Challenging Microsoft on the Desktop
Dotnaught writes "As Microsoft moves to offer software-as-a-service with Windows Live, online companies are moving to challenge Microsoft on the desktop. In a decision that would have been seen as foolish a few years ago, file sharing and social networking company TransMedia plans to release desktop productivity apps (in conjunction with online ones) as lightweight Microsoft Office alternatives. Google, meanwhile, through its deal with Intuit, is colonizing desktop apps as it has done with browsers and search toolbars. Microsoft used to have a home field advantage on the desktop, thanks to Windows. Lately, operating system ownership is looking a lot less valuable."
Come on submitters! There is a generally accepted format for submissions like this! Please follow the rules. The format is:
_________ plans ________ killer!
In this case: TransMedia plans Office killer!
If you ignore these simple rules people may be confused and mistake this for actual news.
"reality has a well-known liberal bias" - Steven Colbert
When Word out did WordPerfect, it was through bundling it with OS, getting steep discounts on the price of OS to the OEM installers if they DONT install or sell WordPerfectb by throttling the revenue stream of WordPerfect by leveraging MSFT's monopoly in the OS space. That is how it won. And what happens after it wins? Just look at IE after it won the war with Netscape. Just look at the price increase in MsOffice while the hardware prices dropped by orders of magnitude. Starting from a pale imitation of a competing software is not the bad part. It is killing a superior product with underhand tactics that hurts us users. All of us.
sed -e 's/Chuck Norris/Rajnikant/g' joke > fact