Windows 7 Eyed For Antitrust Violations
Preedit writes "The committee that oversees Microsoft's compliance with the 2002 antitrust settlement now has its hands on Windows 7. The Technical Committee is checking to see if the software meets the settlement's terms. Among other things, it's looking at whether Windows 7 favors Microsoft apps over third party programs, according to InformationWeek. The story also notes that Vista SP1 includes a number of changes that were added to satisfy the committee. For instance, it eliminates several browser overrides where Vista ignored users' default preferences and automatically launched Explorer. Windows 7 is due sometime around 2010."
It's really too bad they didn't add enough features in Vista, and need another version to do this.
I look forward to the 1,500 new options that will be available in group policies. I think I will understand most of these before Windows 8 is delivered.
Meanwhile, what do I do with this Glass Turd?
"Flyin' in just a sweet place,
Never been known to fail..."
We're just going to hack it anyway to run whatever 3rd party apps we want.. the EU is really going overboard IMO with forcing microsoft to make their OS how the EU wants it made. If microsoft wants to make Internet Explorer the only app that can access the internet, that's their prerogative.. nobody has to buy Windows. Even if there was no excellent free alternative, which there is.
What do i do with this glass turd?
Downgrade of course!
any new windows will always come under this scrutiny, and for good reason. the mainstream US does not use linux or macs, so windows is seen as the dominant os figure. this gives them a justification to bring up charges.
If people can get past, can they get future? Best way to confuse a stoner
The watchdogs have rubber teeth. So far they've done nothing and MS ignores them.
Engineering is the art of compromise.
Microsoft Outlook needs (and loads) MS Word. MS Visual Studio requires MS Office for some of the data aware components to work at all. Windows Media player often "reactivates" all on its lonesome
"Thanks for all the money you paid to us. We've used it to buy off ISO among other things" -Microsoft
Proceed with modding down; it was worth it!
Demented But Determined.
Goatse in your mouth.
You nerds love it.
Wake me when it hits version 6.61x!!! That would only leave us a month of monthly builds until The Prophecy is fulfilled!~
Mug 'O Frosty Piss
Ubuntu is coming on strong at long last. I myself made the leap halfway recently to a dual-boot system. Anyone have any forecast about the state of the OS market come 2010?
A-Bomb
It'll be the Year of the Linux Desktop (tm).
I prefer Flambe as apposed flamebait.
"it's looking at whether Windows 7 favors Microsoft apps over third party programs"
Doesn't Apple very heavily lean towards Apple software?
(This isn't starting flaming, this is a legitimate question - what separates Apple from Microsoft in these regards?)
"For instance, it eliminates several browser overrides where Vista ignored users' default preferences and automatically launched Explorer."
Yup, just try clicking on a link in a Messenger conversation with or without Vista. You get IE, like it or not.
I care on multiple accounts:
1. I care enough not to use Windows or MS Office because I enjoy my computing freedom.
2. I realize that most people don't care what an OS is and what a web browser is. They also don't realize that there is no need for anti-virus and the MS Tax.
3. I care enough that I will NOT hack Windows to run my applications. I will not fix the code that Microsoft purposefully broke. Let the house of glass collapse under its own weight.
J-F
Goodbye Slashdot. You've changed.
Apple's greatest virtue is that it's not microsoft. It doesn't have any other ethical merit I'm aware of, but for many people that's enough.
...around 2010 -ish
I hate this anti-trust crap with Windows. Let MS do whatever they want to lock people into using their OS and other crap. This isn't flamebait btw, they're a private company who can make the product however they want and if people are too stupid to realize that there are other options out there so be it.
I know plenty of techies, creative-types and non-users who have discovered non-MS OSes and other software & love it. My mom is the simplest user you could ask for & uses Linux. Plenty of programmer & artist friends of mine have moved on to OSX. It's THEIR CHOICE.
It's not like Windows is the only OS out there and regardless of its market share, the alternatives are widely known & advertised. I went to Brazil for vacation recently & noticed that everyone down there uses Linux. I myself use Debian.
Big whoop. Let them lock people in. It's so silly to think that "ooooh we know better" and "ooooh people can't think for themselves" and "oooh people need the govt. to protect them".
I'm not saying we don't need to have anti-trust watchdogs but this is a ridiculous waste of time money and resources. Oh, Netscape lost the browser "war" in the 90s because it sucked, not because of some evil-Microsoft crap like everyone makes it sounds AND... if you look at it in the long-run, we're better off that Microsoft won that "war" because we have the Mozilla foundation & firefox & Opera to use which we probably wouldn't if Netscape had won.
Comment removed based on user account deletion
Most of these "flaws" were likely caused by some programmer who made it work and had more interest in getting something off his list than interest in "furthering the visibility of Microsoft products".
Not everyone likes to speculate on the backstory, though, so I guess the gov't gets to run around with this 'til they're happy, whether or not it does anything really constructive.
What's the name of the book? Sounds like something I might be interested in.
Thank God for evolution.
That rather depends on what you mean by "lean heavily", doesn't it?
Apple is generally pretty standards-friendly. And why not? Interoperability represents a threat to a company that has a near monopoly, as Microsoft has. But it tends to be in the interests of the smaller players.
So, for example, Microsoft tries to lock businesses into Outlook/Exchange. Apple, by contrast, has Darwin Calendar Server available:
http://trac.calendarserver.org/projects/calendarserver
That uses open protocols, like CalDAV, and is even itself open-source code. Here's the source code:
http://subversion.tigris.org/servlets/ProjectDocumentList?folderID=260&expandFolder=74
But, even if it wasn't open source, it uses CalDAV. That's the point. You can use Apple's calendar server with someone else's calendar clients -- say, this one:
http://www.mozilla.org/projects/calendar/sunbird/
Alternatively, you could use Apple iCal client on OS X with someone else CalDAV server -- e.g.:
http://www.osafoundation.org/
So, no, whatever some people might like you to believe NOT the same at all.
I just can't figure out the issue. Windows ships with IE, OSX ships with Safari. Because more people use Windows, Microsoft should remove its first party program and OSX shouldn't?
I know what the real crying is about, and can sympathize that third party solitaire and redundant media players have no market, but I don't want to pay for a stripped down OS.
Can't wait for "Birdwatcher caught watching birds!"
You might also want to try running Windows XP inside a virtual machine (VirtualBox and VMWare come to mind).
Those can run your windows applications (Tax software) and even have modes where the Windows' windows are drawn as normal windows on the X-Window screen (instead of being only on the virtual screen inside the virtual machine) and thus mostly look-like native application (visually similar to what you get by running them with Wine, although the backend is completely different).
Also, a lot of these application, thanks to stuff like LIBUSB, enable to have your actual USB hardware (iPod, Digital Camera) be "connected" on the virtual machine and be accessed from Windows XP as if you where actually plugging the hardware into a genuine computer (VirtualBox does this, we use this capability to run a HP ScanJet 5400c scanner - whose driver aren't perfect for Linux/Sane and are non-existant for Vista/Twain).
Basically, instead of an actual "grudge" machine, you have an emulator doing the exact same job.
"Sufficiently advanced satire is indistinguishable from reality." - [Tips: 1DrYakQDKCQ6y52z6QbnkxHXAocMZJE61o ]
This is the main method of the application. This is the ultra-secret API call which calls the secret x86 instruction set we held Intel at gunpoint for which makes our applications run in awesome mode. This is our logger.
2 weeks later...
Approved!
Check out my lame java blog at www.javachopshop.com
The Lost Cause is what way can MSFT go now that Vista has poluted everything.
Vista is the same as Intel's Itanium.
Itanium (aka P7) was supposed to replaced the 686 architecture and essentially be the "786". Intel was fortunate. When it because obvious that Paul Thomas and Albert Yu (IIRC. it has been a while) had fucked Itanium up hard, they could just ignore it and let another team (Oregon) move on to a proper 786, and leave iA64 as an alternative architecture.
However, MSFT has all its eggs in one basket. Since "merging" DOS-based Win9x and WinNT into WinXP, they have only one horse to ride. And with Vista that horse has become lame and diseased. WinNT wasn't the BEST horse but it worked more than not; certainly more than Win9x. However, BVista is fucked and everyone and their Mom knows it. But, once they released Vista to the market place they are stuck with it. And they are stuck with it for all time.
So, they have to start Windows 7 with the Fucked Up Vista code base, and don't have the luxury of starting with the relatively clean WinXP code base. All the mistakes they made in Vista, we are all going to have to live with for at least a decade if not two.
Now I really don't care one way or the other, but I've always wonder why Apple never gets sued over these types of things. The bundle just about everything you can think of into OS X, and up until recently you couldn't even install another OS on a Mac if you wanted to. Why don't they get looked at for noncompetetive and monopolistc practices?
When people complain that Windows is more expensive, you point out how much more it has now.
When people complain that Windows is bundling applictions to the detriment of competitive forces, you point out how the stuff windows has is free.
Which is it: Windows costs less in real terms because it has a bundle of applications that are worth paying the extra cash for (and are therefore not free), or these applications bundled are free (therefore Windows is more expensive).
Thank you for your cooperation.
The watchdogs have rubber teeth. So far they've done nothing and MS ignores them.
The story also notes that Vista SP1 includes a number of changes that were added to satisfy the committee.
I think what is lost in this is what constitutes the anti-competitive abuse. Is it abuse to bundle the software? No. Is it abuse to make the software better? No. Outspending your competition in marketing is not abuse, and neither is bundling IE with Windows.
The abuse comes when they use their market share to force users hands. (consumers, businesses, etc...) Abuse is ignoring user preferences and forcing the use of a Microsoft product. Abuse is forcing manufacturers into agreements to stifle the manufacturers ability to offer alternatives. All of which Microsoft has done for nearly a decade, Europe just has the balls to call them out.
All OS's bundle products, Windows, Ubuntu, OSX, etc. The difference however is that they don't go out of their way to inconvenience you for choosing alternatives. If you want to show the market you don't approve of their business policies, buy a Mac, or an Ubuntu Dell. Either is more than fine for (I'm guessing) 90% of consumers. Most consumers only browse and send email. And there are still commercial products that match Office feature for feature. I personally have no Microsoft products in my house, clearing my conscience. In a perfect world, that shouldn't matter.
It isn't so much that Microsoft produced a superior product (agreed that at the time they did regards to IE and Netscape -- I left before Media Player was usable though), it was the deviousness of, at the same time, ensuring that other products were targeted to not work as in the case of DR Dos, and Stacker compression. I believe it occurred with Netscape among a host of others too.
(Why pray tell, do I not list them? I left because of the unethical behaviour and only wish to encourage others to be so altruistic. I'm not on a witch hunt.)
It has been a common practice for Microsoft; rather than beat their competitor purely on feature and function (Why yes! I believe they could!), at the same time deliberately suppress a competitor's product ability to work.
Semi-automatic amateur armchair Australian philosopher; conjecture ready at any moment...
The watchdogs, they do nothing!
The EU is saying that ALL OS's should give ALL competing products an even ground. By their own stated rules the EU should also be going after Apple. It is not. I think it is a bigger target vs smaller target. Apple is currently a smaller target. Let's see what the EU does after they finish with microsoft. If they ever finish with microsoft.
I thought Windows 7 was relased around 1998? Or was it 2003? Now I'm confused...
(-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
And their March update also includes #99 and #100 for their Malicious Removal Tool, with the addition of Vundo and Virtumonde detection that runs with each and every WindowsUpdate download.
Right on schedule with their 3 year plan to break all computing records -- what else is there to do now, but start working on an OS that might reach 1000 exploits in record time.
%WINDIR%\explorer.exe is a process that encompasses both the Windows shell and Windows explorer, a file manager.
%ProgramFiles%\Internet Explorer\iexplore.exe is the web browser.
Don't confuse the two.
What's purple and commutes? An Abelian grape.