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Seven States Extend Microsoft Antitrust Judgment

Technical Writing Geek writes "A number of states have moved to extend antitrust judgments against Microsoft until the year 2012. California, Connecticut, Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, and the District of Columbia are all contributing to the decision, and have released a report on the factors that lead to the extension. 'The report laments the state of OEM web browser bundling, saying that no major OEM currently distributes a browser other than Microsoft's Internet Explorer (IE). This is important due to the rise of new middleware platforms (such as Adobe's AIR and Microsoft's own Silverlight) that can create rich, OS-independent, web-based applications.' The report is slightly self-contradictory, but raises some valid points."

200 comments

  1. they're no stranger to that idea by User+956 · · Score: 3, Funny

    A number of states have moved to extend antitrust judgments against Microsoft

    Ah yes, the old "embrace and extend" has come full circle.

    --
    The theory of relativity doesn't work right in Arkansas.
    1. Re:they're no stranger to that idea by nschubach · · Score: 1

      Wouldn't the judgments have to "Extinguish" first?

      --
      Every time I start to have faith in humanity, I ruin it by driving to work between 7 and 8 am.
  2. Just what I want - by TJ_Phazerhacki · · Score: 2, Insightful
    A million different browsers with no standards!And before you say it - we need standards before we get browsers, not browsers that generate standards.

    For the record, between IE, Firefox, and Everything Else, just because OEM's ship the default browser doesn't mean that there isn't anything else available - it means more often that people are far too lazy to look.

    --
    Physics is nothing like religion. If it was, we'd have an easier time trying to raise money!
    1. Re:Just what I want - by necro2607 · · Score: 1

      "we need standards before we get browsers, not browsers that generate standards."

      No probs, check it out: HTML 4.01 Specification :)

    2. Re:Just what I want - by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The truth is, Wyld Stallyns will never be a super band until we have Eddie Van Halen on guitar.

    3. Re:Just what I want - by morgan_greywolf · · Score: 1

      No probs, check it out: HTML 4.01 Specification :) I think what the grandparent there meant was, "we need standards that browsers other than Opera and Safari actually follow."

    4. Re:Just what I want - by DustyShadow · · Score: 1

      I'm pretty sure Microsoft purposely keeps IE from following the standards so more websites are developed for only IE. Doing this makes most of the web require Windows for correct viewing of it.

    5. Re:Just what I want - by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Dear TJ P, you're a retard. Sucks to be you.

      Also, whoever clueless sucker modded him 'insightful', is clueless too.

      Way to go guys, you're rock solid professionals.

    6. Re:Just what I want - by brunascle · · Score: 1

      the HTML isnt really a problem. it's mostly CSS and occasionally javascript and DOM.

      but one that thing would really help is if they made a standard for the window object model and designMode. designMode in particular is one big glorious pile of chaos.

    7. Re:Just what I want - by nschubach · · Score: 2, Funny

      Microsoft would never do that, just look at DirectX...oh shoot, you might be right.

      --
      Every time I start to have faith in humanity, I ruin it by driving to work between 7 and 8 am.
    8. Re:Just what I want - by bunratty · · Score: 3, Informative

      If you check out Web browser standards support summary from Web Devout you can see Firefox 2 (and of course other Mozilla-based browsers) and Konqueror have some pretty good standards support. It's really just IE that doesn't support the standards well, judging from the fact that IE has the lowest percentage of support in most categories.

      --
      What a fool believes, he sees, no wise man has the power to reason away.
    9. Re:Just what I want - by davester666 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      What' makes this web-standards argument kind of ridiculous for Microsoft is that they say they can't follow the standards because it would break too many pages, which use non-standard HTML because IE doesn't follow the standard... MS can't follow the standard now, because they didn't follow the HTML standard in the past with either their web-viewing software OR their web-creation software, which was, of course, to aid in monopolizing the internet/crush their competition [which was Netscape at the time].

      --
      Sleep your way to a whiter smile...date a dentist!
    10. Re:Just what I want - by sh3l1 · · Score: 1

      Wow, I'm surprised Firefox beat opera. Opera users are always talking about how opera can do perfectly on the acid test, but Firefox supports more standards.

      --
      Help Me! I'm trapped in the tubes! Oh noes! Here comes a internet!
    11. Re:Just what I want - by D4rkn1ght · · Score: 1

      I think what the grandparent there meant was, "we need standards that browsers other than Opera and Safari actually follow."

      Agree. There are plenty of capable browsers out there been exclude because sites are only coded for the proprietary ways of the most used browsers. That is Firefox, Opera, IE, and now Safari.

      On the Mac side alone there are plenty of good browsers like iCab, Shiira, OmniWeb, etc, that are very capable of using those sites.

      If web masters make certain that their pages are validated to the standards, the responsibility then will shift to the browser programmers. This will be better than dealing with the stupid browser requirement of sites like Yahoo, the new Hotmail, etc.
    12. Re:Just what I want - by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      A million different browsers with no standards!

      What dickhead modded this astroturf up?

      Microsoft are the only ones setting out to break standards. Insightful, my arse!

    13. Re:Just what I want - by lsatenstein · · Score: 1

      Alternate browsers should be on the cd or dvd that would accompany a computer. Or better still, no browser is installed on the computers at all. Then an icon should appear to ask you which browser you would like to use. That method should/could level the playing field.

      --
      Leslie Satenstein Montreal Quebec Canada
    14. Re:Just what I want - by Kazoo+the+Clown · · Score: 1

      I'm sure Microsoft would be perfectly willing to submit some convoluted standard with the name "open" in it that contains a lot of specifications like "render this element just like IE4.0 does" in it...

  3. District of Columbia by Apple+Acolyte · · Score: 4, Insightful

    DC = !a state

    --
    Part of the hardcore faithful who believed in Apple long before it was cool again to do so
    1. Re:District of Columbia by calebt3 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      That's not off-topic! The headline says seven states. I count six states and D.C.

    2. Re:District of Columbia by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Maybe the moderators are as educated as the submitter. Or worse yet, maybe they are both in the same.

    3. Re:District of Columbia by DragonWriter · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      DC = !a state


      While true in a general sense, this statement is not true in the context of many important federal laws. In particular, relevant to the issue here, in the context of the Clayton Act which authorizes suits by State attorneys-general to enforce certain provisions of anti-trust law, a "State" is defined (15 U.S.C. Sec. 15g) thus:

      The term "State" means a State, the District of Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, and any other territory or possession of the United States.


      So the initial moderation of your post as "off-topic" was quite proper; insofar as it is true at all, it is true only in a sense irrelevant to the present discussion.
  4. Washington D.C.? by oahazmatt · · Score: 1

    Hmm, it's amazing what they'll make a state these days.

    --
    Those who believe the Internet is private,
    find their privates are on the Internet.
    1. Re:Washington D.C.? by tkdtaylor · · Score: 0

      Actually the article just says District of Columbia, there's no mention of Washington D.C. and I've been blasted by an American before for leaving D.C. off a list of states. As far as the postal service is concerned it's a state.

    2. Re:Washington D.C.? by vux984 · · Score: 1

      As far as the postal service is concerned it's a state.

      Why? Because it has a usps state abbreviation?

      Because so do Guam (GU), Micronesia (FM), Palau (PW), Mariana Islands (MP), Marshall Islands (MH), Virgin Islands (VI), American Samoa (AS) and Puerto Rico (PR)

      Not to mention they have state codes like: AP (Armed Forces Pacific)...

    3. Re:Washington D.C.? by tkdtaylor · · Score: 1

      I am not an American so I am definitely not an expert on this subject, I was just pointing out that the summary and article say "District of Columbia" not Washington D.C. and I thought there was a difference between the two. Please correct me if I'm wrong.
      Can you also let me know which state Washington D.C. is in if D.C. isn't a state.

    4. Re:Washington D.C.? by oahazmatt · · Score: 1

      It's not in a state, I believe the land was "liberated" from another state. Think of it as an autonomous government playground.

      --
      Those who believe the Internet is private,
      find their privates are on the Internet.
    5. Re:Washington D.C.? by r_jensen11 · · Score: 1

      I think they essentially declared themselves a state when Colbert featured their Shadow Congresswoman on Better Know a District

    6. Re:Washington D.C.? by DragonWriter · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      As far as the postal service is concerned it's a state.


      More relevant to the present discussion, as far as the laws allowing State attorneys-general to sue for antitrust violations are concerned, the District of Columbia is a state (see 15 U.S.C. Sec. 15g).

    7. Re:Washington D.C.? by vux984 · · Score: 1

      I am not an American so I am definitely not an expert on this subject

      I am not an American either, but that's neither here nor there. I've met born and raised American's who don't know this stuff.

      I was just pointing out that the summary and article say "District of Columbia" not Washington D.C. and I thought there was a difference between the two. Please correct me if I'm wrong.

      "Washington D.C." properly written as "Washington, D.C." (see the comma I added?) refers to the city of Washington in the District of Columbia. While "District of Columbia" would refer to the entire district, not just the city of Washington within it. So, technically, yes, they are different.

      In actual practice, there really isn't any difference between them and the terms can be used pretty much interchangeably.

      Can you also let me know which state Washington D.C. is in if D.C. isn't a state.

      D.C. isn't a state, and it is not in a state. It is a separate federal district, governed directly by Congress (although most actual governing is left to the city government and its mayor).

      Fun Fact: The District of Columbia, because it is not a state, has no voting representation in the federal government. It does elect a single congressman (actually a congresswoman at the moment. congress-person? congress-critter?) who can participate in debates etc, but may not vote. It has no senate representation at all.

    8. Re:Washington D.C.? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All of that and you left out the fact that they still have to pay federal taxes. Whatever happened to no taxation without representation?

    9. Re:Washington D.C.? by tkdtaylor · · Score: 1

      Wow, at least now I'm informed the next time an American gives me heck for leaving D.C. off the list of states

  5. 7 States? by n0dna · · Score: 1

    Despite the delusions of Mayor Adrian Fenty and Pretend-Representative Eleanor Holmes Norton, Washington D.C. is a city, not a state.

    That's why it doesn't have congressional delegates or a Governor.

    The rest of the article is similarly well researched and written.

    1. Re:7 States? by ianare · · Score: 1

      The District of Columbia, founded on July 16, 1790, is a federal district as specified by the United States Constitution. The U.S. Congress has ultimate authority over the District of Columbia, though it has delegated considerable authority to the municipal government. source

      It is neither a state nor a city.
    2. Re:7 States? by brunascle · · Score: 1

      DC is a district but Washington is a city. Hence "Washington comma D.C."

    3. Re:7 States? by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Actually, no. Washington DC is a distric that is governed by the senate. The only reason there is a mayor is because congress felt is was spending too much time dealing with it's problems.

      At anytime a simple vote in the house can undo or override anything the local government of Washington DC does. The Idea behind it is to not show favoritism to any state with the location of the government and to keep any favoritism to the location neutral. So while washington DC is refereed to as a city, it is only in the common terminoligy that we use to reference an area of that size. It is done so in much the same ways that towns are called cities and so on. The truth of it is that City, town, municipality and everything else have a definition described by attribute in state law. Seeing how DC isn't in a state, it cannot have a legally defined city status. But we commonly call it a city because it is familiar and easy to do.

    4. Re:7 States? by DragonWriter · · Score: 1

      Despite the delusions of Mayor Adrian Fenty and Pretend-Representative Eleanor Holmes Norton, Washington D.C. is a city, not a state.

      That's why it doesn't have congressional delegates or a Governor.

      The rest of the article is similarly well researched and written.


      Under the law under which D.C. and the other states brought the antitrust actions at issue in TFA against Microsoft, D.C. is a State. What D.C. is or is not in other contexts is hardly relevant. I suspect your understanding of the rest of the issues involved is about on par with that demonstrated by your comment about D.C.
  6. What to do... by calebt3 · · Score: 4, Insightful
    From the article:

    This last bit gets into the argument over Microsoft's current desktop monopoly and what, if anything, is to be done about it. Simple. Take the advice of that one EU thinktank and force OEM un-bundling.
    1. Re:What to do... by plague3106 · · Score: 1

      So... make MS take out IE, just to have OEMs put it back in? Or do you think any modern OS should come without any browser at all?

    2. Re:What to do... by edraven · · Score: 1

      I would say that the fact that you can only see two options, IE or no browser at all, is perhaps the best summary of exactly why this is a problem.

    3. Re:What to do... by calebt3 · · Score: 1

      Well, I would really like to see computers come without an OS, but without a browser would be fi... Wait... How will they download new browser? Better add .exe's for IE, Firefox, and Opera on the desktop.

    4. Re:What to do... by plague3106 · · Score: 1

      Why is it a problem? OEMs don't want to waste time installing three different programs that do the same thing. So if IE is forced to be removed, browsers now will have to pay OEMs to be placed on as the browser.

      FF has gained a respectable market, even though IE was bundled. I think that proves more than anything that there is no problem.

    5. Re:What to do... by nschubach · · Score: 1

      Until last week, my parent's friend hadn't even heard about Firefox when I installed it after cleaning off his trojan and porn infested Windows installation. I'd say there's still a problem.

      --
      Every time I start to have faith in humanity, I ruin it by driving to work between 7 and 8 am.
    6. Re:What to do... by Richard+Steiner · · Score: 2, Interesting

      A modern OS should come bundled with whatever browser the seller of a given machine wants to install or uninstall.

      That includes Firefox, Opera, MSIE, or whatever else the OEM desires. The choice should be with the OEM.

      The problem many of us have with Windows preinstalled on machines is the fact that IE is always present in those cases and the other browsers are never present. That creates a tremendous bias amongst nontechnical users towards MSIE and the way it behaves.

      --
      Mainframe/UNIX Bit Twiddler and long time Windows/Linux Hobbyist.
      The Theorem Theorem: If If, Then Then.
    7. Re:What to do... by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      I would say they would download the new browser the same way we did before the IE was bundled in ever MS OS install. open a command promt and type ftp://someserver.com/browsers/ then ls to view the list of browsers and then type get Browser name.

      Or better yet, they could just put the browsers on a disk and let you browse the folders on the disk to install optional hardware. It could also include links for more options where it retrieves a list from the internet somewhere. And no, you don't need a browser to do that. the link can be a .bat or .exe file that uses other basic clients built into almost every network capable operating system.

      Seriously though, it would probably make a better user experience for everyone if they had to pick a browser and do something besides turning the computer on when they first buy it.

    8. Re:What to do... by calebt3 · · Score: 1

      Can't do that. That would be exposing n00bs to the command line. Must not shatter their innocence.

    9. Re:What to do... by calebt3 · · Score: 1

      Maybe force MS to charge the same amount for an OEM copy for all OEM's rather than charging more for the ones that want to install Firefox (a practice mentioned somewhere else in this discussion)?

    10. Re:What to do... by LO0G · · Score: 1

      Sources? In the past, Microsoft used to do what you said (charge more if you didn't take the Microsoft stuff), but the DoJ stopped that.

      As far as I know, none of the PC manufacturers are required to include IE as the default browser - they can do whatever they want and Microsoft can't stop them.

      Which, if true, implies that they must have a different reason for choosing to include IE as the default browser on their machines.

      Maybe the Mozilla foundation should start paying OEMs to include Firefox, just like Google pays OEMs to include the Google toolbar.

    11. Re:What to do... by chrismcb · · Score: 1

      You are right, we should force Microsoft to unbundle most of the software, like IE and Media Player.

      The first thing the user does after installing the OS is to connect up to the internet and download whichever browser they want.

    12. Re:What to do... by Dan+Ost · · Score: 1

      Thank you for cleaning up a problem computer.
      Every computer cleansed thusly makes the internet better for all of us.

      --

      *sigh* back to work...
  7. Ow! My wrist! Why, I oughta... by edraven · · Score: 5, Interesting

    So the totally ineffectual measures that've been taken to punish Microsoft for misusing its illegal monopoly to eliminate or marginalize its competition are going to be ineffectual for a longer period of time? That'll show 'em.

    I've said it before, and I'll say it again. You cannot punish a corporation the same way you punish an individual, because they don't care about the same things. There's only one thing a corporation values, so there's only one thing you can take away from one: market share. Pass a measure forcing Microsoft and its subsidiaries to halve their advertising budget for, say, five years.

    1. Re:Ow! My wrist! Why, I oughta... by AuMatar · · Score: 1

      Sure you can- get rid of the corporate veil. For every $100,000 a company is fined, the CEO and board of directors must stay 1 month in jail, with no possibility of parole. Watch corporations follow the law instantly.

      --
      I still have more fans than freaks. WTF is wrong with you people?
    2. Re:Ow! My wrist! Why, I oughta... by edraven · · Score: 1

      As I understand it, the concept of incorporation was created to overcome the chilling effect on commerce of the individual's natural reluctance to take on personal responsibility for a whole company. Basically what you're saying is take that protection away. You might have a hard time finding CEOs and directors, and they'd probably expect higher pay than they already receive.

    3. Re:Ow! My wrist! Why, I oughta... by falconwolf · · Score: 1

      Sure you can- get rid of the corporate veil. For every $100,000 a company is fined, the CEO and board of directors must stay 1 month in jail, with no possibility of parole. Watch corporations follow the law instantly.

      Even better, void the Corporate Charter. Corporate charters were originally granted only if the corporation served the public good. However as corporations gained power they were able to have the public good requirements removed.

      Falcon
    4. Re:Ow! My wrist! Why, I oughta... by AuMatar · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The reason corporations don't care about laws is that there are no consequences for the people running it. Bring back the consequences and you'll bring back respect for the law. The idea was never to give the people running corporations complete immunity- it was to give investors limited immunity, so people who weren't running the show could invest in minority positions and not take on huge legal risks. In other words, to protect the small-medium investors, not to protect the CEOs. The major owners and controllers of a company *have* to be personally liable if you want any accountability from the company.

      --
      I still have more fans than freaks. WTF is wrong with you people?
    5. Re:Ow! My wrist! Why, I oughta... by nschubach · · Score: 1

      Pass a measure forcing Microsoft and its subsidiaries to halve their advertising budget for, say, five years.

      Kind of like child support, couldn't the law force MS to give half it's advertising budget anyone making a competitive product? ...or all of it (based on the average budget for the past 'n' years) for a certain period of time?
      --
      Every time I start to have faith in humanity, I ruin it by driving to work between 7 and 8 am.
    6. Re:Ow! My wrist! Why, I oughta... by edraven · · Score: 1

      Wasn't the tobacco industry fined and the fines used to produce anti-smoking advertising campaigns? Seems like there's a precedent.

    7. Re:Ow! My wrist! Why, I oughta... by FridayBob · · Score: 1

      Better yet, prevent retailers from bundling operating systems with new computers. At the very least, you'll see M$ lower their prices as a result.

    8. Re:Ow! My wrist! Why, I oughta... by edraven · · Score: 1

      I think the essence of what we're digging at here is the duality of corporations. On the one hand they are, in a sense, a separate entity. This is how the law seems to treat them today. On the other hand, they are a collective entity, made up of the people responsible for making decisions pertaining to the use of their resources.

      Your explanation of the origin of incorporation is perfectly correct, according to my understanding. But for one reason or another the law (in America, at least) has over time extended that concept of incorporation to the point where people now talk about a corporation's right to Constitutionally protected free speech.

      So I think what we're talking about is two different ways of looking at the same problem: that corporations are treated like people without a good understanding of how they differ from people in the mix. In essence there are no meaningful consequences to either the people running the corporation, nor to the corporation itself. What you're saying, as I understand it, is basically to stop looking at corporations as people and instead look at the people. What I'm saying is if you're going to look at corporations as people, you have to make the punishment fit not only the crime, but the criminal.

    9. Re:Ow! My wrist! Why, I oughta... by edraven · · Score: 1

      That's true, a lot of MicroSoft's monopoly power comes from their influence over OEMs and retailers. Another idea I've had in the past (that you've just reminded me of) was to increase the cost for other corporations to do business with a corporation that had been found guilty of illegal practices. If a company has to pay an extra tax in order to use or install MicroSoft products, they're encouraged to start looking at options. And as someone else has pointed out, that tax money could be earmarked for advertising campaigns aimed at opening up the markets that MicroSoft's monopoly has closed.

    10. Re:Ow! My wrist! Why, I oughta... by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      This is absolute BS. Any CEO can be criminally punished for their actions of running a company. The problem you have is when a lower level employee does something wrong and the CEO isn't punished along with them. But that only goes with our supposed spirit of justice where your innocent until proven guilty and no guilt by association.

      You see, When Employee X, whether a lower level supervisor, a member of the corperate ladder or a peon pushing parts together does something illegal, you don't remember it as Joe Blow did this, your remember Evil Company screwed this. But arresting the person who broke the law is sufficient for punishment because they are the lawbreakers not "evil corporation". And this is still true if Evil Corporation benefits from Joe's illegal activities. Now if Joe acted because of orders from higher up, then they are held accountable too. And if the CEO made the orders, or done something illegal, they too are held accountable.

      But the confusion has you suggesting that we punish someone who has nothing to do with the illegal action outside employment association. This can become a scary thing really fast. Do you want to be on trial for drug charges because someone you know and have a connection with was caught with drugs? I know it sounds ridiculous but it really is the same thing. Suppose the person you know bought you dinner the night before he was busted. You now have a financial connection and benefited from his drug activity. Slap a corperate cover over it and it is almost identical.

    11. Re:Ow! My wrist! Why, I oughta... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The reason companies go inc or whatever IS to protect the owners from personal risk. You can sue a company and the company pays. You cannot go after the owner personally by going after the company. The owner's personal wealth is not touchable.

      You may sue the owner personally but you need a reason. One cannot sue Gates or Jobs for something that their company did.

    12. Re:Ow! My wrist! Why, I oughta... by edxwelch · · Score: 1

      > Pass a measure forcing Microsoft and its subsidiaries to halve their advertising budget for, say, five years.

      That could backfire horribly. I can see the headlines now:

      MS sales increase despite ban on advertising. Savings cause MS profits to skyrocket. "The goverment fine was the best thing that ever happen to us", quotes MS spokesman.

    13. Re:Ow! My wrist! Why, I oughta... by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

      I've said it before, and I'll say it again. You cannot punish a corporation the same way you punish an individual, because they don't care about the same things.

      I agree.

      There's only one thing a corporation values, so there's only one thing you can take away from one: market share.

      I disagree. The company cares about money and the people directing the company care about money, power, and their own well being.

      Pass a measure forcing Microsoft and its subsidiaries to halve their advertising budget for, say, five years.

      The brilliance of capitalism within a free market is that it relies upon greed and self interest to bring benefit to society. As companies compete with one another to give customers what they want, they are rewarded based upon how well customers believe they have succeeded in that.

      Because of MS's monopoly, that is no longer the case and the only way I think things will be fixed is if MS loses that monopoly. Forget about fines or bans on advertising. Break MS up into at least two companies, each with full rights to the source code for Windows, patents, copyright, and trademarks, as well as half the resources (both manpower and money). Forbid these new companies from any collaboration or non-public communication. The desire of the new companies to make money will mean each will start working on a version of Windows that they think OEMs will like more than the other former MS company. OEMs will choose based upon which they think computer buyers will want. Both will be able to bundle anything they want and it won't be a problem because it won't be backed up with the monopoly influence since people can always choose to go with the other former MS company. In short order the market will open up, people will have real choices, and innovation will return.

    14. Re:Ow! My wrist! Why, I oughta... by jayp00001 · · Score: 1

      What good would that do? The problem is there's no good reason why IE isn't good enough for the average person. IE has flaws but Firefox simply isn't that much better than IE to make the average schmo stand up and take notice.

    15. Re:Ow! My wrist! Why, I oughta... by MrKaos · · Score: 1

      Break MS up into at least two companies
      That might actually be doing M$ a favour if this guy's allegations are true. What about a settlement that means something to competition and getting M$ to declare patent indemnity for all Linux Vendors or force them to publish the patents in question?

      Seems to me the competition only needs a little leeway to be able to move forward and that browser wars don't mean much anymore.

      --
      My ism, it's full of beliefs.
    16. Re:Ow! My wrist! Why, I oughta... by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

      What about a settlement that means something to competition and getting M$ to declare patent indemnity for all Linux Vendors or force them to publish the patents in question?

      I'm not opposed to software patent reform, but I don't see it as related strongly to monopoly abuse.

      Seems to me the competition only needs a little leeway to be able to move forward and that browser wars don't mean much anymore.

      On the contrary, I think the browser tie-in is one of MS's biggest competition blockers. The prohibitive cost of moving away from technologies and services tied to IE is a large factor in preventing both companies and individuals from moving away from Windows and to other platforms. MS's refusal to support modern Web standards have prevented the Web from being a real platform for applications that would be OS agnostic.

    17. Re:Ow! My wrist! Why, I oughta... by drsmithy · · Score: 1

      Break MS up into at least two companies, each with full rights to the source code for Windows, patents, copyright, and trademarks, as well as half the resources (both manpower and money). Forbid these new companies from any collaboration or non-public communication. The desire of the new companies to make money will mean each will start working on a version of Windows that they think OEMs will like more than the other former MS company. OEMs will choose based upon which they think computer buyers will want. Both will be able to bundle anything they want and it won't be a problem because it won't be backed up with the monopoly influence since people can always choose to go with the other former MS company. In short order the market will open up, people will have real choices, and innovation will return.

      This is one of the sanest suggestions on the topic I've ever seen.

    18. Re:Ow! My wrist! Why, I oughta... by edraven · · Score: 1

      If that actually happened, the effect on the advertising industry itself would be positively crushing. Which would send me weeping to my room, I can tell you.

    19. Re:Ow! My wrist! Why, I oughta... by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

      Jumping Jesus on a pogostick! drsmithy agrees with something I posted! Surely the end is nigh. :)

    20. Re:Ow! My wrist! Why, I oughta... by drsmithy · · Score: 1

      Jumping Jesus on a pogostick! drsmithy agrees with something I posted! Surely the end is nigh. :)

      That's because you've started making suggestions that aren't just about punishing people who choose to use Windows :).

    21. Re:Ow! My wrist! Why, I oughta... by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

      That's because you've started making suggestions that aren't just about punishing people who choose to use Windows :).

      Umm, are you joking? That's the same solution I've been advocating in posts here for years. MS's monopoly and bundling is bad for users and the industry in general. I'd rather make their bundling a non-issue by removing their monopoly power than try to micro-manage things.

    22. Re:Ow! My wrist! Why, I oughta... by drsmithy · · Score: 1

      Umm, are you joking? That's the same solution I've been advocating in posts here for years.

      Funny, because I seem to recall most of the "solutions" you've been advocating "for years" involve Microsoft being forced to rip most of the functionality considered standard today (browser, more recently search, etc), out of Windows to leave it as a basically worthless piece of semi-functional infrastructure solely for other vendors to improve. It looks like you want Windows to be reduced to the same ugly patchwork-quilt of hacked together bits and pieces that the typical Linux distribution is, presumably to leave Apple as the only vendor credibly able to make something close to an end-to-end solution.

      Further, it all appears to be predicated on the highly dubious assumption that there is, for some meaningful sense of the word, a separate and identifiable "market" for each of those individual bits of functionality that now make up every remotely mainstream, end-user-oriented OS available.

      I'd rather make their bundling a non-issue by removing their monopoly power than try to micro-manage things.

      Strange, because you seem to want to do a lot of "micro managing" as to what features Windows is and isn't allowed to have. Although at least the theme is pretty consistent - if it's anything that end users might find vaguely useful, Microsoft shouldn't be allowed to include it in Windows.

      Seems to me you favour making Windows basically useless on its own, without large amounts of third-party effort (and money) put in to make it something people might be interested in actually using. I'd say that's clearly trying to punish those who choose to use Windows, be they end users or OEMs.

    23. Re:Ow! My wrist! Why, I oughta... by MrKaos · · Score: 1

      I'm not opposed to software patent reform, but I don't see it as related strongly to monopoly abuse.
      In this case, I'm not talking patent reform, just M$ reform. Distributing M$ patent claims to the four winds might be a good way to encourage business to use an alternative OS distribution without FUD.

      On the contrary,
      You are right, I should have said "don't mean much to me anymore" except now that I web "coding" again it does mean alot to me. Perhaps Windows should bundle Firefox AND Opera as well and on installation the user is asked - Which browser would you like to default(today)?

      Except that I think a large part of the problem is that the SOHO vendors press agree to all the EULA's on install in their shop, I wonder what that says for the legality of the EULA if you never got a chance to disagree with it in the first place?

      --
      My ism, it's full of beliefs.
  8. Oh, come on by realmolo · · Score: 1, Insightful

    I've always thought it was strange that the focus of a lot of the anti-trust case was the "bundling" of Internet Explorer.

    Who gives a shit? The only other browsers worth using, Firefox and Opera, are both FREE. How is bundling IE with Windows hurting them? They don't make any money from their browsers anyway!

    Plus, the REAL problem with the MS/Windows monopoly (and I don't think it is a monopoly, really, but that's a different argument) is that they don't document the Windows API completely.

    1. Re:Oh, come on by edraven · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It was something you could explain to a judge.

    2. Re:Oh, come on by PrescriptionWarning · · Score: 3, Interesting

      many people use IE happily if only because they are not even aware of the existence of firefox and opera

      i'd similarly wonder how many mac OSX users use firefox instead of safari

      for everyone to have a win-win situation, the OEMs need to start pre-installing firefox AND opera AND safari in the windows boxes. OpenOffice can come too :)

    3. Re:Oh, come on by Sloppy · · Score: 2, Insightful

      How is bundling IE with Windows hurting them?
      Because it gives a default answer to the question "what browser should I use?" Most people don't bother to make choices when they don't have to (cue the Rush lyrics) and just take defaults. This inhibits markets.
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    4. Re:Oh, come on by Jester998 · · Score: 3, Informative

      It was relevant to the antitrust case because it generates platform lock-in.

      For two perfect examples, you have to look no further than some major software out there. I will give two examples of software that we have implemented at my workplace. Maybe you'll recognize these (major, multinational) companies?

      Cognos 8 Business Intelligence: Works 100% with IE. Works for report consumers with Firefox (with some loss of functionality). However, Report Studio (one of the report-authoring tools) doesn't work on anything but IE. There's no reason it couldn't be implemented with standard AJAX-type code.

      BMC Software Service Desk Express (baby brother to the "Magic" helpdesk software that is very common): Works *only* on IE, doesn't work at all on other browsers.

      Yes, part of the problem is these software vendors coding for IE-specific things. However, if they knew that most of their customers are probably using something else, they would code their products to support open standards. However, because MSFT has such a huge marketshare of browsers due to antitrust practices, third-parties code to support that, thus tying THEIR customers to MSFT as well.

      It's a circular loop, but one possible only because MSFT used their OS dominance to push a certain browser 'standard'.

    5. Re:Oh, come on by nine-times · · Score: 1

      Mozilla and Opera make money from their browsers. They don't make you pay for their browsers, but that doesn't mean they aren't money-making ventures. They have a deal with Google to set Google as the default search engine. They have deals with other people to put bookmarks to those companies in your default bookmarks. Things like that.

      Why do you think Microsoft wants the browser market share so badly? Microsoft doesn't just install IE for free-- that's not the complaint. The complaint is that they sabotaged other browsers and made it impossible to remove IE. Why did Microsoft do that if browsers aren't worth anything?

      Microsoft wants to be able to drive users to their own services. IE7 uses Microsoft's Live Search as its default search engine. They make money from Live Search's ad revenue. There's a lot of money to be found in "free" (gratis) software.

    6. Re:Oh, come on by suv4x4 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      many people use IE happily if only because they are not even aware of the existence of firefox and opera

      i'd similarly wonder how many mac OSX users use firefox instead of safari

      for everyone to have a win-win situation, the OEMs need to start pre-installing firefox AND opera AND safari in the windows boxes. OpenOffice can come too :)


      No, no.. wait, to have a win-win situation, all computers should come with 500GB disks loaded with a selection of 10 different OS, and the user can pick which to launch on startup.

      Aaaah, nothing like a simple and easy to use solution! Win!

    7. Re:Oh, come on by nine-times · · Score: 1
      I don't think anyone is saying that OEMs should have to install Firefox AND Opera AND Internet Explorer AND Safari. What's at issue is that Microsoft doesn't allow manufacturers the option of choosing Firefox OR Opera OR Internet Explorer OR Safari.

      OEMs don't have a choice in the matter. There's no supported way of installing Windows without installing IE. There's no supported method of uninstalling IE after Windows is installed. And I don't know what the current system is, but I remember past accusations that Microsoft had structured their OEM licensing so that not only was IE required, but OEMs were discouraged from installing a second browser *even if they wanted to*.

      Apple is a little bit of a different issue, since Apple is also the OEM in addition to being the software developer. However, it's trivially easy to uninstall Safari if you're inclined to do so. You drag and drop the .app file into the trash.

    8. Re:Oh, come on by Bert64 · · Score: 1

      Bundling IE hurts end users...
      Because IE is designed to not follow standards, and encourage web developers also to not follow standards, thus creating sites which require IE... This takes away the end user's freedom to choose their own browser (and by extension, choose the os and hardware to run it on), which for those of us who believe in freedom is one of the worst ways you can hurt someone.
      That's why people support firefox and opera, because they represent choice. The more actively used browsers there are out there, the smaller the risk of sites being designed for just one.

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    9. Re:Oh, come on by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How would unbundling IE make any difference? Companies that use those programs will continue to use IE because they need to, and then there is no reason for the software writers to make it compatible with anything else because all of their customers are using IE. Potential customers that didn't move away from IE because they didn't need to make a choice in browser won't feel strongly enough to not download IE if its required for the software they want to use.

    10. Re:Oh, come on by Bert64 · · Score: 1

      Well, these companies know that their customers aren't using anything other than IE, because they can't be... What they don't realise is why, and that if you took away this forcing effect a lot of them would stop using it.

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    11. Re:Oh, come on by Bert64 · · Score: 1

      Microsoft weren't interested in driving users to their services, they didn't really have any services to speak of in those days.
      They were concerned that browser based applications would quickly become the next big thing, thus making the underlying os irrelevant. If this were to happen, linux would take over _VERY_ fast due to cost, and microsoft would be in dire trouble.
      They push their services now, and use whatever methods they can because they've come to realise that they can't stop their os becoming irrelevant, all they can do is delay it, and use that delay time and their current position to force themselves into other markets before it's too late.

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    12. Re:Oh, come on by suv4x4 · · Score: 1

      Who gives a shit? The only other browsers worth using, Firefox and Opera, are both FREE. How is bundling IE with Windows hurting them? They don't make any money from their browsers anyway!

      It's worth thinking *why* are they free. They're free since they can't compete with IE. Historically browsers were not free. The search boxes though still make plenty of money to support those vendors, as long as they can convince people their product is better than whatever comes with Windows.

      That said, the proposed solutions are silly as well.

      Solution 1: bundle Opera, Firefox and Safari. Can you guess how this will end? Those browser vendors, having guaranteed distribution, will monetize it by starting to put promotions and offer various products inside their browser. Think something along the lines of Netscape.com integration in the late Netscape browsers. This "solution" will turn Firefox, Opera and Safari into craplets you remove the moment you get home with your new PC.

      Solution 2: unbundle IE. Lame. It's 2007, and an OS should come with a suitable media player, browser, and backup solution, among other. Heroic attempts to artificially cripple the OS and turn back the arrows of time always made me laugh.

      So, what is the solution? Firefox has shown us what it is: simply make a browser that's sufficiently better so people will want to install it. It's that simple.

      Yes, MS will still put IE in Windows, but Apple puts Safari in OSX, and Canonical puts Firefox in Ubuntu. Each OS needs a default browser.

      If you don't like the default choice, spread knowledge about the alternative browsers and operating systems people can pick from.

    13. Re:Oh, come on by nschubach · · Score: 1

      cue the Rush lyrics

      a modern day warrior ... mean, mean stride ...today's Tom Sawyer ... mean, mean pride

      Oh, I think I got the wrong CD.
      --
      Every time I start to have faith in humanity, I ruin it by driving to work between 7 and 8 am.
    14. Re:Oh, come on by bunratty · · Score: 1

      They don't make any money from their browsers anyway!

      Opera and Mozilla certainly do make money from their browsers. They both get revenue from partnering with search engines.

      Anyway, by the time the antitrust case made it to court, Microsoft's decision to bundle IE with Windows had already devastated the browser market. After killing the competition off, IE was able to grab up to 96% share of the browser market. They came quite close to so totally dominating the browser market that they could ignore web standards entirely, as web developers would (and still do) bend over backwards to make their sites work with IE, no matter how buggy or nonstandard its behavior was.

      --
      What a fool believes, he sees, no wise man has the power to reason away.
    15. Re:Oh, come on by nine-times · · Score: 1

      When Microsoft started developing IE, there basically weren't any browser-based applications. The purpose was more like running an advertising service.

      The browser would come pre-loaded with bookmarks. So let's say your browser comes with a bookmark to CNN. Why do you think this is? Most likely, it's because CNN paid the people who make your browser for bookmark placement. There would also be bookmarks for things like photo processing, for example, so if you wanted to get your GIF files printed on nice photo paper, Microsoft gave you a bookmark to a company who performed that service. Because that company paid Microsoft.

      Remember, along with everything else, these early browsers came out before everyone had pretty much settled on Google as THE search engine. Your pre-loaded bookmarks meant even more than they do today.

      Now, the purpose has shifted slightly to driving you to the services of people who paid Microsoft to also pointing you towards Microsoft-owned services. By default, IE uses a Microsoft search engine and an MSN homepage. Various hooks into the system encourage you to use Hotmail instead of Gmail. That's why Microsoft wants you to use IE.

    16. Re:Oh, come on by jez9999 · · Score: 1

      To be fair, there are one or two things you can do in IE you just *can't* do in other browsers.

      For example, right now at my company we're coding an intranet site that automatically logs in a user using their Windows domain credentials, which IE automatically passes to the IIS if it detects that a site is a local intranet site and IIS issues a certain WWW-Authenticate header. You can get the same in Firefox by manually typing your username/password in, but the user is already logged in, they shouldn't have to do that. Thus, the intranet really has to be mainly designed for IE.

    17. Re:Oh, come on by brunascle · · Score: 1

      my old company did that on their intranet and i had no problem with typing my username and password once every morning. it took me all of <5 seconds per day.

    18. Re:Oh, come on by Alsee · · Score: 1

      I set up a relative of mine with Firefox. She is quite happy with it.

      As part of her job with the government, she need to access her new government Email account. Guess what? It's a Microsoft mail server and you have to use Internet Explorer to access it. It REFUSES to work with Firefox.

      So it's actually the US government now FORCING people to use Internet Explorer. And the only reason that insane shit is flying is because Internet Explorer is tied to Windows. The US anti-trust conviction of Microsoft was because it is CRIMINAL to abuse a monopoly in one area using tying and other tactic to create a new or expanded monopoly. The DOJ was ordered to back off after Microsoft was convicted for their criminal conduct, and they granted Microsoft a worthless toothless settlement. So worthless and toothless that Internet Explorer is STILL completely tied to Windows and even the government has fallen victim/perpetrator FORCING Internet Explorer on people, serving and expanding Microsoft's criminal tactics.

      Hell, I oppose the states currently seeking to extend the current anti-trust judgment. As I said, and as is obvious, the current settlement given to Microsoft is toothless and worthless. It has failed completely. Further extending thesettlement merely continues to SERVE and PROTECT Microsoft. Yes, protect. The standing settlement is effectively shielding Microsoft against prosecution. Let the crap settlement expire, and then maybe we can get a new criminal case.

      The browser issue is far from the only problem. One of the first issue I'd like to see prosecution address is the recent bribery in international standards organizations and who-know-what-else that went on behind the scenes. And in case anyone missed it, yeah, one or more of the people involved spilled the beans on that. Maybe someone has a link handy.

      -

      --
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    19. Re:Oh, come on by Cro+Magnon · · Score: 1

      Apple is a little bit of a different issue, since Apple is also the OEM in addition to being the software developer. However, it's trivially easy to uninstall Safari if you're inclined to do so. You drag and drop the .app file into the trash


      The fact that Apple's System Updater doesn't depend on Safari also helps there.
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    20. Re:Oh, come on by Alsee · · Score: 1

      To be fair, there are one or two things you can do in IE you just *can't* do in other browsers.

      One or two? I'll name one, then you tell me what the other thing is.

      One thing we haven't been able to do here is access a government employee required web email account. So my relative was forced to switch from Firefox to Internet Explorer, or lose her job.

      So, what was that other thing?

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    21. Re:Oh, come on by Kalriath · · Score: 1

      Over here, our OEMs sometimes dump OpenOffice on new PCs. It's cheaper for them then the ridiculous Works Suite, which sucks balls anyway. They then offer discounts for a copy of MS Office, if you want it, as an upgrade option.

      I believe I once saw Firefox on a new PC too.

      --
      For a site about things like basic rights, Slashdot users sure do like to censor "dissent".
    22. Re:Oh, come on by Kalriath · · Score: 1

      You're talking out your arse. Exchange will happily serve a (marginally different) Outlook Web Access interface when it detects a non-IE browser. It's not 100% as functional as the IE interface, but it works fine in Firefox/Opera/Safari/Konquerer.

      --
      For a site about things like basic rights, Slashdot users sure do like to censor "dissent".
    23. Re:Oh, come on by mariushm · · Score: 1

      Firefox and Opera ARE free, but only because they receive funds through advertising.

      Each time you perform a Google search using the built-in search box in the right corner of Firefox, the Firefox guys get paid by Google.

      Anyways, nowadays the price of CDs is so small it's very easy to just make a CD with IE7, Firefox and Opera and a small autorun app and deliver it with each sold computer. User should be able to choose what version wants. As a bonus, the CD would contain free versions of Adobe Acrobat Reader and alternatives and the drivers and the computer would be less bloated (dream on).

    24. Re:Oh, come on by BlackSnake112 · · Score: 1

      Having a different password for computer logon and access would be a better security practice. How many people actually lock their computers when they leave their desk/go home for the night? If the computer is logged in and not locked, then anyone can access everything as the logged in user. And forcing the screen saver to use a password only works so far. After a number of complaints from 'important' people those settings will be turned off. I have people not wanting to wait the 30 seconds-1 minute for the computer to start up (newer machine), so they do not power their machine off even if they are on vacation for two weeks!

    25. Re:Oh, come on by Alsee · · Score: 1

      I've always thought it was strange that the focus of a lot of the anti-trust case was the "bundling" of Internet Explorer.

      The reason it seems strange is because you are misunderstanding the purpose of anti-trust law.

      Who gives a shit? The only other browsers worth using, Firefox and Opera, are both FREE. How is bundling IE with Windows hurting them? They don't make any money from their browsers anyway!

      Right there - that's what you're misunderstanding. Anti-trust law is not about that. It's not about protecting competitors, not about protecting competitor's profits. Anti-trust law doesn't care how much money they do or don't make.

      Anti-trust law is about protecting and benefiting the public.

      Hopefully we can agree that capitalism and the free market are good things? That a free market and free market competition benefit everyone, benefit the public? That the best product best serves the public and the best product should win? That competition selects and ensures that the public best gets what they want and need?

      What anti-trust law protects is the free market and free competition itself. It doesn't protect competitors, it protects the marketplace. It ensures the marketplace is a free and fair playing field where people/companies can go and reasonably compete attempting to better serve the public by trying to offer a better product.

      Now if you have a really great product and a really well run business and you're simply better than all competitors and you win the market and you wind up with a monopoly because no one a competitive product at a competitive price, well great! Then the public has selected and is getting a great product and you won because you're the best, and it is perfectly legal to end up with a monopoly that way.

      What is prohibited under anti-trust law are market conditions and abusive business tactics that distort or destroy the marketplace itself. That is a Bad Thing because it prevents potentially better products from reasonably competing, prevents them from better serving the public. You cannot abuse a monopoly position to maintain that monopoly, and you cannot abuse a monopoly position to expand that monopoly into a new area.

      For example it is illegal to sell your product at a loss to drive all competitors to bankruptcy and then jack up your prices to extortive monopoly levels to rape the public and build a warchest to be able to again sell at a loss to bankrupt and exterminate anyone who attempts to enter the market.

      It is also illegal to tie one product to another monopoly-position-product in order to hijack your monopoly in one areas in order to manufacture an artificial monopoly in a the other area for the other product. That is a Bad Thing because the monopoly player gets to effectively IMPOSE that second product in that second area, regardless of the quality and value of that second product. By bypassing or suppressing competition, the public is denied a reasonable practical ability to select the best product in that second area. That is a Bad Thing because the public is denied whatever price/quality/value or other benefits they would have obtained from the product they would have preferred to select had they had a level-marketplace chance to choose.

      Microsoft has an effective monopoly position in Microsoft Windows. Amongst other anti-trust abuses, Microsoft has and is tying Internet Explorer to Microsoft Windows. Microsoft used to abuse their monopoly position to prohibit OEMs from supplying competing browsers along with new computers. This was criminal, and Microsoft was convicted for it. Microsoft is still discouraging OEMs from offering competing browsers, and is still prohibiting OEMs from unbundling Internet Explorer. Microsoft is engaging in illegal product tying. Microsoft is forcing anyone who gets Windows to also get Internet Explorer, to leverage their Windows Monopoply into a NEW browser Monopoly as well. And as I said it is illegal to use a monopoly in one area in order to

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    26. Re:Oh, come on by Bravoc · · Score: 1
      "no major OEM currently distributes a browser other than Microsoft's Internet Explorer (IE)"

      What is Apple doing distributing Safari "bundled" with their OS then?! Didn't they get the memo?

    27. Re:Oh, come on by edxwelch · · Score: 1

      What if you have no permission to install software on the PC (lab PC, work PC, etc.)?
      Then your stuck with the default browser.

    28. Re:Oh, come on by Alsee · · Score: 1

      I haven't checked exactly which software the mailserver is, but whatever it is it's not serving to Firefox.

      And regardless of what server software it is and regardless of why it doesn't serve to Firefox, it makes my point that Microsoft tying IE to Windows not merely forces people to *have* IE, it has direct and secondary marketplace distorting effects that severely pressure or even force members of the general public into *using* IE instead of their preferred browser.

      Which is why anti-trust law makes things like monopoly product tying criminal. Because it is a monopoly abuse that exterminates competition itself, it eliminates free market competition and instead imposes a potentially inferior product on consumers and artificially creates a new and harmful monopoly.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    29. Re:Oh, come on by Jester998 · · Score: 1

      Well, these companies know that their customers aren't using anything other than IE, because they can't be...

      Cognos, for example, makes server-side components that work on UNIX as well as the Windows version, so they know very well that their customers could be using something other than Windows... yet parts of their 'client' software insist that you MUST have IE as a browser.

    30. Re:Oh, come on by Zephyr14z · · Score: 1

      I actually installed firefox immediately upon getting my macbook pro. It is my primary browser, though I currently run the Safari 3 beta.

    31. Re:Oh, come on by RightSaidFred99 · · Score: 1

      So really a market isn't what people want/need, it's what you think they should want/need? Very "interesting" thinking there. So apparently even though most people don't bother/don't care about which browser they use, it's a super important issue and the government should step in and make the choice for them? That is truly "brilliant" logic.

    32. Re:Oh, come on by RightSaidFred99 · · Score: 1

      Bullshit. "Part" of the problem isn't the vendors, it's the entire problem. You're urging socialism (where the government goes in and effectively takes everything but fiscal control of the company) becuase a few people want to use Firefox and the people writing the software won't properly support it? This logic is simply ridiculous. It's the same logic that says that since the market _wants_ a near monopoly and _choose_ Microsoft products, they should be penalized. In the "logical" world, market availability of a free competitor pretty much negates the concept of a monopoly in that market.

    33. Re:Oh, come on by RightSaidFred99 · · Score: 1

      Repeat after me. There is no "web browser market". There never would have been one. The web browser is something that's become intrinsic to using a computer. It's silly to think people would still be buying web browsers if MS hadn't, gasp, given away a free one.

    34. Re:Oh, come on by RightSaidFred99 · · Score: 1
      All your gibber jabber is par for the course from people who really just hate Microsoft and apparently love socialism. Same old tired markets about how government intervention in a free market which has _repeatedly_ said with resounding authority that it _wants_ a near monopoly on the desktop operating system market. The idea that you think there could have conceivably been some kind of market for web browsers shows you are hopelessly naive.

      Furthermore, you can't have a monppoly without pricing power. MS has no pricing power over a _free_ OS, or over Apple's, or over anything. In fact, Microsoft has no pricing power whatsoever over anything but their own products which people have repeatedly _chosen_ to buy in the face of what your average SlashWhiner swears is the superior and free OS in Linux.

      Really, in the end, I get bored with seeing such trite crap from you people. It's either the blowhard who thinks he can rationalize government regulation of the tech sector with some contrived, ridiculous, long-winded and facile treatise on how really a free market needs the government to step in and control it with an iron fist because people are too stupid to choose a supposedly better, cheaper alternative.

    35. Re:Oh, come on by drsmithy · · Score: 1

      However, it's trivially easy to uninstall Safari if you're inclined to do so. You drag and drop the .app file into the trash.

      It's trivially simple to delete iexplore.exe as well.

    36. Re:Oh, come on by drsmithy · · Score: 1

      There's no reason it couldn't be implemented with standard AJAX-type code.

      Yes, there is - the only reason a business cares about - reimplementation would be a major expense for next to zero benefit.

    37. Re:Oh, come on by Bert64 · · Score: 1

      If that were the case, microsoft could save a lot of money and effort by distributing a mozilla or webkit based browser, just like Apple do...
      They could even have redistributed Netscape back in the days, and supplied their own bookmarks etc.

      What compelled them to push their own browser, was all the talk of cross platform browser-based apps. Sure they didn't take off, but companies like Netscape and Sun were pushing hard for them. Had they taken off, windows would have been reduced to an expensive and buggy driver-layer between hardware and browser, and people would have migrated in droves to a cheaper driver layer (eg linux) running the same browser.
      Customers not being dependent on them is microsoft's biggest fear, and would severely reduce their profits and force them to reorganise.

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    38. Re:Oh, come on by nine-times · · Score: 1

      Yes, but doing that will break other things. Deleting Safari doesn't break anything in the OS.

    39. Re:Oh, come on by Sloppy · · Score: 1

      So really a market isn't what people want/need, it's what you think they should want/need?

      I'm talking about why existing anti-trust laws are being used. I'm not arguing anything involving the word "should." (Other than: people should wake up and think about what they're doing.)

      --
      As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
    40. Re:Oh, come on by drsmithy · · Score: 1

      Yes, but doing that will break other things.

      No, it won't.

  9. Thanks big brother! by NEOtaku17 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Good thing the government can decide for me what software I should receive packaged in my OS or else I just wouldn't know what to do with myself. It not like I can just choose for myself whether or not I will use the prepackaged version or download my own.

    1. Re:Thanks big brother! by zappepcs · · Score: 1

      Nice! abuse MY right to be free of unfair business practices in the name of your right to choose. You are that idiot that believes the little blue e on your desktop actually IS the Internet, aren't you?

    2. Re:Thanks big brother! by edraven · · Score: 1

      I think it's probably more about the software that you don't have the option of downloading because MicroSoft made sure that company doesn't exist.

    3. Re:Thanks big brother! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Good thing the government can decide for me what software I should receive packaged in my OS or else I just wouldn't know what to do with myself. It not like I can just choose for myself whether or not I will use the prepackaged version or download my own.

      Yep its a very good thing the government has this authority to do this. Or else you would not be able to download and execute the software of your choosing.

      If Microsoft had its way, nobody else would be able to developer software for Windows, all software would be subscription only, and nobody else would be able to read their file formats.

    4. Re:Thanks big brother! by Bert64 · · Score: 1

      Most people cant or wont make a choice to download something else...
      Some are lazy, some don't even realise anything else exists. Leave it too long, and so many websites will be locked into proprietary ie-only extensions that you lose the ability to choose completely.
      Plus, you saw what happened, without competition ie never got updated so the entire web stagnated for years (and is still doing so)

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      http://spamdecoy.net - free throwaway anonymous email - avoid spam!
    5. Re:Thanks big brother! by stubear · · Score: 1

      Government should NOT be our personal nannies. If these people are too stupid to learn how to use even Windows then they get what they deserve. I am so sick and tired of laws being determined by the lowest common denominator.

    6. Re:Thanks big brother! by Pie-rate · · Score: 1

      My internet is upside down :(
      It looks like this

    7. Re:Thanks big brother! by Nullav · · Score: 1

      Surely there's nothing wrong with providing basic functionality out of the box? Besides, how many ways are there to download Firefox without opening IE (on a fresh Windows installation)?

      --
      I just read Slashdot for the articles.
  10. Hedging bets by truthsearch · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The states' report seems to imply that Microsoft will try to find a way to tie Silverlight to IE in the future, and leverage the 80 percent market share of IE on the desktop to try and edge out competitors like Adobe AIR. In our view, it's more likely that Microsoft has learned to accept the reality of a web application future and simply wants to make sure that it is the driving force behind its development.

    +1 Insightful

    Microsoft is hedging their bets. If their cash cows are really threatened in the near future they need a backup plan. I think they're not sure how they would profit, be it software-as-a-service or infrastructure or development tools. But they know they need to cover as many angles as possible to survive long term.

  11. Boy... by JK_the_Slacker · · Score: 4, Funny

    What with this and the releases of Gutsy Gibbon and Leopard, this is turning out to be a bad month for furniture.

    --
    I'm waiting for a "-1 somepeoplejustshouldn'tgetmodprivileges" meta-moderation.
    1. Re:Boy... by blind+biker · · Score: 1

      I think Ballmer went through most chairs after Michael Dell's announcement.

      --
      "The agriculture ministry is not in charge of Gundam" - Japanese ministry official.
  12. Alternate browsers the reason? by BZWingZero · · Score: 1

    The issue, as I understand it, is not that there aren't other browsers available but that the consumer must go out of their way to get the other browser and avoid the bundled IE in their OEM systems.

    1. Re:Alternate browsers the reason? by MightyMartian · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The logical solution then is to order Firefox be preinstalled on all copies of Windows, OEM or otherwise. If Microsoft doesn't like it, then promise them a new series of monopoly trials in which Microsoft will be cut to ribbons and the pieces only permitted to communicate with each via some incredibly inefficient government branch with 35% too few staff and with a turnaround on a question like "what will the default shape of the new UI button be" taking an average of 35 weeks to be answered.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    2. Re:Alternate browsers the reason? by cyberworm · · Score: 1

      Someone can correct me if I'm wrong, but I thought it was because IE was so tightly integrated into the OS. For instance, clicking on "my computer" would open up a window that you could also type a url into and instantly the window was IE. I didn't think it was that big of a deal, since I always used Netscape and then later Firefox, before getting a mac and using Safari. I didn't see it as a powerplay as much as a way to keep people stupid. Though, maybe that was the point.

        I say wahtever makes it easier for people in general. Those who care, will look for alternatives, those who don't won't. At the very least you need some sort of interface by default to get an alternative (at least easily...put your usb drives down).

    3. Re:Alternate browsers the reason? by cyberworm · · Score: 1

      I'd respectfully have to say that would be very illogical (captain). If anything the logical solution would be to not include ANY web browser, GUI FTP client, or whatever made by anyone, except....... the government as a way to get to your choice of browser. Nissan isn't required to tell you about NAPA replacement parts for your car. They'd rather sell you Nissan parts.

      If I were microsoft I'd simply say "Screw you guys. You don't want IE? Fine. You can figure out another way to download an alternative."
      (if that's all this were about). Not everyone is FTP savvy, especially from a command line.

      Cutting Microsoft up because they included a web broswer is silly, and I don't believe is what the AT case was all about.

    4. Re:Alternate browsers the reason? by webmaster404 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The fact though isn't that they included the web browser but rather that the browser is irremovable from the OS, and when its filled with security flaws its a risk for offices and businesses with the employees knowing nothing other then Word and Outlook go on IE when Firefox is installed and end up getting the computer infested with spyware. It is the same thing with the Media Player in the EU, theres no problem with them including it, but when it can't be removed, its a problem.

      --
      There is no "disagree" moderation, and troll, flamebait and overrated are not valid substitutes
    5. Re:Alternate browsers the reason? by SixDimensionalArray · · Score: 1

      Why push just Firefox?

      Here's a crazy idea: how about suggesting that what websites you see in a browser window are kind of like "the commons" (somehow public) and therefore, to ensure that the commons can be consumed by everyone, that all web browsers must, BY LAW, adhere to an internationally maintained standard for web browser rendering.

      Although we know that might never happen for political reasons, at least that way, which browser you use would no longer be an issue - if they all render the same! Then it would be about other features that make one browser better than the other, like, integrated spell check, who knows.

      Microsoft has a right to include a browser. A browser is a common tool... and Windows is their own product. However, where they would go wrong if it can be said that they damage the public good by not following "accessibility of websites" standards.

      Dimension Six --- full of hot air

    6. Re:Alternate browsers the reason? by falconwolf · · Score: 1

      The logical solution then is to order Firefox be preinstalled on all copies of Windows

      Why not also require Opera, along with every other browser, to be installed?

      Falcon
    7. Re:Alternate browsers the reason? by BlackSnake112 · · Score: 1

      But the latest browser is removable. The case is looking at older versions. XP comes withe the older version, Vista doesn't. So if microsoft says this is what we are selling now (Vista with ie7 or ie8 I forget) The AT case built on ie5(ie6?) looses creditability. So as others have said, let this AT case end. Then come up with newer more current charges that microsoft doesn't have a way out of.

    8. Re:Alternate browsers the reason? by westlake · · Score: 1, Flamebait
      The logical solution then is to order Firefox be preinstalled on all copies of Windows, OEM or otherwise.

      Tell me why the "logical solution" is Firefox and not any other competitive browser.

      I can't help thinking that for all the Geek's talk of "freedom of choice" for the user that choice disappears when anything other than "free and open source" is available.

    9. Re:Alternate browsers the reason? by Alsee · · Score: 2, Interesting

      But the latest browser is removable.

      I am absolutely *not* an expert on Vista and maybe my information is old, but last I heard I'm pretty sure your statement is wrong. As I understand it Microsoft does *not* let IE be removable, that they merely have an option to install a SECOND browser and partially "hide" that IE is still installed and still active and that it does still seize control away from your selected browser in a variety of cases.

      If you have a link that IE can actually be *removed* I would be most interested in seeing it.

      But even if IE is now fully removable, there is still the anti-trust violation of Microsoft tying IE to Windows and contractually prohibiting OEMs from actually doing it, to replace IE with some other browser.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    10. Re:Alternate browsers the reason? by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The logical solution then is to order Firefox be preinstalled on all copies of Windows, OEM or otherwise.

      Such a solution does not go far enough. For it to work all browser makers that wanted their browser pre-installed on Windows would have to be allowed to have theirs included. Of course bundling IE and Windows is only one of the dozens of abuses of MS's monopoly.

      Inefficiently and slowly addressing the abuses one at a time is simply not going to work. The only solution I have confidence in is removing the monopoly so that MS has no ability to abuse it. Break MS into at least two companies with full rights to all the patents and code in Windows. Forbid those two companies from any collusion or even private communication. When both of them are fighting for market share with one another, they will give consumers versions of Windows that finally do what consumers want, instead of what will gouge the most money from them. Restore competition and the industry will recover. Barring that, government corruption and a glacial legal system will never fix this market and technology will continue to improve slowly and in a broken direction.

    11. Re:Alternate browsers the reason? by RightSaidFred99 · · Score: 1

      Oh my God, they have to go "out of their way"!? That's crazy shit, they need to convene a panel in Nuremburg!

    12. Re:Alternate browsers the reason? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree though I would personally prefer that they were forced to open up the win32, directx, etc apis, so alternatives like WINE on linux could FULLY support all Windows applications.

    13. Re:Alternate browsers the reason? by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

      I agree though I would personally prefer that they were forced to open up the win32, directx, etc apis, so alternatives like WINE on linux could FULLY support all Windows applications.

      It has been 7 years since the US Dept. of Justice ordered MS to document and license a limited subset of their APIs. As of 5.5 years ago MS admitted that they had not complied but were working on it and the DoJ said they had no problem with that. The reason this did not work and a order to open up all APIs will not work is because MS has too much money and too many lawyers and they can delay action using those lawyers until they can pay off someone to ignore their noncompliance.

      I'm convinced at this point that the only way to stop MS from abusing their monopoly is to remove that monopoly. If the courts ordered MS to open up all their APIs they'd fight it in court for years and years, then they'd partially comply in a way that makes it unusable to the WINE team and fight about that in the courts for years and years. They'd also continue donating to campaign funds for both democrats and republicans until people were put in place that would ignore their behavior and we'd be no better off.

      The US government is simply too corrupt to deal with a monopoly of their size piecemeal. Maybe the EU will be faster and less corrupt, but I'm not holding my breath.

  13. Re:The Commonwealth of Massachusetts? by DECS · · Score: 1

    Dear anonymous coward NeoCon:

    Commonwealth has nothing to do with communism or communal wealth distribution.

    According to Wikipedia:

    ==The original phrase "common wealth" or "the common weal" comes from the old meaning of "wealth" which is "well-being". The term literally meant "common well-being". Thus commonwealth originally meant a state or nation-state governed for the common good as opposed to an authoritarian state governed for the benefit of a given class of owners.==

    Kentucky, Pennsylvania, and Massachusetts are all officially designated as a commonwealth, and Puerto Rico is also described as a commonwealth of the US.

    Trying to jingoize words to fit a fascist/fundamentalist right wing political simplification based on what you think they might mean just makes the world a stupider place. Please stop, our country is already stupid enough without your contributions.

    What You Expected, What You Got.

  14. Slightly self-contradicting? by geoffrobinson · · Score: 1

    Is being slightly self-contradictory like being slightly pregnant?

    --
    Except for ending slavery, the Nazis, communism, & securing American independence, war has never solved anything.
  15. You are wrong really by Skiron · · Score: 1

    The issue is MS making the OS DEPEND on IE and ignore anything the user wants. If I remember rightly, during the anti-trust case, Gates & Co. lied to the court that IE was needed to run Windows (it wasn't at the time). The next patch/hotfix/release it was, as they quickly embedded it.

  16. Right... by NEOtaku17 · · Score: 1

    That's funny I didn't know they made Internet Explorer for OpenBSD. Perhaps I am less of a geek than I thought.

  17. You really don't understand monopolies do you? by hellfire · · Score: 1

    IE killed off netscape by forcing OEMs to bundle IE. They used their monopoly to strong arm OEMs and charged higher fees to OEMs who didn't do EXACTLY what they wanted them to. Those who bundled AOL and netscape were punished. That's illegal in anti-trust law, and Microsoft is a convicted monopolist. That's where the bundling thing came from.

    Bundling isn't right now hurting opera or Firefox, it's hurting the OEMs. The OEMs can't complete by providing, say Firefox and advertising that their bundle is more secure than their competitors. Dell could chose firefox and HP could chose opera or whatever. They can't because MS is still stronarming them.

    And you are either highly misinformed or completely deluded if you think MS isn't a monopoly. 90% of the desktop OS market IS a monopoly under every developed nation's laws, and to anyone with any common sense, period.

    --

    "All great wisdom is contained in .signature files"

    1. Re:You really don't understand monopolies do you? by VertigoAce · · Score: 1

      The OEMs can't complete by providing, say Firefox and advertising that their bundle is more secure than their competitors. Dell could chose firefox and HP could chose opera or whatever. They can't because MS is still stronarming them.

      Sure they can bundle Firefox or Opera. Take a look at the Windows Principles. These principles are the same ones that mean Dell can ship Linux on PCs without affecting their business with Microsoft (except to the extent that pricing is based on volume of Windows licenses shipped). In addition, the Windows Principles are not tied to particular court rulings. For example, protocol documentation for interoperability was already part of the design process for future versions of Windows, regardless of the recent EU ruling.

    2. Re:You really don't understand monopolies do you? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are a moron.

      1) Companies can ship other browsers. This has been true for quite some time now.

      2) This is not a way for OEMs to compete. No one will buy a Dell because they're more secure than someone else's Windows machine. Customers will compare Windows to Windows. They buy Dell for the hardware -- they know they are getting Windows.

      I use Firefox, but I wouldn't buy Windows pre-installed from a company that didn't ship IE and only IE. I don't want them dicking with the OS. It's bad enough that companies install a bunch of other crap already (do I hear Google Toolbar) that I have to uninstall.

      Honestly, I've never seen so many stupid people on one story. You know, not everyone wants to make every choice possible at purchase time. I didn't care what spark plugs my new car came with. I can always buy a different brand (assuming I ever care enough). I also don't remember discussing the brand of windshield wipers, transmission gears, carpet manufacturer, etc. with the dealer. /oldtimer mode off

    3. Re:You really don't understand monopolies do you? by RightSaidFred99 · · Score: 1
      Ding ding ding! You win today's installment of "Which dipshit will dramatically use the phrase 'convicted monopolist' in a retarded whine-fest about MS"! Congratulations!

      Oh, and you do have evidence that MS is currently preventing OEM's from installing additional web browsers, right? Only morons or liars can say Microsoft is a monopoly in one breath then try to get people to switch to the _free_ competitor they claim is 1000% better. Microsoft is not any any legal way a monopoly, at least to anyone with at least half a wit. It's very easy to explain why. Microsoft has no pricing power in the market for computer operating systems. They cannot control the price at which Linux is sold. They cannot control the price at which OSX is sold. They cannot control the price at which any of the dozens of other commercial or open source operating systems are sold. You cannot, in any logical world, have a monopoly without pricing power. This is a simple truism. Logically you can't have a monopoly over intellectual property, either, but MS's competitors have whined enough to make the government think that a computer operating system is a physically limited resource over which someone could have a "monopoly".

    4. Re:You really don't understand monopolies do you? by RightSaidFred99 · · Score: 1

      Don't rain on his parade with your so-called "facts"!

  18. Re:The Commonwealth of Massachusetts? by JayDot · · Score: 1

    "Trying to jingoize words to fit a fascist/fundamentalist right wing political simplification based on what you think they might mean just makes the world a stupider place. Please stop, our country is already stupid enough without your contributions."

    Am I the only one that sees the irony of that paragraph, vis-a-vis the "fascist/fundamentalist right wing" bit. From Wikipedia: "Fascism is an authoritarian political ideology (generally tied to a mass movement) that considers individual and other societal interests subordinate to the interests of the state." This seems to follow more closely with a socialist viewpoint than with the free-market ideology of the American right.

    The parent's point about the GP's lack of understanding, however, is right on the mark.

    --
    Meh, a real sig would take too long, and I have an MMORPG to play with....
  19. Why is it a problem? by falconwolf · · Score: 1

    OEMs don't want to waste time installing three different programs that do the same thing. So if IE is forced to be removed, browsers now will have to pay OEMs to be placed on as the browser.

    I don't see having three different programs as being a problem. All an OEM would need to do is create one disk image with all three then use it to clone it on each hdd installed on a PC, "do once, use anywhere". If OEMs aren't already doing this, minus the three different programs, then they need to work on improving their workflows.

    Falcon
    1. Re:Why is it a problem? by plague3106 · · Score: 1

      Leaving the choice to the end user, that just wants to use the computer, not figure out which browser they should pick... especially since they all do the same thing. That's my point; if you want the OEM to set one up, now you need three images, increasing by quite a bit the amount of storage the OEM needs to keep the images.

      All for what? So the user can pick something that does pretty much the same thing as the other two options, and not knowing what would be the "best" option for them? It just adds to user confusion, and / or OEM costs.

      Oh, and lets not forget about those support calls..

    2. Re:Why is it a problem? by falconwolf · · Score: 1

      Leaving the choice to the end user, that just wants to use the computer, not figure out which browser they should pick... especially since they all do the same thing. That's my point; if you want the OEM to set one up, now you need three images, increasing by quite a bit the amount of storage the OEM needs to keep the images.

      Unlike you, who apparently wants, to limit choice, I prefer to expand choice. The amount of storage needed? I didn't know browsers grew into such bloatware they now require many gigabytes of storage space. WOW, They grew so fast seeing as how the folder I have Firefox installed in on my new MBP is less than 50MB. My smallest USB stick can hold 5 of them, and it is only a third as big as a cdrom disk.

      Falcon
    3. Re:Why is it a problem? by plague3106 · · Score: 1

      I never said to limit choice. If IE comes pre-installed, you're unable to use FireFox? You still have the choice.

      As far as storage goes, I was refering to the actual storing of the ghost image, which means you have to image the ENTIRE disk, because only 1% of it is changed because IE or FF was installed. Unless you know of some ghosting program that can 'fill in the blanks' so that you don't need to store the entire disk image.

      Perhaps you need to work on your reading comprehension.

    4. Re:Why is it a problem? by falconwolf · · Score: 1

      As far as storage goes, I was refering to the actual storing of the ghost image, which means you have to image the ENTIRE disk, because only 1% of it is changed because IE or FF was installed. Unless you know of some ghosting program that can 'fill in the blanks' so that you don't need to store the entire disk image.

      Doesn't OEMs like Dell and HP already ghost hdds? If not they aren't being efficient. It's much the same as in the music, or movie, industry. Copies are made from the master. A few weeks ago I bought an external hdd and it takes up less space than many of the books I have. And it holds 500GB. Five different PC lines, each with say five different possible configurations, would require 25 of them. WOW, that's a lot of space. NOT!!! Just counting the books around my desk, I have more than a dozen books and magazine holders each, big enough for my external hdd.

      Perhaps you need to work on your reading comprehension.

      Seems you need not just to work on your reading comprehension but your geometry as well.

      Falcon
    5. Re:Why is it a problem? by plague3106 · · Score: 1

      Ya they do. They also offer a lot more than five different lines of PCs, and they already include quite a few options for software. Nobody said it was a space is, IT'S A FUCKING COST ISSUE. My god you are dense. How much money would it make them to offer a choice of browser? Zero. How much more HDs do they now need to buy, install, maintain, update, inventory, etc? Its not like they just let them lie on the floor and run cables to them.. they also need to be housed and cooled. So its a cost with no payoff for the OEM.

      Seems you need not just to work on your reading comprehension but your geometry as well.

      My reading skills are fine; you've posted nothing that indicates I misunderstood you, where you clearly didn't read my post correctly. Now you're throwing out geometry, AGAIN missing the point. In case you still have not gotten it, IT'S ABOUT COST, with absolutely ZERO return.

    6. Re:Why is it a problem? by falconwolf · · Score: 1

      Nobody said it was a space is, IT'S A FUCKING COST ISSUE

      Can you please show me where you had said anything about it being a cost issue? Following the parent link I went up the thread and saw nothing about cost except maybe in one of your posts you say "OEMs don't want to waste time installing three different programs that do the same thing.". That says tyme not cost, now you could say tyme is cost but then I replied you could ghost image the drive which does not add a significant amount of tyme. Ghosting hard disk drives actually saves tyme, and money, by eliminating the need to install Windows and any apps included on every drive by hand. There were tymes I would have loved a drive image as I spent hours a bunch of tymes reinstalling just Windows. With a ghost image all I would of had to do is remove the old hdd and install the ghost. Five minutes to exchange drives then maybe the rest of the hour to bootup the PC and make sure things are good to go. It would have saved me a lot of tyme.

      My god you are dense

      If you can't understand the above I think you're the one who's dense.

      My reading skills are fine; you've posted nothing that indicates I misunderstood you, where you clearly didn't read my post correctly. Now you're throwing out geometry, AGAIN missing the point. In case you still have not gotten it, IT'S ABOUT COST, with absolutely ZERO return.

      Again, where did you say anything about "COST" before this post I am replying to now. Maybe you thought you mentioned it but I don't see where you actually did.

      Falcon
    7. Re:Why is it a problem? by plague3106 · · Score: 1
      Can you please show me where you had said anything about it being a cost issue? Following the parent link I went up the thread and saw nothing about cost except maybe in one of your posts you say "OEMs don't want to waste time installing three different programs that do the same thing.".

      Maybe you should look a little harder. From my comment here.

      So the user can pick something that does pretty much the same thing as the other two options, and not knowing what would be the "best" option for them? It just adds to user confusion, and / or OEM costs.

      Oh, and lets not forget about those support calls..


      That says tyme not cost, now you could say tyme is cost but then I replied you could ghost image the drive which does not add a significant amount of tyme.

      It does take time to create the additional images. You need to pay someone to do another clean install, then install the second browser, run the imaging program (tying up resources that could be used elsewhere). Perhaps you've never heard of the saying 'time is money.' Using the image isn't the issue, its creating the image, and yes, there is a cost assoiated with the time to create an image.

      Ghosting hard disk drives actually saves tyme, and money, by eliminating the need to install Windows and any apps included on every drive by hand. There were tymes I would have loved a drive image as I spent hours a bunch of tymes reinstalling just Windows. With a ghost image all I would of had to do is remove the old hdd and install the ghost. Five minutes to exchange drives then maybe the rest of the hour to bootup the PC and make sure things are good to go. It would have saved me a lot of tyme.

      In production; to make the ghost image (now three, one for each browser) does take time. By offering more ghosting images, you need to spend TIME up front to make the image. It's a cost.

      If you can't understand the above I think you're the one who's dense.

      You're not out of school yet, are you? Have you never worked in the real world?

      Again, where did you say anything about "COST" before this post I am replying to now. Maybe you thought you mentioned it but I don't see where you actually did.

      Well I spelt out exactly where I used the word cost. Followed by a statement that incidates more costs (more support calls to an OEM = more COST to run the support center). I'm sorry if I didn't spell it out in big bold letters for you, most people could figure out that these options all cost the OEMs something. Something they DO NOT recoup in any way. As I said, you seem to be dense.
    8. Re:Why is it a problem? by falconwolf · · Score: 1

      Maybe you should look a little harder. From my comment here [slashdot.org].

      Ok I missed it, or didn't recall. Sorry.

      Perhaps you've never heard of the saying 'time is money.' Using the image isn't the issue, its creating the image, and yes, there is a cost assoiated with the time to create an image.

      How long it take to create a disk with Forefox versus a disk with just Windows? As I said earlier, maybe you missed it, if I had had a ghost disk it would have saved me hours reinstalling Windows. And because tyme is money those hours could be put to better use.

      You're not out of school yet, are you? Have you never worked in the real world?

      No I'm not out of school, and I never will be. If you mean high school, I graduated many years ago. Or do you mean college? Though I don't have a BA or BS I got my AA years ago as well. Have I worked in the real world? Not only did I serve in the US Army but I worked part time jobs while in college then full time in construction for a few years.

      Well I spelt out exactly where I used the word cost. Followed by a statement that incidates more costs (more support calls to an OEM = more COST to run the support center). I'm sorry if I didn't spell it out in big bold letters for you, most people could figure out that these options all cost the OEMs something. Something they DO NOT recoup in any way. As I said, you seem to be dense.

      Sorry I made a mistake, however your condescending attitude, "You're not out of school yet, are you?" doesn't help. If instead you had simply pointed out where I was wrong it would of been better. I wonder if you have an excuse for your attitude, I have an excuse for my bad memory, I am a survivor of a Traumatic Brain Injury, TBI. I wonder how you would do with one. Maybe I should just roll over and die, well after I came out of a coma I was in my sister said that I screamed at everyone to just let me die. Unfortunately they didn't.

      Falcon
    9. Re:Why is it a problem? by plague3106 · · Score: 1

      How long it take to create a disk with Forefox versus a disk with just Windows? As I said earlier, maybe you missed it, if I had had a ghost disk it would have saved me hours reinstalling Windows. And because tyme is money those hours could be put to better use.

      You don't get it, still. They don't just create a ghost with Windows. They add in all their other apps as well that are standard. Then it takes quite a bit of time to create the image, and reload the image without a browser to install one, then more time to create another image. I ghosted my 120GB HD, it took a few HOURS to do so. Not to mention prep time (zeroing out the empty part of the disk so that it would compress better).

      No I'm not out of school, and I never will be. If you mean high school, I graduated many years ago. Or do you mean college? Though I don't have a BA or BS I got my AA years ago as well. Have I worked in the real world? Not only did I serve in the US Army but I worked part time jobs while in college then full time in construction for a few years.

      I can only wonder what you're major was. Your jobs didn't seem to require any critical thinking though, which seems to be what you were missing in this discussion. Perhaps you also lack experience in computers? I don't know, but I have ghosted quite a few times and it takes a non-trivial amount of time.

      Sorry I made a mistake, however your condescending attitude, "You're not out of school yet, are you?" doesn't help. If instead you had simply pointed out where I was wrong it would of been better. I wonder if you have an excuse for your attitude, I have an excuse for my bad memory, I am a survivor of a Traumatic Brain Injury, TBI. I wonder how you would do with one. Maybe I should just roll over and die, well after I came out of a coma I was in my sister said that I screamed at everyone to just let me die. Unfortunately they didn't.

      First, you should check the thread history to see who started with an attitude. Second, I'm not going to give sympathy to someone because they didn't know what they were talking about. Apparently your memory is good enough to get onto slashdot, check your user page for replies and remember the injury you suffer. Finally, when someone does show a lack of critical thinking and experience, it DOES stand to reason that person is a child or not yet in the real world. So while you take that question in a condosending manner, I was actually serious when I asked it.

  20. Not wise by JeremyGNJ · · Score: 1

    Its not really a good idea to impose restrictions on a company for "what they MIGHT do".

    Ie they "might be able to" leverage the next version of Windows to push people toward silverlight. Kinda dangerous ground.

    1. Re:Not wise by DragonWriter · · Score: 1

      Its not really a good idea to impose restrictions on a company for "what they MIGHT do".


      Those who have been found to have committed wrongdoing in the past are often subject to future restrictions based on what they might do; this relates to the concept of incapacitation as a tool in a justice system.

      I don't see why companies should be less subject to this than individuals.
  21. Re:The Commonwealth of Massachusetts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    1. Can I get a "*whooosh*"?

    2. You don't have to be a neo-con to think that a state where wearing blinking lights on your jacket can get you shot is a little on the insane side.

    3. The point here is that none of the other states are listed as, for example, "state of California" and calling Massachusetts "the Commonwealth of Massachusetts" makes it sound like some sort of communist country, sort of like "the People's Republic of China." No one really calls any of the "commonwealths" anything but states. It's 2007, they can drop a phrase from the 17th century.

    4. Nice little linkspam at the end there. Hopefully your post will get dinged so you'll gain the rel="nofollow" that you've dodged using the karma bonus. No one cares about your blog.

  22. The irony by Uncle_Meataxe · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Perhaps it's only a little ironic that some states keep fighting the Microsoft Monopoly yet force their own (state) employees to use Microsoft products. This is true of California (and probably most states). How much do they really care to bust the monopoly if they can't even wean themselves from the convicted monopolist?

    1. Re:The irony by nschubach · · Score: 1

      Wouldn't you say you answered your own question? Once a government body becomes so ingrained into a product that they cannot find an alternative, something must be done.

      --
      Every time I start to have faith in humanity, I ruin it by driving to work between 7 and 8 am.
    2. Re:The irony by DragonWriter · · Score: 1

      Perhaps it's only a little ironic that some states keep fighting the Microsoft Monopoly yet force their own (state) employees to use Microsoft products. This is true of California (and probably most states). How much do they really care to bust the monopoly if they can't even wean themselves from the convicted monopolist?


      How is this "irony"? Its really very simple, the states who don't see a viable choice for themselves besides the existing monopoly would be most likely, not least, to see the monopoly as harmful and seek legal redress for its harms.

      States that find that their needs have viable alternatives (whether they always choose Microsoft or not) are unlikely to see Microsoft as even being a monopolist, much less a harmful one. It would be more fairly described as "ironic" if states accused Microsoft of being a harmful monopoly and sought redress but did not use Microsoft software.
    3. Re:The irony by Uncle_Meataxe · · Score: 1

      States that find that their needs have viable alternatives (whether they always choose Microsoft or not) are unlikely to see Microsoft as even being a monopolist, much less a harmful one. It would be more fairly described as "ironic" if states accused Microsoft of being a harmful monopoly and sought redress but did not use Microsoft software...
      Only problem with this argument is that California is not particularly different from other states in terms of software needs and the vast majority of state workers could accomplish their tasks on a Linux or Mac OS X platform. Perhaps the real reason for the continued pressure is that it provides leverage when it comes to negotiating Microsoft site licenses?
    4. Re:The irony by DragonWriter · · Score: 1

      Only problem with this argument is that California is not particularly different from other states in terms of software needs and the vast majority of state workers could accomplish their tasks on a Linux or Mac OS X platform.


      The only problem with this argument is that it simply asserts assumptions without any support.

    5. Re: The irony by Uncle_Meataxe · · Score: 1

      The only problem with this argument is that it simply asserts assumptions without any support. Having worked in a couple of California state departments and seen how many others work, I can safely say that the vast majority of state workers use three applications -- word processing, email, and web browsing. A small percentage use spreadsheets but typically for light-duty tasks. None of these applications gain an advantage on Windows. Indeed, I have used Mac OS X & Linux machines for the last 12 years, collaborating with my Windows colleagues, and done just fine without a Windows box. Windows people have as many problems with incompatibilities between various Office & Windows versions than I do sharing from a different OS. Also, it seems reasonable to assume that state workers do similar jobs regardless of which state they work for.

      Finally, I've worked at a couple of universities and they seem to do quite well with a diversity of computing systems.
    6. Re: The irony by DragonWriter · · Score: 1

      Having worked in a couple of California state departments and seen how many others work, I can safely say that the vast majority of state workers use three applications -- word processing, email, and web browsing.


      Having worked in several departments of the State of California, I can safely say that, IME, this isn't true, and that, even to the extent it is, both internal consistency (for support) and interoperability with what is in use in private industry are frequently important for many, and likely most, departments. Also important is support for legacy applications. The last two are big weights pushing toward Windows for most departments, and even though they don't apply to every employee, the first makes it so that Windows becomes desirable for virtually all. Where its not, they use other OS's, but those tend to be servers, not end-user systems.

      Windows people have as many problems with incompatibilities between various Office & Windows versions than I do sharing from a different OS.


      I've never known a state department to maintain a diversity of Windows and Office versions, either. They tend to transition a whole department at a time.

    7. Re: The irony by Uncle_Meataxe · · Score: 1

      I've never known a state department to maintain a diversity of Windows and Office versions, either. They tend to transition a whole department at a time.

      Our department (~2,000 employees) updates Office and Windows versions as new machines are bought or if people specifically ask for an upgrade (most users don't have a clue which version they have and do not ask). My old department was the same (500 employees). Even if your department upgraded machines en masse, you still have problems when you collaborate with people from other institutions.

      A friend just bought a new laptop with Vista. He can't open his old MS Office documents -- "Office 2007 does not support documents from XYZ version of Word/Excel/etc.," or something to that effect. Clever!

  23. Or... by Belial6 · · Score: 1

    Or, imprison the corporation itself. If I break the law, they lock me up, and I cannot do business with the rest of society. Do the same to the corporations. Send the sheriff out to lock the company doors, and prevent them from doing business for 6 months, a year, or whatever sentence they would give me.

    Yes, it would be devistating to the corporation, just as devistating as it would be to me if I were locked up for a year.
    Yes, those that work for the corporation would be hurt, just like the people who work for me. (if I were wealthy enough to hire people to do my bidding)
    Yes, it would hurt the economy if all, or even a significant portion of corporations got shut down, just as it would hurt the economy if all, or even a significant portion of people were imprisioned.

    You can bet that the corporations would get their act together right quick if the penalty for breaking the law was the same as for a real person.

    I would say that one of the big problems we have is that corporations are considered to be 'people' when it is convenient, and not 'people' when that suits the needs of those in making money off of them.

    1. Re:Or... by edraven · · Score: 1

      Corporations live off their ability to do business. This would be more like locking you up for 6 months without food.

  24. No OEMs that bundle something other than IE? by nsayer · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I can think of at least one OEM that bundles a browser other than Internet Explorer.

    1. Re:No OEMs that bundle something other than IE? by theurge14 · · Score: 1

      Yes, Mac OS X comes with Safari, various Linux distros come with Konqueror or Firefox.

      There is a difference. They can all be completely uninstalled except for IE.

    2. Re:No OEMs that bundle something other than IE? by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

      There is a difference. They can all be completely uninstalled except for IE.

      That is not an important difference at all. The reason bundling Safari with OS X or Firefox with RedHat is not an issue is because Neither OS X nor Linux wields monopoly influence in a market. If Apple is ruled to have monopoly influence in the portable music player market, it will be just as illegal for them to bundle iTunes with every iPod sold, regardless of how easy it is to uninstall.

      I just don't understand why it is so hard for people to understand what a monopoly is, why bundling and tying are an abuse of a monopoly, and why such actions are bad for society and illegal.

    3. Re:No OEMs that bundle something other than IE? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because they are smarter than you and can follow logic to a conclusion. If Apple had a monopoly, what a pain in the ass it would be if the government said they couldn't bundle iTunes.

  25. Re:ACHTUNG! SLASHTARDS! by laughing+rabbit · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    I thunk he meaneth FrontPage!

    --
    No incumbents, not no where, not no how.
    Vote them out every term.
  26. Re:The Commonwealth of Massachusetts? by brunascle · · Score: 1

    Am I the only one that sees the irony of that paragraph, vis-a-vis the "fascist/fundamentalist right wing" bit. From Wikipedia: "Fascism is an authoritarian political ideology (generally tied to a mass movement) that considers individual and other societal interests subordinate to the interests of the state." This seems to follow more closely with a socialist viewpoint than with the free-market ideology of the American right.

    the political compass is 2-dimensional*. 1 dimension is personal freedom, the other is economic freedom, and the axes are turned 45%. the top (or you could call bottom) middle is 100% of both, and the bottom middle is 0% of both. socialism is at the bottom left. technically, fascism is the very bottom middle, but it's often used to describe the bottom right. the free market right is either the middle right or the top right.

    *you could even add a 3rd and forth dimension for political freedom and state sovereignty, but few do.

  27. Re:The Commonwealth of Massachusetts? by DECS · · Score: 2, Insightful

    "Fascism is an authoritarian political ideology (generally tied to a mass movement) that considers individual and other societal interests subordinate to the interests of the state"

    Perhaps you are unfamiliar with extreme right wing fundamentalist talking points:

    - Don't criticize the administration or you are "supporting terrorism."
    - Broad wiretap spying programs on citizens is important for nationalist security.
    - Torture and indefinite imprisonment of the accused, with suspended Habeas Corpus, is critical to nationalist security.
    - Limiting the right to travel around and to/from the country and imposing a Nationalist biometric ID program.

    Centrist Americans in both the Democratic and Republican parties have historically found all those ideas repugnant. You are right to say those ideas have historically been associated with extremist socialist states such as Stalin's Russia, but they are also associated with with the Axis fascist countries and fundamentalist religious states. Authoritarian political ideology is not unique to a particular extreme end of political spectrum.

    The US isn't in danger of falling to a communist revolution. It is, however, already knee deep in a cesspool of a fascist torture/spy/police state that considers individual rights and societal interests (freedom of expression, access to health care and education) subordinate to the needs of corrupt corporations that largely run the country. Corporate welfare, a government run media (Fox), and wartime profiteering are not American ideals.

    The American right and conservatives in general are not represented by the NeoCon minority. Small and effective government and free markets have little to do with the torture/spy/police state fascism being advanced by NeoCons in their efforts to set up a fundamentalist religious state and declare war on other fundamentalist religious states throughout the world, partnered with welfare-state corporations like Haliburton and Blackwater.

    What You Expected, What You Got

  28. What about alternative OS'es? by Deathlizard · · Score: 1

    Since when does Ubuntu and OSX have IE installed? Dell and Apple are both OEM's and they both use alternative OS'es which has alternative browsers. Just because it's not running windows doesn't mean it's not competing with IE.

    Regardless, There's a definite rising trend of market share in alternative browsers, especially FireFox. Most likely the OEM's are not including Firefox (as well as other free software, such as Openoffice) because the Mozilla Foundation isn't willing to pay the OEM's (unlike Google, AOL, ETC) to install it on pre configured PC's.

    1. Re:What about alternative OS'es? by mariushm · · Score: 1

      Nobody stops Microsoft from producing an OSX and a Linux version of Internet Explorer.
      Both would probably be offered as modules or packages in Ubuntu/OSX for the people interested.

      The thing is - I'm not 100% sure - Ubuntu let's you choose to install or not (or at least you can uninstall) Firefox. You can't do that with IE. Oh, and removing the icons of IE is not considered uninstall.

  29. Incorrect by Belial6 · · Score: 1

    That is simply incorrect. Corporations live off the recognition of the government. If the government revokes their charter, then they are dead. If the government recognizes them as a Corporation, then it lives on. Cutting off of it's revenue could simply make it destitute. The same as cutting off the ability of a real person to make money for six months could make them destitute. So, that is no excuse for the government to give one entity preferential treatment under the law over another. Hell, many companies run in the red for years. That is certainly not the same as cutting off a real persons food supply for years.

    1. Re:Incorrect by edraven · · Score: 1

      So what you're saying is that as long as the government continues to recognize the existence of the corporation, all of their employees can comfortably live for a year with no salary. There's a wide range of difference between operating in the red and operating with no income at all.

    2. Re:Incorrect by Belial6 · · Score: 1

      You seem to be trolling, as I know that you already read the answer to that. You replied to the post that contained:

      "Yes, those that work for the corporation would be hurt, just like the people who work for me. (if I were wealthy enough to hire people to do my bidding)"

      Either the law applies to entities that employ other entities or it does not. How many employees do you suggest an entity needs before locking them up is no longer a solution? The current situation where some legally recognized entities in the US can be imprisoned, and others cannot is a serious problem. For all intents and purposes it makes corporations royalty that are above the law.

    3. Re:Incorrect by edraven · · Score: 1

      My reply was more to the point that your proposal is essentially the dissolution of the corporation, which is not the equivalent of a year in jail for you. It's death.

      But I agree this discussion seems to be going in circles and not anywhere productive.

    4. Re:Incorrect by Belial6 · · Score: 1

      No, the discussion went right where you wanted it. To the 'lets not even discuss punishing the royal elite the way we do the average citizen'. The argument that it is ok to bring finacial ruin upon real people is ok, but doing the same to a corporation bad, is bizarre at best.

      If a corporation is shut down for a year, they do not automatically loose their charter. Their assets are not seized other than by creditors who they have not paid. This is the EXACT same situation that a human is put into when they are jailed. When they get out of jail, they try to salvage what they can from what is left after being locked up for a year with no income. Your statement that it is 'death' is simply wrong, and an attempt to rationalize why we should have a caste system.

  30. No OS installed by falconwolf · · Score: 1

    Better yet, prevent retailers from bundling operating systems with new computers

    A BIG problem with this is that most people when they buy a new computer they just want to plug it in when they get home and have it work out of the box. Maybe it would help if a new computer came with different OSes came on disk. A Windows disk, maybe two or three different versions, and disks for different versions of Linux and BSD. However I seriously doubt most people ever want to install an OS unless they call tech support and the tech walks them through reinstalling Windows.

    Hey, perhaps that's an idea that might work, OEMs shipping computers with these disks then allow the user to decide which one to use. When booted up the first tyme a screen asks which OS the user wants. The user selects one then it asks for the correct disk and installs the OS.

    Falcon
    1. Re:No OS installed by FridayBob · · Score: 1

      A BIG problem with this is that most people when they buy a new computer they just want to plug it in when they get home and have it work out of the box. ...
      Nonsense! What about all those Windows recovery CDs? You just insert it into the drive, boot with it and soon the system is returned to exactly the same state as when you got it from the store. One of Microsoft's original arguments against distributing Windows this way was that it would make piracy easier, but that defense has become much more difficult to maintain since the introduction of their online registration system. The whole idea was outlined earlier in this story.

      As a matter of fact, the "recovery CD approach" would allow retailers to deliver all their PCs with CDs for multiple operating systems, which would then the customers could go home and choose which ever one they wanted to install. This could be any number of Windows or Linux flavors, or even BSD. All would install to an initial state, except that the Windows versions would also require registration and a credit card payment before they would work.
    2. Re:No OS installed by falconwolf · · Score: 1

      Nonsense! What about all those Windows recovery CDs? You just insert it into the drive, boot with it and soon the system is returned to exactly the same state as when you got it from the store.

      People still want the computer to just run when they get it home. Those recovery disk are just for that, "recovery". They are used only after the system has crashed, not to install the OS to begin with. And I bet most of the tyme an individual uses one is when tech support tells them to.

      As a matter of fact, the "recovery CD approach" would allow retailers to deliver all their PCs with CDs for multiple operating systems, which would then the customers could go home and choose which ever one they wanted to install. This could be any number of Windows or Linux flavors, or even BSD. All would install to an initial state, except that the Windows versions would also require registration and a credit card payment before they would work.

      Did you compleatly read my post? Though I didn't use as many words that's what I said in my last two sentences.

      Falcon
  31. Just Highly Compatable by EmbeddedJanitor · · Score: 1

    with Slashdot.

    --
    Engineering is the art of compromise.
  32. it's not nannyism by ClioCJS · · Score: 1

    The government isn't choosing your browser. They are preventing Microsoft from choosing your browser. They are leveling the playing field, and forcing people to actually make a choice, instead of going with the flow. You're not being told which web browser you can and cannot use. I see where you're coming from, but you should clutch your idealism with slightly less intensity -- this is a good thing, even if it doesn't meet the strict interpretation of capitalism.

    --
    -Clio
    Karma: Bad (mostly from not giving a fuck)
    Blog: http://clintjcl.wordpress.com
  33. mednwhile, back at The Money Bin... by westlake · · Score: 1
    What with this and the releases of Gutsy Gibbon and Leopard, this is turning out to be a bad month for furniture.

    for the hammering Microsoft takes on Slashdot, we all know what Microsoft's next quarterly financial report is going to look like. we all know why "Apple' is no longer "Apple Computer." Apple sells a half dozen or so configurations of the Mac that either meet your needs or they don't. that is a profitable strategy, but it is not a strategy that dramatically increases your market share.

  34. Re:ACHTUNG! SLASHTARDS! by thePowerOfGrayskull · · Score: 1

    I am in awe.

  35. What does this mean? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    IANAL, so WIAL (Who Is A Lawyer?) Does this extend the bit where someone should watch over Microsofts shoulder, or does it also extend the bit where I, living in Iowa, can get cash back for every Microsoft product I've had forced on me when I've bought computer products? (At least in Iowa, I could get cash back on any copy of DOS, Win3.1-XP, Office, and maybe a few others bought between like 1994 and 2006 or so, the date of the original agreement.) Is THAT extended to 2012 as well, so for instance my Dad could get cash back for the copy of Vista that he had me erase and replace with Ubuntu (within about 2 days of getting his notebook..)? That'd be super-sweet 8-).

  36. Or, just threaten to not buy Microsoft stuff by walterbyrd · · Score: 1

    Instead of the states taking ineffective legal action, how about this: "msft knock it off, or we won't buy your stuff. We'll use mac, or linux, or whatever. Then we'll insist on all documents in non-msft format: odf, pdf, whatever. Then we'll insist on firefox only as a browser. And all multi-media must also be in a non-msft format - no .wma or .wmv."

    Could you imagine how msft would react? Lawsuits take ten years, cost $100 million, and get you nowhere.

    1. Re:Or, just threaten to not buy Microsoft stuff by mick129 · · Score: 1

      Wow, I wish I had mod points. That's probably the most effective thing the government can do to Microsoft.

      --
      Move along, no sig to see here.