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Microsoft Admits Targeting Wine Users

Buddha Joe wrote in to mention that the lack of Windows updates for Wine users is the result of a Microsoft's active targeting of Wine users. ZDNet has the story. From the article: "As the most popular third-party translation technology in use, Wine was the first emulator to be specifically tested for via WGA"

541 comments

  1. The Interview by lecithin · · Score: 5, Funny

    Do you admit to targeting wine users?

    Reply:

    In all fairness, most alcoholics are Microsoft's customers. We need them.

    The Linux/Unix market has already cornered the stoner folks. Just look at the latest release of Solaris.

    Oh... That Wine...And you mean 'targeting' much differently. Are we on the air????

    --
    It could be worse, it could be Monday.
    1. Re:The Interview by PopeAlien · · Score: 5, Funny

      Gates: "Damn it Balmer.. Stop jiggling around!! I cant get a clean view through the scope with you jiggling around!"

      Balmer: "Developers! Developers! Developers!

    2. Re:The Interview by un1xl0ser · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      That's funny. Mod up. Flamebait my ass.

      --
      v4sw6PU$hw6ln6pr4F$ck 4/6$ma3+6u7LNS$w2m4l7U$i2e4+7en6a2X h
    3. Re:The Interview by A.K.A_Magnet · · Score: 5, Funny

      Flamebait ? I thought it was funny. I am OK with the Linux/Unix assertion, being myself targeted... The problem is, I don't run Windows at all and I still drink wine. Being for stoner AND alchoolic, I guess I'll just have to switch to BSD... so I can die along with it :)

    4. Re:The Interview by lecithin · · Score: 4, Interesting

      These are exactly the reasons why I have a +5 flamebait on.

      Some folks should stop taking life so seriously.

      --
      It could be worse, it could be Monday.
    5. Re:The Interview by A+beautiful+mind · · Score: 5, Funny
      Re:The Interview (Score:0, Flamebait)
      by un1xl0ser (575642) on 2005-02-25 19:06 (#11779444)
      Flamebait my ass.

      Be careful what you wish for.
      --
      It takes a man to suffer ignorance and smile
      Be yourself no matter what they say
    6. Re:The Interview by cryptomanx · · Score: 1

      Got the right picture on that.

    7. Re:The Interview by ndtechnologies · · Score: 0

      ...lol Where exactly was the scope trying to go?

      --
      I have nothing clever to put here...
    8. Re:The Interview by Sean+the+Impaler · · Score: 0, Redundant

      Good thing I'm a beer drinker!

      (yeah, go ahead, mod me redundant)

      --
      Sig? No thanks, I'm trying to quit.
    9. Re:The Interview by daeley · · Score: 3, Funny

      Being for stoner AND alchoolic

      Somebody's had tee many martoonis!

      --
      I watched C-beams glitter in the dark near the Tannhauser gate.
    10. Re:The Interview by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Would that be another missile with a GPS unit broadcasting its location to the so called BMD?

    11. Re:The Interview by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It was certainly reported on NPR, which conservatives say is liberal.

    12. Re:The Interview by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      and later...

      "No way office sir, theres no blood in my alcohol system, im not even the least bit drink, I mean drunk"

    13. Re:The Interview by javaxman · · Score: 1
      Being for stoner AND alchoolic, I guess I'll just have to switch to BSD

      What, now you're a devil worshiper, too?!?

    14. Re:The Interview by PakProtector · · Score: 2, Funny

      I use NetBSD. I am posting this from a NetBSD 2.0 box, X11R6 running, with icewm, viewing /. with Mozilla Firefox. I am neither stoner nor alcoholic.

      I'm psychotic. Please get it right next time. After all, one has to be psychotic after seeing what GNU/Linux have done to the world of Unices. Like the select() call for example. Don't get me started.

      /me starts foaming at the mouth and falls over dead, knocking the NetBSD box into the bathtub

      --

      Edward@Tomato - /home/Edward/ man woman
      man: no entry for woman in the manual.
      "Qua!?"

    15. Re:The Interview by rk · · Score: 0
      Like the select() call for example. Don't get me started.

      It's been too long for me to remember clearly, but didn't select() derive from BSD Unix back in the day?

      poll() is nicer, however.

    16. Re:The Interview by hawk · · Score: 3, Funny

      /me starts foaming at the mouth and falls over dead, knocking the NetBSD box into the bathtub

      Hey! No dying twice in the same post!

    17. Re:The Interview by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The electricity revived him. Now he's the first NetBSD zombie.

    18. Re:The Interview by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That reminds me of this joke.

    19. Re:The Interview by rbarreira · · Score: 1

      Good idea, thanks. The first one ;)

      --

      The AACS key is NOT 0xF606EEFD628B1CA427BEA93A9CA9773F
    20. Re:The Interview by kernelistic · · Score: 1

      Does this process descend from init? :)

    21. Re:The Interview by NMEismyNME · · Score: 1
      He was just making damn sure

      From In France, Jacques LeFevrier left nothing to chance when he decided to commit suicide. He stood atop a sheer cliff and tied a noose around his neck. He tied the other end of the rope to a large rock. He drank some poison and set fire to his clothes. He even tried to shoot himself at the last moment. He jumped and fired the pistol.

      The bullet missed him completely and cut through the rope above him. Now freed from the threat of hanging, he plunged into the sea. The dunking extinguished the flames and made him vomit the poison. He was dragged out of the water by a kind fisherman and was taken to a hospital, where he died of hypothermia.

    22. Re:The Interview by civilizedINTENSITY · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Hehehe...Thats always been my favorite darwin award.

    23. Re:The Interview by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Das Register
      ->NEUTRUM

    24. Re:The Interview by qurk · · Score: 1

      How can you call the media 'liberal'? The media is DOMINATED by "conservatives". Look at the success of Rush Limbaugh. If you are a "conservative" and want all the media to paint a completely rosy picture of what many people would completely condemn or make fun of, rather than just report....then why the hell are you living in this country? Go to some country where the government controls all the newspapers and radio stations. WAAAAA "Liberal Media" MY ASS) For every "proof" you guys pull out that the "media" is "liberal", there exist "conservative" equivalents but hey, that's not your spin, you non-subjective "conservative" people. Damn, I mean you guys are way intelligent and good people in general, I am just sick of hearing you people spin this. /me hands you a tissue :)

    25. Re:The Interview by PakProtector · · Score: 1

      I refer to the fact that select() on a Linux machine alters the timeval struct when it returns. Quoth the man page:

      select() should probably have been designed to return the time remaining from the original timeout, if any, by modifying the time value in place. Even though some systems stupidly act in this different way, it is unlikely this semantic will ever be commonly implemented, as the change causes massive source code compatibility problems. Furthermore, recent new standards have dictated the current behaviour.

      Emphasis mine.

      --

      Edward@Tomato - /home/Edward/ man woman
      man: no entry for woman in the manual.
      "Qua!?"

    26. Re:The Interview by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "As the most popular third-party translation technology in use, Wine was the first emulator to be specifically tested for via WGA"

      WINE = Wine Is Not an Emulator. IT IS NOT AN EMULATOR!

    27. Re:The Interview by laffer1 · · Score: 1

      I think stoner AND alcoholic makes you a Windows ME user. At least it does in my mom's case. :)

  2. No obligation... by mythosaz · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Microsoft is still not under ANY obligation to update YOUR emulator.

    1. Re:No obligation... by Doesn't_Comment_Code · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Microsoft is still not under ANY obligation to update YOUR emulator.

      That is true. And if it required additional effort to update the emulators, I would expect them not to. But it appears as if they are are putting forth additional effort to hamper emulators. And that just makes them look like jerks.

      --

      Slashdot Syndrome: the sudden, extreme urge to correct someone in order to validate one's self.
    2. Re:No obligation... by A+beautiful+mind · · Score: 4, Insightful

      ..unless someone owns a legal copy of Windows of course.

      --
      It takes a man to suffer ignorance and smile
      Be yourself no matter what they say
    3. Re:No obligation... by QMO · · Score: 5, Insightful

      True, but it is under (anti-trust) obligation to not exclude a person running an emulator from getting updates to their MS software (like office), even it that obligation hasn't been court tested, yet.

      MS says that someone running an emulator can get the updates somewhere else, but it is still a practical exclusion.

      --
      Exam 4/C again. Maybe I'll do better this time.
    4. Re:No obligation... by mythosaz · · Score: 4, Informative

      A legitimate copy of windows, running under a hardware emulator, or a virtual machine (like VMWare or VirtualPC) will continue to be updated.

      A piece of software that performs windows-like-functions, like WINE, won't continue to be updated.

    5. Re:No obligation... by lawpoop · · Score: 4, Insightful

      NO ONE is ASKING Microsoft to update ANY emulator. They are asking Microsoft to UPDATE MICROSOFT SOFTWARE running under wine.

      --
      Computers are useless. They can only give you answers.
      -- Pablo Picasso
    6. Re:No obligation... by SlayerofGods · · Score: 1

      You can still get updates for their other software if you own it. Just download the updates.
      They're just blocking people that don't have windows from downloading through the windows update program.
      They aren't blocking you from updating software you own. They're blocking you from using a windows service because you don't have windows. That's perfectly legal.

      --

      Technology, the cause of and solution to all of life's problems.
    7. Re:No obligation... by mythosaz · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The "extra effort" involved is pretty minimal. WINE has a registry value that identifies itself. Other emulators do the same.

      This entire forum would go ape-shit if Microsoft was publishing a patch from Windowsupdate that broke WINE simply because it conveniently "forgot" to read that registry key.

      Windowsupdate has simple checks in it to verify that it's updating actual installs of...wait for it...WINDOWS!

    8. Re:No obligation... by macaulay805 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Microsoft is still not under ANY obligation to update YOUR emulator.

      Is it me, or is this starting to look like another Dr. DOS issue?

    9. Re:No obligation... by RonnyJ · · Score: 5, Insightful
      And if it required additional effort to update the emulators, I would expect them not to.

      Well, if a Microsoft update accidentally broke a part of WINE's compatibility, some people might accuse Microsoft of deliberately breaking it. Why should they take the chance?

    10. Re:No obligation... by DShard · · Score: 2, Insightful

      What does owning a copy of windows have to do with a web service that updates microsoft products automatically? Just because you buy one product it doesn't entitle you to another. They don't even owe you updates at all as a windows user and owner, they do it for customer retainment.

    11. Re:No obligation... by mythosaz · · Score: 1

      Update of Microsoft programs, like Office, still functions from Officeupdate - even when running them under programs like WINE.

    12. Re:No obligation... by kd5ujz · · Score: 1

      W.I.N.E.
      Wine Is Not an Emulator.

      [blockquote]Wine is an Open Source implementation of the Windows API on top of X and Unix. Wine provides both a development toolkit for porting Windows sources to Unix and a program loader, allowing many unmodified Windows binaries to run on x86-based Unixes.[/blockquote]

      Wine

      --
      -William
      God is everything science has yet to explain.
    13. Re:No obligation... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You must be new here.

    14. Re:No obligation... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      there's no shortage of dumb assholes who feel the need to speak up to companies who are actively screwing them over.

      I guess it's the same mentality that keeps electing Republicans.

    15. Re:No obligation... by Frank+T.+Lofaro+Jr. · · Score: 1

      Do anti-trust obligations prevent Microsoft from using the DMCA to outlaw programs and/or methods to prevent Microsoft's blocking of windows update on WINE from working?

      --
      Just because it CAN be done, doesn't mean it should!
    16. Re:No obligation... by hcob$ · · Score: 4, Insightful

      As much as I hate to admit this.... Microsoft is right on this one. They took the time to code software, and make a platform that has hard vendor tie-ins. By disabling free third party support, they are in effect fending off attacks on their intellectual property. Which, unfortunately IP in the US is enforceable through law or just plain old effort.

      --
      Cliff Claven
      K.E.G. Party Chairman
      Founding Leader of: Koncerned for Egalitarin Governance
    17. Re:No obligation... by iamwahoo2 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      If you are using Windows Media Player and IE under Wine and you have paid for a Windows XP CD, should MS go out of their way to ensure that you cannot automatically update this software on Wine? The assumption is that you DO have windows and are running portions of the packaged applications like IE under Wine and since you own Windows they probably should not block you from using windows update.

    18. Re:No obligation... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Jesus, what more do you want?!? First, everyone was bitching that they couldn't update Office running under Wine; then, when MS states that downloads will still be available to "non-native" Office users, doing a little fucking digging to manually download an update is all of a sudden a "practical exclusion," presumably because of inconvenience.

      If you want convenience, run Office natively under Windows while conveniently opening yourself up to whatever the virus of the day is.

      "even it that obligation hasn't been court tested, yet."

      The GPL hasn't been FULLY court-tested either, but I'm guessing you're making an exception in that case. Makes me wonder how many exceptions you make, if it suits your purpose.

    19. Re:No obligation... by bersl2 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      This is just something to get us pissed off. We have no recourse nor reason to do this. "The spokesperson said users who are not running Windows XP or Windows 2000 natively can still download updates for Microsoft Office from the Office Update Web site." They are pushing our buttons. To quote a Fark cliche, "It's a trap!"

      How many ways should I say this?

    20. Re:No obligation... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative
      There's no such firm distinction. All the emulators make choices about which parts of a PC to emulate and which they will simply translate calls from one system to another.

      The ones that emulate everything -- including CPUs, memories, bus's, IDE controlers, etc -- are extremely slow.

      The ones that use the native processor and simply choose which calls to translate from the guest API to the Host API work pretty well. The biggest difference is exactly which specific hardwawre components an emulator emulates. Just because Wine chose a different subset than VMWare doesn't mean they shouldn't be targeted.

      If Microsoft chose to target VMWare this way (break thing running on VMWare to help VirtualPC) people would have the same objections.

    21. Re:No obligation... by Vectorferret · · Score: 4, Insightful

      However, Windows update costs Microsoft money. WINE customers do not pay them any money. (WINE source is free and open after all, which is a good thing.) Although the usual argument that Windows shouldn't be broken in the first place might come up, some thing's really aren't known at the time a product releases. I think it's fair that they spend their resources (however infinite) only on teir own customers. Plus, I think most WINE users won't have much trouble patching thier WINE without windows update, there not typically the kind of person who isn't tech savvy, plus, vulnerabilities are less severe in WINE, since they (usually) can't compromise the rest of Linux/BSD etc...

    22. Re:No obligation... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Except if you are an admin using Linux, and have to support other user's Windows boxes for updates. If I wanted to download Windows Updates to put on a CD so I can go to the PCs that aren't connected to a fast connection, etc, shouldn't this be allowed?

    23. Re:No obligation... by SlayerofGods · · Score: 3, Insightful

      But how do they know you own a Windows XP CD?
      If you want WINE to be able to use windows updater it's up to the makers of WINE to find a way for to connect to windows updater and vaildate itself with your windows information.
      It's not Microsoft's job to find out if you own the cd or not while running WINE.

      --

      Technology, the cause of and solution to all of life's problems.
    24. Re:No obligation... by dinivin · · Score: 2, Insightful

      From American Heritage Dictionary:

      1. To strive to equal or excel, especially through imitation: an older pupil whose accomplishments an style I emulated.
      2. To compete with successfully; approach or attain equality with.
      3. Computer Science. To imitate the function of (another system), as by modifications to hardware or software that allow the imitating system to accept the same data, execute the same programs, and achieve the same results as the imitated system.

      Sorry, but that third definition clearly applies. WINE most certainly is an emulator.

      Dinivin

    25. Re:No obligation... by danheskett · · Score: 1

      True, but it is under (anti-trust) obligation to not exclude a person running an emulator from getting updates to their MS software (like office), even it that obligation hasn't been court tested, yet.
      I haven't seen that claimed anywhere with some evidence. Can you cite this with any backup, or a portion of the decree that called for this?

      MS says that someone running an emulator can get the updates somewhere else, but it is still a practical exclusion.
      There is a differnce between being pratically excluded and jumping through a hoop. Browsing to a website, selecting a link, and downloading the file is not an exclusion in any sense of the word. That is *the industry standard* for downloading software updates. How many Linux products are updated this way? Mac products? Dozens or thousands. Most patches are distributed this way. A much smaller percentage do something like Office Update. Much smaller. It is a value-added way to update.

    26. Re:No obligation... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      What do you think "FULLY court-tested" means? It seems not possible for any piece of legalese writing (legislation, licenses, etc) to become "FULLY" tested on courts; as courts are constantly adjusting their interpretations to meet the times. Yes, the GPL has been used in court. Yes it will appear in court again. The same can be said for most legal documents.

      Using your bizare standard of "FULLY" tested, I'd point out that the US constitution has not been "FULLY" tested in court either. Do you think that makes it invalid?

    27. Re:No obligation... by Random832 · · Score: 1

      Even if it does validate itself, it would be saying "Hey, even though i'm WINE, this is a valid installation with activation code 0xNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNN and cd key #NNNNN-NNNNN-NNNNN-NNNNN-NNNNN" windows update will stop listening at "i'm WINE"

      --
      We've secretly replaced Slashdot with new Folgers Crystals - let's see if it notices.
    28. Re:No obligation... by phauxfinnish · · Score: 1

      Is that Insightful as modded or Funny? Break it on purpose because if we do it on accident they will think we did it on purpose?

    29. Re:No obligation... by JHromadka · · Score: 5, Interesting

      And what would happen if a virus/trojan went and added that WINE registry entry? Would updates stop working so users wouldn't be able to install patches? Thanks Microsoft!

      --
      "The objective of securing the safety of Americans from crime and terror has been achieved." -- John Ashcroft
    30. Re:No obligation... by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      But it appears as if they are are putting forth additional effort to hamper emulators. And that just makes them look like jerks.

      And is probably a violation of antitrust laws.

    31. Re:No obligation... by boarder · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Windowsupdate updates other things besides... wait for it... WINDOWS!

      If you had bothered to pay any attention to what was being talked about, you might understand how stupid your posts were. Microsoft is under no obligation to keep your emulators up to date. That is correct. They are, however, under obligation to keep your Office up to date. Whether you are running Office under an emulator or not shouldn't be a factor if you legally paid for Office. You paid for their product and service, so they should keep you updated just like the rest of their legitimate users. This has nothing to do with installs of Windows and updating them... Wine makes it so you don't have to install Windows. This is about not allowing emulators to fully run their other, non-OS software.

      They are excluding a specific set of legitimate users who should have the same rights as other legitimate users to lock out a competitor. This has nothing to do with fighting piracy; it is purely about anti-competitive behaviour.

      --
      IANAL, but I play one on /.
    32. Re:No obligation... by arodland · · Score: 1

      It would really be nice if people knew what they were talking about when they posted, especially when given a week's lead time, and the chance to see others corrected repeatedly for making the same mistake. Or, they could just RTFA.

      The updates are in question are for Office. Office. Office is not WINE, and there's no reason for MS to change their agreement wrt updating Office because someone is running it on WINE.

    33. Re:No obligation... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I hope I live in your state. That way you'd know that I effectively cancelled out your vote, jackass.

      Other than that, nice post.

    34. Re:No obligation... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then don't say "i'm WINE"

    35. Re:No obligation... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What I meant was that the GPL has stood up to preliminary court scrutiny. The alleged "obligation" the grand-parent cites has not been tested at all. I used "FULLY" (incorrectly) to imply that there are, in fact, varying degrees of scrutiny a license (or obligation, for that matter.) Besides, that second part was more of an add-on anyways. I think I made my point in the first part.

    36. Re:No obligation... by LurkerXXX · · Score: 1
      I think if you carefully study the box that Office came in, you will note as a requirement "Windows 2000, Windows XP", etc. Yes, some version of windows is required. It's right there on the box. You aren't using the required software with it, so don't expect full support (ie nice easy patch downloads).

      Please point out exactly where in the anti-trust judgements they said you have to support beyond what the listed software requirements are.

    37. Re:No obligation... by mythosaz · · Score: 1

      Windowsupdate doesn't update things under WINE. Officeupdate does.

    38. Re:No obligation... by natrius · · Score: 1

      Sorry, but that third definition clearly applies. WINE most certainly is an emulator.

      Or, [gasp!] the dictionary could be wrong! That never happens! In the realm of computers, the "modifications to hardware or software that allow the imitating system to accept the same data" involve translating foreign instructions to native ones. WINE doesn't translate anything. It's merely an implementation of the Win32 API. It does the same thing (well they aim to at least) that Microsoft's Win32 libraries do when given a program to run. If you wanted to run an OSX program on Linux x86, you'd need to translate the machine code to instructions that will run on native hardware, then implement the API used. The first step is PowerPC emulator: what the American Heritage Dictionary should have defined, but failed to.

      FWIW, I think the difference is pretty trivial.

    39. Re:No obligation... by bradkittenbrink · · Score: 1

      There is absolutely no reason to expect a general purpose dictionary like American Heritage to have an accurate definition for a piece of technical jargon like the word "emulator". Besides, that's not even a definition of the word "emulator" it's a definition of the word "to emulate". The word "emulator" has a much more specific technical meaning than just "something that emulates".

    40. Re:No obligation... by theshowmecanuck · · Score: 4, Insightful
      What if someone paid to purchase Microsoft Office, and chose to run it on Linux using Wine? Why should they not have access to convenient updates like the rest of the people who purchased MS Office? There are a number of software packages that run on both Windows and Linux and have easy mechanisms to ensure they are updated. Frisk software's F-Prot virus update comes to mind as one (mind you, you do have to set up a cron job on Linux, but that is pretty easy to set up, even for a newbie). I agree with the rest who think that MS just comes off looking like a bunch of jerks... like a whiney kid who didn't like being scored against during a game: "it's my ball, and I'm taking it home!"

      I know this has been alluded to before, but I thought a direct reply to this post that has been marked insightful was warranted.

      --
      -- I ignore anonymous replies to my comments and postings.
    41. Re:No obligation... by dinivin · · Score: 1

      Or perhaps the dictionary has the correct definition. It almost certainly has the most commonly accepted definition of the word "emulator" in mainstream society.

      Dinivin

    42. Re:No obligation... by mythosaz · · Score: 4, Informative
      So, a legitimate user of Microsoft Office who chooses to run it under WINE is told that he can't use Office Update.

      No, no, no, no no.
      Wrong, wrong, wrong, wrong, wrong!

      The spokesperson said users who are not running Windows XP or Windows 2000 natively can still download updates for Microsoft Office from the Office Update Web site.

      You can't use WINDOWSupdate to update Office if you're not using WINDOWS. You have to use OFFICEupdate to update Office.

    43. Re:No obligation... by GeSchmidtt · · Score: 1

      Stop the whining or should it be wine-ing. If you think your emulator needs a Microsoft Update go to the manual downloads and break it yourself.

      When you act like a bunch of pathetic second class losers, you become pathetic second class losers.

      Raise your wine glass high and suck it up.

    44. Re:No obligation... by dinivin · · Score: 1

      Any reason why I should trust your definition (and perhaps the definition of many programmers) over the definition commonly accepted by society? WINE may be an open source development project, but it's a product, aimed at end-users. End-users don't care what the technical definition of emulator may or may not be. They are going to think that WINE emulates windows, because, according to every definition they know/lookup, it does.

      Dinivin

    45. Re:No obligation... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Its pretty funny that you're complaining about other people not reading the article while you think its about Windows Update. Actually, its about Office Update.

    46. Re:No obligation... by dJCL · · Score: 0, Redundant

      O, dear god! That would be absolutly hilarious!

      If there is a key that stops windows updates, and a worm uses a new flaw to get around, then it can wait a week, set the key and watch how the new windows patch refuses to install.

      I just know that the next couple of worms will decide to see what happens if they do this.

      Of course, AV vendors will catch on quickly, and I've never run Norton on my copy of wine...

      Anyway...

      --
      On Arrakis: early worm gets the bird. Magister mundi sum!
    47. Re:No obligation... by Dr.+Zowie · · Score: 1

      Like just about everyone else who posted to the same effect, you're failing to realize that Windows Update is the official pathway for updating (e.g.) Internet Explorer, Microsoft Outlook, and Microsoft Office. Those applications run just fine under Wine but are blocked from being updated.

      I do run Orifice and Exploder from time to time (I purchased Orifice2000 for just that reason) under the Codeweaver wine, and it would be nice if M$ would supply me the effing updates they told me I'd get.

    48. Re:No obligation... by natrius · · Score: 1

      It almost certainly has the most commonly accepted definition of the word "emulator" in mainstream society.

      The other definitions were supposed to be the commonly accepted definitions of the word in mainstream society. The entry in question said "Computer Science" next to it, which means it should define the way the term is used in Computer Science. And I take back what I said about the difference being trivial: if both steps of the process I described in my earlier post are referred to as the same thing, you can't distinguish between the two. Luckily, computer scientists have narrowed the scope of certain words when used in their field.

    49. Re:No obligation... by Smallpond · · Score: 1

      I think you're right. In the EULA for Office, it's careful to never say that you are required to run it on Windows, because that would be an abuse of their desktop monopoly.

      The question is, when you buy Office, are you also buying updates? If so, its anticompetitive to refuse to update on non-Windows platforms.

      I think MS's position is that there are a lot of Wine users with illegal copies of Office, but they are crossing the line refusing to update anyone that's not a Windows user.

    50. Re:No obligation... by dinivin · · Score: 1

      But emulator isn't being used in the CS field when talking about WINE. It's being used in the field of computer end-users. There's a huge difference.

      Dinivin

    51. Re:No obligation... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      After reading the article, I'm still a bit unclear on what exactly is going on here. I haven't used WINE in a year or two, so I don't recall exactly how it works. My understanding of it, which may be wrong, is:

      1. A new program called WGA is going to check if the computer has a valid copy of windows installed before the user can get anything from Microsoft Downloads.

      2. Windows Update is completely irrelevant to WINE users. Windows Update applies service packs to Windows, replacing Microsoft-written DLLs with newer Microsoft-written DLLs. If you applied a service pack to WINE (which should have FOSS DLLs that emulate Microft's DLLs), I would be very suprised if WINE didn't die a painful death. It seems like it would be like trying to apply a patch from MS Office to OpenOffice...same functionality, completely different innards.

      3. The problem is that WGA doesn't affect just Windows Update, but also patches for MS Office, drivers and development tools, etc. So if you're running MS Office under WINE, you've got to jump through a few hoops to download patches from now on.

      4. The other problem is...suppose you have two computers, eg. a mac and a Windows machine. Suppose the Windows machine isn't on the public network, but the Mac is. So, you want to download a service pack on the Mac, burn a CD, and then apply the service pack to the Windows computer. But WGA would block you from downloading the files on a non-Windows computer...wouldn't it? Or, suppose you are using a computer running Linux and you want to see an example file from the .NET sdk. If the .NET sdk has to be downloaded via Windows Downloads (don't know if that's the case), you wouldn't be able to look at it unless you find a Windows computer.

    52. Re:No obligation... by amigabill · · Score: 1

      >That is true. And if it required additional effort
      >to update the emulators, I would expect them not
      >to. But it appears as if they are are putting forth
      >additional effort to hamper emulators. And that
      >just makes them look like jerks.

      MS provides these updates to their customers. Who actually use Windows. Who paid for Windows, and thus paid for the right to service updates. Did you pay for a legitimate Windows license for the machine you're running Linux/Wine on, and thus pay for service updates to your system?

      If not, then what real expectation do you, as a non-paying non-customer who doesn't actually use Windows, have of them regarding their "MS Windows" software product? If you didn't buy Windows, and if you aren't running Windows, then how is it their problem to keep your Linux computer updated with various pieces of the product you didn't buy from them?

    53. Re:No obligation... by qodfathr · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Because they don't legally have the option to run it under Wine. The MS Office for Windows EULA states that it may only be run under Microsoft operating systems.

      If that person doesn't like the EULA, they should use something else, like oo.org.

      --
      Yes, it's true. This man has no dick.
    54. Re:No obligation... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      MS wouldnt have any updates for Wine anyway, since it isnt a product they make.

      The problem is, that they are(were?) preventing people using legally purchased/licensed copies of *application* products that MS *does* make, but using them under Wine instead of Windows, from getting updates to *those* products. Fweeet! Illegal monopoly tying!

    55. Re:No obligation... by dillon_rinker · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Excellent point. Security, as always, is subtle. Bill Gates claims that security is job one now, and yet there is now an easy way to make security updates fail. And this behavior is BY DESIGN!

      The answer, of course, is for Microsoft to stop worrying about piracy causing potential revenue loss and start worrying about security. Microsoft has enough cash reserves to buy ALL of google's stock (at least, they did last time I checked google's market capitalization). Microsoft's revenues are larger than the next n software companies COMBINED (where I believe n=20, but it may be even larger). Every new PC sold contributes to Microsoft's revenues. Revenues aren't the worry.

    56. Re:No obligation... by Zemplar · · Score: 1

      Why should they not have access to convenient updates like the rest of the people who purchased MS Office?
      This is because nobody is entitled to software updates after purchasing the software. When purchasing the software, you are basically purchasing it as-is without any requirement to be given updates, then, or ever. This is just another good reason illustrating why when purchasing software you should really examine the product in its current state and realize the potential that no patches would ever be forthcoming.

    57. Re:No obligation... by amigabill · · Score: 2, Insightful

      This is just something to get us pissed off. We have no recourse nor reason to do this. "The spokesperson said users who are not running Windows XP or Windows 2000 natively can still download updates for Microsoft Office from the Office Update Web site."

      Running Linux/Wine is mutualy exclusive to running Windows. You also likely didn't buy a Windows license or service contract for your Linux/Wine system.

      But it's quite possible that the version of Office you may be running is legitimately paid for, regardless of the host operating system. So you may have paid for the right to service updates to the Office product even though you most likely did not pay for the right to service updates to the Windows product.

      That's one plausible difference between the two.

      Or perhaps the next update to Office will bork at Linux/Wine systems as well, even those who did pay for the right to service updates to their copy of the Office product. Only time will tell...

    58. Re:No obligation... by SpongeBobLinuxPants · · Score: 1

      I think you're missing the point... It's not that M$ won't put effort into making software updating work with WINE, it's that M$ IS putting an effort to make sure if you're using WINE, you CAN'T get the update.

    59. Re:No obligation... by nolife · · Score: 1

      Insightful my ass. Can you give us a single reason why you'd believe that getting your OS/Office patches via windowsupdate.microsoft.com with activeX/IE is more expensive for MS then getting them manually from ftp.microsoft.com? Do you really think that is the reason for blocking out Wine? I'd like to see the internal study from MS that shows how the worlds vast number of Wine users compared to non Wine users accessing the automated update site for their MS office updates is realy having an effect on the MS bottom line. I'd bet if there really was such a price breakdown, it would be less then the cost of something from the 99 cent menu at Wendys per year and the cost of the study that concluded those results probably cost 20000x that.

      --
      Bad boys rape our young girls but Violet gives willingly.
    60. Re:No obligation... by falconed · · Score: 1
      .... Microsoft is right on this one.

      You must be new here ;)

      --
      USE='clever' emerge -u sig
    61. Re:No obligation... by natrius · · Score: 1

      Just because they're end users doesn't mean they should change the meaning of words. When dealing with computers, the definition of the word applicable to computers is the one that should be used.

      From the American Heritage Dictionary:

      mouse (mous) pronunciation
      n., pl. mice (ms).

      1.
      1. Any of numerous small rodents of the families Muridae and Cricetidae, such as the common house mouse (Mus musculus), characteristically having a pointed snout, small rounded ears, and a long naked or almost hairless tail.
      2. Any of various similar or related animals, such as the jumping mouse, the vole, or the jerboa.
      2. A cowardly or timid person.
      3. Informal. A discolored swelling under the eye caused by a blow; a black eye.
      4. pl. mice or mouses (mous'z). Computer Science. A hand-held, button-activated input device that when rolled along a flat surface directs an indicator to move correspondingly about a computer screen, allowing the operator to move the indicator freely, as to select operations or manipulate text or graphics.


      If a mouse "end user" ignored the computer science definition just because he wasn't a computer scientist, then his kid is going to be a bit disappointed to find out that his new pet is made out of plastic.

      Many end users that "internet" means the blue 'e' on their desktop. They're wrong. Must this argument continue?

    62. Re:No obligation... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're so wrong that it isn't even funny.

      1. Have you read the Office EULA? It doesn't state that.

      2. If EULAs were valid such a statement would be illegal.*

      3. EULAs are invalid.*

      *) In the EU at least - I know all software legalities here very well. However, I'm not sure about the US but legislation banning companies from obliging customers to buy X if they buy Y is quite likely in the US as well and thus even if EULAs are valid in the US such a statement would be illegal.

    63. Re:No obligation... by jeff4747 · · Score: 1

      Did you pay for a legitimate Windows license for the machine you're running Linux/Wine on, and thus pay for service updates to your system?

      Yes.

      So, now what? I've bought Windows, and that entitles me to updates to files that ship with windows. But I decided to run the @indows apps in Wine instead.

      I can't wait for the next Windows worm to set the registry key so that WindowsUpdate on XP thinks it's in Wine.

    64. Re:No obligation... by Conor+Turton · · Score: 0, Flamebait
      They are asking Microsoft to UPDATE MICROSOFT SOFTWARE running under wine.

      Windows and Office Update requires ActiveX. Its not Microsofts fault your shitty emulator doesn't do the job properly. You keep saying Linux users are supposedly more IT literate than Windows users yet you seem unable to manually download and apply the patches.

      --
      Conor "You're not married,you haven't got a girlfriend and you've never seen Star Trek? Good Lord!" - Patrick Stewart
    65. Re:No obligation... by boarder · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Both of them use microsoft downloads if you aren't using IE.

      "From this summer onwards all users of Microsoft Downloads will be required to validate using either an ActiveX control or a standalone tool."

      This is what people have to use if they don't use IE... go to windowsupdate or officeupdate in firefox and see where it takes you. If you want to update Office under Wine, you have to go through this validation process (which is what this story is about). Actually, none of the links or even the blurb mention windowsupdate or officeupdate... I was just replying to what you wrote. Either way, if you are under Wine and go to windowsupdate or officeupdate, they are locking you out. So what I said is still valid: this is about locking out legitimate Office users.

      It's been awhile since I messed with Wine, so I don't know if it can run IE or not.

      --
      IANAL, but I play one on /.
    66. Re:No obligation... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not Microsoft's job to find out if I'm running WINE either.

    67. Re:No obligation... by boarder · · Score: 1

      I don't think it's about either, because it isn't. I just wrote windowsupdate in response to what he wrote. Windowsupdate and Officeupdate both lead to the same place when you aren't using IE.

      Read this post where I explain:
      http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1406 40&cid=117 80685

      They are locking people out of Microsoft Downloads, which is where you have to go if you don't have IE and want to update either Office or Windows.

      --
      IANAL, but I play one on /.
    68. Re:No obligation... by jonfelder · · Score: 1

      What a dumbass. If you had bothered to pay attention to what was being talked about you might understand how stupid your post is.

      RTFA Microsoft isn't stopping people from updating Office.

      From the article:

      The spokesperson said users who are not running Windows XP or Windows 2000 natively can still download updates for Microsoft Office from the Office Update Web site.

      Considering you decided to use Office as an example...what do you think Office update, updates? I'll give you a hint...it's not Windows.

    69. Re:No obligation... by jascat · · Score: 1

      I can't say that it's all that bad considering they still have the updates available to download on the site. If they locked out people who run Wine from applying the updates by downloading them individually from the site, then that would be wrong, but not being able to use the update service is more of an annoyance than anything. I guess it is something for people to get their panties in a wad about. As much work goes in to making Wine work, what is a couple more steps to those users? If it's such a big deal, use OpenOffice.org.

    70. Re:No obligation... by Random832 · · Score: 1

      this isn't the kind of thing microsoft should be disqualifying based on if they're going to make the argument that using wine implies lack of a legitimate copy of windows.

      --
      We've secretly replaced Slashdot with new Folgers Crystals - let's see if it notices.
    71. Re:No obligation... by randallpowell · · Score: 1

      True but why not update their software?

    72. Re:No obligation... by cranky_slacker · · Score: 1

      Being that I don't use WINE and almost never use Windows, I really don't care. However, this an interesting idea. Creating a virus which makes all infected Windows machines look like *nix running WINE would certainly be funny. Would MS remove the check? Would they just write a removal tool? Would we have Joe Public attempting edit his borked registry by hand? The amusing possibilities are endless. Hypothetically speaking, of course.

    73. Re:No obligation... by Ender+Ryan · · Score: 1
      That's a very good point, especially considering how easy it is for a virus or trojan to do that. What's more, that could be a very beneficial(to said virus or trojan) thing to do, to be sure that the infected box is never updated and remains vulnerable.

      --
      Sticking feathers up your butt does not make you a chicken - Tyler Durden
    74. Re:No obligation... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is a distinct difference between Microsoft not allowing future updates to WINE, and Microsoft releasing updates that break WINE.

    75. Re:No obligation... by cmoss · · Score: 1

      attacks on their intellectual property?
      Can you be more specific?

      trademarks?
      patents?
      trade secrets?

      IP is a broad term that encompasses several completely different things. It would help to understand your point if you used the appropriate term rather than an overbroad catch-all.

    76. Re:No obligation... by theshowmecanuck · · Score: 1
      Actually I agree with you that nobody is entitled to software updates. However, since MS does provide MS Office updates, but not to Wine users (even if they paid for the product), I believe my point still stands: They look like jerks.

      To add to your point about 'examining the product in its current state', you could also add, 'examine the track record of the vendor and how they treat their customers'. For those people or organizations that wanted to run Linux but still use MS Office, they should start looking at Open Office (or Star Office) more closely. Or any other 'office' product that runs under that O/S.

      --
      -- I ignore anonymous replies to my comments and postings.
    77. Re:No obligation... by Fortun+L'Escrot · · Score: 1

      Read this and tell me that while they might be right are they not also creating a door for abuse?

    78. Re:No obligation... by Darby · · Score: 1

      Would you do us all a favor and not use your +1 bonus when you are dead wrong and don't even have a clue what the discussion is about?

      This isn't about windows, it's about office.
      This is about the 20th time it's been said but you clearly have no interest in actually paying attention.
      You just want to pompously spout crap.

      Please stop it.
      k thx bye

    79. Re:No obligation... by Serveert · · Score: 1

      Good points, it's common sense, this is jerk behavior. It's amazing how many m$ drones there are around here, I wonder how many of them come from the microsoft.com domain?

      --
      2 years and no mod points. Join reddit. Because openness is good.
    80. Re:No obligation... by mattyrobinson69 · · Score: 1

      the article's about microsoft office, which you can buy legitimately without a windows license, and run in wine

    81. Re:No obligation... by mattyrobinson69 · · Score: 1

      it does emulate (not the api, thats just a reimplementation, like gtk for X and gtk for windows). it does emulate the paths to files (c:\=~/.wine/fakec)and other stuff.

    82. Re:No obligation... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah and you can run MSIE under WINE. If you do so to run Windows Update, then it doesn't work. You can even use ActiveX in Mozilla, btw. IOW STFU with your misinformative BS.

    83. Re:No obligation... by amigabill · · Score: 1

      Would you do us all a favor and not use your +1 bonus when you are dead wrong and don't even have a clue what the discussion is about?

      This isn't about windows, it's about office.


      Then why did the article go like this:

      Microsoft prioritised making its anti-piracy tool prevent users of Wine, an open source toolkit that allows users to run Windows applications under Linux, from downloading Windows updates, the software giant said on Friday.

      Or the Slashdot summary go like this:

      Microsoft Admits Targeting Wine Users Posted by Zonk on Friday February 25, @12:58PM from the why-wouldn't-they? dept. Buddha Joe wrote in to mention that the lack of Windows updates for Wine users is the result of a Microsoft's active targeting of Wine users.

      As far as I could tell, the "discussion" did seem to be talking about Windows updates as well as Office updates. My post addressed both... Quotes from this "discussion" that made me think commenting on Windows Update was OK:

      Windowsupdate has simple checks in it to verify that it's updating actual installs of...wait for it...WINDOWS!
      "The spokesperson said users who are not running Windows XP or Windows 2000 natively can still download updates for Microsoft Office from the Office Update Web site." Indicating that Office is not the problem, that Windows is the problem
      A legitimate copy of windows, running under a hardware emulator, or a virtual machine (like VMWare or VirtualPC) will continue to be updated.


      Your troll is no reason for me to learn that I actually have a +1 bonus or how to disable it. But you told me the first part already, might as well finish the job with the second part... If you don't like it, don't read my ramblings, or mod me down, as the rest of Slashdot society will if they don't like what I have to say. And be glad I didn't go frothing at the mouth and start raving about Amiga stuff or how evil and fill of antitrust MS is for not porting Office to it... That would actually have been off-topic. :p

    84. Re:No obligation... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wine is NOT an emulator

    85. Re:No obligation... by bersl2 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I don't think you understand why I put that there.

      The point of this, if anything, was to get us bent out of shape about nothing. A blocking of Windows updates makes us worry about them possibly blocking Office updates. As a couple of people here have pointed out, Microsoft is obligated to provide updates to all users of its software, even if that software is being run under an "emulator."

    86. Re:No obligation... by Taladar · · Score: 1

      Simple. MS doesn't want Linux Users to help their stupid Windows User neighbourhood/relatives. They want Linux Users to convert all people they know to Linux.

    87. Re:No obligation... by Darby · · Score: 1

      If you read the responses to the things you quoted, then you will see that they got responses similar to the one you did.

      This is about preventing wine users from getting Office updates automatically.

      Think for half a second, and you might well realise that the idea of trying to update your windows installation when you are not running windows doesn't even make any sense at all in the first place.

      I know I was a dick about it, but I was just getting fed up reading all the crap that was posted without even giving it the most basic sort of sanity check like that.

      That said, there is a little check box below the box I'm typing this into, right above the submit button that's labeled "No Karma Bonus"

      If you check that box, your posts start out at +1 rather than the +2 that they will by default since you have received enough positive moderation to your posts in the past.

      Generally, if you have an important point to make you'll leave it at 2.
      If you're just posting stupid crap like this post right here (My post that is) you check the box.
      Or at least that's how it's supposed to work.

    88. Re:No obligation... by ray-auch · · Score: 1

      I think you've misunderstood the point.

      The effort MS have to put (once) into detecting the platform is certainly a lot less than the effort required to test/fix _every_ update on a different platform. And WINE is definitely a different and not-completely-compatible platform to (the various versions of) Windows.

      I think Win95 (and maybe 98 but I think they extended that) is end-of-lifed now, in which case it is quite possible that the exact same result happens if you use a '95 box as if you use WINE - and for the same reason, ie. cost of developing and testing on an additional platform. [ BTW - I don't know what it does on '95 and I haven't got a copy of 95 to test it with, you can't even _get_ 95 from MS now, even with full MSDN subscription ].

    89. Re:No obligation... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you had "purchased the software" possibly I'd agree. However the Microsoft EULA is keen to point out that all you have been sold is a Licence to use the software.

      Since Microsoft are leasing you the software you can reasonably expect that what you lease is a current copy.

      Shoka

    90. Re:No obligation... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, this entire forum wouldn't go apeshit. Someone would just fix WINE to work with the new patch. Problem solved. There's a difference between MS accidently breaking compatibility by not testing with WINE and purposely making it not work.

    91. Re:No obligation... by einhverfr · · Score: 1

      The only thing people find worrying is the history that MS has with things like the infamous AARD code (the Windows 3.1 code that checked for DRDOS and spat out error messages if you were running it. The code was active in the beta programs and was deactivated by a flag in the release versions but included nonetheless).

      Personally I don't care. I have several customers running Linux and OpenOffice. Wine is nice to have but I am targetting Office much more heavily in recent days. Already 3% of my customers are running Linux and I expect that number to double (at least) within the next year.

      Wine is a threat to MS. But it is not the pillar of any competitve strategy I have. It is just a tool of last resort as a way to support legacy Windows apps.

      --

      LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
    92. Re:No obligation... by kelzer · · Score: 1

      Microsoft is still not under ANY obligation to update YOUR emulator.

      This whole thread is moot. Wine Is Not an Emulator, dammit!

      Case closed. :)

      Note to moderators: You should mod me up just for spelling "moot" right, a rare thing on Slashdot, where "mute" is the norm.

      --

      ---------------------------------------------
      SERENITY NOW!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
    93. Re:No obligation... by gregorio · · Score: 1
      What if someone paid to purchase Microsoft Office, and chose to run it on Linux using Wine?
      Then this someone will just have to RTFA: The spokesperson said users who are not running Windows XP or Windows 2000 natively can still download updates for Microsoft Office from the Office Update Web site..
    94. Re:No obligation... by dinivin · · Score: 1

      Just because they're end users doesn't mean they should change the meaning of words. When dealing with computers, the definition of the word applicable to computers is the one that should be used.

      And just because the WINE programmers are in the CS field, it doesn't mean they should change the meaning of words, either. WINE clearly meets the third definition of emulator from the American Heritage Dictionary, the definition that is applicable to computers.

      Dinivin

    95. Re:No obligation... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who the hell keeps modding up this wanker? There's nothing insightful about this post, or his 5 other clueless posts.

    96. Re:No obligation... by Yooden_Vranx · · Score: 1

      Like they did with OS/2 for Windows way back? Win 3.11 didn't update much if anything in functionality, but it kept OS/2-Win from installing. The more things change, the more they stay the same.

    97. Re:No obligation... by uglyduckling · · Score: 3, Interesting
      But it's quite possible that the version of Office you may be running is legitimately paid for, regardless of the host operating system

      That's an interesting point. MS has been found guilty of abusing monopoly powers by insisting that OEMs don't remove MS products like Media Player. I think the general public find it hard to understand a legal process to stop a company providing 'free stuff' with their product. But here we have a case where a (hopefully - let's assume for the moment) legally purchased piece of software intentionally has features blocked when it's not used on an MS operating system.

      When OSs are mutually incompatible it's not unreasonable for MS to choose which OSs to support. No-one can force them to release a Linux version of Office. But now that Linux (on i386) is becoming increasingly compatible with Windows, MS has a problem - how do they prevent Linux users from installing Office and other flagship apps? And can they do this without abusing monopoly powers? I don't think so.

      It might be that MS doesn't mind abusing their powers - they pretty much get away with it every time (although the EU is having a pretty good do at stopping them). The difference here is - in a couple of years time, when Walmart are selling cheap Linux boxes that are compatible with 90% of Windows software, if the general public find out the MS is intentionally stopping it working with their computers - I think that could have some real traction.

    98. Re:No obligation... by uglyduckling · · Score: 1

      Wine can run IE. I've got it running on my laptop (Ubuntu) without buying Crossover or anything like that. I'd hardly call it stable, but it works.

    99. Re:No obligation... by antiMStroll · · Score: 0

      And Slashdot submitters are still not under ANY obligation to READ the article before posting.

    100. Re:No obligation... by TimboJones · · Score: 1
      WindowsUpdate doesn't even update Office in the first place. You've always had to go to OfficeUpdate to get Office patches.

      WindowsUpdate is responsible for updating:
      • the OS -- not applicable to WINE users, OS patches will most likely break WINE
      • hardware drivers -- not sure of the applicability to WINE, but you're usually better off getting your drivers from the manufacturer anyway
      • Bundled software like Windows Media Player, MS Messenger, and Outlook Express -- if you're running these programs, for whatever ungodly reason, you'll just have to update manually
    101. Re:No obligation... by Urger · · Score: 1

      Don't go give them any ideas now....

    102. Re:No obligation... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Does this really matter? MS Office is a piece of turd. Who is running Linux, and using MS Office? No one. OpenOffice.org is just as good.

    103. Re:No obligation... by MORB · · Score: 1

      This prove that then didn't think this throught.
      It's useless because wine authors will implement a workaround in a snap (like, for instance, listing some specific apps like windows update as no being able to see the wine specific entries of the registry), and it risks to bring new problems for their customers.
      Way to go. It's about as stupid as audio cd copy protections.

    104. Re:No obligation... by MORB · · Score: 1

      Don't they think before implementing such inept counter-measures ?
      It's useless because wine authors will implement a workaround in a snap (like, for instance, listing some specific apps like windows update as no being able to see the wine specific entries of the registry), and it risks to bring new problems for their customers.
      Way to go. It's about as stupid as audio cd copy protections.

    105. Re:No obligation... by Matilda+the+Hun · · Score: 1

      Heh.

      There's a difference between MS accidently breaking compatibility... ...Like they've done with so many other third-party applications every time they update Windows XP...

      --
      Tluin natha Linux xxizzuss uriu olt bwael mon'tun.
    106. Re:No obligation... by civilizedINTENSITY · · Score: 1

      Actually, MS calls it, "Windows Genuine Advantage (WGA) programme".

    107. Re:No obligation... by Curtman · · Score: 1

      If they locked out people who run Wine from applying the updates by downloading them individually from the site, then that would be wrong

      Well, that is exactly what they are doing. The installer just does this when it detects Wine.

    108. Re:No obligation... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      On most days, i would just rob you. but today I will kill you as well. It doesn't take much extra effort. Just a pull of the trigger.

    109. Re:No obligation... by Zeinfeld · · Score: 1
      That is true. And if it required additional effort to update the emulators, I would expect them not to. But it appears as if they are are putting forth additional effort to hamper emulators. And that just makes them look like jerks.

      No they are just making sure that they do not inadvertently polute any open source Zealot's machine by loading unlicensed copyright material onto it.

      I don't see how anyone can honestly get steamed up about this. If you didn't pay Microsoft for the O/S you do not have the right to run their software. They are not under any obligation to Wine users.

      If you want to run Windows or any part of it then you go to the store and buy it.

      Besides which the chance that the windows updates would do anything other than mess up a genuine third party clone of Windows are somewhat infintesimal.

      --
      Looking for an Information Security student project suggestion?
      Try http://dotcrimeManifesto.com/
    110. Re:No obligation... by Zeinfeld · · Score: 1
      And what would happen if a virus/trojan went and added that WINE registry entry? Would updates stop working so users wouldn't be able to install patches? Thanks Microsoft!

      What if the trojan just disabled the automatic updates like most of them try to disable other viruses and anti-spyware code?

      This is not a new attack vector and if the machine is still requesting updates it is trivial to make sure that the WGA checking does not get spoofed by a virus.

      --
      Looking for an Information Security student project suggestion?
      Try http://dotcrimeManifesto.com/
    111. Re:No obligation... by civilizedINTENSITY · · Score: 1

      I think the problem is that "trademarks", "patents", and "trade secrets" are well defined terms, whereas "intellectual property" is an oxymoron. If they called it "intellectual psuedo-property" it would be more clear. Besides, IPP is cooler anyway because all the really *cool* acronyms are three lettered.

    112. Re:No obligation... by Zeinfeld · · Score: 1
      The point of this, if anything, was to get us bent out of shape about nothing. A blocking of Windows updates makes us worry about them possibly blocking Office updates. As a couple of people here have pointed out, Microsoft is obligated to provide updates to all users of its software, even if that software is being run under an "emulator."

      And so folk proceed to get bent out of shape over blocking of 'office updates' even though they are not sent out automatically and never have been. The nearest thing to automatic updates for office is that some tools will link to MSFT to download new templates.

      Now in theory it is possible to push out updates to any piece of software through windows update. And one would hope that if a bug was found in Office that was a really serious security threat that Microsoft would use windows update to push out a patch pronto, but from a legal standpoint that would probably only be possible if they would also do the same for a really serious threat to Real player or Lotus or any other similar product.

      Windows update is just that, updates for the platform. The platform does not at present provide a unified update delivery mechanism for applications built on Windows, it might do so of course in the future.

      --
      Looking for an Information Security student project suggestion?
      Try http://dotcrimeManifesto.com/
    113. Re:No obligation... by civilizedINTENSITY · · Score: 1

      I'll agree with you that I'm "leasing" the right to use the software when MS replaces a scratched CD. What? I need to purchase another? But I already own a "license", did that get damaged when the CD was scratched?

    114. Re:No obligation... by civilizedINTENSITY · · Score: 1

      Well but you have to have a copy of WinXP to install under VMWare. At that point you really are running MS Windows. If you can't even use IE, on top of WinXP (which happens to be on top of VMWare on top of *nix) to autoupdate, then it would be even more obviously wrong.

    115. Re:No obligation... by civilizedINTENSITY · · Score: 1

      The concern is that they are discriminating between two sets of customers who both bought the same product. It would be more obvious if they said, for instance, we'll autoupdate all customers who live in states with Republican governors. Or if you had to prove you were caucasian. Or if you had to prove you were male.

    116. Re:No obligation... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      WINE IS NOT AN EMULATOR, for Christ sake. How MANY Places do they have to Put That so that People grasp that concept.

    117. Re:No obligation... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why would I care, Wine is NOT an emulator. No one wants stupid ass windows updates anyway. The project dosn't not even rely on any part of windows period. So if you knw anything you would know how stupid your post is.

    118. Re:No obligation... by boarder · · Score: 1

      That's funny, because a few days ago when the first story came out, going to officeupdate took you to microsoft downloads and downloading updates asked you to verify your valid windows version... now when I go there it doesn't.

      That's why I said all that stuff because it was true when I tested it. I wonder if they realized they might get sued for it.

      --
      IANAL, but I play one on /.
    119. Re:No obligation... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      haha :) This is _The_idea_ ... :)
      I will write such an troyan -
      muhahahaha :)
      I will propagate it throw the whole internet - if you got it - then you are self responsible, get a real secure OS ! -

      His name will be finv ! "finv is not a virus..."

    120. Re:No obligation... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The purpose of Wine, as stated on its home page, is to allow people who have the need to run applications *without* equivalents or ports to/of them for Linux. The most common application I hear of people running under Wine, Micro$oft Office, has *three*, count 'em, *three* (3) native Linux equivalent offerings: OpenOffice.org, KOffice, and GNOME Office. And all of them can open *and* save in Word, Excel, and PowerPoint formats. And they're all FREE SOFTWARE. In addition, they can export to PDF, which is something that you would need to pay $200-$500 to do under MS Office.

      Besides, who needs Micro$oft and their lousy software anyway? I use Wine *only* for running non-Microsoft apps that are not available for Linux and that don't have an equivalent (mostly games).

    121. Re:No obligation... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And then you find out that Office update requires IE, which can be downloaded from Windows update, which requires IE(!) or from the download page which is the one being blocked if you're not running Windows. If you don't have IE, you'll have to get the updates for office from the same download page that is being blocked.

    122. Re:No obligation... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Noone asked them to fix or even test every update on wine. People here would be happy if MS would just pretend Wine doesn't exist, like they did for the last ten years. The problem is that they are actively blocking it, which IS more effort than ignoring it.

  3. If ever there was a case..... by ip_freely_2000 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    ...for the separation of Microsoft's Operating Systems business from the Application business, this would be it.

    It's too bad this didn't happen a while back during the trial years.

    1. Re:If ever there was a case..... by mythosaz · · Score: 2, Informative

      The key point to this is valid. Microsoft will continue to supply Office updates for you if you're using Office on ANY platform that you can make Office run on; what they won't do, however, is provide updates for your non-Microsoft platform.

    2. Re:If ever there was a case..... by QMO · · Score: 3, Interesting

      When I did support for WordPerfect Suite 7 and 8:

      Some beta version of IE had a substantial conflict with WP7 (been a while, specifics gone). WP worked around it so WP8 didn't have the conflict.

      WP8 came out, and shortly afterward the "final" of that version of IE did too, with a very similar conflict with WP8.

      Maybe it was just coincidence.

      --
      Exam 4/C again. Maybe I'll do better this time.
    3. Re:If ever there was a case..... by Bastian · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Given Microsoft's history of deliberately making their products not work with other companies' products at least once every couple of years, I wouldn't be inclined to think it's a coincidence at all.

    4. Re:If ever there was a case..... by calculi · · Score: 1

      Doesn't matter though if I had to pay the MS tax when I bought a new computer? Since I own that copy of Windows, shouldn't I be allowed the updates, even if I'm not running the OS? I'm not asking them to update my non-MS platform, I'm asking for updates to my genuine Windows OS -- I'll do the updating of my non-MS platform myself.

    5. Re:If ever there was a case..... by jeff4747 · · Score: 1

      Office update does not check for WINE. Works fine.

      So if I run IE under WINE, I should just suck it up then? (I've got a windows license and thus a license for IE).

    6. Re:If ever there was a case..... by Jungle+guy · · Score: 1

      I agree with you. Microsoft is deliberately stopping Wine users to update their MS Office if the Windows Update webservice detects the program is running on top of Wine. There is no technical justification for this, and they are only using the semi-monopoly they have on the office applications market (with MS Office) to enforce the semi-monopoly they have on the operating systems market (with Windows). It does not matter if this "feature" is written in an Eula, or if the intellectual property of Windows and Office belong to Microsoft. If it is against the law, it is illegal. Is is very much like when a company developed a DOS clone, DR DOS. If you used Windows 3 with DR DOS, Windows would detect it was running on top of other operating system and some error screens would appear. But Windows would operate perfectly: Microsoft introduced the error screens on Windows code only to create fear, uncertainty and doubt among users. "Gee, I see these error messages when I see DR DOS, I should go back to DOS". The situation is much worse today, as users will say: "I can't update MS Office if I change Windows for Wine and Linux. My hands are tied, the costs to change from two MS products together are too high." Where is the DOJ when we need them? Isn't it a violation of the "probation period" that will expire in 2 years, as part of the settlement of the anti-trust suit? Slashdot users used to be more critical of these tactics of Microsoft. Are we losing our nerve?

    7. Re:If ever there was a case..... by Serveert · · Score: 1

      they were deemed a monopoly, given a slap on the wrist and continued their ways.

      --
      2 years and no mod points. Join reddit. Because openness is good.
    8. Re:If ever there was a case..... by hawk · · Score: 1

      But if you go back to the time that there were multiple successful commercial word processors, they all pretty much did this.

      Generally, word, word perfect, and wordstar could read the *prior* version of their competitors' files, but not the current version.

      It hardly started with micorsoft.

      hawk

    9. Re:If ever there was a case..... by hawk · · Score: 1

      I agree with you. Microsoft is deliberately stopping Wine users to update their MS Office if the Windows Update webservice detects the program is running on top of Wine.

      According to the FA, that just isn't true. It's just updates to Windows that they're not supplying to wine users.

      Sounds basically reasonable to me . . .

      hawk

    10. Re:If ever there was a case..... by Reziac · · Score: 1

      Same thing with OfficeXP and WP10. OXP is known to disable WP10; it's even in the M$ knowledge base (with "no plans" to fix the problem). Workaround: Acquire and install WP11.

      Back in the v6-for-Win3.1x era, if you installed WP6.x, then installed Word6, Word6 would disable WP6.x. Workaround: always install Word6 FIRST.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    11. Re:If ever there was a case..... by Bastian · · Score: 1

      Grandparent wasn't talking about file formats. Similarly, I was talking about Microsoft deliberately making early versions of Windows not work with a competitor's DOS, and making their version of DOS not work with GEM, and so on and so on. It's not a matter of simple incompatibilities - in each of these cases, the software was designed to detect whether or not it was working with Microsoft software or not, and then behave poorly if it was working with a competitor's software. It wasn't an issue of compatibility - if you tricked Windows into thinking it was running in MS-DOS, it would behave perfectly, because the alarm that would make it not work never got tripped.

  4. Yup by Quasar1999 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Did you read the EULA? It doesn't give you the right to use windows update if you aren't using windows.

    --

    ---
    Programming is like sex... Make one mistake and support it the rest of your life.
    1. Re:Yup by isolation · · Score: 1

      It also does not give you the right to install Internet Explorer but it comes with Office 2000 and XP. What am I not allowed to install IE with the copy of Office paid for under CrossOver, Wine or ReactOS?

      -sedwards

      --
      Free Unix? Free Windows. http://www.reactos.com
    2. Re:Yup by satoshi1 · · Score: 1

      You ARE using Windows, under the WINE environment, yes, but you are using Windows just the same. Therefore you should be given access to the updates to the software you bought.

    3. Re:Yup by magefile · · Score: 1

      Does Office run under ReactOS? I was under the impression it was still very unstable.

    4. Re:Yup by isolation · · Score: 1, Interesting

      I have Office sorta loading atm. Yes it is very unstable but getting better.

      --
      Free Unix? Free Windows. http://www.reactos.com
    5. Re:Yup by skajake · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Why should i read the EULA if im using linux.. EULA is End User Licanse Agreement... for WINDOWS USERS. I never had to agree to any such license.

      --

      ~ Maintainer of the Skajake Projects

    6. Re:Yup by megarich · · Score: 1

      I think somewhere in my EULA also claims the right to my first born child.......

    7. Re:Yup by Piquan · · Score: 1

      You're thinking of Vigor's EULA.

      I'm not sure why I put that in there. Of most of the Vigor users I've seen, I can't imagine why I'd want their children.

    8. Re:Yup by Valdrax · · Score: 1

      I never had to agree to any such license. ...And thus, you have no license to use their service.
      Neat how that works, isn't it?

      --
      If it's for-profit but free, you're not the customer -- you're the product (e.g., the Slashdot Beta's "audience").
    9. Re:Yup by magefile · · Score: 1

      My FC2 box recently went down and needs to be formatted. The fact that Office is (sorta) loading is enough to inspire me to install ReactOS before I reinstall Fedora, and maybe dual boot. Thanks!

    10. Re:Yup by yuri+benjamin · · Score: 1

      Did you read the EULA?

      When our laptop was stolen, insurance company replaced it.
      The old laptop ran linux. The insurance replacement came with windows xp.
      The first time I turned it on, I was presented with an EULA. This was not presented at time of purchase.
      I clicked on "I do NOT agree" and it told me I had to click on "I agree" to use the system. It wouldn't let me past that screen. So I rebooted with a Mandrake insall CD and blew away the OS I wasn't allowed to use - according to the manufacturer - even though no such restrictions were presented at the time of sale.

      Now, if I needed wine - which I don't - but if I did - then I would feel entitled to use whatever windows components where sold with the laptop. No post-purchase EULA will be honoured by me - although I will honour any agreements made before the sale.

      --
      You make the mistake of thinking you can educate the fundamental stupidity out of people. You can't.
  5. ReactOS also has the Wine registry key by isolation · · Score: 4, Informative

    We share a lot of Win32 code with Wine as we just build the Wine dlls for Windows and make drop in replacements for ReactOS. The Wine WinMM.dll uses the Wine key and as such ReactOS will fail the check as well.

    -sedwards

    --
    Free Unix? Free Windows. http://www.reactos.com
    1. Re:ReactOS also has the Wine registry key by RonnyJ · · Score: 5, Interesting
      The Wine WinMM.dll uses the Wine key and as such ReactOS will fail the check as well.

      This check creates a possibile vulnerability for future trojans/viruses to exploit - they could just place this Wine key into the Windows registry, and thus block Windows updates for the user.

    2. Re:ReactOS also has the Wine registry key by isolation · · Score: 0

      This is true. Whats odd is that it will pass if the Wine key is set and version = WinXP.

      You would think Microsoft could have come up with a better check such as talking to a device driver or something.

      --
      Free Unix? Free Windows. http://www.reactos.com
    3. Re:ReactOS also has the Wine registry key by WhiteWolf666 · · Score: 1, Funny

      WoW...

      What a good idea....

      I hope some black hats read this.

      --
      WhiteWolf666 an exBush supporter. All you new-school,compassionate,save the children Republicans can rot in hell
    4. Re:ReactOS also has the Wine registry key by natrius · · Score: 1

      MS Programmer 1: Hey, for shits and giggles we can disable Windows Update for WINE users by checking for a registry key!
      MS Programmer 2: But what if legitimate users have the key in their registries for some reason? They wouldn't get updates, and that'd be a huge security hole. Isn't security more important than shits and giggles?

      I think this article tells you how that conversation ended.

    5. Re:ReactOS also has the Wine registry key by Walkiry · · Score: 4, Interesting

      You know what's even better? That the vulnerability cannot be patched through Windows Update :)

      I'd have modded you +10, Interestingly funny.

      --
      ---- Take the Space Quiz!
    6. Re:ReactOS also has the Wine registry key by chris+mazuc · · Score: 1

      Doesn't work on this xp (not mine) box. Windows update seems to be perfectly happy with that key there. Maybe it's looking for a sub-key or something, I didn't mess with it for too long.

      --
      E pluribus unum
  6. I'm confused by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    Microsoft releases updates and patches for wine?
    Said updates actually work on wine?

    1. Re:I'm confused by numbski · · Score: 1

      Yeah, and after installation it instists that you reboot, killing your uptime. Go fig.

      --

      Karma: Chameleon (mostly due to the fact that you come and go).

    2. Re:I'm confused by RonnyJ · · Score: 1
      Said updates actually work on wine?

      Well, they don't always work on Windows either ;)

    3. Re:I'm confused by m50d · · Score: 1

      Microsoft releases updates and patches for things like Office. And you can install them fine under wine, and they work.

      --
      I am trolling
  7. MS downloads no longer needed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    If you go to the WineHQ site, they suggest that the downloads will not be needed to run wine in the future, since they will have completed their own versions of things like dcom95.

    1. Re:MS downloads no longer needed by Mitchell+Mebane · · Score: 1

      Well, almost completed, anyway. If you look at the , you will see they aren't quite there.

      However, massive amounts of work have been done over the last six months, and I think the next six months will bring some very exciting things for the Wine community.

      --

      The roots of education are bitter, but the fruit is sweet.
      --Aristotle
    2. Re:MS downloads no longer needed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      HA!

      "Real soon now," eh?

      You do realize how long WINE has been around, right? And they've been saying "real soon now" for more than a decade.

      WINE has sorta, kinda, barely worked forever. Meanwhile the rest of us that actually get work done are using things like VMware.

    3. Re:MS downloads no longer needed by benjamindees · · Score: 1

      It should be noted that downloads aren't really needed to run MS Office XP in Wine either. The installation CD includes a copy of dcom95 and the setup program installs the necessary components of IE (along with a bunch of unnecessary ones).

      --
      "I assumed blithely that there were no elves out there in the darkness"
  8. Microsoft Admits It Can't Hold Its Liquor! by Korben+Dallas · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    And the wino and I know the pain of street singin'
    Like a door-to-door salesman knows the pains of bell ringin'

  9. Office can still be updated, however by Rude+Turnip · · Score: 5, Informative

    From the article: "The spokesperson said users who are not running Windows XP or Windows 2000 natively can still download updates for Microsoft Office from the Office Update Web site."

    To those who were saying "what about me? I'm only using Office under WINE," you can still get updates.

    1. Re:Office can still be updated, however by Noksagt · · Score: 1

      Except that Office ships with a lot of stuff that WON'T be updated--like IE, dcom, etc.

    2. Re:Office can still be updated, however by Clovert+Agent · · Score: 1

      ...except that is completely misleading as an official statement, since Microsoft has just finished integrating the Windows and Office update facilities into "Microsoft Update". That "Office Update Web site" will no longer exist as a separate entity - that's been the MS strategy for months and months, something the spokesperson certainly would have known about.

  10. Internet Explorer comes with Office by isolation · · Score: 0

    But its part of Windows update.

    -sedwards

    --
    Free Unix? Free Windows. http://www.reactos.com
    1. Re:Internet Explorer comes with Office by homer_ca · · Score: 1

      IE blurs the line between standalone app and integral part of the OS. IE is an integral part of every Windows since 98. However it's also available as a standalone installer for Windows 95 and NT 4.0 which never came with a web browser and also to upgrade IE on earlier Windows to a newer version. It's been a while since I installed Office on NT 4.0. Office 97 didn't require IE, but it's possible newer versions do.

    2. Re:Internet Explorer comes with Office by Obsidian+Dagger · · Score: 1

      And again a case for the seperation of OS and applications as stated above. I hate Microsoft for the following reasons: Buggy software Unethical business practices Its forcefed in soo many instances Bill Gates is an asshole and yes I have met him and speak from personal experience.

      --
      "It is not my intent to offend, but if offense is taken, the fault lies with the audience." attributed to Patrick Henry
    3. Re:Internet Explorer comes with Office by sconeu · · Score: 1

      and NT 4.0 which never came with a web browser

      Not quite. NT4 came with IE2.0 (essentially, the rebadged Spyglass Mosaic). The first thing most people used it for was to download Netscape.

      --
      General Relativity: Space-time tells matter where to go; Matter tells space-time what shape to be.
  11. The simple solution is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    ...to give up on Windows. Wine is just a crutch. There are plenty of great alternatives that not only work well, but don't have some of the huge problems that Windows does such as viruses.

    1. Re:The simple solution is... by somethinghollow · · Score: 1

      That's a great idea until you have to use a CERTAIN program to do a SPECIFIC job. If that specific job happens to be your only job, then Wine isn't a crutch, it's a way out of using Windows. Until "plenty of great alternatives" turns into "at least one great alternative for every program that runs on Windows", Wine will be pertinent.

      But I do agree: Ditch Windows apps on Wine for native Linux apps if at all possible.

    2. Re:The simple solution is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Meh, not really. It's a migration tool. Many companies have invested way too much money in their current software and doing a port would either be impossible or cost too much. WINE allows them to ditch the crappy OS but keep using their software. This saves them money and makes OS migration possible.

      You can argue that they should have used something other than Windows, or used better cross-platform programming, but you have to realize that there is a ton of software out there that was made before Linux was viable. Linux is just barely now starting to come out as a usable alternative. Plus many programmers just suck and don't know how to do cross-platform stuff, so they target the largest audience. Migration is the only way to make Linux the largest audience.

    3. Re:The simple solution is... by 0racle · · Score: 1

      Or actually run a legal copy of Windows. Let me tell you, its a whole lot easier. Wine is just a crutch for people runing Linux because they want to 'stick it to the man' while still using everything from this entity that they claim to hate. Linux and Windows are jsut OS's not religions.

      --
      "I use a Mac because I'm just better than you are."
    4. Re:The simple solution is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Anybody who shits on windows because of viruses is a complete and utter moron.

    5. Re:The simple solution is... by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      There are sound reasons for running emulators. For instance, I run a SNES emulator because I really enjoy Super Mario World. Sure there are lots of games out there that are probably much better, but I enjoy ol' Mario, and since my SNES machine died many a long year ago, this is a perfectly adequate way to do it.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    6. Re:The simple solution is... by 0racle · · Score: 1

      Do you expect Nintendo to support your emulator?
      Also you are talking about running something that requires aging hardware which may or may not be easy to find. This is people whining that they can't have a free Windows environment because they're too cheap to buy it.

      --
      "I use a Mac because I'm just better than you are."
    7. Re:The simple solution is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Can't you see the difference between supporting an emulator and ACTIVELY DETECTING AND BREAKING AN EMULATOR? They aren't just failing to support wine, they are actively putting code in to check for wine and make sure it doesn't work. If you can't see the difference you are either an idiot or a MS fanboy.

    8. Re:The simple solution is... by 0racle · · Score: 1

      If Microsoft does not support running these patches and apps under anything but real Windows, it is in the best intrest of their suport department to activly check if this is being installed on an unsupported platform. Did you think that the listing of Windows as a required componant on the box was just a suggestion? Do you whine when Windows doesn't run on an UltraSPARC?

      --
      "I use a Mac because I'm just better than you are."
    9. Re:The simple solution is... by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      Why is it in the best interest of their support department? Wine users aren't likely to be demanding support for Microsoft.

      This has nothing to do with support, but rather to do with trying to cause trouble for Wine users. It's simply another monopolistic act to punish those attempting to run Win32 programs on another platform.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
  12. Wine users? by cmburns69 · · Score: 3, Funny

    If I was Microsoft, I'd target whining users as well, preferably with a couple of large missles.. oh wait..

    --
    Online Starcraft RPG? At
    Dietary fiber is like asynchronous IO-- Non-blocking!
    1. Re:Wine users? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      by that schooling, /.ers beware!

  13. Who the hell says I'm not using Windows? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Why can't I dual boot and run the same apps under Windows and Linux?

    Nice try, fanboy. How much did you get paid for that bit of astroturf?

  14. WINE by th1ckasabr1ck · · Score: 4, Informative
    Wine was the first emulator...

    (W)ine (I)s (N)ot an (E)mulator

    1. Re:WINE by MindStalker · · Score: 1

      Bullshit and GNU is not Unix.....

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

      and they could call wine a relational database app, but it's not.

      wine IS an emulator. it emulates the availability of entire API layer.

    3. Re:WINE by CarrionBird · · Score: 1
      It allows you to run software for X system on (incompatible) Y system. Slowly.

      Yep, that's an emulator, all right.

      --
      Free Mac Mini Yeah, it's
    4. Re:WINE by fm6 · · Score: 2, Informative

      Yeah, an irritating bit of semantic sloppiness. But "alternate API implementation" takes too long to say. Besides, the difference is too subtle for most people. We're probably going to have to live with this one.

    5. Re:WINE by maxwell+demon · · Score: 1
      About your sig:
      Will document APIs for food!
      I didn't even know that food has APIs. Great that you will document them!
      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    6. Re:WINE by gid · · Score: 1

      2.2. Does Wine emulate a full computer?

      No, as the name says, Wine Is Not a (CPU) Emulator. Wine just provides the Windows API. This means that you will need an x86-compatible processor to run an x86 Windows application, for instance from Intel or AMD. The advantage is that, unlike solutions that rely on CPU emulation, Wine runs applications at full speed. Sometimes a program run under Wine will be slower than when run on a copy of Microsoft Windows, but this is more due to the fact that Microsoft has heavily optimized parts of their code, whereas mostly Wine is not well optimized (yet). Occasionally, an app may run faster under Wine than on Windows. Most apps run at roughly the same speed.

      So no, it's not an emulator in the strict sense, it's merely an alternative implementation of the windows api. For more info, look here

    7. Re:WINE by Procrastin8er · · Score: 0

      What category would you place it in?

      --
      Slashdot - Where the slash is most definitely to the left.
    8. Re:WINE by dinivin · · Score: 1
    9. Re:WINE by pclminion · · Score: 1

      It's not a HARDWARE emulator, but is certainly "emulates" a Windows environment. I don't care what the letters WINE stand for, the thing is an emulator.

    10. Re:WINE by Penis_Envy · · Score: 1

      Of course it's not Unix, just look at the name. :)

      I believe their argument is that it is not an emulator, but rather a compatibility layer. It allows win32 based applications to run on linux/unix, making win32 just another windowing toolkit. If you think of it, when it says it's "win95", it's simply advertising a level of features to applications running on it, just as gtk libraries would say they're a certain version, and that they support certain features.

      It could go even further, because the windows versions (2k/xp) have versions other than their PR names (NT 4/5/6, etc.) showing that they are revisions of the same product, supporting the idea of "emulating win95/2k" as advertising support for specific features.

      Are the gtk libraries/environment an emulator? (This would be the point of view.)

    11. Re:WINE by WhiteWolf666 · · Score: 1

      You post this all the time.

      Please stop trolling. Even your definition says " achieve the same results as the imitated system."

      Wine does NOT imitated a system. It does nothing of the kind.

      It is not an emulation.

      I guess I'm giving you the benefit of the doubt, as one is not supposed to feed trolls.

      --
      WhiteWolf666 an exBush supporter. All you new-school,compassionate,save the children Republicans can rot in hell
    12. Re:WINE by Mitchell+Mebane · · Score: 1

      Well, that may be true, but Wine _does_ have a VM layer.

      --

      The roots of education are bitter, but the fruit is sweet.
      --Aristotle
    13. Re:WINE by dinivin · · Score: 1
      Imitate:
      1. To use or follow as a model.
        • To copy the actions, appearance, mannerisms, or speech of; mimic: amused friends by imitating the teachers.
        • To copy or use the style of: brushwork that imitates Rembrandt.

      To copy exactly; reproduce.

      To appear like; resemble.

      If you think that WINE doesn't imitate the win32 API, you're not the brightest. No offense, of course.

      Dinivin

    14. Re:WINE by poot_rootbeer · · Score: 1

      (W)ine (I)s (N)ot an (E)mulator

      And (G)NU's (N)ot (U)nix, but do you think anyone who runs Emacs under Linux cares about that trivial distinction? (Besides RMS, boviously.)

      For all practical purposes,
      Linux = Linus's kernel + GNU utilities
      and
      Linux = Unix

    15. Re:WINE by m50d · · Score: 1

      Yeah, sure, just like (L)ame (A)in't an (M)P3 (E)ncoder.

      --
      I am trolling
    16. Re:WINE by MindStalker · · Score: 1

      I was just joking actually. I know this argument and agree with it. Though there may be some emulation for some of the lower level calls. Either way an emulator is software the "emulates" an operating environment, and that is exactly what wine is doing, its emulating the Windows environments. While GTK is only emulating itself.

    17. Re:WINE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      If you think that WINE doesn't imitate the win32 API, you're not the brightest.

      It doesn't imitate the API. An API is a specification. Why would you want to imitate or emulate a specification? You implement it. Wine is an alternative win32 API implementation. At best you could say that parts of WINE emulate parts of Windows.

      No offense, of course.

      None taken. I understand other people can't all be bright.

    18. Re:WINE by cronius · · Score: 1

      Although WINE might not actually be an emulator, I wouldn't count on the name to prove that.

      Take for example LAME which stands for "LAME ain't an MP3 encoder", and on their site the first line says: "LAME is an LGPL MP3 encoder".

      --
      Life is Reality
    19. Re:WINE by Kiryat+Malachi · · Score: 1

      I still like "translator" for software mimics software implementations, as opposed to "emulator" for software mimics hardware.

      --

      ---
      Mod me down, you fucking twits. Go ahead. I dare you.
      (I read with sigs off.)
    20. Re:WINE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wine is NOT an Emulator. Why don't you educate yourself before making stupid remarks. Not only is the project open source, you can plainly read about how wine is not an emulator and what it actually does, if you look into the wine project instead of acting like you know it all.

      And btw GNU is not Unix, GNU is a Licensing system that is freely available to anyone for use. It is not isolated to unix or linux there are GNU projects that are mac and win32. Educate yourself before looking stupid yet again.

    21. Re:WINE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No its not emulating any windows enviroment at all. Wine does not emulate anything. It interpets win32 data and filters it into the unix shell as native commands for processing its is not an EMULATOR.

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

      No it DOES NOT EMULATE A WINDOWS ENVIROMENT. It interpets win32 data into native linux system information processed in the Linux shell. it does not emulate an enviroment.

    23. Re:WINE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Excuse me But GNU Is a licensing system. It is not isolated to Linux and Linux IS NOT UNIX.

      GNU software also includes Win32 and Mac Software and not just Linux and Unix Software.

      Unix is written in a totally different code base then linux, this is what maks SCO Unix lawsuites so base less. LINUX is != Unix - Not equal, is Not, Never Will be. Totally Seperate projects.

      Wine Is not an Emulator, its is an API, a System layer that converts Win32 Data into Native Linux readable Data. An Emulator Does not do this, An Emulator creates an entire enviroment including core cpu functions of the enviroment or system it is emulating.

    24. Re:WINE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      1. If you think that WINE doesn't imitate the win32 API, you're not the brightest. No offense, of course.

      Thanks for your uninformed and belabored input, moron. No offense intended, of course.

  15. Excluding competitors is not good... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If I own a licensed copy of Windows, they'd damn well better not discriminate against me in terms of providing updates (something I paid for in acquiring my license) merely because I use competing software they do not like. It certainly seems anti-competetive to me, though I mean that in a literal sense and not necessarily the legal one, with its implications of illegality which I am not qualified to judge.

  16. Emulator? by Bob+of+Dole · · Score: 0, Redundant
    As the most popular third-party translation technology in use, Wine was the first emulator to be specifically tested for via WGA
    Good god! You can even put the "NOT AN EMULATOR" bit right in the name, and still people can't get it right.

    (WINE = WINE Is Not an Emulator)

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

      And Claria is not spyware.

  17. DRM Mind Set by nodehopper · · Score: 3, Insightful

    This is just another example of how the DRM mind set values profit over innovation. Expect to see more of this type of thing as the DRM philosophy permeates society and business culture.

    --
    "We will remember not the words of our enemies, but the silence of our friends. " Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
    1. Re:DRM Mind Set by legirons · · Score: 1

      "This is just another example of how the DRM mind set values profit over innovation. Expect to see more of this type of thing as the DRM philosophy permeates society and business culture."

      The good thing about that (well, not from the company's point of view) is that DRM-style add-ons can be extremely intensive in terms of programmer time, fault tolerances, testing, and management. A lot more time-consuming than adding features or removing normal bugs. So any company with a Free Software product can spend proportionally a lot more of their time implementing stuff that benefits the customer, as they literally don't need to care at all about policing the customers.

      Taken to the extreme (because we have a convenient example), you end up with the current "shareware"/crippleware situation, where authors are so absolutely paranoid about people using the program without paying them that they spend almost all their time devising ways to "get back at" the people who use their program. Equivalent free software is doing stuff to improve the product, while shareware authors are adding another license manager, registry key, NTP date check, online activation, spyware code, or other stuff which actually makes their product less likely to sell.

      Microsoft looks to be pretty much the same. Compare the last few versions of MS products, and it looks like 10%+ of the effort has gone into licenses, product activation, license-checking on updates, ways to stop the computer being used if you don't click an EULA, etc. etc. Even Word documents have got your license information in them now, and goodness knows how long they spent converting their "CD ripper" to "CD ripper which creates a license file and authorises it on the net and locks the audio file to your PC and counts the number of people who've accessed it".

      When they're fixing bugs on that monstrosity, I have to say I'd rather be editing CDEX code than WMP code anyday...

  18. The whole thing is... by afstanton · · Score: 4, Interesting

    that it will block not just Windows updates, but *all* MS downloads. This includes specs and other miscellany that doesn't even require Windows of any kind to run.

    --
    Reject Fear - Embrace Hope
    1. Re:The whole thing is... by falconed · · Score: 1
      From TFA:

      The spokesperson said users who are not running Windows XP or Windows 2000 natively can still download updates for Microsoft Office from the Office Update Web site.

      The way I read it, this only affects WindowsUpdate and OfficeUpdate.

      --
      USE='clever' emerge -u sig
    2. Re:The whole thing is... by KiloByte · · Score: 1

      They also require you to run an ActiveX control to even download some of SDKs, too...

      --
      The creatures outside looked from Alt-Right to Antifa; but already it was impossible to say which was which.
  19. That's a great acknowledgement from Microsoft by jeremy_white · · Score: 5, Interesting
    I'm really impressed by how hard Ingrid worked on this; I told her I didn't think she get Microsoft to comment officially, and yet she did. Way to go!

    And I'm thrilled to have Microsoft say that Wine is the "the most popular third-party translation technology in use".

    The one thing I felt she didn't emphasize enough though was that this is not a problem for Wine - we shouldn't (and mostly don't) need any OS component downloads from Microsoft. In fact, we're just finishing up work to make any need for DCOM or MSI or any other 'common downloads' from Microsoft unnecessary.

    It's always nice when the other guy blinks :-).

    1. Re:That's a great acknowledgement from Microsoft by LnxAddct · · Score: 1, Informative

      I must say, you rock! Honestly, you are awesome and keep up the good work:)
      Regards,
      Steve

    2. Re:That's a great acknowledgement from Microsoft by DJStealth · · Score: 1

      Don't forget, you can always download the updates on a true Windows machine, save them to disk and run the updates under WINE.

    3. Re:That's a great acknowledgement from Microsoft by northcat · · Score: 0, Troll

      Who the fuck are you?

    4. Re:That's a great acknowledgement from Microsoft by urbaneassault · · Score: 1
    5. Re:That's a great acknowledgement from Microsoft by urbaneassault · · Score: 1

      I didn't say that I was him, just answering his question....

  20. Let the beer flow ... by ScorpFromHell · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    for windoze hates wine!!

    --
    -- Prem
    Aiming to tweet on a rice ... help me find the write pen!
    1. Re:Let the beer flow ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      especially the "free beer" (as in linux).

  21. And this suprises you? by LordPhantom · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    What, exactly, suprises anyone about M$ft targeting Linux EMULATION users? Allowing Windows (especially Microsoft ones) applications to be run easily and well in an "emulator" (ha!) on Linux would show them to be as incompetent at business planning as they are at providing bug-free software.

  22. Insightful?!?! Geez, M$ fanboys are out in force by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Bill's money is getting spent, I'd bet.

    And just why should MS applications require MS operating systems?

  23. Wait just a minute! by zoloto · · Score: 5, Insightful

    First of all, wine is not an emulator as noted on their web page. And of course MS isn't under obligation to update the emulator, only their software. IE- WINDOWS. Their targeting of Wine and other API translators (like Wine) is nothing more than a stunt to anger the users of Windows within a Linux operating system.

    If you're going to post rants, make them obvious so we can mod them down. This is nothing more than the obvious BS it is.

    1. Re:Wait just a minute! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm stil waiting for the part where you tell us why Microsoft should feel any obligation to co-operate with the makers of WINE.

    2. Re:Wait just a minute! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      WINE allows you to run Windows apps under Linux. It's an emulator whether they want to admit it or not. It's all semantics.

    3. Re:Wait just a minute! by mattyrobinson69 · · Score: 1

      its not the fact that it allows you to use another operating systems applications that make it an emulator. for the most part its just a set of the win32 api's.

      There is some emulation in there, such as changing path names dynamically from c:\program files\myprogram\myprogram.exe to ~/.wine/fakec/program files/myprogram/myprogram.exe.

  24. Dumb question but.... by Otter · · Score: 4, Interesting
    WINE Is Not an Emulator but rather a native API translation layer, right?

    So what does it do with Windows updates, anyway? I get why, for example, a Windows copy on Virtual PC needs to be updated, but how does WINE make use of them?

    1. Re:Dumb question but.... by turgid · · Score: 4, Informative

      WINE can use native Windows DLLs, in case you need one that isn't yet implemented fully by WINE itself, or if there is some particular quirk of the native DLL that you need to have.

    2. Re:Dumb question but.... by m50d · · Score: 1

      It's not windows that needs updating, but the applications. You don't need updates for windows itself, but if you're running Office under wine you'll need upgrades for Office, and so on.

      --
      I am trolling
    3. Re:Dumb question but.... by .com+b4+.storm · · Score: 1

      This applies not just to Windows updates, but ALL downloads from Microsoft's site, including (supposedly) documentation and (I'd imagine) Internet Explorer, which some Wine users do use...

      --
      "Wow, you're like some kind of superhero able to ward off happiness and success at every turn."
      -- Ryan Stiles
  25. Re:Quote by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    It's going to be interesting to see if any here has the raw brassneck to suggest that MS *should* provide these files to Wine users. I bet dollars to donuts that someone tries, though.

    Sure, but only for people running legal versions of Windows. Why should I be able to dual boot my machine and still get windows updates? Just because I run someone's software doesn't mean they get full legal control over my computer.

  26. The real issue by not-real-sure · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The real issue is that microsoft wants to keep its dominance in the office productivity suite market. They have already started losing market share in browsers. The last /. article that i saw was talking about MS taking away the online activation feature in XP. Which may impact XP sales. Now its not supporting office on multiple platforms. Ms supports office on the Mac platform whats the big deal to support on a linux platform. Port the software over to the 4 most popular distros and sell the software and support. This is a battle they are not going to win so they might as well roll with the punches.

    --
    My Doom. The gift that keeps on giving
    1. Re:The real issue by m50d · · Score: 1

      WTF? If they wanted to concentrate on office then they absolutely would not do this, because it just makes it harder to use office under linux. This smacks of desperation, or at least panic. They know they're slowly crumbling on the OS front, and their reaction is to take away any support they had for other platforms to try and stop people moving.

      --
      I am trolling
    2. Re:The real issue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is a battle they are not going to win so they might as well roll with the punches.

      That's what a young, fast company would do. Microsoft has gotten fat and slow, and would much rather "compete" by relying on their OS dominance. In fact, I think Pink Floyd said it best:

      And it's too late to lose
      the weight you used
      to need to throw around.

      So have a good drown,
      as you go down, all alone,
      dragged down by the stone.
  27. Har. by dauthur · · Score: 1

    Why shouldn't we be allowed to use Wine with Microsoft products? Doesn't that sound like a monopoly? (Redundant) I like Wine (Offtopic) Microsoft needs to wake up and realize that they have like 80% of the market, and because of that, nothing is compatible with anything else. The most cherished programs anyone uses runs on Microsoft software, no matter what. Wine should be seen as a compliment by Microsoft, and seen that way because it shows that even though M$ shafts everyone with security, people still need and want to use their swiss cheese software.

    1. Re:Har. by SpacePunk · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Wine isn't seen as a compliment because Microsoft is in the business of selling an operating system. They lose money if you run Office under Wine, and not under Windows. Sure, they could probably do a native port of Office for Linux, but then they wouldn't sell that copy of Windows that Office currently 'needs'.

      The problem isn't a monopoly by Microsoft. The problem is that there are a HUGE amount of businesses and individuals that are married to Office, and by extension married to Windows.

    2. Re:Har. by Drantin · · Score: 1

      But isn't Office the only product making money for MS? ... Or is it because of people running Office on non-windows OSes (or old versions of windows) that Office is the only part making money? ...or did that only apply to a particular quarter of a year a short while back?

      --
      Actio personalis moritur cum persona. (Dead men don't sue)
  28. Its war dude! by BipinG · · Score: 0

    sounds like an openfire

  29. A true businessman by No.+24601 · · Score: 5, Insightful
    For this reason, White (chief executive of CodeWeavers) said he was excited rather than worried to hear that the WGA validation tool was blocking Wine. "The reason we love this is because this shows that Microsoft is aware of Wine at very high levels," said White. "For us it's exciting -- it is an acknowledgement of us as a threat."

    This is a true businessman at work. While everyone else is crying foul, this man is rallying around this news. Anyways, most of the updates coming out of MS might mess up a working Wine installation.

    1. Re:A true businessman by WolfWithoutAClause · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Ah! But why are they admitting to it *now*?.

      Presumably, they're admitting to it now because they've changed their mind and they don't consider it to be a big threat :-)

      --

      -WolfWithoutAClause

      "Gravity is only a theory, not a fact!"
    2. Re:A true businessman by ccZaphod · · Score: 1

      Updates coming out of MS might mess up a working Windows installation as well. XP SP2

  30. Two birds with one stone by camcorder · · Score: 1

    How is that limitation is related w/ WGA? Isn't it only supposed to check cd key?

  31. Not much by ICECommander · · Score: 1

    more than a repeat?

    --
    All your Sybase are belong to us.
  32. Re:Quote by Chyeld · · Score: 1, Insightful

    They don't need to prove OS updates to Wine users, but given they aren't blocking OS updates but updates to all of their products, including Office, that really isn't the issue.

    If I purchase a license to use Office, and they are telling me that I must use Windows over any other OS to be able to use Office, especially if there are no technical reasons for this restriction, then they are breaking their settlement agreement from way back in the Windows 3.1/DOS days.

    I could care less about the OS updates.

  33. Arms race by daveo0331 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Is there any way Wine can change to get around Microsoft checking for it? I'm thinking something similar to changing your user agent settings on Firefox so you can get into "IE only" websites.

    --
    Remember the days when Republicans were the party of fiscal responsibility?
    1. Re:Arms race by Frank+T.+Lofaro+Jr. · · Score: 1

      When asking that, ask youself if there is anyway to get around the FBI coming after you for a DMCA violation like they did to Sklyarov of Adobe e-Book PDF cracking fame.

      Perhaps anti-trust rules might disallow them from using the DMCA that way.

      But it seems the DMCA even overrides the Constitution, never mind the anti-trust laws.

      --
      Just because it CAN be done, doesn't mean it should!
    2. Re:Arms race by m50d · · Score: 3, Informative

      This particular check can be beaten pretty easily. But the opinion of the wine devs is that that would start an "arms race" they can't win. They already know of one way of checking that would be impossible to fool without rewriting large parts of wine, and if they can think of it then MS with its much greater resources has almost certainly found it.

      --
      I am trolling
    3. Re:Arms race by dajak · · Score: 4, Funny

      They already know of one way of checking that would be impossible to fool without rewriting large parts of wine

      I know! It must be related to bounds checking: MS can try out buffer overflow vulnerabilities to test whether it is dealing with the real MS product.

  34. -1: RTFA by p3d0 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The issue is not Microsoft updating WINE. It's Microsoft refusing to update copies of their own software because they are running under WINE rather than their own OS. Remember, these could be legitimately purchased copies of MS applications that MS refuses to update.

    --
    Patrick Doyle
    I mod down every jackass who puts his moderation policy in his sig. Oh, wait a sec....
    1. Re:-1: RTFA by anagama · · Score: 1

      • Remember, these could be legitimately purchased copies of MS applications that MS refuses to update.

      This is proof positive you have to be some kind of knucklehead (or locked in, locked down, handcuffed-to-the-beadpost-naked-and-spread-eagled customer) to buy MS software.
      --
      What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
    2. Re:-1: RTFA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Well that does pose a huge problem then. Microsoft is tying every product its makes into Windows Update. So for things like Office etc which many linux users run via Wine MS has effectively locked them out. Add that together with the "Genuine Assurance" bullshit and you can no longer do manual downloads of updates either because you have to pass verification. So Wine users are soon to be SOL when it comes to running MS software, unless of course you don't mind running buggy upatched versions.

      Did anyone not see this coming a mile away as soon as Linux barely started becoming a credible threat to Microsoft? All the more reason to stick with or transition to OSS apps like OpenOffice.org and Evolution. They may not be as good as the products they clone but at least your not locked in for the rest of your life. Many people don't think that's enough of an incentive for having to deal with the incompatibilities that come from making a jump to OSS. More and more though many of us are finding the price you pay to stick with MS software to be even worse.

      AC

    3. Re:-1: RTFA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      5 - insightfull??? The spokesperson said users who are not running Windows XP or Windows 2000 natively can still download updates for Microsoft Office from the Office Update Web site."

      RTFA hu !

    4. Re:-1: RTFA by p3d0 · · Score: 1

      We must not be reading the same FA. Where did you see this stated?

      --
      Patrick Doyle
      I mod down every jackass who puts his moderation policy in his sig. Oh, wait a sec....
    5. Re:-1: RTFA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      And if your running WINE you obivously don't have windows.
      The fact someone runs WINE is unrelated to the question wether he/she uses Windows Update together with a legitimate Windows version (correctly licensed in software way, or IRL).
    6. Re:-1: RTFA by SlayerofGods · · Score: 1
      The spokesperson said users who are not running Windows XP or Windows 2000 natively can still download updates for Microsoft Office from the Office Update Web site.
      --

      Technology, the cause of and solution to all of life's problems.
    7. Re:-1: RTFA by p3d0 · · Score: 1

      Ok, thanks for the cluestick. I didn't read what you said carefully enough either.

      --
      Patrick Doyle
      I mod down every jackass who puts his moderation policy in his sig. Oh, wait a sec....
  35. Minimum system requirements for Office.. by d_jedi · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Microsoft Windows.
    If you don't have it, why do you expect Office should run?

    Still, this needs to be looked at closely by antitrust regulators..

    --
    I am the maverick of Slashdot
    1. Re:Minimum system requirements for Office.. by Esine · · Score: 2, Insightful

      duh, there's Microsoft Office for Mac OS

    2. Re:Minimum system requirements for Office.. by d_jedi · · Score: 1

      Yes, but that is besides the point. I highly doubt that the MacOS version of Office runs under Wine (if it does, then I'm underestimating the capabilities of it..).. so all of the people complaining about Office not running under WINE are running the Windows version of it.

      --
      I am the maverick of Slashdot
    3. Re:Minimum system requirements for Office.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      there is a huge difference between not making any effort to support something and deliberately working to break it.

    4. Re:Minimum system requirements for Office.. by d_jedi · · Score: 1

      ..
      just like Apple did with Real's "hack" to allow their songs to work on the iPod? :->

      What's good for the goose..

      --
      I am the maverick of Slashdot
    5. Re:Minimum system requirements for Office.. by xenoandroid · · Score: 1

      Which sucks compared to Apple's Pages in quality.

  36. Short Article, Good News by dhj · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The article on ZDNet is REALLY short and there's no excuse for anyone not reading it.

    As it's already mentioned you don't have the right to use Windows Updater if you don't own Windows. It's just like you can't use Redhat Network unless you own Redhat. Only Redhat is even more restrictive with their update services than Windows Update, granted their services are more comprehensive.

    Some interesting tidbits from the article...

    White, CEO at CodeWeavers (acompany that utilizes Wine), said 'he was excited rather than worried to hear that the WGA validation tool was blocking Wine. "The reason we love this is because this shows that Microsoft is aware of Wine at very high levels," said White. "For us it's exciting -- it is an acknowledgement of us as a threat."

    Also, the spokesperson for windows 'said users who are not running Windows XP or Windows 2000 natively can still download updates for Microsoft Office from the Office Update Web site.'

    So you can still get the updates manually, which is something anyone running Wine over linux probably has the expertise to do.

    The only reason we have Windows machines where I work is because of Microsoft Office file compatibility. Wine and consequently Codeweaver's CrossOver Office is a HUGE threat to Windows OS, and it's a good sign that Microsoft is forced to recognize this.

    --David

    1. Re:Short Article, Good News by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can download office updates for now. I bet you within a year all the office updates will check for wine and refuse to run as well.

    2. Re:Short Article, Good News by JustNiz · · Score: 3, Insightful

      > As it's already mentioned you don't have the right to use Windows Updater if you don't own Windows.

      So what about me? I own a full version of Windows XP. Its not installed anywhere as I use Linux, but I presumably still have rights to download updates.

      Furthermore there was nothing in my XP EULA that said I couldn't install XP in a virtual machine, or that I couldn't use only parts of it(say, the system DLLs), or that it has to be the controlling OS.

    3. Re:Short Article, Good News by Ahnteis · · Score: 1

      I believe you can still download the updates manually. You just can't use the WINDOWS update service. (Yes, I know that it also updates other things.)

    4. Re:Short Article, Good News by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Codeweavers' CrossOver Office
      not Codeweaver's

  37. MOD PARENT DOWN - MALICIOUS CODE! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Malicious code alert! Parent post causes brain stack to overflow when it tries to expand the recursive acronym.

  38. Re:Quote by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    RTFA. What you describe is exactly NOT what they're doing. You CAN get updates for Office running under WINE.

    Someone complaining about an issue specifically noted in the article NOT to be a problem got +2 insightful?????

  39. Yes, it is... by lxt · · Score: 4, Insightful

    An emulator is "a device that is built to work like another" (says the Google dictionary link). So what's WINE then - it's a software program that isn't Windows, but allows you to run programs that require Windows. ...sounds a lot like an emulator to me.

    1. Re:Yes, it is... by brunes69 · · Score: 2, Informative

      An emulator is not "a device that is built to work like another", at leats when it comes to programming.

      An emulator emulates a CPU or platform. VMWare is an emulator, because it emulates an x86 host system.

      Wine is not an emulator. Wine is a 3rd party implimentation of the Win32 API. This is partially why Wine only really works well on X86 platforms (although work is being done in this area).

    2. Re:Yes, it is... by dinivin · · Score: 1
    3. Re:Yes, it is... by pclminion · · Score: 1
      You're refining the definition to fit your purposes.

      In fact, an emulator is anything that, well, emulates the behavior of something else. Wine may not be a hardware emulator, in that the instructions execute natively on the processor, but the mass of DLLs and system software certainly exists for the purpose of emulating a Windows environment.

      And oh God, let's please not get into the semantics between "emulation" and "simulation" shall we?

    4. Re:Yes, it is... by hattmoward · · Score: 1

      That's very much like saying that GNU's libc is a emulator for the original libc. It is not. Wine is more of a wrapper and a library in one.

    5. Re:Yes, it is... by dinivin · · Score: 1

      If you don't agree it's an emulator, than you should be able to explain how it doesn't mean that third definition from the American Heritage Dictionary:

      To imitate the function of (another system), as by modifications to hardware or software that allow the imitating system to accept the same data, execute the same programs, and achieve the same results as the imitated system.

      Dinivin

    6. Re:Yes, it is... by tomkins · · Score: 0

      If you can't describe an emulator without using the word emulate, then you don't know what it means.

    7. Re:Yes, it is... by Profane+MuthaFucka · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Right. And Gnu's Not Unix. Except, it is UNIX in everything but the official license.

      So I take that to mean that Wine is not an emulator of Windows. It's Windows, from someone other than Microsoft.

      In the computer world, most uses of the word 'emulation' are referring to making a piece of software work like and replace a piece of hardware. VMWare works like and replaces an X86 box. A microprocessor emulator works just like a physical chip. Mame simulates a piece of hardware that is found in game systems.

      When we write pieces of software that work just like some other piece of software, we consider that to be an alternative implementation, not an emulation. Linux is not an emulation of UNIX, it's an alternate implementation. Wine is not an emulator of Windows, it's an alternative implementation.

      Emulation isn't about just the implementation, it's about the LEVEL of implementation. Emulation is about making a useful device in software that behaves just like a device in the physical hardware world.

      OK, this is the cue for anyone else to jump in with some counterexamples to prove me wrong...

      --
      Fascism trolls keeping me up every night. When I starts a preachin', he HITS ME WITH HIS REICH!
    8. Re:Yes, it is... by crashcodesdotcom · · Score: 1

      Wait. Lemme see if I understand you...
      Wine is a set of API's that immitates the Win32 API so that applications designed to use Win32 API will work? What magic is it that it immitates the API without emulating them? But what's the difference in this context?


      Crash
      Help stop political price fixing in the U.S. Don't vote Democrat or Republican.

    9. Re:Yes, it is... by bradkittenbrink · · Score: 1

      wine doesn't execute any programs, it is merely a set of libraries that are called by win32 programs that the linux kernel is executing.

    10. Re:Yes, it is... by internic · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I have no real opinion on this one way or the other, but I'd say it would hardly be surprising if a general purpose dictionary gets a definition wrong in the context of a specialized field. The American Heritage dictionary is not written for CS, Physics, Biochemistry, or any other such specialized purpose and isn't really reliable for them. A more reasonable thing to do would be to look at some cannonical sources in the field and see how they use the word.

      Then again, I'd also suggest that this argument about semantics is really pointless.

      --
      "You call it a new way of thinking; I call it regression to ignorance!" -- Operation Ivy
    11. Re:Yes, it is... by dinivin · · Score: 1

      If that's the case, why can't users just run "./notepad.exe" instead of "wine ./notepad.exe". Or perhaps wine does something after all... Like emulating the win32 API.

      Dinivin

    12. Re:Yes, it is... by Qzukk · · Score: 1

      Start up wine and tell me whats on its start menu? How do you replace the wine login screen with another picture like you can on winxp? How do you load a driver in it?

      No matter how much you try, at BEST you can claim that wine emulates the win32 api, but you'll never be able to claim it emulates windows.

      I'd hardly call implementing the win32 api "emulation" though, since all it does is translate the api calls to relevant linux substitutes. Claiming that is emulation is like claiming my English-French phrase book "emulates" french.

      --
      If I have been able to see further than others, it is because I bought a pair of binoculars.
    13. Re:Yes, it is... by dinivin · · Score: 1

      The American Heritage dictionary is not written for CS, Physics, Biochemistry, or any other such specialized purpose and isn't really reliable for them.

      Nor is WINE written for CS, Physics, Biochemistry, or any other such specialized purpose. It's written for end-users, who are going to accurately see WINE as an emulator.

      Dinivin

    14. Re:Yes, it is... by arkanes · · Score: 1

      Why not, lets get into it. Then every one of you retards who can't understand that technical definitions are not neccesarily the ones in general purpose dictionaries can all post about that, too. Wine isn't an emulator in the technical sense of the term. In the generic "anything that emulates is an emulator", then all you software is an emulator. Your fucking mouse is an emulator. Wine is a re-implementation of the Win32 API, a compatability layer if you will. It's not an emulator any more than Firefox is an IE emulator, or GNU libc is a BSD libc emulator.

    15. Re:Yes, it is... by dinivin · · Score: 1

      No matter how much you try, at BEST you can claim that wine emulates the win32 api, but you'll never be able to claim it emulates windows.

      I never made the claim that it emulates Windows.

      Dinivin

    16. Re:Yes, it is... by dinivin · · Score: 1

      BTW, even the WINE readme says that WINE executes programs:

      It (wine) consists of a program loader which loads and executes a Microsoft Windows binary...

      Dinivin

    17. Re:Yes, it is... by bradkittenbrink · · Score: 1

      They can on properly configured systems, and wine implements the win32 API, it doesn't emulate it. You could say that wine emulates the Microsoft implementation of the win32 API. You do realize that the whole "wine means wine is not an emulator" thing is a big HHOS joke about how imprecise the word emulator is, don't you?

    18. Re:Yes, it is... by pclminion · · Score: 1

      Why are you blowing your fucking top? Just curious. Try enjoying your Friday instead.

    19. Re:Yes, it is... by dinivin · · Score: 1

      You could say that wine emulates the Microsoft implementation of the win32 API.

      So it could be said, in fact, that WINE is an emulator.

      BTW, if it's just a big joke, why do all the WINE fanboys get so upset when someone points out that WINE is an emulator? :-)

      Dinivin

    20. Re:Yes, it is... by bradkittenbrink · · Score: 1

      Congratulations, you caught me because I applied a definition which I didn't agree with in the first place.

    21. Re:Yes, it is... by bradkittenbrink · · Score: 1
      Because it's fun, otherwise I'd actually be getting work done.

      In all serious though, the vast majority of the people who call wine an emulator do not know the difference between an implementation of an API, a system which emulates another system. These discussions provide great opportunities to educate people on the difference. The point is that it's not possible to emulate an abstract API, you can only emulate a concrete existing system. The wine project takes great pains to make sure it is implementing the API, and not emulating the bugs of a paritcular win32 implementation like windows98. Also, Wine doesn't form a complete operating system by itself, so it cannot be an emulator of an operating system, it is only a piece of such an emulator.

    22. Re:Yes, it is... by nfogh · · Score: 0

      Of course wine is not an emulator. Wine is something you drink, you geekass bastards.

      --
      !rotinom siht ni kcuts mI ,em pleh esaelP
    23. Re:Yes, it is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      What magic is it that it immitates the API without emulating them? But what's the difference in this context?

      It's called an implementation. You don't emulate an API, you implement one.

    24. Re:Yes, it is... by mcrbids · · Score: 1

      An emulator emulates a CPU or platform. VMWare is an emulator, because it emulates an x86 host system.

      Except that it doesn't, which is why VMWare is NOT an emulator - VMWare cannot be run on non-X86 hardware. It actually uses 386 Enhanced mode to "split" the CPU into multiple logical CPUs, minimizing performance costs in so doing.

      An actual X86 emulator is BOCHS.

      --
      I have no problem with your religion until you decide it's reason to deprive others of the truth.
    25. Re:Yes, it is... by xenoandroid · · Score: 1

      And those libraries are emulating the Microsoft coded libraries. Unless the WINE project has been using Microsoft's code to build from then they are building things that act like the original aka. emulators.

    26. Re:Yes, it is... by silicon+not+in+the+v · · Score: 1

      I wonder if it would help people understand the difference by giving an example of another program. Most of you know Samba. Some would claim Samba is an emulator of Windows File and Printer Sharing(TM). Actually, that program and Samba were(originally) both implementations of the CIFS/SMB protocol. If that were the extent of it, that would be two programs implementing an API.

      In continuation of the story, MS has added other functionality beyond that which is actually in the spec for SMB, and through some experimentation, Samba has discovered and implemented the additions. That does move it closer to emulation.

      --
      We may experience some slight turbulence and then...explode. -Capt. Mal Reynolds
    27. Re:Yes, it is... by interiot · · Score: 1
      Except that you're wrong too. VMWare is a virtualizer (what's the first letter in "VMWare"?) When Vanderpool comes out, vmWare's role will be as a VMM (Virtual Machine Manager).

      Personally though, I think we need to create even more synonyms for simulator/emulator/virtualizer so we can all be just a little more confused.

    28. Re:Yes, it is... by mindbooger · · Score: 1

      VMWare is not an emulator, it's a virtualizer. Bochs is an emulator.

    29. Re:Yes, it is... by bradkittenbrink · · Score: 1

      Which microsoft libraries is wine emulating? The Windows95 libraries, the Windows98 libraries, the windows2000 libraries? Do you get my point? You can emulate a particular library, but you can't emulate something abstract like the win32 api. The wine project's goal is to provide an alternative implementation of the win32 api, not to emulate any particular Microsoft library. The difference is a very subtle one, but it is one that the wine developers have chosen to emphasize as important to their motivations.

    30. Re:Yes, it is... by KiloByte · · Score: 1

      WINE is not an emulator. It's just a comprehensive set of libraries.

      Would you call, let's say, pthreads-win32 an emulator? It's just an implementation of a very popular API, an API that has more than ten of wildly different implementations from a number of FS projects and commercial vendors.

      Just like this, WINE is an implementation of an API that has two other implementations already: one running on DOS and one running on the NT kernel.

      --
      The creatures outside looked from Alt-Right to Antifa; but already it was impossible to say which was which.
    31. Re:Yes, it is... by ndogg · · Score: 1

      Thanks for clearing that up. For some time now, I've been using GIMP under the impression that it was a Photoshop emulator. How wrong I was...

      --
      // file: mice.h
      #include "frickin_lasers.h"
    32. Re:Yes, it is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      GNU is a Licensing system. Not a piece of software. GNU Licensing is not isolated to Unix and Linux platform development. There are GNU Projects that are mac and win32.

      Wine is not windows and it does not emulate windows. It process win32 to calls into a native system language which is processed by the linux shell. It is NOT an emulator and it is NOT windows.

    33. Re:Yes, it is... by hattmoward · · Score: 1

      Well, Linux users can do just that, if their system is set up correctly. The binfmt_misc kernel module allows you to register WINE as the handler for Windows binaries. I could draw an analog to shebang lines, but I don't want anyone accusing WINE of being an interpreter!

      Now, you might say that's just a hack to get the behavior you ask for, and it is. WINE is normally run this way because that's the easiest, but WINE provides the tools to get your Windows app running in a number of ways. WINE implements the Win32 API, along with a number of common libraries. Most people are holding hot little PE binaries in their hands, and running WINE in the manner that makes you feel like it's an emulator is the way for those people to get the instant gratification they desire. But I'm not going to waste my time arguing here -- you're simply trying to be pedantic, and I think you should research WINE more carefully to understand the reason I take my position that it's not an emulator. Look for these keywords: winemaker winebuild

    34. Re:Yes, it is... by Spoing · · Score: 1
      1. An emulator is "a device that is built to work like another" (says the Google dictionary link). So what's WINE then - it's a software program that isn't Windows, but allows you to run programs that require Windows. ...sounds a lot like an emulator to me.

      Is Windows CE an emulator of Windows 2000 or XP? For that matter, is Windows ME an emulator of Windows 2000 -- or bisa versa?

      I'll await your answer before bringing out the Cluestick(tm) brand clue stick. :)

      --
      A firewall can not protect you from yourself. Turn off what you do not need. Do not use the firewall to do your work.
  40. Nope! by bonch · · Score: 4, Informative

    Microsoft is under no obligation to support updates to applications that are not running under the operating system listed on that magical little section on the side of the box that says "System Requirements."

    1. Re:Nope! by A+beautiful+mind · · Score: 1

      They have no obligation to BREAK it neither.

      --
      It takes a man to suffer ignorance and smile
      Be yourself no matter what they say
    2. Re:Nope! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But they do have the right NOT to support third-party software, which they have exercised.

      Other than that, great post!

    3. Re:Nope! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There's a whole lot of difference between "not supporting" an environment and purposely breaking compatibility. The burden of being compatible with MS updates is left to the WINE developers. If someone complains to MS about their software not working under WINE, the response should be "that configuration doesn't meet our system requirements, we can't help you". Taking the time to prevent it from working with 3rd party tools is just another mile in MS's history of anti-trust legal battles.

    4. Re:Nope! by antiMStroll · · Score: 1

      Are you sure? Printing it on the side of the box might not be enough to make it legally so.

    5. Re:Nope! by theLOUDroom · · Score: 1

      Microsoft is under no obligation to support updates to applications that are not running under the operating system listed on that magical little section on the side of the box that says "System Requirements."

      I would LOVE to see you try to find an actual LAW that supports that position.

      I can write anything I want on the side of a retail box. Unless the customer actually signs a contract, they are free to ignore it.
      Meanwhile, consumer protection laws exist that make it illegal to do something like write "office suite" on the outside of the box, and put something inside that is not a functional office suite. Either the customer gets their money back, or the manufacturer has to fix it.
      Furthermore, anti-trust laws exist that specfically forbid monopolies from engaging in this sort of behavior. (Using their monopoly position with one product to deliberatly break functionaly of a competitior's product in another market, so that they may expand their monopoly.)

      --
      Life is too short to proofread.
  41. The job's not done ... by jeepmeister · · Score: 3, Funny

    ...until Lotus won't run.

    --

    I don't need no estinkin' .sig
    Jeepmeister
    1. Re:The job's not done ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well that's it. Dupe stories are now creating dupe responses. Get some originality, fucker.

  42. Re:Quote by bonch · · Score: 1

    If I purchase a license to use Office, and they are telling me that I must use Windows over any other OS to be able to use Office...

    Get your box of Office. What operating system is listed in the "System Requirements" section?

    Okay, then. You can't complain if they don't support running their software on an environment it was not intended to run on! That's almost like complaining that Ford doesn't go out of their way to make sure their engines work if I strap them onto my lawnmower, even though I also happen to own a Ford vehicle. Office is written for Windows. Not Wine.

  43. I dunno.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    Maybe they have a mac?

  44. Re:Quote by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have a windows license that came with my laptop yet I never even booted windows. In this situation, if people want to run WINE, who are MS to be witholding updates from paying customers?

  45. Re:Quote by raddan · · Score: 4, Insightful
    OK, how about this-- I bought Microsoft Office 2003. Aren't I entitled to updates for this product, even if I'm running it through WINE?

    If I'm not mistaken, interoperability with their products and open documentation of their APIs was one of the specific terms that Microsoft had to accept as a part of their settlement with the DOJ. How can they get around this? As far as I am concerned, sabotaging WINE users' ability to update their Microsoft products amounts to monopolistic abuse.

    My guess is that they figure they'll just do whatever they want, loopholes in the settlement aside, since the DOJ has proved that it could really care less if MS was punished anyhow.

    Anyone have a link to the settlement terms?

  46. RTFA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    RTFA, Non-Windows users can still get Office updates.

  47. First they ignore you... by technix4beos · · Score: 3, Insightful

    With statements like these,

    ... said that Microsoft has until now had "a clear corporate policy to not talk about Wine."

    it is no wonder Linux is clearly gaining new users daily.

    Microsoft needs to change, or perish.

    --
    user@host$ diff /dev/urandom /dev/uspto
  48. A better Windows than Windows..... by big-giant-head · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Trying to run windows crap in OS2 is one of things that killed it. IBM spent so much time trying to run windows inside OS2, they completely missed supplying good OS2 native apps.

    Wine is good for running old windows apps that you have ( I still Office 7 !!!???? and open office of course), but if anyone spends too much time trying to emulate windows (ala os2) then MS will simply screw you over. As soon as one thing works, they will break it.

    If you are using a current MS app either 1) run windows 2) find/create a linux based alternative.

    People will scream that yadddadda M$ app is just what they need. Trying to build a 'better windows than windows' is a game no one can win (not even IBM).

    --

    So Long and Thanks for all the Fish.
    1. Re:A better Windows than Windows..... by isolation · · Score: 0

      3. Improve ReactOS and have a Free Windows.

      --
      Free Unix? Free Windows. http://www.reactos.com
    2. Re:A better Windows than Windows..... by runderwo · · Score: 3, Insightful
      OS/2 was killed by glacial support from IBM and no Win32 support in WINOS2. It had absolutely nothing to do with the Windows 3.1 support built-in to it.

      Customers who were looking forward had no choice but to go with Windows 95 as opposed to the dark horse with no marketing. If OS/2 had Win32 support and OEM preloads, it would have been a completely different ballgame. Microsoft was in a position to prevent both of those, and that ended up sealing their strategy to kill off OS/2.

      I've heard people scream repeatedly that developers would simply target the Win3.1 API because it was included in OS/2, precluding OS/2 native applications and guaranteeing the failure of OS/2. First of all, I don't see how that guarantees the failure of OS/2 - it's a removal of a barrier to entry for the consumer, and the developers go where the consumer install base goes. Furthermore, if that assertion were true, then developers wouldn't have bothered writing Win32 native applications at all since Win3.1 compatibility was available - why lock out existing Win3.1 and OS/2 users?

      The key here is who has a dominating market share and who has a forward path for compatibility with the dominating market share. Microsoft had a dominating market share, and IBM had no forward path for compatibility with it. OS/2 was doomed the moment Win95 was launched.

    3. Re:A better Windows than Windows..... by poot_rootbeer · · Score: 2, Informative

      In my experiences with OS/2 Warp, it was able to run 16-bit Windows crap flawlessly.

      The problem was, by the mid-90's Microsoft had begun a shift to 32-bit code, with NT and Win95 introducting new APIs beyond those contained in OS/2. IBM never quite managed to keep up compatibility once users started using software more modern than Windows 3.1.

      (Internet applications were an especially big nail in OS/2's coffin -- Netscape 2.x for Windows wouldn't run under OS/2, even after you shelled out $99 for the OS/2 native TCP stack, and there were no native OS/2 browsers, except for IBM's own limited-usefulness Web Explorer.)

    4. Re:A better Windows than Windows..... by olau · · Score: 2, Interesting

      You are missing the fact that this is free software. Noone has stopped working on nice free alternatives just because the Wine folks are doing what they do.

      Besides, you forget legacy applications. All the major pieces for ordinary desktop users are already in place on GNU/Linux. The only thing preventing enterprises from switching is legacy Windows applications. This is why Wine is absolutely a plus.

  49. Re:Quote by gowen · · Score: 1
    Aren't I entitled to updates for this product, even if I'm running it through WINE?
    No, you're not. Check the EULA for Office. If you don't run it under Windows, you're not licensed to use it.

    --
    Athletic Scholarships to universities make as much sense as academic scholarships to sports teams.
  50. Can this be exploited against Windows users? by Noksagt · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So, they check for a registry key to see whether or not it is on WINE. Do virii/worms/other malicious intruders now have an easier way to prevent software updates in a slightly secretive manner? Can't they just make the same key on a valid copy of Windows?

    1. Re:Can this be exploited against Windows users? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes

    2. Re:Can this be exploited against Windows users? by CedgeS · · Score: 1

      You're right. Spyware or adware (these would probably benefit from blocking windows updates more then viruses) can emulate whatever fingerprints of Wine Microsoft uses for countermeasures to prevent updates. Wine doesn't need to enter the arms race against Microsoft - more nefarious groups with financial incentive will do it for them.

      Kudos, that was a very good idea!

  51. -1: RTFA by SlayerofGods · · Score: 3, Informative

    You should get -1 for not RTFA.
    You can still update MS software if your running WINE. What you can't do is run windows updater to update said software for you automaticly because windows updater is a windows service. And if your running WINE you obivously don't have windows.

    --

    Technology, the cause of and solution to all of life's problems.
  52. This reminds me of... by Foolomon · · Score: 4, Interesting

    ...a few old stories:

    The mantra in Redmond when Windows 3.1x was being developed was: "Windows ain't done til Lotus won't run."

    The Microsoft team who worked with IBM on OS/2 specifically designed certain key features of OS/2 so that they would - in the resulting form - not run under an SMP system. IBM had to invest significant time to correct these design "flaws" (or WAD [W.orking A.s D.esigned], depending on which company you ask) to get OS/2 to run on a 2 and 4 processor system.

    There are a few other incidents that come to mind were Microsoft used its power in a manner that was dubious at best, monopolistic at best, yet they continue to skirt the line on the side of legality. Oy vey.

    1. Re:This reminds me of... by vocaro · · Score: 2, Informative
      The mantra in Redmond when Windows 3.1x was being developed was: "Windows ain't done til Lotus won't run."

      That was DOS, not Windows.

      http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,1759,1640917,00.as p
    2. Re:This reminds me of... by Foolomon · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Perhaps. I remember Dvorak saying Windows in one of his columns years ago (circa 1996).

      The OS/2 story is one I know from personal experience since I was on the OS/2 team at IBM.

      Um..Maybe that's not something I should admit to. :D :D :D

    3. Re:This reminds me of... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Correction: the saying was "DOS won't run until Lotus won't run". It was in the day when they were still peddling Multiplan, but sadly for them, Lotus 1-2-3 was owning the market for spreadsheets. The younger crowd never saw it, but there was actually a time when Microsoft was a non-player in the application market. I am over-simplifying here, but, essentially:
      * WordStar, then WordPerfect owned the word processing market;
      * Lotus 1-2-3 owned the spreadsheet market;
      * dBase II, then III, owned the "database" market;
      * etc.

      I think for Windows 3.x, it would have been "Windows ain't done until DR/DOS won't run"...

    4. Re:This reminds me of... by Lord+Omlette · · Score: 1

      Here is a little more on OS/2, although I would not trust a goddamned thing that Dvorak says, if it's the same Dvorak that keeps making worthless predictions.

      --
      [o]_O
  53. People still use Windows??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I thought Microsoft died a while back.

    Oh well, as long as Linux is alive and well, that is all my family is worried about.

  54. Re:Quote by gowen · · Score: 2, Informative

    Oh, and Office updates *do* work with WINE.

    --
    Athletic Scholarships to universities make as much sense as academic scholarships to sports teams.
  55. Two simple steps to fix this.... by bob670 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I replaced my XP box with a Mac mini and my 2000 Server install with Linux. Screw MS, it is quite easy to live without them for all but the most locked in of large business customers.

  56. Dumb answer... by grahamsz · · Score: 1

    People install legally purchased microsoft software on top of Wine.

    Some corporate environments require that you run MS Office, and wine lets users do that.

    Microsoft are using their windows monopoly to stop users of Office on Wine from getting updates.

    1. Re:Dumb answer... by zoombat · · Score: 1
      Microsoft are using their windows monopoly to stop users of Office on Wine from getting updates.

      Actually, according to the article, such users should be able to download Office updates just fine:
      • The spokesperson said users who are not running Windows XP or Windows 2000 natively can still download updates for Microsoft Office from the Office Update Web site.

      Really all they're saying in this interview is that they consider update components of their OS to be part of the OS.. and they're trying to restrict the distribution of those copyrighted components to only validly licensed versions of their OS.

      I don't see anything particularly wrong with that stance.
  57. Re:Quote by J.+T.+MacLeod · · Score: 1

    It isn't a matter of "not supporting", it's a matter of "specifically disabling".

    If your Ford engine wasn't built to be strapped into, say, a Chevrolet chassis, that's one thing. But if it specifically checked to see if it was in a Chevrolet chassis and then refused to work in that case, Ford would be doing something wrong.

  58. Re: by zoloto · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Your assumption is mistaken. Of course they aren't under any such obligation, but the fact that they're targeting users of WINE is indicative of violating antitrust laws (since they're a convicted illegal monopolist, a bad thing) when it comes to interoperability.

    You can find information here: http://http//www.google.com/search?hl=en&lr=&c2cof f=1&q=microsoft+antitrust+ruling+interoperability& btnG=Search/

    Oh, and just to rebut before you retort with anything regarding using their "dll" downloads or pirating MS-Windows OS's for use under WINE to make it functional; Microsoft has allowed downloading of libraries or platforms (ala .NET) without having to use WU service. You can use their DLL's in systems like Linux privately but you can't redistribute. Not only that, but you get no support from them. In the case of binaries/dll's that come only with one of their Windows OS's, it would be a good idea not to pirate. Period.

    But a move to block users from an update service simply because of their choice to use an API translator for Win32 software is ludicrous

  59. Uh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's Microsoft Office and I run it. However, I am BLOCKED from getting updates for it.

    If it merely didn't work for a technical reason, that's one thing. However, it is failing for a non-technical reason - they are checking for the "wrong" value and forbidding the updates. Without that forbidding, it would work.

  60. Re:A true businessman --- selling snake oil by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    WRONG!

    It is not any sort of recognition but rather the simplicity. MS employee says, hey you know that Wine thing for Linux that runs windows apps. Everyone says no so employee X tells them about it. They say well, shit if we can block it then we might as well.

    End of story.

    Spinning it into a positive is like saying that because so many people constantly put down the Phantom Console it is bound to be a success, they are just scared of it and it hasn't even been made yet.

  61. Re:Quote by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I completely agree. They do not have to support running their software under WINE. But they should allow me to download updates to the software that I _own_ from whatever environment I choose to download it from.

    If they made Office check for the WINE registry key and not run, then that is a different story. They don't have to support their product _running_ on any environment, but why shouldn't I be able to _download_ from wherever I choose.

    Downloading and running are two completely different animals.

  62. Re:Quote by t0ny747 · · Score: 0

    If I'm not mistaken, interoperability with their products and open documentation of their APIs was one of the specific terms that Microsoft had to accept as a part of their settlement with the DOJ. How can they get around this?

    Lots of freaking money is how :)

    --
    Taco?
  63. Re:Lordy, Billy G has paid for a lot of mod points by Vectorferret · · Score: 1

    Just because most things M$ does are unethical doesn't mean all things they do are.

  64. The EULA is meaningless by Peaker · · Score: 5, Insightful

    and cannot cancel rights granted by the Fair Use doctrine.

    1. Re:The EULA is meaningless by Richard_at_work · · Score: 1

      And 'Fair Use Doctrine' doesnt have the meaning 99% of slashdotters think it does.

    2. Re:The EULA is meaningless by coreymichaelbarr · · Score: 2, Informative

      How did this get moderated up this high?

      A contract most certainly can cancel fair use exceptions to copyright. An example: Editor signs a contract with Author where Author pays Editor $100 for editing services. Editor agrees that they will not disclose a single word of the book. Editor has just signed away their right to quote from the book for review purposes.

      Sure, there's still a question of whether the EULA is an enforceable contract. But you can certainly contract away your fair use (and many other) rights.

    3. Re:The EULA is meaningless by Peaker · · Score: 1

      The EULA is not a legal contract, as no law requires you to agree to the vendor terms in order to use the legally purchased copyrighted works nor does any law give meaning to clicking "I agree" buttons on a computer screen.

    4. Re:The EULA is meaningless by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      And 'Fair Use Doctrine' doesnt have the meaning 99% of slashdotters think it does.

      Spoken like a true slashdotter.

    5. Re:The EULA is meaningless by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Sure, there's still a question of whether the EULA is an enforceable contract.

      No there isn't a question. It's a license. A license is not a contract. The license may or may not be "enforcable", but not in the same way a contract would be.

    6. Re:The EULA is meaningless by cmoss · · Score: 1

      EULA is not meaningless if you are in the US states, Maryland or Virginia which passed the stupid UCITA laws.

  65. WINE by Punboy · · Score: 0, Redundant

    But... WINE Is Not an Emulator!

    --
    If you like what I've said here, and want to read more, go to http://www.krillrblog.com
  66. Problem.... by rwven · · Score: 1

    WINE is not an "emulator." You'd think Microsoft would understand something that obvious...

    1. Re:Problem.... by TeknoHog · · Score: 1
      If you insist that WINE is not an emulator, can you please name one piece of software that IS. And then explain what the crucial difference is.

      BTW, LAME ain't MP3 encoder.

      --
      Escher was the first MC and Giger invented the HR department.
  67. -1: STFU by Elwood+P+Dowd · · Score: 1

    You have it completely backwards. Microsoft admits to checking and not running Windows Update on WINE. That's good, because WINE users are not running Windows. They're running WINE instead.

    Office update does not check for WINE. Works fine. So Microsoft hasn't done a damn thing wrong. Jeremy White, Mr. WINE, posted here saying that everything is peachy. So... what's your problem?

    --

    There are no trails. There are no trees out here.
    1. Re:-1: STFU by jeff4747 · · Score: 1

      Office update does not check for WINE. Works fine.

      Except that it will only update Office, and not other programs that I can run under WINE.

      For example, I've got a copy of XP here so I've got a licence for IE. I can't update IE through Office Update.

    2. Re:-1: STFU by Elwood+P+Dowd · · Score: 1

      Huh. Good point.

      --

      There are no trails. There are no trees out here.
    3. Re:-1: STFU by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Office update does not check for WINE. Works fine.

      Except that it will only update Office, and not other programs that I can run under WINE.


      Hence the name, OFFICE update. Not Everything else I run under WINEupdate

  68. Theory by DeltaSigma · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Suppose I set this WINE registry key in a valid Win2k install (I actually own a legitimate copy of Windows, hooray for me). Would I thus be barred from these updates even though I have a perfectly legitimate installation of Windows? I don't think the EULA for Windows or Office includes "and thou shalt not set HKLM/SOFTWARE/WINE/CurrentVersion... etc."

    So wouldn't they, in this instance, be denying a perfectly legitimate user the software updates that they are supposed to provide? Is there a legal case here?

    1. Re:Theory by Foolomon · · Score: 1

      Perhaps, but you could make the case that this is the only reasonable way for them to determine if you're using WINE or not, in which case they've done "due diligence."

      Your response is: "couldn't they check for the DLLs?"

      My answer is: "yes, but you could theoretically spoof those too."

      Your response is: "your mother is still ugly. I win."

      My work here is done. :D

    2. Re:Theory by kosmosik · · Score: 1

      Mind that a virus or something can easly do that.

    3. Re:Theory by DeltaSigma · · Score: 1

      Your mother is still ugly, I--damn't!

  69. at last... by alexandreracine · · Score: 1

    At last! They said it! Now... let's make tell them that Windows suck.

    --
    No sig for now.
  70. Mirror by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Would it be possible to set up a Windows server to pick up the updates and have that server relay it to wine users. Im sure its possible but im not sure about how legal it would be.

  71. Re:Quote by Chyeld · · Score: 1

    Ford didn't get out of an anti-trust lawsuit by signing a consent agreement specificly stating they would not ever again tie two products together in a manner which required the customer to purchase the second product as well.

    Microsoft did. This was during the time when they forced Windows to be sold with MS-DOS to kill off their compitition. They knew what they were doing was wrong and they signed a consent agreement with the DOJ as part of their settlement.

    While the article states that you can download updates for Office off another website, Office is only one of the many products they sell. And it's also about the only one that has it's own update site. Admittedly, using Office was a bad choice for an example. However outside Office, they _are_ blocking anyone from updating.

  72. EULA surely violates something by r00t · · Score: 1

    All by itself, that EULA appears to violate the law
    against product tying by a monopoly.

    Plus there is the settlement.

    1. Re:EULA surely violates something by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But it's absolutely essential to tightly integrate the word processor and spreadsheet programs with the OS, or are you just against innovation?

  73. Gates: We're big believers in interoperability. by Kirth · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Spread in just about every interview with Gates. And this is what it look like.

    Of course its absulutely within their rights to do that, but its definitly going against "interoperability".

    Some network-staff will not be amused "we can't download your servicepacks" - "you need a licensed Microsoft OS" - "We've got 2000 of them, but they're all firewalled off, policy, we can't use those".

    --
    "The more prohibitions there are, The poorer the people will be" -- Lao Tse
  74. Funnily enough...... by mormop · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I've spent the last few weeks working out how to swap as much of my current employers network over to Linux as possible. The Windows CD server has gone, the file servers are looking like they'll follow with Samba/Winbind and a couple of old PCs are being turned over to print serving.

    Until now, I had not seriously looked into Wine/VMWare etc (time constraints mainly) as although they are well known to the Linux community, I don't have enough experience with them to talk my IT director into trying it.

    The fact that MS are so anti-wine is probably the best indication yet of its effectiveness and given a few more months while Linux settles in it could swing the balance when it comes to replacing NT4.

    --
    Hmmmmmm..... Deep fried and look like Squirrel.
  75. Not illegal, not even immoral by analog_line · · Score: 4, Insightful

    What Microsoft is basically doing is refusing to offer support for their software running on any system they don't advertise the product working with. This is the same reason that if I call up Apple for support getting my iPod working under Linux, they're going to hang up the phone on me.

    Microsoft isn't obliged to allow their automated update tools to function under WINE. They aren't even obliged to allow seperately downloaded updaters to work under WINE. The software you're updating is advertised to run on Windows only and you're not running it on Windows. Microsoft isn't breaking any rules, and whining about it just wastes oxygen

    Either work on getting around the block, buy a copy of Windows, or work on switching over to one of the free software suites. Donate some money to the Open Office, KOffice, or AbiWord projects. I'm sure they can use all the cash they get, and it will help them add more and more useless features to the software so the pointy-haired types will be more impressed with them.

    1. Re:Not illegal, not even immoral by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      No one is asking Microsoft to support MS Office under Linux. They just want MS not to specifically check for WINE when updating Office. If it just doesn't work than fine, the WINE team can fix it, but breaking it for no other reason than its WINE is wrong.

      As for Open Office, its great for most things but some people still need some advanced featured that are only found in MS Office.... for now

  76. Admit isn't the right term by hkb · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Slashdotians use the term "admit" as if Microsoft is guilty of something. They are simply preventing those are are not running Windows according to the agreed-upon EULA from accessing their resources and using their bandwidth. What happened to Microsoft's IP rights?

    Why should Microsoft allow WINE users, who either don't possess a valid copy of Windows, or who are breaking Microsoft's EULA, to leech resources (server/bandwidth) from them?

    My mind boggles that this is even being debated.

    --
    /* Moderating all non-anonymous trolls up since 2004 */
    1. Re:Admit isn't the right term by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      uh.. because it's anticompative. They are screwing up their service in such a way to make one use their OS to use completely independant programs. And they are a monopoly, so those aren't cool together

    2. Re:Admit isn't the right term by JahToasted · · Score: 1
      Well they aren't admitting that they are doing anything wrong, they are admitting that WINE is doing something right. They are admitting that WINE is so compatible with windows that it will soon be feasible to use windows update to keep WINE up to date. They are admitting that WINE is a good peice of software.

      It not really a debate its just an article telling you that WINE is good enough that MS sees it as a threat.

    3. Re:Admit isn't the right term by Shotgun · · Score: 0, Troll

      What happened to Microsoft's IP rights?

      Unless you signed a contract when you bought the software, they lost many of them when the store accepted funds from your credit card.

      Yes, that's right, children. EULA, click-throughs, little pieces of paper stuck inside a box, any other cutesy little mechanism they try to use to force you to read some verbage before using the program...they are all utter bullshit. The contract was executed when you handed over the money, and follows standard law without a written contract. Anything they have to say afterward is spitting in the wind.

      --
      Aah, change is good. -- Rafiki
      Yeah, but it ain't easy. -- Simba
    4. Re:Admit isn't the right term by hkb · · Score: 1

      Gee, following that logic that means I can go buy a copy of Linux at Borders and utilize the source in my proprietary product with impunity.

      Good thinking!

      --
      /* Moderating all non-anonymous trolls up since 2004 */
    5. Re:Admit isn't the right term by Capt.+Murphy · · Score: 1

      They are admitting that WINE exists and they are actively looking at/targetting it. It has nothing to do with guilt. It's about Microsoft really not saying anything about WINE at all until now. Just think of it as the US government 'admitting' that Cuba exists. Since the US government doesn't recognize Cuba's government it's like there is 'nothing there' from a political stand-point.

    6. Re:Admit isn't the right term by soulhuntre · · Score: 1

      "Gee, following that logic that means I can go buy a copy of Linux at Borders and utilize the source in my proprietary product with impunity"

      1) Get zealots to deny the legitimacy of IP protections

      2) Steal IP from zealots...

      3) ....

      4) Profit

      --
      --> Fight tyranny and repression.... read /. at -1!
    7. Re:Admit isn't the right term by AnyNoMouse · · Score: 2, Informative
      Gee, following that logic that means I can go buy a copy of Linux at Borders and utilize the source in my proprietary product with impunity.
      I probably shouldn't respond to this, but... All software is protected by copyright. This is a limitation on distribution. I can buy Windows at the store and do just about anything but distribute copies of it legally. The same applies to Linux. Linux, however, comes with a license that states (among other things) that you are allowed to make copies of it if you agree to some terms (distribute source changes, etc.). This isn't an EULA that *RESTRICTS* your lawful rights, but a license that gives you *MORE* rights than you would normally have. If you don't agree to the license and distribute copies anyway, than you are in violation of copyright. Simple, eh?

      --
      -Redundancy Man strikes again!
    8. Re:Admit isn't the right term by BBird · · Score: 1

      What makes you assume wine users are breaking any eula? wine is an autonomous api translator, does not depend on win "ip". I can have a valid copy of office, and be running it wherever I want (be it windows, wine, the toilet, and so on).

    9. Re:Admit isn't the right term by hkb · · Score: 1

      Sorry, it's still and End User License Agreement.

      --
      /* Moderating all non-anonymous trolls up since 2004 */
    10. Re:Admit isn't the right term by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "What happened to Microsoft's IP rights?"

      IP, or intellectual property, is a misleading mishmash of concepts which are wholly independent of each other -- copyright, tradmark, and patent. In future, please specify which rights you're referring to, rather than trying to obfuscate with made-up terms.

    11. Re:Admit isn't the right term by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No.

      Imagine a line of people. In one end is the author(s), in the other end is the *end* user, and the people between are distributors.

      The GPL is a distribution license. The end user doesn't need to care about the distribution license at all. You didn't agree to the Windows distribution license either, you most likely didn't even read it. On the other hand, the distributers don't need to care about the EULA (if there is one), they only care about the distribution license.

      As and end user you can even use GPL'ed code in your own programs without giving anyone the source, depending on local copyright law. BUT: Once you distribute those programs (with the GPL'ed parts), you are a distributer, and need a distribution license. That could be the GPL, which would require you to include the source for the entire program, or it could be a different license negotiated with the author(s) of the code you used.

      And just in case: One person can be both a distributer and an end user at the same time. In that case he takes the role of a distributer and an end user, and each role has different rules to follow.

  77. MSFT Defenders Dig Deep by HangingChad · · Score: 0
    Now they have to make up stuff no one was really suggesting in the first place in order to come to MSFT's rescue. No one was suggesting they should update an emulator, merely allow people to continue to update legally purchased MSFT software running under an emulator. But it turns out MSFT is deliberately targeting Wine users, which will accomplish little except to inspire the Wine developers to even greater effort.

    If MSFT defenders weren't so pathetic it would be funny. Actually, it's kinda funny anyway.

    --
    That's our life, the big wheel of shit. - The Fat Man, Blue Tango Salvage
  78. update or move away by H9000 · · Score: 1

    Hi, think what you realy need and what you get for your money why not switch completly away to a different platform like minimc linux bsd or so. my 2 cent

  79. Acronym by RaguMS · · Score: 1

    "As the most popular third-party translation technology in use, Wine was the first emulator to be specifically tested for via WGA"

    Last I checked, Wine was not an emulator.

  80. Oh no!!! by defishguy · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Microsoft has a new Update site for us to use.

    1. Re:Oh no!!! by Bambi+Dee · · Score: 1

      Seriously now, can Ubuntu's installer create a boot floppy? Previous PC I tried Ubuntu on was "GRUB Error #whatever"-ish afterwards with, apparently, a damaged partition table, and my pathetic fixboot/fixmbr attempts (XP recovery console) probably messed it up completely. Yes, it was old and falling apart; I'm not blaming anyone.

  81. What happens if I put that WINE registry key by thrad · · Score: 1

    in the registry of my legit native windows system? Gonna do that, try winupupdate and phone Bill asking what the heck is wrong.

    1. Re:What happens if I put that WINE registry key by zoombat · · Score: 1

      Get ready to pay $250 for telephone tech support!

  82. Re:Quote by mythosaz · · Score: 2, Informative

    RTFA. Office users can still use Officeupdate to update Office.

  83. No obligation? by erroneus · · Score: 2, Interesting

    As I read in another article, since Microsoft has been ruled criminally guilty of abusing its monopoly to leverage its products in other areas, doing this is a blatant additional violation and the DOJ needs to be focusing on this.

    In this case, they are attempting to ensure that their applications run only on MS Windows rather than on any competing OS. This has the effect of attempting to leverage their apps to keep Windows running on peoples computers. This is STILL a problem and should be addressed.

    Microsoft, in this case, has clearly displayed what I would consider to be contempt of court and should be handled from that perspective first and foremost. They SHOULD force a breakup of Microsoft into OS and Software companies and be done with it. They were given an chance to straighten up and fly right. They read this as "hey, we got away with it! Let's continue to illegally tie the browser to the OS in our next release of Windows even though it was deemed criminal and let's continue to break competitor's software to keep them from running our apps and software."

    Has anyone read where Microsoft has hired anyone formerly employed by the DOJ yet? I'm kinda wondering why the DOJ isn't jumping all over this... unless, of course, they've been bought like several politicians have been... (where's that site? Open Secrets was it?)

    Anyway... this needs to be watched.

  84. W.I.N.E. by Sierpinski · · Score: 1

    Please report the facts. Wine is not an emulator.
    WINE actually stands for:

    Wine
    Is
    Not an
    Emulator

    It's am implementation of the win32 library.
    Some might not see the difference, but there is a difference.

    1. Re:W.I.N.E. by The+MESMERIC · · Score: 1

      yes there is
      you are pedantically stupid

  85. Wine Is Not... by generationxyu · · Score: 1
    Wine was the first emulator to be specifically tested for via WGA

    Wine Is Not an Emulator!

    --
    I mod down pyramid schemes in sigs.
  86. Re:Quote by jd142 · · Score: 1

    Since Wine does not require an installation of windows, MS is under no obligation to provide OS updates or add-ons to wine users.

    HOWEVER, I think the are required to provide updates to non-OS applications. Is MS provides an update to Word, they should be obligated to provide that service pack or hotfix to all legally licensed users of Word, regardless of the OS on which they are running Word. I bought a copy of Word, and how, when, and where I run it should not matter one whit.

  87. No you are wrong. by LWATCDR · · Score: 4, Insightful

    No one is asking Microsoft to update Wine. The updates are for software from Microsoft that runs under WINE.
    If someone PAYS for Office they should get the UPDATES for Office even if they are running the program under WINE.
    This so smells of anti trust it is not funny.

    --
    See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    1. Re:No you are wrong. by xcfx · · Score: 0

      No, you are wrong. When someone buys Microsoft Office, in the BOX of the MS Office says the System Requirements, it says Windows 9x, Windows 2000, XP etc etc... IN NO place it says Wine or any other mulator.

      --
      WARNING: DO NOT LET DR. MARIO TOUCH YOUR GENITALS. HE IS NOT A REAL DOCTOR!
    2. Re:No you are wrong. by bhpaddock · · Score: 0

      What are you talking about? They haven't blocked Wine users from updating Office or any other programs. In fact, the only things you can't download from Microsoft without WGA are Photostory 3 and AntiSpyware Beta 1. And both of those are available at softpedia.

    3. Re:No you are wrong. by TimboJones · · Score: 2, Informative

      Office updates are not, and have never been, available to anyone on WindowsUpdate.

    4. Re:No you are wrong. by anonymous22 · · Score: 1

      "This so smells of anti trust it is not funny."
      Maybe the next case will let wine users have DirectX! I better not get my hopes up though.

      --
      Anyone who runs is V.C. Anyone who stands still is well-disciplined V.C.
      Door Gunner, Full Metal Jacket
  88. System Requirements anyone? by hegleran · · Score: 1

    Long time listener, first time caller If you paid for the product, such as Microsoft Office, then your box cleary states what OS the product will run on. Why should Microsoft provide support for a product if it is not being run on the platform that it was developed for? http://www.microsoft.com/office/editions/prodinfo/ standreq.mspx I'm all for WINE, I think it's a great tool; however I wouldn't expect to download updates from Microsoft for a product I am running in an environment not supported by the system requirements clearly printed on the box.

    1. Re:System Requirements anyone? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Contrary to Windows users' "innovative" internet experience there is a difference between downloading and running.

      No one is asking Microsoft to support their apps *running* on WINE. That is WINE's problem, and one they seem to be handling rather well.

      Microsoft has no business preventing you from *downloading* updates to the applications you legally own. The fact that they are doing this based the OS you are running screams antitrust. It would be like denying you the ability to *purchase* Microsoft products unless you ran Windows.

    2. Re:System Requirements anyone? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If it states Windows 98 or better, can I safely assume it will run on Linux? ;)

    3. Re:System Requirements anyone? by hegleran · · Score: 1

      I would still tend to disagree. The system requirements are listed on the box. These are *requirements*. The user should understand what they are committing to prior to making the purchase. If the product needs to be run under a certain OS, then that is all that it is going to be supported under. The updates can be viewed as a type of support. You don't even have to own a computer to purchase Microsoft software and products, so how can you claim that Microsoft is requiring you to run Windows? Microsoft is requiring the user to run Windows if they wish to receive any support on their products. To use the ever-so-common automobile analogy: You can buy Motorcraft radio from Ford, but it is not going to plug into the audio harness of a Mopar vehicle. To work around this, you emulate the connection by creating or buying a third party adapter (WINE). Some functionality may be lost such as the controls on your steering wheel, etc. Should Ford support your attempt to install their radio in a competitors vehicle? Or something a little more software based - try putting a Nissan Pathfinder chip into a Chevy Silvardo. I don't think Chevy will support your attempt at running a Nissan chip on their vehicle.

  89. But it didn't used to be! by Godwin+O'Hitler · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Please tell me I'm not imagining things. A few years back, WINE quite simply stood for WINdows Emulator.

    I'm sure the "IS NOT [AN]" bit got tacked on later when daft acronyms suddenly got popular.

    --
    No, your children are not the special ones. Nor are your pets.
    1. Re:But it didn't used to be! by Godwin+O'Hitler · · Score: 1

      OK I found the proof, see below.

      So can we agree it IS an emulator now?

      --
      No, your children are not the special ones. Nor are your pets.
  90. Re:Quote by zoombat · · Score: 1

    No, you're not. Check the EULA for Office. If you don't run it under Windows, you're not licensed to use it.

    Huh, where'd you get that from?

    I just read the EULA for Office 2003 from here; it didn't say anything about having to run it on Windows.

  91. Re:Quote by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No, their telling you that they only support it if it's used as intended. Wine is unsupported. Now please go fuck yourself.

  92. FUD by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Seeing the remarks from most of the slashdot crowd, it seems that FUD isn't really a tactic that is Microsoft exclusive.

    You can still update your fikking Office software! RTFA

  93. Codeweavers is 'exited'????? by nurb432 · · Score: 1

    Personally id be worried if the big gorilla didn't like me. It might decide to sit on me..

    Unless I was wanting to be bought out...

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
    1. Re:Codeweavers is 'exited'????? by Drantin · · Score: 1

      Or it might give you one of those exploding bananas...

      --
      Actio personalis moritur cum persona. (Dead men don't sue)
    2. Re:Codeweavers is 'exited'????? by Foolomon · · Score: 1
      Unless I was wanting to be bought out...

      That's why I'm developing Bill Lates. It's a version of Bill that runs on Linux and spews out Linuxisms, kinda like that Donald Trump doll does. I give MS a couple of weeks before I'm offered a lot of money.

  94. All together now! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    From the article: "As the most popular third-party translation technology in use, Wine was the first emulator to be specifically tested for via WGA"
    Wine Is Not an Emulator!
  95. BEFORE YOU SAY WINE is not an emulator... by Godwin+O'Hitler · · Score: 1

    read this...

    From the first Wine newsletter, very first line:

    "This is the first release of Wine's kernel cousin publication. Its main goal is to distribute widely what's going on around Wine (the Un*x Windows emulator)."

    http://www.winehq.com/?issue=1#Service%20thread%20

    --
    No, your children are not the special ones. Nor are your pets.
  96. wine users actually used automatic updates? by urbieta · · Score: 1

    I thought wine could do it's thing all by itself :S

    Have ppl been updating wine with windowsupdate? sounds to me like they are also installing antivirus/antispyware software and getting upgrades online and all hehe (maybe even getting viruses and all!?!??!?!) ;)

    Why not just make a dual-boot lin/win machine and tell wine to use the original /mnt/crap/windows/system partition? Since it's a legal installation and files are not moved/copied/pirated, it laughs it's ass out of any M$ EULA.

    is this possible? anybody done it? how? heh

    p.s. no wonder they came up with .net, in that case just compile with mono heh

  97. There are other ways to block WU by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Once you are at the point of registry access, there are already tons of ways to disable Windows Update anyways; right now it is trivial to remap the Windows Update servers to 127.0.0.1 in the Hosts file. Other techniques include deleting the WU executable, I'm sure that I could go on forever.

  98. Parent is Funny, not Insightful. by Dogun · · Score: 1

    As the previous comment noted.

  99. antitrust laws forbid this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I thought using a monopoly (office) to help another monopoly (windows) was forbidden !

  100. What rights? by Valdrax · · Score: 1

    Please enumerate, in detail, any and all Fair Use rights that prevent Microsoft from doing what they've done.

    --
    If it's for-profit but free, you're not the customer -- you're the product (e.g., the Slashdot Beta's "audience").
  101. Substantiate or retract by kamog · · Score: 1
    The MS Office for Windows EULA states that it may only be run under Microsoft operating systems.
    Please show me where, because I don't see it mentioned ANYWHERE in the standard M$ Orifice EULA. To summarize, Office EULA does not bind users to a Windows OS.
    1. Re:Substantiate or retract by afidel · · Score: 1

      Well, according to the EULA Microsoft is under no obligation to provide updates to ANY user:

      8. ADDITIONAL SOFTWARE/SERVICES. This EULA applies to updates, supplements, add-on components, or Internet-based services components, of the Software that Microsoft may provide to you or make available to you after the date you obtain your initial copy of the Software, unless they are accompanied by separate terms. Microsoft reserves the right to discontinue Internet-based services provided to you or made available to you through the use of the Software.

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
  102. RANT by runswithd6s · · Score: 1

    You know, one thing I relaly hate about this change is that it makes it more difficult for support staff to download patches, hotfixes, and the like without having a Windows machine to do it. So we have the famous "chicken or the egg" question. I plan on installing an administrative workstation from which to grab these hotfixes and service packs, but I can't legitimately put it on the network until all the hotfixes and service packs are installed! Firewalls help, but have had nasty little problems in the past. For example, in Win2k, the interface is live before the firewalls kick in to protect them. It could be anywhere from 5 seconds to a minute before you're legitimately protected. This is proportedly not true with WinXPsp2, but I'm not taking any chances. Keep the NIC unplugged until you reboot... I REALLY hate microsoft.

    --
    assert(expired(knowledge)); /* core dump */
    1. Re:RANT by jonadab · · Score: 1

      > I plan on installing an administrative workstation from which to grab these
      > hotfixes and service packs, but I can't legitimately put it on the network
      > until all the hotfixes and service packs are installed! Firewalls help, but
      > have had nasty little problems in the past. For example, in Win2k, the
      > interface is live before the firewalls kick in to protect them.

      If possible, you should use an external firewall or NAT solution, either one
      of those $50 hardware firewall thingies, or an OpenBSD or Linux or cetera box.
      An external firewall is more secure than an interal one, because it does not
      share the vulnerabilities of the protected system, and even if the firewall
      becomes compromised, the protected system is not automatically compromised;
      that becomes an additional step for the attacker to perform. In other words,
      it's better defense in depth.

      Theoretically, the best practice, security-wise, would be to always protect
      any system that matters (i.e., anything that needs to be relyable or that
      contains data that needs to be protected) with a firewall that's based on
      a different operating system from the one being protected. In practice, this
      is *especially* important when the system being protected runs a Microsoft OS.

      Also note that a firewall will usually not (and NAT will certainly not)
      protect you from client vulnerabilities, e.g., holes in Outlook Express.
      If you use vulnerable client software, you need something additional to
      protect you from that.

      --
      Cut that out, or I will ship you to Norilsk in a box.
  103. Have none of you supported products before? by robryandotcom · · Score: 1

    interesting that the concept of "supportability" hasn't seem to come into play for anybody here.

    ignoring windows - microsoft, as a software developer has a responsibility to provide adequate support for the applications they sell. as a result, those said applications are written for specific platforms, which in most all cases is Windows (i think the frontpage extensions are still put out for *nix.) Anybody who has ever had the misfortune to be in product support will identify very quickly that it is impossible to legitmately support a product on a platform that an app isn't written for.

    there's a reason newer versions of office don't work on windows 3.1, 95, whatever - is it because it's not technically possible? not necessarily - but since they weren't written for, weren't tested on, weren't marketed to those other operating systems, there's absolutely no way to determine if a given problem is legitimately with the application or something with the underlying operating system.

    especially with apps that share dll's such as ms' does -- remember dll hell? i sure do.. i used to be in pss for the evil empire and know first hand what a pain in the ass it is to try and support applications that can be affected by another app dropping a similar dll (but oh yet not quite the same) in the wrong spot at the wrong time -- this is no different. for obvious reasons, WINE was never tested for compatibility by the software company and subsequently cannot be officially supported by them, now can it..

    (and before anyone accuses me of just being a fanboi, i run suse on my laptop, so i'm an equal opportunity offender)

  104. "Sideways" unfairly targeting Wine users. by RyuuzakiTetsuya · · Score: 1

    err.

    oh. never mind.

    --
    Non impediti ratione cogitationus.
  105. WINE is best for custom WIN32 apps by Rob+Y. · · Score: 3, Interesting

    WINE isn't only for running Office.

    For most users' purposes, native Linux desktop apps are perfectly good. But some companies have Win32 code developed in-house that they can't afford to convert.

    They could switch to OpenOffice, Firefox, Evolution, etc., and still need to run their custom stuff. That's where WINE comes in really handy. Rather than needing to rewrite these apps, they just need to tweak them to make sure they work well under WINE.

    I've recently used WINE to deliver one such app to Mac OS/X users via X-windows. These users would have no other way to run that app. This is really cool stuff. I'd prefer to be able to build a native OS/X version uxing winelib, but getting winelib to work for the PowerPC is beyond me. This would be nice, even if I still had to use XDarwin, because remote X-Windows can't see the Mac's local drives (or launch Mac helper apps).

    --
    Posted from my Android phone. Oh, I can change this? There, that's better...
  106. Re:Quote by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If I take a Ford engine that I legally purchased and put it on my lawnmower and somehow manage to get the thing working, Ford has no right to refuse to sell me replacement parts for the engine.

    Of course it's not exactly the same thing, since in the engine parts business there is this concept called "competition" that prevents Ford from even considering making such restrictions, but you get the idea.

  107. Mirror by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    I taught I hhad posted this already but I guess I was wrong.

    Anyway..
    Would it be possible to sent up a windows box that acts as a relay to WINE users? I am sure it is possible but I am not sure if re-distributing the updates are legal.

  108. It's "tying" Office to a monopoly product by mbkennel · · Score: 1


    Windows is legally a monopoly. They're not supposed to do this.

  109. You're all wrong... by Eric+Damron · · Score: 1

    Okay, skimming through the posts there are some misunderstandings that should be cleared up. The first misconception has already been well addressed: Microsoft isn't being slammed for not updating WINE. An upgrade to the XP OS could not possible be applied to WINE anyway. They are being slammed for not upgrading things like Office when it is being run under WINE.

    The second misunderstanding is has not been challenged yet so I'll do it here. I hate to because it's sort of coming to Microsoft's defense. A LOT of software does not run under WINE. If Microsoft makes a change to Office or some of their other products that do run under WINE, the change could prevent that product from working under WINE any longer. Would you want Microsoft to automatically apply a patch that broke your software?

    So there could be a legitimate reason for excluding WINE users. I guess...

    --
    The race isn't always to the swift... but that's the way to bet!
  110. Re:Quote by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The minimum requirements for an MS application like Office are listed right on the box, they don't have to support you if you're not using their load-out.
    For example: If I installed WinXP on a 486 or some other comparitively weak machine, I would fully expect MS to laugh in my face if I were to ask them for support.

  111. Why do you have the right to use their service? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ..when you didn't purchase their operating system? You:

    (1) Don't buy their OS and install WINE.
    (2) Install apps that are designed to run on Windows (not WINE).
    (3) Complain when Windows Update doesn't work.

    WINE *is not an emulator* - WINE is not Windows. It's a variant that's designed to behave a lot like Windows. Unless the apps you installed specifically say that they support WINE, you have no case. If you want to run Windows - buy a copy of Windows! XP Pro OEM version is only $150 from NewEgg.com. What, really, is the problem?

  112. Catch-22 by SpaceLifeForm · · Score: 1

    How is a user going to be able to download the update that removes the update check?

    --
    You are being MICROattacked, from various angles, in a SOFT manner.
    1. Re:Catch-22 by cbr2702 · · Score: 1

      The check is server-side.

      --


      This post written under Gentoo-linux with an SCO IP license.
    2. Re:Catch-22 by DrSkwid · · Score: 1

      Are you sure it's not the WindowsUpdate ActiveX control one runs to be able to acess WindowsUpdate ?

      --
      There are places where the networks are not touching,and there are places where they are-Boeing's Lori Gunter
    3. Re:Catch-22 by cbr2702 · · Score: 1

      If the check were not server-initiated, it would be really easy for WINE to get around it.

      --


      This post written under Gentoo-linux with an SCO IP license.
  113. Did you purchase MS Office for WINE or WINDOWS? by Smilin · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Let's be clear about something: You bought MS Office for WINDOWS. You didn't buy MS Office for SOMETHING LIKE WINDOWS. You don't expect MS Office for Mac to run on Windows, why would you expect MS Office for Windows to run on something else? You've been lucky so far, but now your luck has run out.

    If you bought it then obviously it is your software and you can do what you want with it. Just don't expect MS to go to great lengths to help you run in an unsupported manner. It's like expecting Nintendo to help you get your ROM game running on a SNES emulator.

    I know you all love to hate Microsoft but I think they are being quite fair this time. WINE uses dlls and modules that were written by Microsoft yet they have not paid for them. Is WINE violating copyright? No, they are asking you to do that for them.

    I don't get the big deal anyway. What are you running Office on *nix for anyway? Shouldn't you be using that piece of crap, OpenOffice anyway you sellouts?

    I think this is definately Microsoft's way of acknowledging WINE. Of course my way of acknowledging flies is by pulling out a rolled up newspaper. It certainly doesn't mean I feel threatened.

    You don't even know what anti-trust means.

    1. Re:Did you purchase MS Office for WINE or WINDOWS? by grahamsz · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I'm not convinced.

      There's no expectation that Microsoft will work to put effort into keeping Office Wine compatible. However if it can be shown that they are specifically breaking it then it strikes me as an abuse of their monopoly.

      You should still be entitled to updates of any faulty software you've purchsed.

      This would be like ford voiding my warranty for putting non-ford sparkplugs in my car.

    2. Re:Did you purchase MS Office for WINE or WINDOWS? by malkavian · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You have a weird view there.. Using DLLs you've not paid for? You just bought office.. That means you've paid for it, fair and square..
      Why shouldn't you use them how you like?

      Nobody's expecting MS to go to any lengths to do anything to affect running in an unsupported environment.. Which is why you'll never find people using MS Office making support calls about it. It's the WINE team's job to do that, and they're doing that pretty well..

      It's nothing like getting Nintendo to do anything to get their ROMs working on a SNES emulator.. In face, more like Nintendo rewriting all their ROMs to specifically NOT work on a particular emulator.
      Largely a pointless task.
      Now, if MS wasn't a monopoly, they'd be doing what they could to get business in (hey, WINE is just getting them extra revenue, by allowing Linux users to purchase and use Windows programs). Being able to arbitrarily turn away paying customers says something about a business.

      As for not getting the big deal about using MS office on *NIX.. You've not worked in an office environment where people are throwing round documents with macros in just to format headings have you? They won't work in anything BUT MS Office.. Thus the need to run it in emulation..

      Now, I can understand MS turning around and saying 'Buy what you like of ours, but we're not going to support it on anything other than the environment we sold it for'.. But actually changing their code to specifically look for certain things, and STOP you using stuff if you choose to use it other than where they expect you to?

      It's like selling a town car, and specifically make it stop working if it detects mud under the wheels, as they only sold it to you to use on tarmac roads (and then only on the tarmac roads that you pay them a toll for).

    3. Re:Did you purchase MS Office for WINE or WINDOWS? by Smilin · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      I'm not talking about DLLs you've paid for. I'm talking about the ones you haven't paid for. The "secret sauce" for Windows is the libraries. WINE works at it's best when you pirate a copy of those libraries and use them.

      Looky:
      http://www.winehq.com/site/docs/wine-use r/config-d ll

      (that link above ends in "dll" /. seems to put an odd space in there)

      I think Nintendo SHOULD takes steps to make sure their ROMs do not run on emulators. They sold you the game to run on a Nintendo didn't they? How does allowing a ROM to run on an emulator help them sell Nintendos?

      One of the great things about Windows is all the applications available for it. If you hate MS and don't want to use Windows fine, don't let the door hit you in the ass. Just don't come whining about your sorely missed apps once you're over there. Deal with what you have and don't try to gripe or sue your way out of your predicament.

    4. Re:Did you purchase MS Office for WINE or WINDOWS? by op00to · · Score: 1

      Do you get made fun of a lot in school? You've got a hell of a lot of animosity towards people who are causing you no harm at all.

      Hey man, just cause you're not as cool as the Linux guys who smoke pot and cut class doesn't mean that you have to take it out on them. Go back and play with LDA^H^H^H Active Directory and reboot your server a few more times.

    5. Re:Did you purchase MS Office for WINE or WINDOWS? by Gr8Apes · · Score: 1

      And what if I happen to own said DLLs (ie, I happen to have bought a PC that came with the obligatory copy of Windows, therefore I have legal copies of everything required. What then?

      Heck, at one time I had 27 unused copies of various flavors of Windows because of this nonsense (since discarded). You've bought into the "piracy" spiel hook, line, and sinker.

      As for Nintendo, the money is in the ROM, not the system. They should care less if it runs in emulators, especially if that sells more ROMs.

      Lastly, Office is never a "sorely missed" application. I wish everyone would send base documents in RTF, or the LCD format supporting the needed features. MS doc(uments) suck, have unneeded features buried within them, and, worse yet, are self-corrupting at times. 99% of folks running Office in emulation would prefer not to run Office at all. It's lazy Windows users with bad applications that force the issue (another major violator: Visio - not even compatible with itself in some cases)

      --
      The cesspool just got a check and balance.
    6. Re:Did you purchase MS Office for WINE or WINDOWS? by malkavian · · Score: 1

      Actually, I do use Windows. I've been using MS software since the late 80's.. Been using UNIX since then too (and CP/M when it was in vogue back then, along with a dash of PrimeOS and VMS).

      As to your allusion that they're saying 'Infringe MS copyright by taking the DLLs from MS Windows', I can only assume you're talking about all the DLLs they refer to that say 'Leave as builtin, as Windows native doesn't really run under WINE'.
      A couple (mainly video decompression codecs) they say run better if you have the Windows native DLL, but it'll work with the WINE builtin. I have Windows (2000, fully licenced thank you). What copyright am I infringing by using a DLL from the Win partition on my dual boot workstation? None, I think.

      If you think Nintendo should sue anyone that runs a ROM on an emulator, then, methinks you also believe that people who reverse engineered the original PC BIOS should have been sued into oblivion, leaving the PC as an IBM only, expensive, underpowered and underperforming business machine, leaving it dead in the water.
      Maybe the Amiga would have picked up the slack to make a decent gaming machine, or perhaps even Apple but I can guarantee the IBM PC would never have been that.

      In fact, without that reverse engineer and 'emulation' of the IBM BIOS, Microsoft would never have had their foothold they do now. And a lot of the apps you hold dear would never have been written in the first place, unless they were written for an Apple (or whatever machine took it's place.. Perhaps a Sinclair machine even?).

      One of the Great things about the PC is the amount of things written for it (MS and Non-MS). So don't come whining because you hate all things non-microsoft. If you don't want to use something that's not the product of Emulation, go use a Mac. Just don't whine about all the apps you don't have that you had on Windows.
      Deal with what you have and don't gripe, or sue your way out of your predicament.

      I really can only imagine that you didn't grow up in the tech industry over the last 20 years (which I've been working/studying it for the last 24). I think the bit about the ROM letting them sell Nintendos is a bit of a giveaway about you not understanding the market.
      The games are definitely NOT there to let them sell more Nintendo boxes.. The boxes are there to let them sell games. Games are where the real money is. If they run well under an emulator, and they can sell MORE legit copies (which they can, if they make them available), then Nintendo will be making yet MORE money.
      Which, for any business, is a good thing.

      Emulation letting Office run would be a great thing if MS had an 'Office' company, which the proposed split of years back in the Monopoly proceedings were hinting at. They'd have jumped at the chance of widening their install base.
      However, MS, in the monopoly position are leveraging their strength to protect the core Windows OS (by stopping all periphery market software from running on any non-MS platform when it's perfectly capable of doing).

      In fact, it's not the first time MS has persued this tactic. In Windows 3.x, they deliberately inserted a check to see if you were running a non-MS DOS. If you were, it threw loads of error messages at you. For most non-tech users, this worried them enough to ditch their non-MS dos (which was actually more efficient in many cases) for the MS version. They were hauled up in the courts over that, and found guilty. After they'd killed the effective competition, as the courts took forever to decide. Just like they steamrollered BeOS by illegal business practices.

      No, I don't hate MS for competing in the days gone by with the likes of Lotus and Corel, and winning. What I do hate is what they do now to try and maintain their stranglehold on the industry.
      Winning by merit I can take (and Windows does indeed have it's merits, which I can appreciate for what they are), but sheer malicious practice on their part makes me more reluctant to pay them anything in future (they won't get money from me for XP, and I won't use it, due to that crap activation. I change hardware too frequently. If they carry on like that, I'll simply buy Apple later for business apps, and Linux for the emulation of what I can get for Games).

    7. Re:Did you purchase MS Office for WINE or WINDOWS? by Matilda+the+Hun · · Score: 1

      Let's be clear about something: You bought MS Office for WINDOWS. You didn't buy MS Office for SOMETHING LIKE WINDOWS. You don't expect MS Office for Mac to run on Windows, why would you expect MS Office for Windows to run on something else? You've been lucky so far, but now your luck has run out. Here's the thing: We do expect it to. This isn't asking them to go out of their way to support something on another operating system. This is asking them to NOT go out of their way to PREVENT something from being run on another operating system.

      --
      Tluin natha Linux xxizzuss uriu olt bwael mon'tun.
    8. Re:Did you purchase MS Office for WINE or WINDOWS? by nmaeone · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      You have a weird view there.. Using DLLs you've not paid for? You just bought office.. That means you've paid for it, fair and square..
      Why shouldn't you use them how you like?


      IIRC, you did not pay for those DLLs, you merely pay for the license to use them. What those DLLs do internally is none of your concern nor is it within your ability to change -- again, you did NOT pay for the DLL, or even a copy of that DLL, but only for the right to USE it. If that DLL checks for a specific version of Wine and breaks on purpose due to Wine's presence, you then also have the right not to use that DLL (I'm sure you clicked 'Agree' if you got that far), so switch to OO.o.

      The Power of Choice.

      -A

    9. Re:Did you purchase MS Office for WINE or WINDOWS? by civilizedINTENSITY · · Score: 1

      "They sold you the game to run on a Nintendo didn't they?"

      That is the problem in a nutshell. The idea that things are sold for a specific use, rather than sold to be put to use as the owner sees fit. This denies the utility attribute of possession. It denies fundamental property rights. This concept is fundamentally wrong and *should* be legislated against...

    10. Re:Did you purchase MS Office for WINE or WINDOWS? by MrResistor · · Score: 1

      Maybe you should learn a little something about how Wine works before you start leveling baseless accusations. Unless, perhaps, you like looking like an idiot?

      Yeah, Wine can use DLLs from an existing Windows installation. As long as that copy of Windows is legit, the owner is perfectly free to do that (it's called "First Sale", look it up). If the copy of Windows isn't legit, well, it was pirated already, and that has fuck-all to do with Wine, especially since it's been years since Wine has actually needed to have any part of a real Windows installation available in order to function.

      --
      Under capitalism man exploits man. Under communism it's the other way around.
    11. Re:Did you purchase MS Office for WINE or WINDOWS? by grahamsz · · Score: 1

      No it'd be like Honda saying that they would replace defective sparkplugs in your engine because you put it in a ford car.

  114. Targeting the faithful... by dantheman82 · · Score: 1

    Dvorak, it seems, drunk not a little Wine before he wrote his splendid article. It's really too bad that Microsoft is taking him for granted...

    --
    This sig donated to Pater. Long live /.
  115. "pointless" difference by notcreative · · Score: 1

    My dictionary defines "pointless" as "devoid of meaning" or "devoid of effectiveness". I think what you want to say is that the argument is "pedantic," which means like a "pedant," "one who makes a show of knowledge" or "one who is unimaginative or who unduly emphasizes minutiae in the presentation or use of knowledge." It is vital that you understand this distinction in your criticism!

  116. MS is required to support Office no matter what? by clymere · · Score: 1
    What makes you think MS is _required_ to give you any updates whatsoever for any of their products? I don't recall reading that anywhere. And the fact that they no longer offer such for older versions of their products further supports this point. If they aren't required to support Windows 95, how are they required to support the latest MS Office under WINE?

    Furthermore, that box for MS Office that you bought says explicticly on it that it requires windows, unless of course you bought the Mac version, which you guessed it, requires a Mac.

    There is absolutely no legitimate reason I can think of that anyone can require them to support their product in any way, shape, or form on a system that does not meet the specific requirements.

    Would you call them and complain because WindowsXP won't run on your 486? No, because the stated hardware requirements are right there on the box. So are the software ones.

    And of course, I have a legal copy of MS Office 2000 that I use in Crossover Office. One of the advantages to buying Crossover is that they specifically state full support for certain products(such as MS Office 2000), and they are the ones I can register my complaints with if that software suddenly stops working with their product.

    If there are problems with WINE itself, they are the ones you should be registering your complaints with. And as its a free and open-source product, your complaints are only going to go so far.

    --
    once you go slack, you never go back
  117. Re:Quote by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You miss the point - Microsoft are actively targeting Wine in an artificial way to deny application support. It's not a case of them saying "that's an unsupported OS, we can't help" - it's them saying "we must not allow a non-Windows OS to run our applications". Support doesn't come into it.

  118. interoperability by rbochan · · Score: 1

    interoperability (n)
    The ability of software and hardware on multiple machines from
    multiple vendors to communicate.

    Wasn't it Bill gates who was recently harping about how 'Linux makes interoperability harder'?
    Yes, yes it was.

    --
    ...Rob
    The American Dream isn't an SUV and a house in the suburbs; it's Don't Tread On Me.
  119. ah well by mattyrobinson69 · · Score: 2, Informative

    i wish the /. articles would start correcting misconceptions, so the whole discussion doesn't go like this:

    1. microsoft shouldn't have to update wine because they didn't write it
    2. the article is about updating office on wine, not wine itself

    1. microsoft shouldn't have to update wine because they didn't write it
    2. the article is about updating office on wine, not wine itself

    etc

  120. Well I bought... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Funny, I purchased a Mopar fan belt for my volkswagon and it didn't quite fit... so I altered it to work. Now that the fan belt broke, Mopar won't replace it even though it's still under warranty? How dare they!

    Bottom line, if you purchase a product meant for something and it doesn't work correctly on something else, that's your own damn fault. Why would a company continue supporting you if you didn't use the product as it was intended for? They shouldn't need some legal write-up to state this, it should be common sense. If I make football-shaped lighbulbs and someone uses it to play catch, then don't come bitching to me about it not working.

  121. Re:MS is required to support Office no matter what by UncleFluffy · · Score: 1

    What makes you think MS is _required_ to give you any updates whatsoever for any of their products?

    If I paid for something and it's broken, then I expect the manufacturer to repair it free of charge. If, however, we're talking about additional features then I would agree with you.

    --

    What would Lemmy do?

  122. Get it right.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    From their website(http://www.winehq.org/site/docs/wine-faq/i ndex#IS-WINE-AN-EMULATOR):
    "Wine Is Not a (CPU) Emulator"

  123. Bzzt. Thank you for playing! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You must be joking parent poster:
    "Wine isn't seen as a compliment because Microsoft is in the business of selling an operating system. They lose money if you run Office under Wine, and not under Windows. Sure, they could probably do a native port of Office for Linux, but then they wouldn't sell that copy of Windows that Office currently 'needs'."

    Microsoft has a 2400 person team building Office (I'm on that team -- Marketing is separate). We make Office for 3 versions of Windows (2K, XP, Server). It is a monumental effort to produce, debug, maintain (over 15 million lines of code) and test this suite of applications on each OS (not to mention in some 80 languages/cultures - not everyone who speaks your language is in the same culture). So try and tell a team which is already looking to cut down the testing matrix to two versions of Windows to spend tens or hundreds of millions of dollars supporting something new. See if we listen. The Mac Office is a different division which you will notice doesn't make software that runs on Windows.

    3 years per release * 2400 People = 7,200 man years * $80,000 estimated average salary = $576M spent on salary to develop the produce alone -- not including all the overhead, equipment, buildings and utilities, benefits, etc. That's a lot of effort. So the next time you think that that $500 Retail copy of Office is too expensive (the most expensive way to buy Office), think about the $2 Billion and 3 years of my life that went into producing it plus all the effort of the 10 versions before it.

    1. Re:Bzzt. Thank you for playing! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So many people working on the product, so much money being spend, but backwards compatibility (on file format) is impossible. Brilliant.

    2. Re:Bzzt. Thank you for playing! by SpacePunk · · Score: 1

      That many people, eh? Sounds fat and bloated.

      $500 dollars IS too expensive for a marriage to Office.

  124. Illegal Product Tying by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

    That "Office Update Web site" will no longer exist as a separate entity - that's been the MS strategy for months and months, something the spokesperson certainly would have known about.

    OK, so this is illegal product tying, right? Did their internal DOJ compliance office get hit by a bus?

    --
    My God, it's Full of Source!
    OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
  125. Re:No obligation... (now you've done it) by Harodotus · · Score: 1

    Just in case you hadn't thought of it, it's most likely that virus / spyware authors read Slashdot like the rest of us. Therefore you can now expect that feature to be included in the next generation of viruses headed to desktop near you.

    While I'm all for full disclosure to encourage vendors to fix bugs faster, lets not try to publicly disclose potentially innovative future virus features based on the results of our insightful analysis.

    The world is tough enough without well meaning, skilled and talented technical individuals doing the virus / spyware author's design work for them.

    It's probably futile to expect they wouldn't have thought of it themselves, but we could have hoped so. So please just be aware of what you're saying and moral range of your likely audience.

    --
    Its not users who are broken, it's systems not taking account their likely behaviour and fixing it technically.
  126. Re:MS is required to support Office no matter what by rekenner · · Score: 1

    "Furthermore, that box for MS Office that you bought says explicticly on it that it requires windows, unless of course you bought the Mac version, which you guessed it, requires a Mac."

    Correct me if I'm wrong, but under this logic, couldn't they also drop support for Crossover Office? Crossover Office is still run on Linux. According to what you said, MS could make a check for Crossover Office and not let you run updates. Would you be fine with that? No?

    What would you do in response? Bitch at Codeweavers? The only difference between running it in WINE and CO is that you paid for CO and CO support. If MS' way of blocking CO was completely sound, you'd be screwed out of running Office in the OS that, according to you, it doesn't have to run in, regardless of how it is run.
    I suppose this would probably annoy you, as it wouldn't take any extra effort from getting the working in CO than getting it to working if the person had Windows. Same situation here.

  127. Re:No obligation... (now you've done it) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    While I'm all for full disclosure to encourage vendors to fix bugs faster,

    Yeah I'm with you on that.


    lets not try to publicly disclose potentially innovative future virus features based on the results of our insightful analysis.


    What?! You sure changed your mind about that full disclosure thing pretty fast!

  128. Microsoft has no obligations -- period. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Microsoft is under no obligation to keep your emulators up to date. That is correct. They are, however, under obligation to keep your Office up to date.

    Re-read your End User License Agreement, and find the clause where it states that Microsoft is required to do this. I'm pretty sure you'll find it isn't there.

    According to the last License Agreement I read, they weren't legally required for their software to do anything, not even boot. Microsoft also disclaims liablity for any damages and all caused by it's software. They simply don't accept any obligations to the end user, period.

    This has nothing to do with fighting piracy; it is purely about anti-competitive behaviour.

    Microsoft is a convicted monopolist: and they recieved only a minimal punishment for being one. Denouncing Microsoft as anti-competive is like holding a press conference to announce that water was recently discovered to be wet.
    --
    AC

  129. In other news... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hightimes admits to targeting cannabis users.

    Thank you. You've been a great audience. Please drive home safely.

  130. I just "windows-updated".. by BigGerman · · Score: 1

    .. my CrossOver installation.
    Worked just fine. It seems to think it is Windows 98 being updated.

  131. Clearly Illegal, Obviously Immoral. by HopeOS · · Score: 1

    There are two problems with your theory.

    First, Microsoft can inform you of what operating systems it is guaranteed to run on. It cannot legally enforce this, directly or indirectly, without violating anti-trust laws regarding product bundling. It's already been convicted of doing just that, so we'll see what happens next.

    Second, if Microsoft actively leverages its customers to cease using Wine in this fashion, they are guilty of "Contract Interference". See "Intentional Interference With Prospective Economic Advantage" for more information. Companies selling products based on Wine for the purpose of running Office could likely sue on this basis.

    Now, whether anything becomes of this is a whole different story.

    -Hope

    1. Re:Clearly Illegal, Obviously Immoral. by analog_line · · Score: 1

      First, Microsoft can inform you of what operating systems it is guaranteed to run on. It cannot legally enforce this, directly or indirectly, without violating anti-trust laws regarding product bundling.

      Microsoft is not enforcing what operating systems Microsoft Office will run on. It is enforcing what operating systems it will provide an automatic update service to. Microsoft is not forced to allow anyone to use a service, otherwise AOL would be sued every time they tried to stop third party AIM clients from accessing the AIM service. As yet, Microsoft has not stopped WINE users from installing downloaded updaters. When that happens, you might have a point.

      See "Intentional Interference With Prospective Economic Advantage" for more information.

      Informative, but I don't see anything that damns Microsoft outright. Microsoft might argue that companies selling software intended to allow people to use licensed software intended to be used on Windows without needing to buy Windows as "intentional interference with prospective economic advantage" as well.

      IANAL, etc.

    2. Re:Clearly Illegal, Obviously Immoral. by HopeOS · · Score: 1

      Microsoft is not enforcing what operating systems Microsoft Office will run on. It is enforcing what operating systems it will provide an automatic update service to.

      One of the principal ideas behind consumer protect laws goes like this: a business may group customers into classes. Those classes may be defined by a number of legal means including inking of individual contracts and public or private pricing structures. It cannot be based on all the usual items like race, color, and sex. Some other non-obvious things that such classes cannot be based on: state of residence, height, last name, and most importantly, third-party business relationships. In short, customers have a legal expectation of equivalent service to all other customers in their class. If someone sues for breach of this law, they are stating that they did not receive equivalent service to members of their class. The company's defense must state that the service was in fact "equivalent" (to be decided by a jury) or by what means this customer is classified differently (also to be decided by a jury). If they state that downloading via a separate product using a separate website is equivalent, they lose. If they state "usage of third-party product" as a means of classification, they lose because that is not a legally justifiable means of classifying your customers. In fact, it's explicitly illegal. If they state, "failure to use our other product", then they lose because that is illegal for both anti-trust reasons and consumer protection reasons. In short, they lose. Eventually. After the lawyers are done.

      Meanwhile, by publicly offering updates to their customers, Microsoft is establishing an open contract to customers of a given product class. Any intentional action by Microsoft that prevents a consumer from receive equivalent service to any other customer in his class based on the fact that he uses WINE or does not use Windows, is illegal.

      This does not mean that Microsoft has to lift a finger to help WINE connect and get updates. It does not mean that it must provide updates to non-paying customers. It does mean that it must provide the exact same service to all customers who paid for Microsoft Office. In this regard, it has broken the law, since it is providing a degraded service with the consumer class partitioned illegally.

      With regard to AIM, AOL provides the service to paying AOL customers. Gaim and similar users are not entitled to nor have any expectation to free service from AOL. What would be illegal is if AOL's software refused to operate on a computer that had a competitor's product also installed. That would be a violation of consumer rights law.

      Informative, but I don't see anything that damns Microsoft outright.

      Specifically, I was referring to this item: "The actionable wrong lies in the inducement to break the contract or to sever the relationship, not in the kind of contract or relationship so disrupted, whether it is written or oral, enforceable or not enforceable." Microsoft has induced a situation in which the customer must discontinue use of WINE, a third-party product, un-related the Office product, or forfeit access to equivalent product upgrades that the consumer is legally entitled to based on consumer protection laws. That covers "inducement to break contract as well as sever [business] relationship" between the consumer and companies selling WINE-based products. The contract is implied fitness and warranty. The relationship is anything a jury defines it as, but in particular, future sales.

      -Hope

  132. Who will use MS software now? by antikristian · · Score: 1

    Now with the WGA you actually have to pay for your ms software and run the software on windows. I wouldn't buy MS-stock at this point if I were me...

    --
    A computer is a tool, but I am not. I use Linux
  133. Target VMware? by gatzke · · Score: 1

    Will they target VMware? Supposedly you need a full official copy of Windows to run office on a VMware emulator?

    How could they ever tell?

    Codeweaver's crossover office is awesome, if you have to use word, get it!

    1. Re:Target VMware? by The+MESMERIC · · Score: 1

      no.
      Microsoft has a strong partnership with that company.
      Microsoft strongest allies uses Vmware.

      I wonder if Win4Lin will be attacked though.

  134. Wine is not an emulator... by BBird · · Score: 1

    By definition, Wine Is Not an Emulator

  135. Quick! by pp · · Score: 1

    Start releasing useful open source software for Windows that adds that Wine-specific key the Office update stuff is checking for into the registry and refuses to run without it. (obviously people can remove the check, it's open source after all, but that's not the point :-) )

    Then watch poor people unable to install Office updates because they're not running a genuine version of Windows even when they are.

  136. Big Difference by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Not supporting Wine is fine. Actively detecting and rejecting their own product because it is running under Wine is called product bundling, and it is illegal under anti-trust laws.

  137. No it's not. by 3vi1 · · Score: 1

    By that loose mass-media definition, Windows XP is an emulator too, since it is "a device that is built to work like another". That is, I can run Windows 98 software on it, yet some of the DLLs used are completely different except for the function names.

    API compatibility via wrapper does not equal emulator. *True* software emulators do not execute binary code without interpretive translation or recompilation.

    I'm going to go emulate a Ford with my Chevy now.

    -J

  138. Consumer Protection Laws by HopeOS · · Score: 2, Insightful

    What you have stated is not true. While Microsoft has no responsibility to uphold their quality guarantees if the product is used contrary to their expectations, they cannot deny their publicly advertised and generally available services to their own customers without violating consumer protection laws. Furthermore, the stated "system requirements" can recommend specific products, but it cannot mandate them. That would be product bundling, and that is illegal under anti-trust laws. Even if Microsoft does not put "or equivalent" after those operating systems, legally, that is how it is interpreted in a court of law.

    If you would like an example, have you ever considered why the car industry cannot prevent you from putting a third-party stereo in your car or have a non-certified mechanic work on your engine, and yet you can still have your engine serviced by the dealership? If they denied you service on any similar basis, they would be breaking the law.

    -Hope

  139. Common Problem. by HopeOS · · Score: 1

    There is a common misconception that you share which is that an object can be identified by a dictionary definition. This is not so, and let me explain why.

    To identify an object, it is necessary to determine what it is not, rather than what it is. For example, if I define a car to be "a four wheeled passenger vehicle powered by a combustion engine" one would not be able to distinguish it from a van or a pickup truck or a school bus. In fact, no matter how much additional detail is added to the definition, there is a possibility that two dissimilar things may meet that description and not be the aforementioned object.

    Here too with WINE, certainly it is similar to an emulator. It shares many of the same traits as an emulator. What an emulator is not however, is a native implementation of an API. That alone invalidates any possibility of WINE being an emulator.

    Faulting the dictionary for not providing enough information to invalidate WINE as an emulator is to fail to understand what the dictionary is providing. It states: if you have an object, and that object is an "emulator", then one or more of the following definitions is true. It makes no other assurances, and thus, if you have an object and it is not an emulator, the dictionary can tell you absolutely nothing about it.

    In summary, a dictionary can tell you what something means; it cannot tell you if something you have can be called by a particular name. That is determined largely be consensus which you have accurately pointed out to be muddled. However, the authority for establishing criteria for identifying an object rests with the people who created the criteria in the first place, the experts in the field, so it is their consensus alone that matters. Everyone else is simply incorrect.

    Most languages have words in common usage that differ from their correct usage. The common usage does not become more correct as the number of people using it increases. This situation is no different.

    -Hope

  140. Re:No obligation... (now you've done it) by MaDeR · · Score: 1

    "It's probably futile to expect they wouldn't have thought of it themselves, but we could have hoped so." Geez... of course they think about it. You really think that black hats are idiots? And without good Slashdot people they will be like child in mist? Please!

    --
    What modern Obelix would say today? Of course, "Those crazy Americans!".
  141. Maybe by fm6 · · Score: 1
    It does sound like the same thing, at least to most people. But a lot of computer people reserve the word "emulation" for "hardware emulation". The "Wine Is Not an Emulator" acronym emphasizes this. Though its main purpose might be to use one of those recursive puns some geeks are excessively fond of.

    This sort of thing happens a lot. Experts define a word in a way that makes sense to them. ("Modem", short for "Modulator-Demodulator": a device for translating from analog to digital and back.) Then non-experts come into possession of a word and use it in a completely contradictory way that makes sense to them. ("DSL Modem": an all digital device used as a DSL endpoint.) The experts protest for a while at the corruption in jargon, but eventually give in. It'll take longer this time, though, because we'll have "Is Not an Emulator" to remind the nit-pickers.

  142. Games. by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 0

    Without Wine, how am I supposed to play Counter-Strike? Half-Life 2? Everquest/WOW?

    --
    Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
  143. Re:MS is required to support Office no matter what by mdamaged · · Score: 1

    I beleive it's called, implied warranty of merchantabilty..
    http://www.wvs.state.wv.us/wvag/faq/consumer/impwa rranties.html
    This is US specific, but the UK has a similar one as well.

    IANAL

    --
    Someone asked me the difference between ignorance and apathy, I told them I don't know and I don't care.
  144. Re:MS is required to support Office no matter what by MrResistor · · Score: 1

    What makes you think MS is _required_ to give you any updates whatsoever for any of their products?...If they aren't required to support Windows 95, how are they required to support the latest MS Office under WINE?...Furthermore, that box for MS Office that you bought says explicticly on it that it requires windows,

    Since you seem to have missed the news:

    MICROSOFT WINDOWS HAS BEEN LEGALLY DECLARED A MONOPOLY

    This means that it is ILLEGAL for them block use of their other products, such as Office, on other platforms. It is an anti-trust violation. All your other handwaving about Win95 and 486s is completely irrelevant.

    If there are problems with WINE itself, they are the ones you should be registering your complaints with.

    The problem isn't with Wine. The problem is being caused by Microsoft, and since THEY are the ones who are blocking updates to their products for certain customers, THEY are the ones who need to recieve the complaints.

    Oh, and Crossover Office IS Wine.

    --
    Under capitalism man exploits man. Under communism it's the other way around.
  145. Re:No obligation... (now you've done it) by predakanga · · Score: 1

    Notice the double negative?
    The grandparent was indeed implying that even if it wasn't discussed here, the blackhats would have thought about it, not that they only get their ideas from others.

  146. Re:Linux Zealots Need Windows Software? Hah! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If I had spare mod points, this would be +5 Insightful.

  147. never mind the acronym by The+MESMERIC · · Score: 1

    of course it is an emulator - dont be stupid.

  148. Re:No obligation... (now you've done it) by Harodotus · · Score: 1

    Well what I'm saying is that it's one thing to point out that checking for the registry key for Wine constitutes a security vulnerability and that it needs to fixed/not done and another thing to say that virus authors could / should create the Wine registry keys to block future patches and that this could increase the viability / resistance of a (or any) virus.

    One is full disclosure and with the other the virus author has to do his own analysis and think of using the vulnerability in his code.

    I know some smart Blackhats that are in the "of course I'd see that, it's in my next rev" camp, but there are beginning Blackhats for whom it would not be so obvious. I want to make it as difficult as I can to come up to speed on doing this, while still fully disclosing.

    I suppose it shows a deep conflict in my opinion on full disclosure and this is undoubtedly true. I don't like full disclosure, I just think there isn't anything better out there (maybe responsible delayed full disclosure, but the jury is still out on that one) and we've tried really hiding vulnerabilities and it didn't work.

    So now we're stuck with full disclosure's lesser evil. I'd prefer no evil at all, but nobody's come up with a practical way to do that.

    --
    Its not users who are broken, it's systems not taking account their likely behaviour and fixing it technically.
  149. A minorly neglected point... by Matilda+the+Hun · · Score: 1

    I note that a lot of people arguing Microsoft's case are neglecting a minor point.

    It seems that people are asserting Wine = Pirate. But this isn't the case. In fact, I'd like to make the assertation that people running Wine are probably less likely to be pirates.

    Consider this: People who're using Microsoft Office in Linux are usually running it because they need some bit of functionality that OpenOffice doesn't have. These people would, I think, be found more in a business setting, where you have people who (gasp) have the liscense to the product.
    Meanwhile, people in a non-business setting who run Linux are, like it or not, more likely to be geeks; and as such, will probably use OpenOffice over MSO on Wine, for reasons ranging from "I like it more" to "It's already there" to "M$O suXXorz, LOL".

    On the flip side, guess which people probably run pirated versions of MSO...? Right in one, boys and girls; the people who're running Windows. Percentage-wise, I'd say that the ratio of people running pirated versions of MSO with WINE, compared to the number of people running pirated versions of MSO with Windows, is probably something on the order of 1:200. Conservatively.

    Not, of course, that running pirated versions on any operating system is good (), but would it not be a better use of Microsoft's resources to work on a better way of keeping pirates in general away from their software, rather than try to mildly irritate an entire subset of their Office users?

    Of course, this is just my opinion. Flame away.

    --
    Tluin natha Linux xxizzuss uriu olt bwael mon'tun.
  150. It isn't magic... by civilizedINTENSITY · · Score: 1

    Actually what right do they have to even take notice of what OS you are running Office under? The "System Requirements" is a suggestion, not part of a contract or EULA. You can't possibly think that if I used my Office CDs to balance a short leg of my coffee table the BSA would find it actionable? The "Systems Requirements" is *not* magic.

  151. Re:MS is required to support Office no matter what by amliebsch · · Score: 1
    This means that it is ILLEGAL for them block use of their other products, such as Office, on other platforms. It is an anti-trust violation. All your other handwaving about Win95 and 486s is completely irrelevant.

    Uh huh, and can you please cite to the ass out of which you pulled this law? I'd like to look it up please. IAAL

    --
    If you don't know where you are going, you will wind up somewhere else.
  152. Re:MS is required to support Office no matter what by clymere · · Score: 1
    I'm aware of what CO is. It is _not_ WINE, it is a tweaked version of WINE, with a company standing behind it guaranteeing support of specific programs.

    What i said was that MS is not obligated to support WINE, I didn't say a thing about them intentionally breaking things in their products.

    My complaint is still valid: If MS Office does not work in WINE, you need to talk to WINE developers. If this is because MS has something illegal, thats between the WINE devs and MS.

    Calling MS for support for MS Office in WINE makes as much sense as calling them for support for Corel WordPerfect in Windows. They didn't sell you WINE, they sold you Office, and you aren't following the manual.

    Nobody supports you not following the goddamn instructions. If you are running WINE, you are on your own, and anyone involved in WINE will tell you as much.

    --
    once you go slack, you never go back
  153. Re:MS is required to support Office no matter what by MrResistor · · Score: 1

    Oh? Then explain how this is not tying Office to Windows.

    As for reading, how about the Sherman Act, followed by the MS anti-trust settlement.

    --
    Under capitalism man exploits man. Under communism it's the other way around.
  154. Re:MS is required to support Office no matter what by MrResistor · · Score: 1

    It is _not_ WINE, it is ... WINE

    Uh-huh.

    What i said was that MS is not obligated to support WINE, I didn't say a thing about them intentionally breaking things in their products.

    Well, that's exactly what they are doing.

    MS is under a legal obligation not to tie Office to Windows. If they take action to prevent non-Windows users from updating their copy of Office, they are going against that obligation.

    For any other company I would agree with you, but Microsoft, because they have been declared a monopoly, has to play by different rules.

    --
    Under capitalism man exploits man. Under communism it's the other way around.
  155. Excuse me but don't microsoft have a website? by tod_miller · · Score: 1

    Where is the press release on thier website? How come WHen the assholes announce something they include it on thier own hosting site, but when they screw over something that is providing compatibility in the name of 'anti-piracy' (I knew the US gov would help M$ through all this anti-monopoly stuff) they just nod and wink to zdnet?

    Post a full damn page and explanation on your site you fscking whoring bitches.

    --
    #hostfile 0.0.0.0 primidi.com 0.0.0.0 www.primidi.com 0.0.0.0 radio.weblogs.com