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Founder of Go Computer, Inc. sues Microsoft

wantobe writes "From Yahoo! News 'Microsoft saw Go's PC operating system as a serious threat to its operating system monopoly and took swift covert action to 'kill' it just as it did the Netscape/Sun Java threat to its monopoly," according to Go's private action in federal court. ' Are Kaplan's complaints warranted, or is he just taking advantage of some recent Microsoft court losses and trying to get his cut? "

6 of 370 comments (clear)

  1. Will this be like the Be, Inc. lawsuit? by CyricZ · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Several years back Be, Inc., developers of BeOS, launched a similar lawsuit against Microsoft. While it was touted as the case that would demolish Microsoft, I believe they ended up settling. So I wouldn't be surprised if we saw a repeat in this situation.

    --
    Cyric Zndovzny at your service.
  2. Re:Kooks by MooseByte · · Score: 4, Interesting

    3. Pay off gov't or company suing them.
    4. Profit.

    With all the dirt that's coming up as one antitrust suit cascades into another though, I start to wonder just how long Step 4 will remain viable for MS. Especially after the US$850 million settlement with IBM (which only settled some of the claims there, IIRC).

    To paraphrase a famous quote from a US Congressman, "A billion here, a billion there, pretty soon you're talking about real money."

    Karma's a bitch, and MS has bad karma by the cargo ship load to burn off.

  3. Re:Microsoft has a point... by szo · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Even if the technology was not there in '94, Go was a company comitted to develop it. May or may not they would suceeded with it by let's say '96, if they had the chance. Instead, I think something like this happened:

    1, Go starts do develop the technology.
    2, Need money, so make publicity, attract investors.
    3, MS smells competition, announces similar product
    4, investors think: why should I invest in Go, when MS will soon have the same product (competing with MS never good!), which (according to MS) will be as good as or better, run on windows, thus instantly have all win application, integrated, etc, you know the MS drill about a new product.
    5, Without money, Go folds.
    6, MS suddenly realizes that the handwriting is not so hot.
    7, The handwriting development stops for years, the world is set back in this field by about 5 years.

    MS did something illegal? Will be hard to prove. But they were well avare that anything they say, people listen, and abused their position.

    Szo

    --
    Red Leader Standing By!
  4. Re:Pen-based computing is a fairly recent phenomen by Kevin+Burtch · · Score: 5, Interesting


    I have several NCR 3125 NotePad computers that originally ran PenPoint OS.
    These devices were what Microsoft now calls "Tablet PCs".

    When they first came to market, Microsoft panicked and announced "Pen Extensions for Windows" (which added very little to Windows 3.1) and claimed that a buch of new systems were coming out to use it. Typical Microsoft vaporware tactics... everyone decided to wait for the wonderful new MS product instead of buying the PenPoint devices, and the market for them collapsed.

    Considering that it took them this long to actually produce a product, they obviously only made the annoucement to kill any potential competitor from gaining a foothold.
    Call it a conspiracy theory if you wish, but it's a court-proven tactic that MS loves to (ab)use and is quite famous for.

    The handwriting recognition in PenPoint was actually very impressive, by the way.

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    - Preferences: Solaris 10 (servers), Ubuntu (desktops), Solaris 11 (personal servers) -
  5. happened to us too... by micromuncher · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I don't think Kaplan's complaints are without merrit... because it happened to us.

    I worked at a company making "digital delivery" ware - stuff that allowed try-before-buy and key-based product unlocking from CD.

    Microsoft approached us with interest in the product. However, we could never get them to sign an agreement where they would commit to deploying the technology. They wanted absolutely every detailed spec including code for evaluation, without committing... it suffices to say after a few months with no agreement, we told them we would not release the jewels without an agreement where a product resulted.

    Within two weeks, Microsoft announced their own vapour competetive technology. Its FUD department was publishing slander against our product (their security experts saying DES was better than FEAL, lol). Microsoft was lobbying NTT against us as well as some of our clients. Some new clients bailed because they said "We'll wait for that microsoft solution."

    Does this sound like fair trade practice?

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    /\/\icro/\/\uncher
  6. Was MS even a monopoly then? by dirk · · Score: 4, Interesting

    My first thought is that MS didn't even qualify as a monopoly in 1994. This was when Windows 3.1 was out, and there were still a few different versions of DOS. MS was not the juggernaut it is now, no where near. Many PCs shipped with OSes other than MS. If MS wasn't a monopoly at the time (and I think it would be hard to say they were) there was nothing wrong with them asking Intel not to invest in Go. If it happened today, there would be no question of the legality (as in none). But assuming it was malicious and illegal then based on MS now is just wrong.

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    "Information wants to be expensive" - Stewart Brand, the same guy who said "Information wants to be free"