US Antitrust Judge Examining Windows 7 Documents
Anonymous writes "After more than 11 years, the US antitrust case involving Microsoft is still alive, with a federal judge overseeing enforcement of provisions under which the software giant must operate. And now, Judge Kollar-Kotelly says she'll take a close look at new technical documents involving Windows 7. This case began during the Windows 95 era."
Can someone summarize exactly what we have achieved in this case?
.net, which is so complex that they had to implement autocomplete to make it usable.
Yes, .NET is complex, or rather it has a hell of a lot of libraries. That, however, is not necessarily a bad thing. It saves you from having to reinvent the wheel every time you write something.
As for needing autocomplete to make it usable, personally, I think that autocomplete and the graphical debugger are two of the best things to ever happen in programming. It saves me time, makes my job one heck of a lot easier and allows me to be more productive.
You may learn the value of that sort of thing some day.
I wish that more development environments had usable autocomplete. As much as I love to use Ruby for writing scripts, my main complaint about the IDE I use for it (netbeans) is that it *doesn't* have autocomplete for Ruby unless they've come out with a new version recently that does.
Everything I need to know I learned by killing smart people and eating their brains.
With open source libraries, you generally have to find the wheel before you can reuse it.
Often people end up reinventing the wheel because they (a.) couldn't find one someone else made, (b.) found one, but it wasn't under licensing terms that they could use with their project, or (c.) found one, but the project lost its way and ended up incomplete with a lead developer who may well have been hit by a bus.
Not saying closed source libraries are more helpful, plentiful, or accessible, but open source is not the panacea that zealots on Slashdot would like it to be.
The only downside to using Windows is the cost. It takes a reasonably competent user to install a Linux distro, drivers, use WINE to make Crysis work, and so forth. A reasonably competent user can also operate Windows without losing the system to malware and repair any infections that do occur. So a reasonably competent user should be indifferent between Windows and Linux.
I would never purchase Windows for a business enterprise, just because of the cost, and because at work you don't need to run Crysis. It fulfills all of my needs at home, though.
I wish they would sell Direct X as a separate product, though. Using it to try and force Windows upgrades on gamers is a dirty move.
You are aware of the concept of inertia, aren't you? I don't care if it still sells. That doesn't make it less crappy. People buy crap all the time, even when a perfectly good alternative is right there beside it. Microsoft is a forgettable operation now. We have plenty of good options before us. But here we are with the old "lead a horse to water" routine. I guess some people still prefer swill. Fine by me.
What?
may we continue with the slashdot Microsoft apologist categories? first we have the developer who has invested so much time into learning the windows API that he's scared shitless about the thought that customers/bosses might consider using anything else, and his livelihood rests on making jokes about the Linux desktop, free BSD, macOSX, the iphone, google android, or anything else that threatens the software dictatorship that he's to ignorant to look beyond. Second we have the childish one that likes to play these silly things called "games". strangely enough i have more patience for the second one, because their position is a little more justifiable.
The case B you mentioned is exactly why I think open source should be used from the beginning.
.. and if you compile statically, you also don't need a package system, since there are now no external dependencies ...
... but to claim that "a problem Windows doesn't have - massive amounts of intricate and interlinked software dependencies. " is a lie at best, since the whole antitrust case was on the way that IE was supposedly such a core component of the Windows OS, and that so many processes and programs depended on it, or libraries (dlls) that were part of it ...
Remove all the dlls from your system - Windows won't even boot.
Until that time, let us people who produce goods that we need to sell in the brutally competitive free market have a few tools to have a steady income. If that means proprietary file formats, exclusive deals with distributors, making funny protocols... so be it. The free market will determine when that is too annoying to bother dealing it and get with the competition.
If all that shit was eliminated, you'd have a level playing field to work on, and be able to compete based on merit.
What are you afraid of?
I'm not living in a world where my neighbor who makes windows break my window every morning, so I have to pay him to fix the window.
I personally have never had a problem with it, but that sounds like WGA to me.
For that matter, it sounds like the Windows update schedule (or OSX, I'm not prejudiced.) Either way, a new OS comes out every so often with new APIs that developers are convinced or cajoled into using so that we have to buy a new operating system. Sometimes it's made sense, because computers have come very far since the last release. Sometimes it doesn't; Windows XP supports all of today's hardware. And for that matter, paying so much for OSX minor releases is pure bullshit.
Would the world be better if everything was free as in freedom? YES...and I won't argue with that. But we don't live in that world... and I don't feel like making my industry a martyr.
So wait, you think it's a bad thing if this industry is regulated like every other industry is regulated, while this industry more than most could NOT EXIST WITHOUT THE WILL OF THE PEOPLE in the form of their obeyance of copyright law? They are LOSING THAT WILL. Your customers don't want the future you want. You'd better correct your course, or you and they are going to be sailing in different directions.
"You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
It takes a reasonably competent user to install a Linux distro, drivers, use WINE to make Crysis work, and so forth.
Try Mandriva, it doesn't and hasn't for a long time. Windows is only easy for the end-user because it's preinstalled on the PC. I build my own computers, so I wind up installing Windows on them (dual boot) and Windows installation is a long, frustrating ordeal. Installing Mandriva is a piece of cake.
Actually the only reason for Windows is games.
Free Martian Whores!