawsu by Dan+Ost · · Score: 1

    Settlements do not set legal precedent. If the court doesn't rule on it, there
    is no precedent.

    I don't have a good feel for what this particular settlement really means. On
    the one hand it could just be MS trying to clean off its plate, on the other
    it could be that they were actually scared of going to court and simply gave
    Novell what it wanted.

    Just don't know.

    --

    *sigh* back to work...
  76. OS/2 by michaelmalak · · Score: 3, Interesting
    I had heard or read (but cannot confirm with a quick Google search) that WordPerfect did not pursue Windows early because they had been told by Microsoft that OS/2 was the Next Big Thing, while Microsoft was quietly working behind the scenes to build up Windows and Windows applications in a surprise thwarting of IBM and its OS/2.

    As for poor user interface of keyboard-based WordPerfect, we have IBM to thank for that. A function-key-based user-interface was efficient in the days of "standard" keyboards when function keys were on the left. IBM came along and said that their PCs and Mainframes should have the same user interface, and moved the PC function keys across the top. This is what is called an "Enhanced" keyboard. If you've never used a "Standard" keyboard, you have no right to complain.

    Even today Windows has remnants "Standard" keyboard legacy. ALT-F4 closes an application and ALT-F6 closes a child window within an application. Notice the keys are both even numbered -- that was because they were adjacent in the two-by-five arrangement of function keys on the left of a "Standard" keyboard.

  77. You're being selective with your history by bnavarro · · Score: 1
    1987 Apr: Microsoft introduces OS/2 Lan Manager, an network operating system to compete with Novell's NetWare. It's a patched up rehash of IBM's old PCNet.

    1988 Oct: 3Com introduces the 3+Open network, based on Microsoft's Lan Manager (based on IBM's old PCNet). In 1990 a famous "shoot out" was held between 3+ and Novell NetWare. 3Com dropped out of the network software business in Dec 1990.

    I never stated that Lan Man came before Netware, was superior to Netware, or anything of that sort. However, id did predate WfW, was direct competition to NetWare, and was finally integrated for "free" into Windows WfW/NT, when MS decided they couldn't keep up with NetWare, and is still the foundation for NetBEUI under Windows today.

    I don't know the details of the lawsuit, but if anything, the subsequent integration and "giving away with the operating system" of LanMan must have hurt Novell's business, and I wouldn't be at all surprised if this isn't part of the reason for the lawsuit in the first place
  78. Re:1994? Should have sued them then. by bastardsquadmuzz · · Score: 1

    Any software application that basically required a function key explanation chart at the top of every keyboard was doomed when GUI took hold

    That hasn't stopped Emacs...

    *ducks*

    --
    --Muzz
  79. Netware by blanks · · Score: 1

    With this suit novel gives up NetWare, dosent it seem strange that they give up NetWare only months after they have bought SuSE Linux?

  80. Simpsons Quote by heri0n · · Score: 3, Funny

    Your Internet ad was brought to my attention, but I can't figure out what, if anything, Compuglobalhypermeganet does, so rather than risk competing with you, I've decided simply to buy you out.
    -- Bill Gates, "Das Bus"

    % Homer and Marge quietly discuss this proposal.

    Homer: I reluctantly accept your proposal!
    Bill Gates: Well everyone always does. Buy 'em out, boys!
    [Gates' lackeys trash the room.]
    Homer: Hey, what the hell's going on!
    Bill Gates: Oh, I didn't get rich by writing a lot of checks! [insane laughter]
    -- Bill Gates buys Homer's Internet company, "Das Bus"

  81. Re:WordPerfect (and Oo.org) by Lxy · · Score: 1

    Hmm.. you'd have to ask an OO.o developer. I know they have a filter, because Abiword is the test bed for OO.o's WP import feature. It works very well! Not sure why that hasn't been slipped into the main tree.

    --

    There is no reasonable defense against an idiot with an agenda
    :wq
  82. Re:1994? Should have sued them then. by DaveJay · · Score: 1

    Dunno if anyone else remembers their own experience changing from WordPerfect to Word, but I was working in a large company's word processing department during their changeover. The only reason we switched -- and I mean the ONLY reason -- was because the large company got a great deal on Word 2.0 as part of a larger software bundle. Keep in mind we were using Lotus Notes for our email at the time. The person in charge was, at the time, excited, because they'd heard great things about Word.

    Two things from that period stand out in my mind:

    1. Word had a WordPerfect compatibility mode, if I remember correctly, that when activated would arrange the menus and keyboard shortcuts to match that of the Windows version of Word. I leaned on that quite a bit. I often wonder if something like that would help Linux desktop adoption (not trying to start a flamewar here!)

    2. When Word 6.0 came out, we HATED it. We all had to get new computers in order to run it, and even then, it was painfully slow -- we tried everything to get the company to roll back to Word 2.0, but they told us the 6.0 upgrade was a mandatory thing as part of their licensing agreement with Microsoft.

    Anyway, thought it might interest you.

  83. Re:1994? Should have sued them then. by DaveJay · · Score: 1

    Duh! Made a mistake in my above post -- "...keyboard shortcuts to match that of the Windows version of WORD" should of course say "...Windows version of WORDPERFECT".

  84. They did go after them in 1994. by twitter · · Score: 1
    I can't stand MSFT's business tactics as much as the next Slashdotter ... Maybe this lawsuit was better served 10 years ago in 1994 and not now in 2004.

    You must have missed the federal M$ anti-trust trial. Novel did not and did their part then. Now that the case is proved, the damages are being awarded. This case is only going to trial so far after the antitrust file because Novel has tried to settle in good faith. Good faith is generally a mistake when it comes to Microsoft.

    WordPerfect missed the fucking boat on a lot of shit when it came to the migration from DOS to Windows ... How they expected to compete against Word was really beyond me. Any software application that basically required a function key explanation chart at the top of every keyboard was doomed when GUI took hold.

    You must have also missed WP 5.2 for Windoze 3.1. It was out as early as anything dependent on business with a convicted predatory monopoly can be. Support for older methods, while adding new ones is called good product support and logical evolution.

    Now, go wash your mouth out with soap before the feces in it multiply by fornication.

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

  85. Re:Strategy on Microsofts part to legitimize lawsu by Jason+Earl · · Score: 1

    Microsoft has been trying to "clean its plate" for some time now, and yet lawsuits keep piling up like snow in Alaska. The reason for this is simple. Microsoft has a lot of money (they make a good target), and they have made some less than stellar decisions in the past. Add to that the fact that they are essentially a convicted monopolist and you have a situation that allows for a lot of softball lawsuits with the potential for a huge payout.

    $536 million might be chump change for Microsoft, but it's a very healthy sum for Novell. Novell's Linux initiatives require an order of magnitude less R&D investment than Microsoft's initiatives. Novell can make this money go a very long way.

    Microsoft settled because they are afraid of what would happen if this went to court. Microsoft has a lot of skeletons in its closet, and Novell's Netware went from having 70+% of the market to having considerably less than that. If a jury found that Microsoft had taken that marketshare illegally then the potential punishment could be very very substantial.

  86. eval flag? by Bill,+Shooter+of+Bul · · Score: 2, Funny

    The first time I read it as "Evil" flag. I think there should be an evil distro, to compete with *BSD the operating system that keeps coming back from the dead and has a demonic icon.

    --
    Well.. maybe. Or Maybe not. But Definitely not sort of.
    1. Re:eval flag? by flacco · · Score: 1
      I think there should be an evil distro, to compete with *BSD the operating system that keeps coming back from the dead and has a demonic icon.

      i have nothing against demons in general, but i don't particularly care for the ones ass-fucking penguins. that's just wrong.

      --
      pr0n - keeping monitor glass spotless since 1981.
  87. Re:1994? Should have sued them then. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    wow, its typical to see people here elitist about operating systems, music, tv, etc,

    But word processors?!?

  88. Novell screwed WordPerfect - not Microsoft by endeavour31 · · Score: 1

    I used WP from the DOS version and really liked it. I only stopped using it after Novell acquired it and created WP or Windows and the horrible office suite bundle. They certainly messed up a fine product and sent it straight into the toilet. It was barely usable and completely unstable. And the install was a blast with random insertions of any of 36 floppy disks.

    WordPerfect was the market leader prior to this and although I think they would have eventually lost to Office, Novell's efforts accomplished this in a few years where it should have been around longer. But they fucked it up so bad users deserted in impossibly huge numbers.

    Then, after achieving this, they practically gave it to Corel. I have no problems with Novell's NOS product but they have not had a good track record with other apps at all.

    MS did not need to flex any muscle here - Novell's incompetence did all the work!

    1. Re:Novell screwed WordPerfect - not Microsoft by Anne+Thwacks · · Score: 1
      I always thought the idea of inserting disk 7 first was really cute!

      Plus: Once you figured out that the disks had to be inserted in a random order, you could call yourself an expert!

      --
      Sent from my ASR33 using ASCII
  89. You anti-slash fag. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why don't you go join a real cause, instead of some basement kids with nothing better to do but to try and disrupt slashdot?

    The only reason you're posting this is to whore karma points, so that one day you will go "MOD CRAZY!@!!!@@" with your 3 other friends!

    bleah..

  90. Re:$ sign in front? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sorry to have to be the one to tell you, but an Anonymous Coward post without any references is not going to burst anyone's bubble.

  91. Oooh, I bet they're scared! by egriebel · · Score: 1

    Come on, $536 Million? Might as well be $536.00 for all it will affect Microsoft.

    --
    ACHTUNG! Das computermachine ist nicht fuer gefingerpoken und mittengrabben. Ist nicht fuer gewerken bei das dumpkopfen.
    1. Re:Oooh, I bet they're scared! by voideng · · Score: 1

      Although 536 million may not be much for microsoft, it is a lot for Novell.

  92. Re:1994? Should have sued them then. by Peter+H.S. · · Score: 1

    Any software application that basically required a function key explanation chart at the top of every keyboard was doomed when GUI took hold.

    So many Slashdotters have the same experience with WP 5.1 as you do, which make me believe that they never actually used the product to any serious extent:
    WordPerfect 5.1 for DOS had a GUI (ncurses based, but never the less a GUI.).
    WP 5.x had a menubar and drop down menus, and it could be controlled 100% by the mouse. One never needed to remember a single friggin keyboard shortcut. The function key overlay was for you convenience, it was never a necessary thing.

  93. Re:Yawn. The river flows. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    Yes, IBM was too slow to keep up. That's why IBM is number 9 on the fortune 500 list. IBM is doing just fine.

  94. MONO Funding by dynamic_cast · · Score: 1

    Yeah! More money to fund mono with!

    http://www.go-mono.com

    1. Re:MONO Funding by The+MESMERIC · · Score: 0

      Go Mono Go
      Cos their shitty System.Windows forms are far from operational.
      Talk about hype :/

      Miguelitooo? are you theeere? haha

  95. Virii and lawsuits. by St.+Arbirix · · Score: 2, Insightful

    When you ask Microsoft why they are so riddled with exploits the answer is often because they are so popular that hackers everywhere are trying to take a crack at them. It's a pretty decent defense.

    Does the same logic hold true for all their lawsuits? Are they so popular that they are natural targets for lawsuits? Either yes, they are, and all the companies that sue them are on the same ethical level as virus writers, or no, and they really are a company that deserves to be sued over and over again.

    Funny thing though: they keep getting sued and losing. That puts all the companies that sue them on the moral high ground. Why aren't they getting all the business instead of the shaft? Here we have Microsoft with a nice long queue of lawsuits always waiting for trial and they will lose many if not most of them. So why do people keep doing business with them? Why are they allowed to do business? I thought governments were supposed to protect people from this sort of thing.

    This is why I like Open Source. It's a fully functional socialist movement (because it's opt-in) and it actually has the power to stop such bad behavior. Microsoft as a company has such incredible profit margins I can only compare them to Middle-Eastern oil interests and diamond cartels. Bully for them that they're the only public company in the lot, but the rate at which they get sued casts a pretty dark shadow on that. You can't very well produce hydrocarbon and carbon out of thin air, but you certainly can with software and that's just what F/OSS is doing.

    --
    Direct away from face when opening.
    1. Re:Virii and lawsuits. by cryogenix · · Score: 1

      Actually no, it's because they insist on putting Active X in everything. Did you ever hear of a Visio virus before MS Bought them, put Active X into it and released it? If the old, bigger target, more attacks statement was true, then you would find that Apache would have far more exploits than IIS given that it has double the market share, and yet that isn't the case.

  96. W00t !!!!!11 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Go, Go, Novell Gadget...

    Congrats from all the CNEs of the world!

  97. Re:1994? Should have sued them then. by RetroGeek · · Score: 1

    Exactly. Novell brought WP not because it was the market leader (by then Word and Ami Pro had overtaken it), but because Novell wanted a cheap quick office suite to compete against Lotus and Microsoft with.

    No, As I remember it, Novell bought WordPerfect because they wanted GroupWise. As soon as they could they sold the rest of the suite. They needed GroupWise to round out the Netware product.

    --

    - - - - - - - - - - -
    I am a programmer. I am paid to produce syntax not grammar. Deal with it.
  98. Catholic Bush clones and other such drivel....... by Dimble+ThriceFoon · · Score: 1

    europe violated about three of its precious fundamental human rights by booting out buitiglonni (sp?), a man who stated that he would only ever act within the confines of EU law regardless of personal opinion. how has the EU won anything, other than the craptatorship of the year award!

  99. Re:1994? Should have sued them then. by johneee · · Score: 1

    Exactly, and this is what enabled the transition between the typing/word processing "experts" (I.E. Secretaries) and now when we have managers doing their own typing and letter writing. Do you think that Joe Manager would have bothered learning the cryptic commands required to type a letter? No, he or she would have just sent it off to the secretarial pool to be done. As it was, she or he was able to fumble along and get the letter out the door in a more or less reasonable format.

    Nowadays, you need to be a much higher level person to have an assistant than you used to. For better or for worse, the bad UI of Word enabled the shape of the office today.

    --
    - ------- There are ten kinds of people in the world. Those who understand binary, and those who... Huh?
  100. Re:Relativity: the coming implosion of mass market by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Americans appear to be choosing quality over pre-fabricated identity. If so, maybe we aren't dead yet...

    How does Bush come into all of this? :)

  101. $ sign goes after 'Micro' & before "oft" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...but you knew that!

  102. Re:1994? Should have sued them then. by cookd · · Score: 1

    Problem was that it was WordPerfect 6.0 for Windows competing against Word 95, and WordPerfect 6.0 for Windows was one screwed-up piece of work. Crashed a lot. Trouble with installation. Strange glitches with printing. I used it for a month of college, then switched to Word in desperation so I could get my paper in on time. And I'm a real geek. My aunt, who isn't a real geek, was calling me weekly with some glitch in her copy.

    6.1 was better, but still barely usable. I never tried 6.2 or beyond. Sure, WordPerfect had great features, but Word did what I needed to do without crashing too often and without screwing up my whole system at install time.

    Novell got behind at a critical point in the Word Processor Wars, and it cost them the industry. Too bad, so sad. They had a monopoly and they lost it, not vice-versa.

    Same with Netware, if you ask me. Novell didn't go from 70% market share to (whatever it is now) by being the best. They were the best, but they got too far behind on Windows integration. Can't even start to tell you how many hours I wasted because the computer lab's login and file servers (Netware-based) were on the fritz. Again, by the time Novell got that fixed (I assume they got that fixed), they had lost a LOT of business. Sorry, dudes, you missed the boat.

    Now, it looks like Novell is doing a lot of things right again. And maybe they can turn around. But they shouldn't be blaming Microsoft for their woes (er, I guess maybe they should, if it is an easy way to pick up a cool $500,000,000). They had a good thing going, but then they released crappy products (translation: worse than Microsoft's) for too many years in a row. Tough beans.

    --
    Time flies like an arrow. Fruit flies like a banana.
  103. Re:Novell is a dead company by ClosedSource · · Score: 1

    "Novell is "reinventing" themselves as a Linux company."

    So basically, they're selling commodity technology created elsewhere. This reinvented company sounds more like a retailing company than a technology one. Sounds pretty dead to me.

  104. Banyan by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    Banyan was around since 1983/4, and was far better for NOS computing and messaging than Novell until it finally went away (went away is a misnomer...it's actually use all over today - it's called Active Directory and Exchange 2000)

    Even today, I am surprised by the ease of management it provided, and how it had solved so many problems that people are still dealing with today. Novell was problematic, especially managing large implementations, and took more resources.

    Hats of to the best engineers in the last couple decades.

  105. WP and the linux user by cbr2702 · · Score: 1

    I would think that the crowd that would want to learn keyboard shortcuts for everything and would like to be able to do real typesetting jobs would be more interested in an editor + TeX combination. And TeX is platform independent and open source.


    Disclamer: I use emacs + elatex to write/typeset all my papers (plain english, linguistics (excelent trees) and math (excelent formulas))

    --


    This post written under Gentoo-linux with an SCO IP license.
    1. Re:WP and the linux user by Reziac · · Score: 1

      Depends on what you're doing with it, and where you're coming from. I don't know TeX myself, but from what I've heard, it makes programmers very happy, and frustrates hell out of everyone else.

      WP's keyboard controls are grouped by function, and you only really need to know the root function -- the prompts will guide you beyond that. I never had any trouble with them. Conversely Wordstar's kb shortcuts (which Windows largely inherited) refused to stick in my head. That's probably why I still use the keyboard commands in WPDOS, but the mouse and menubar in Windows.

      Speaking of math, WP5.1 catered to math types too -- it had a really good equation editor (it was used to typeset several advanced math textbooks). And remember it has those extended character sets, too (about 1200 special characters available).

      Disclaimer rebuttal: emacs is an invention of the devil. ;)

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    2. Re:WP and the linux user by cbr2702 · · Score: 1
      Depends on what you're doing with it, and where you're coming from. I don't know TeX myself, but from what I've heard, it makes programmers very happy, and frustrates hell out of everyone else.

      TeX and LaTeX are nice to programmers, in the same way they HTML is nice to programmers, but when you get used to it, is there really much of a difference between typing "\emph{this is important}" or "(i)this is important(/i)" and typing "CTRL+I this is important CTRL+I"? [1] The main difference is how it shows up on the screem as you write it.

      WP's keyboard controls are grouped by function, and you only really need to know the root function -- the prompts will guide you beyond that.

      The problem with a prompt-based approach is that it's a lot slower. For the people we're considering, initial time to learn a function is ignored, and we compare the typing of the command (no break in flow from the rest of the text) to the time it takes to go through steps in a prompt (a different focus and slower in general).

      Speaking of math, WP5.1 catered to math types too -- it had a really good equation editor (it was used to typeset several advanced math textbooks). And remember it has those extended character sets, too (about 1200 special characters available).

      Math and equation editing? LaTex is excelent at these. LaTeX is what the American Mathematics Society uses to typeset their journal. And equations are very simple and very fast to type once you read a little documentation.

      Disclaimer rebuttal: emacs is an invention of the devil. ;)

      But that's the neat part. With the TeX system, you can use any editor you want and it doesn't matter, even if it's notepad. But what do you prefer to Emacs, then?

      [1] : I know HTML uses angle brackets, but stupid slashcode (stupid me?) doesn't seem to have a way to enter them.

      --


      This post written under Gentoo-linux with an SCO IP license.
    3. Re:WP and the linux user by Reziac · · Score: 1
      ...but when you get used to it, is there really much of a difference between typing "\emph{this is important}" or "(i)this is important(/i)" and typing "CTRL+I this is important CTRL+I"?

      Well, yeah, there is. Single-key+mnemonic ("CTRL+I") is a lot easier both to learn and to type than formatted tags ("\emph{") or a formatted tag plus mnemonic (HTML-style).

      Are you familiar with WPDOS's prompt system? you type the root code, say SHIFT-F8, and across the bottom of the screen you get a list of options, which you can pick by number or initial-letter. (Which if needed will go to another prompt menu, or an input page such as one might need to set margins etc.) As a rule it only takes once or twice ot learn them, because they use obvious initial-keys, such as "m" for "margins". It's both quick to learn and very fast to use, yet can be totally ignored once your fingers know the keystrokes. But if you have a brain cramp halfway through a sequence, you still have any needed help, because the prompt has kept up with your keystrokes up to that point -- so the prompt is always in context. Very nifty system.

      Yeah, I know programmer types who use LaTeX for anything mathlike, or anything-parsing-textlike. Not my field but the preference seems fairly consistent among those who are "gimme a prompt and get the damn GUI outta my way" types.

      What do I prefer to Emacs? Just about anything else! I only messed with it a little bit, then ran away screaming. :)

      I think you have to pick the "Extrans" option to type angle-brackets without resorting to posting in HTML and using the HTML character code for angle-brackets. Normally I post in Plain Old Text, so I lazily sub square brackets most of the time myself (having learned that /.'s notion of plaintext EATS angle-brackets). I see there's a new "code" option too, which presumably is for source code posts.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
  106. Re:Novell is a dead company by cryogenix · · Score: 1

    Zenworks, and eDirectory. Both are multi platform. Even groupwise can be run under Netware, Windows and Linux. Personally I think the coolest thing in Netware from an END USER perspective is iPrint. I have all of my buildings set up on a web site with building maps. There are printer icons on those maps and users can just find their printer on the floor plan and click it and it installs.

  107. Barc is right and... by Fallen+Andy · · Score: 1

    Back when the SuperSet crew (Drew Major and company)
    picked up the remnants of a (I think M/PM company)
    there wasn't much else out there except Corvus Omninet (grits teeth). You wouldn't want to network with that. Ah the joys of 8" winchester
    hard disks and shared *disk* (not file serving)
    networks.. Ugh. Programmers had to do their own semaphores to arbitrate access at *apps* level.
    Sucky huh?? My good fried Jon used to keep a
    St.Christopher on his corvus drive because the
    darned things would head crash if u even tapped
    the table...

    Novell changed all of that.

    But not only that, Novell always had a very good philosophy towards the little folks (like me and others) out there who needed tech support. They were techies just like us, and they cared. Netware
    was never very pretty, but so long as you didn't
    overload it with NLM's it was *rock* solid.

    Fine people. (and they are doing it again by backing SuSE/Miguel and the mono crew and everyone else).

    Still, just like MS they didn't quite grok TCP/IP
    but nobodies perfect right...

    Re Active directory (sic): most of it (esp the DFS part was trivial to do thanks to the splendid Andrew Tridgell's Samba even in the mid 90's.

    I admire the best MS engineers. They've taught me a lot. But, I loath their management.

    To anyone who doesn't know that execrable outfit that calls itself SC something used to be Calde**
    and was founded by Ray Noorda (ex Novell).

  108. Think about it, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's $11K per employee. Word is, it's harder than ever to get a bonus or promotion at MSFT, no matter how hard you bust your ass. Why? Because these motherfuckers are cutting costs, while at the same time giving away half a billion payouts for fuck knows what. So if you think MSFT is hurt by this, it's unlikely. What is likely is that regular employees (who I assure you are not evil) get squeezed.

    1. Re:Think about it, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh, sure, Microsoft NEVER does anything wrong. Maybe you should do your homework and see what it is that they were accused of violating before shooting your mouth off.

      BTW, that $536 billion turns into about $11K per Novell employee as well. You know, Novell employess bust their asses as well, only to have Microsoft steal the technology they worked to create.

    2. Re:Think about it, by The+MESMERIC · · Score: 0

      This clip exposes how the employees are treated.
      All Microsoft ever wanted was love

  109. Re:Novell is a dead company by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Novell became legacy software quickly. My impression is that they were too concerned with being backward compatible. IBM any one? MS offered 16 then 32 bit going from WFWG through NT 4.0, 2K and 2K3 and despite the pain companies move. Us IT folks like to make work for ourselves too and MS helps with that;) Email and database's for client server app's are the killer app's where I work. Groupwise sucked (even when compared to Notes!) and Btrieve doesn't cut it. Most folks where I work (a big rich company) could use wordpad as a replacement for word given all that they do. Excel is prevalent and invaluable as well as Access, unfortunately, but that makes for lots of SQL server, or even Oracle and DB2 work, when they outgrow it.

  110. CCIA and Eolas still pending by ps_inkling · · Score: 1
    The second settlement today was with Computer & Communications Industry Association (CCIA), who have encouraged many of the anti-trust lawsuits. A little cash, and they've gone back home as well.

    However, there's still the matter of Eolas and the "use form tags, violate our IP" patent 5,838,906. Will Microsoft buy off/out Eolas and truly "own the Internet," or will the patent be found invalid? PHBs and geeks would like to know.

    Perhaps clearing all of these lawsuits by "throwing money at them" (including the pending WordPerfect lawsuit by Novell) is the best return for shareholders; why bother with developing innovative operating systems or office automation software, or at least fixing the bugs in the current one, when you're a monopoly?

    Then again, maybe Gates and Ballmer developed a ethical side and couldn't sleep at night, knowing how they wronged other businesses in the past. Nah. A couple of billion bucks in the bank would put most people's conscience to sleep.

  111. Same deal with NWLink in Windows 2000... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ever wondered why you have to use MS's NWLink in W2K+ rather than Novell's own IPX/SPX as you could in Win9x? MS wouldn't give up the APIs, again.

  112. Re:Novell is a dead company by NuclearDog · · Score: 1

    Netcraft confirms it. BSD^H^H^HNovell is dying.

    --
    This statement is forty-five characters long.
  113. Microsoft legal cases by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Where can we get all legal suits against Microsoft (settled and pending) at one place?