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Microsoft Acknowledges Linux Threat To Windows

angry tapir sends along coverage from Good Gear Guide of a recent Microsoft !0-K SEC filing: "Microsoft for the first time has named Linux distributors Red Hat and Canonical as competitors to its Windows client business in its annual filing to the US Securities and Exchange Commission. The move is an acknowledgment of the first viable competition from Linux to Microsoft's Windows client business, due mainly to the use of Linux on netbooks, which are rising in prominence as alternatives to full-sized notebooks. ... 'Client faces strong competition from well-established companies with differing approaches to the PC market,' Microsoft said in the filing. 'Competing commercial software products, including variants of Unix, are supplied by competitors such as Apple, Canonical, and Red Hat.'"

348 comments

  1. This Is News??!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    A throwaway line in a 10-K report which nobody reads or takes seriously is given a front page news story on slashdot??

    Are you guys really this desperate to drum up the anti-Microsoft pagehits?

    1. Re:This Is News??!!! by wampus · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Are you guys really this desperate to drum up the anti-Microsoft pagehits?

      Posted by kdawson on Tue August 04, 20:46

      In short, yes.

    2. Re:This Is News??!!! by Hal_Porter · · Score: 1, Interesting

      I dunno I like this

      'Competing commercial software products, including variants of Unix, are supplied by competitors such as Apple, Canonical, and Red Hat.'"

      Is it me or is there a subtle jab a Richard "GNU is not Unix" Stallman there. Is it possible that they hate him so much they are trolling him in a SEC filing. Or are they trying to troll Apple by pointing out that (unlike Cutler's highly succesful NT project) their Copland kernel project failed and they ended up using a BSD kernel from Nextstep. Is the idea that their enemies will read this and be driven into chair hurling rage that will sap their productivity.

      I'd like to think so.

      --
      echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
    3. Re:This Is News??!!! by ozmanjusri · · Score: 3, Interesting
      Are you guys really this desperate to drum up the anti-Microsoft pagehits?

      Is open discussion really anti-Microsoft?

      This recurrent claim of anti-Microsoft bias early in Slashdot discussions involving MS is so frequent that it's hard to believe it's anything other than a deliberate tactic by their reputation management team.

      --
      "I've got more toys than Teruhisa Kitahara."
    4. Re:This Is News??!!! by wampus · · Score: 2, Insightful

      So "paid shills" is the new "year of the Linux desktop," correct? You may not be saying it, but you are strongly thinking it.

    5. Re:This Is News??!!! by k10quaint · · Score: 2, Funny

      I guess you have never heard of http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Astroturfing right?
      [secretM$handshake] Wink wink nudge nudge know what I mean? [secretM$handshake]

    6. Re:This Is News??!!! by fucket · · Score: 2, Funny

      Your second and third links seem to be broken.

    7. Re:This Is News??!!! by icannotthinkofaname · · Score: 1

      In short, yes.

      What's the long version?

      --
      Let q be a radix > 1. I am in ur base-q, killing 10 d00ds.
    8. Re:This Is News??!!! by Macthorpe · · Score: 4, Funny

      Yeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeees.

      (Couldn't resist.)

      --
      "It does not do to leave a live dragon out of your calculations, if you live near him." - Tolkien
    9. Re:This Is News??!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Which still comes back to the fact that Slashdot just isn't important enough for Microsoft to waste time or money astroturfing. Geez, deflate your ego a bit there and remove the tin foil hat, will ya?

    10. Re:This Is News??!!! by dna_(c)(tm)(r) · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Which still comes back to the fact that Slashdot just isn't important enough for Microsoft to waste time or money astroturfing.

      They advertise here.

    11. Re:This Is News??!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bullshit.

    12. Re:This Is News??!!! by master5o1 · · Score: 2, Funny

      affirmative. correct.
      or
      "In light of your accusation I would have to agree with what you are saying, as it does appear to support the accusation made."

      --
      signature is pants
    13. Re:This Is News??!!! by ciderVisor · · Score: 1

      So "paid shills" is the new "year of the Linux desktop," correct?

      2009 is the year of the paid MS shills !

      --
      Squirrel!
    14. Re:This Is News??!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Really, most of us wouldn't know if they did or not. We either use ABP or check the 'disable advertising' button.

    15. Re:This Is News??!!! by GigaplexNZ · · Score: 1

      Is it me or is there a subtle jab a Richard "GNU is not Unix" Stallman there.

      Don't worry, it's just you.

    16. Re:This Is News??!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't get me wrong, I have nothing but respect for the whole Linux movement, but this article seems like a sad and desperate attempt to find validation and credibility. I don't think Bill Gates ever wrote an article to celebrate the first time his DOS was mentioned in some obscure IBM report...

      Even though Linux may not fully baked yet, it's getting there and I'm confident it will become a real alternative in mister everybody's home PC within the next few years. Let's drop the loser attitude and start thinking big!

    17. Re:This Is News??!!! by Dragonslicer · · Score: 2, Insightful

      This recurrent claim of anti-Microsoft bias early in Slashdot discussions involving MS is so frequent that it's hard to believe it's anything other than a deliberate tactic by their reputation management team.

      You did see which "editor" posted the story, right?

    18. Re:This Is News??!!! by Verdatum · · Score: 1

      Business tends not to be so exciting or creative. It's not like this report was from the desk of Lord Ballmer or any such thing. It's just "quick, make up an excuse for bad business so we can get some of that there gubment money."

    19. Re:This Is News??!!! by u-235-sentinel · · Score: 1

      Bullshit.

      **cough cough** You must be new here :-)

      couldn't resist

      --
      Has Comcast disconnected your Internet account? Same here. You can read about it at http://comcastissue.blogspot.com
    20. Re:This Is News??!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The fact is that in corporate discurse, words and sayings are very carefully chosen. So the news is that Microsoft recognises those other two companies as "competitors". Seems trivial, but in corporate world, it's not trivial at all! It means lots of bussiness policies modifications.
      Regards!

    21. Re:This Is News??!!! by secondLife · · Score: 1

      Are you so worried about what /. says about Microsatan that you read it looking for anti-MS stuff? Oh, I guess that's rhetorical as you are.

    22. Re:This Is News??!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      dude, did you NOT see the bill gates photo used for this column.

  2. Antitrust avoidance by pasamio · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This isn't an acknowledgement of Linux, its something to use as ammo to prove that they don't have a monopoly. Don't get the warm fuzzies over Microsoft acknowledging Linux because its just marketing and politics.

    --
    I always wondered where this setting was...
    1. Re:Antitrust avoidance by FlyingSquidStudios · · Score: 1, Funny

      I'm no Microsoft fan, but I'd say that does prove they aren't a monopoly. (They're just a near-monopoly.)

    2. Re:Antitrust avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

      I don't think your average Linux zealot will get warm fuzzes, but rather a raging hard-on. They've warped computers and software into something of a battle between forces of good verses evil on a level that could inspire it's own Star Wars sequel. They will use this as proof their crusade has the "Dark side" worried. They are so like children.

    3. Re:Antitrust avoidance by Dachannien · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Very good point. The true indicator of Microsoft considering itself to have real competition is when it starts pricing its products competitively.

    4. Re:Antitrust avoidance by lamadude · · Score: 5, Insightful

      A monopoly does not necessarily mean that you have no competitors.

    5. Re:Antitrust avoidance by fleton · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Use the Linux Luke, use the Linux. I agree that Micro$oft is using Linux as a pawn in their game to make a "legal" monopoly, they have done it before in previous anti-trust lawsuits so this really is not that new of news.

    6. Re:Antitrust avoidance by FlyingSquidStudios · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Not according to my dictionary...

      1. Exclusive control by one group of the means of producing or selling a commodity or service: "Monopoly frequently ... arises from government support or from collusive agreements among individuals" (Milton Friedman).
      2. Law. A right granted by a government giving exclusive control over a specified commercial activity to a single party.
      3.
      a. A company or group having exclusive control over a commercial activity.
      b. A commodity or service so controlled.
      4.
      a. Exclusive possession or control: arrogantly claims to have a monopoly on the truth.
      b. Something that is exclusively possessed or controlled: showed that scientific achievement is not a male monopoly.

      Unless you think 'exclusive' doesn't mean 'exclusive'...

    7. Re:Antitrust avoidance by shanen · · Score: 1

      That's not possible without competition to define the true value of the software. A big chunk of Microsoft's business model has always been to hide the price from the actual customers by bundling their software in with hardware so that most of the end users don't even know what it cost them.

      The problem with pretending that any Linux distro is a competitor to anything is that none of the Linux distro's have a viable economic model. Living on charity doesn't cut it for real programmers.

      My suggestion of a new economic model for open source software is 'reverse auction charity shares'. The wannabe programmers would sell a certain number of shares to pay for the effort of the project, and start work once it was funded. The reverse auction part is that they could sell extra shares at decreasing costs. It's still charitable since their profits are not increasing and since the finished software becomes part of the public domain, but the wannabe users have an incentive to "sell" the software to their friends so that everyone gets a lower price per share.

      You could actually extend the model to other forms of charity. For example, PBS could sell shares for various programs and possible programs so the donors would help them decide what gets on the are. Political parties could auction shares in politicians so their funding would be visible and linked to the public rather than done underground by lobbyists.

      --
      Freedom = (Meaningful - Coerced) Choice != (Speech | Beer^2), and sad sock puppets' bad mods avail them naught.
    8. Re:Antitrust avoidance by RedK · · Score: 5, Insightful

      In the real world and for anti-trust legislation, you aren't required to have 100% market share to have a monopoly. The fact is, Microsoft were found to have one, and they aren't in a much different position now, as far as Windows installed based goes.

      --
      "Not to mention all the idiots who use words like boxen."
      Anonymous Coward on Monday August 04, @06:49PM
    9. Re:Antitrust avoidance by CountOfJesusChristo · · Score: 1

      How big of a price-cut do OEMs get for Windows XP on netbooks again?

    10. Re:Antitrust avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is nothing to compete with.

      On one hand we have Linux/BSD which is free, which you can't compete with. On the other hand, we have OSX which is cheap, but bound to very specific hardware, so it's not really in competition.

    11. Re:Antitrust avoidance by sys.stdout.write · · Score: 2, Funny

      Yeah, but it'll come back to bite them when 2010 is the year of the Linux desktop.

    12. Re:Antitrust avoidance by antirelic · · Score: 1

      Not anti-trust avoidance at all.

      Havent you been reading?!?

      Microsoft is accusing Linux of cyber-bullying and will use this to have linux outlawed in the US, Germany and the UK.

      another diabolical move.

      --
      20th century Marxism is not progress...
    13. Re:Antitrust avoidance by superslacker87 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Would you be happier if they were using the term oligopoly? Then you could chuck Apple in with MS and it would be blazingly accurate.

      --
      I run Ubuntu skinned to look like a Mac on a PC. Go figure.
    14. Re:Antitrust avoidance by Nerdfest · · Score: 2

      Maybe the more meaningful part is the 'control' part.

    15. Re:Antitrust avoidance by Nerdfest · · Score: 4, Insightful
      They are so like children.

      We are not ... you big poopy-head.

    16. Re:Antitrust avoidance by Important+Remark · · Score: 1

      Even if exclusive means exclusive, it lacks a definition of a commodity or service. Is an operating system with a browser one commodity, or is it two? How about an operating system with a TCP/IP stack, or support for USB ports. Is that one commodity, or are they several? Every producer of anything has a monopoly, given a tight enough definition of the product.
      I have a total monopoly on writing this message!

    17. Re:Antitrust avoidance by similar_name · · Score: 1

      I think(hope) you're being funny. The use of the word
      prove[s] is my hint.

    18. Re:Antitrust avoidance by fryjs · · Score: 1

      What is the standard companies are measured against to determine if they are monopoly or not? 90% market share? What ever 'feels' about right? How can one avoid crossing anti-trust laws if one cannot know when they will apply or not?

    19. Re:Antitrust avoidance by Runaway1956 · · Score: 1

      You could have googled a legal definition. I'll note that "from collusive agreements" fits MS exactly.

      "An economic advantage held by one or more persons or companies deriving from the exclusive power to carry on a particular business or trade or to manufacture and sell a particular item, thereby suppressing competition and allowing such persons or companies to raise the price of a product or service substantially above the price that would be established by a free market."

      Even in Al Capone's Chicago, other people produced and sold alcohol. Al still had a monopoly.

      http://legal-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/Monopoly

      You can't possibly believe that Microsoft got where it is today by embracing "free trade". How many individual companies did they bankrupt or otherwise run out of business, often times with the mere threat of a lawsuit that the smaller company couldn't afford to fight?

      --
      "Windows is like the faint smell of piss in a subway: it's there, and there's nothing you can do about it." - Charlie Br
    20. Re:Antitrust avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Given the massive ubiquity of the Windows operating systems, I would think it reasonable to consider, "the ability to run software written for Windows" as a commodity service. Obviously Microsoft does indeed exercise exclusive control over this.

    21. Re:Antitrust avoidance by fleton · · Score: 1

      I hope 2010 will be the year, I have been a Linux user for 2 years and I love every second of it.

    22. Re:Antitrust avoidance by saleenS281 · · Score: 1

      That's the most asinine statement I've ever heard.

      Our Windows licenses are cheaper than our Redhat licenses and always have been. By your definition, Redhat "has no real competition". Please.

    23. Re:Antitrust avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > The problem with pretending that any Linux distro is a competitor to anything is that none of the Linux distro's have a viable economic model. Living on charity doesn't cut it for real programmers.

      There are currently an estimated 1.5 million equivalent-full-time developers working on Linux/FOSS. Regardless if you believe it or not, they are in fact perfectly real.

    24. Re:Antitrust avoidance by dmbasso · · Score: 1

      For me, 2001 was the year of Linux on my desktop (exclusively). What others say about 'the year' is really irrelevant, isn't it?

      --
      `echo $[0x853204FA81]|tr 0-9 ionbsdeaml`@gmail.com
    25. Re:Antitrust avoidance by joocemann · · Score: 1

      Laughably, acknowledgment changes nothing. But that doesn't mean we shouldn't party for the blue skies above us!

    26. Re:Antitrust avoidance by GuyverDH · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The real kicker is what can the company try and coax/cajole/force other companies / people to do based on their desire/want/need to get their product.

      In the case of M$ Winbloze, they had the gall (and it worked) to demand that computer manufacturers buy 1 license of their product for every computer they sold, regardless of the O.S. it was distributed with.

      They did this with a plethora of other currently existing and now extinct computer manufacturers.

      They then continued to grab anything that they thought could entice users, and bundle it into the operating system. gui text editors, word processors, games, disk degragmentation, disk compression, networking, to name just a few...

      They buddied up to software houses, talking about improving their products, only to release their own competition of said products within a fairly short development cycle.

      They stole websites and product names from other companies, by threatening lawsuits, just so they could use the name. (A quick search can find at least one - look for a product with M$ main OS name, and defender in it)

      They embedded their own borked web browser, then made the automatic update/patch processes only work with theirs, disallowing any 3rd party browser from being used to simplify fixing/patching their OS.

      They took international standards and bastardized them, and released them as their own, under their own lock and key product names / tools - usually breaking them utterly.

      They ran roughshod over the international standards boards across the world to force (in any way they could) their standard down everyone's throats, without it even really working, or having a truly definitive definition of said standard.

      Those and literally thousands of other examples are the reason that a company like M$ can be considered to be monopolistic regardless of the number of competitors they have.

      --
      Who is general failure, and why is he reading my hard drive?
    27. Re:Antitrust avoidance by joocemann · · Score: 0

      A monopoly does not necessarily mean that you have no competitors.

      yes it does. wtf?

    28. Re:Antitrust avoidance by falconwolf · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The problem with pretending that any Linux distro is a competitor to anything is that none of the Linux distro's have a viable economic model. Living on charity doesn't cut it for real programmers.

      Though not in the same league as Microsoft, there are Linux distro companies and venders that make a nice profit. One which is in MS's league is IBM, and it had gross profits of $45.66 Billion on revenue of $97.27 Billion. That's less than $1 Billion less than Microsoft's profits. Redhat had profits of $546.45 Million on revenue of $670.33 Million. And I bet though his net worth isn't as much as Bill Gates or Steve Jobs, Linus Torvalds is worth more than a million dollars. as are other Linux developers.

      Falcon

    29. Re:Antitrust avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Welcome back twitter, I've missed you :)

    30. Re:Antitrust avoidance by derGoldstein · · Score: 1

      First of all, every OS has support costs. If a manufacturer chooses to place a distro on a machine, they have to support the entire package, not just the hardware. You're right about OSX, since it's specifically tailored and hardware-bound, but Linux distros are definitely something that MS can compete against in a financial arena. This is especially true for corporate computers where you need an IT infrastructure. The $0 price tag that's attached to Linux only helps you until you first boot up the machine. From that point onward, someone has to support the OS that's running on that hardware. Microsoft has a gargantuan training and support structure they can offer to customers. No single distro would be able to compete with it if we're talking about people running Linux on the desktop (again, especially within a company). The support costs over the span of 3 years (usual life expectancy for a PC) would accumulate much faster in a Linux environment. It's the "price" of running an OS that too few people are used to, and are trained on.

      As a side note, I'm hoping that the move-to-the-cloud will change people's perception of operating systems, expecting them to be "slimmer" and "out of the way", allowing Linux/BSD to gain market share since they're lean by design, and more secure.

      --
      Entomologically speaking, the spider is not a bug, it's a feature.
    31. Re:Antitrust avoidance by haruchai · · Score: 1

      It's not really the first time, but it may be the first time they've put in an official filing. Here's a article from 5 years ago:

      http://www.linuxinsider.com/story/35697.html?wlc=1249446360

      But, I think you're absolutely right that this is a ploy. And, they can play the marketing and political game like no other IT company.

      --
      Pain is merely failure leaving the body
    32. Re:Antitrust avoidance by SerpentMage · · Score: 1

      I work at a hedge fund. This has nothing to do with MSFT doing marketing and politics. MSFT is screwing itself and the operating system called Windows is starting to be become an anchor for the entire corporation.

      Folks what you are witnessing here is a slow downfall and collapse of a company called Microsoft. MSFT used to be one of my holdings until quite recently. I completely unloaded my MSFT position at a slight profit because I am sick and tired on how badly MSFT is run.

      The real problem at MSFT is that in previous years Windows provided the company with profits. But now the real problem is that Windows is failing and because all of the products are based on Windows it is causing a real revenue cutback in all products. Look at their last filing, the first time Microsoft did not grow revenue. Remember this folks, in all of the times MSFT filed they never had a revenue drop. That means they went through three previous recessions with no problems. NOW they are failing... VERY TELLING...

      --

      "You can't make a race horse of a pig"
      "No," said Samuel, "but you can make very fast pig"
    33. Re:Antitrust avoidance by DevStar · · Score: 1

      That's absurd. The main knock against MS has historically been that they undercut the prices of their competitors. Even their Office suite originally was cheaper than WordPerfect and Lotus 1-2-3. Pretty much the only products that are cheaper than Microsoft products are the free (as in beer) open source products. But if you look in areas where there are commercial products, Microsoft is competitive with the top competitors. Look at database pricing (SQL Server vs DB2 vs Oracle), or compilers (Intel C vs Visual C++), or servers (Windows Server vs Solaris/AIX historically), etc... Of course now companies like IBM have given up selling a lot of software and want to make money by selling you a lifelong team of consultants.

    34. Re:Antitrust avoidance by icannotthinkofaname · · Score: 1

      They've warped computers and software into something of a battle between forces of good verses evil on a level that could inspire it's own Star Wars sequel.

      Why Star Wars? The image used with these stories is Bill Gates as a borg, and that reference comes straight out of Star Trek.

      --
      Let q be a radix > 1. I am in ur base-q, killing 10 d00ds.
    35. Re:Antitrust avoidance by yoyhed · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Regardless of whether you are making good points, you really lose credibility with shit like "M$ Winbloze". Just so you know.

      --
      WHO NEEDS SHIFT WHEN YOU HAVE CAPSLOCK/ DAMN1
    36. Re:Antitrust avoidance by NotQuiteReal · · Score: 1

      Tissue = Kleenex (tm)
      Steel Wool = Brillo (tm)
      Cellophane Tape = Scotch Tape (tm)
      Photocopy = Xerox(tm)
      PC Operating System = Microsoft Windows(tm)
      Look it up on the Internet = "Google(tm) it"
      The list goes on...


      Good marketing yes, but I can think of competing products for all this stuff. None of them seem exclusive to me.

      --
      This issue is a bit more complicated than you think.
    37. Re:Antitrust avoidance by node+3 · · Score: 1

      Not according to my dictionary...

      Does your dictionary have anything under the terms "pedantic", "sophistry", "absolutism"?

      There are terms that are often presented in absolute terms, but never are absolute in reality. They can't exist in a pure form. So if you hold to such a literal interpretation, you essentially make the term useless with regards to anything existing in this world. Banning literal monopolies is like banning actual, living unicorns. By taking a literal, asperger's-esque, view of the term monopoly, you essentially give any and all monopolies a free pass.

      Excepting some rare or contrived circumstances, no one can ever have a literal dictionary definition monopoly. Take, for example, steel. Even if you owned all the iron in the world, the moment you sold your first bit of steel, technically you no longer have a monopoly, since there's one tiny bit of steel that someone else can sell.

      On the other hand, the non-literal interpretation of these words is very useful indeed. Something that can't be defined precisely or objectively can still exist and is still important to consider. MS isn't a monopoly in the impossible, literal sense. But it was (and to a reasonable extent, still is) a monopoly.

    38. Re:Antitrust avoidance by AlongForTheRide · · Score: 1

      Oh, come on... Why don't you just tell us how you *REALLY* feel? Geez!

    39. Re:Antitrust avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Regardless of whether you are making good points, you really lose credibility with shit like "M$ Winbloze". Just so you know.

      And you lose credibility by implicitly pretending that M$ marketing drivel and astroturf isn't identical shit with a pretty face. Just so you know.

    40. Re:Antitrust avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Can we stop with the Winbloze/M$/Micro$haft, already? It might have been clever in the early 90s, but now it's just ridiculous.

    41. Re:Antitrust avoidance by Faylone · · Score: 0, Troll

      Astroturf drivel aside, using $ as a letter still makes you look bad.

    42. Re:Antitrust avoidance by xalorous · · Score: 1

      one word:

      DECAF

      --
      TANSTAAFL GIGO Acronyms to live by!
    43. Re:Antitrust avoidance by Atrox666 · · Score: 1

      Bahahah So I hear this desktop dominant version of Linux has Duke Nukem Forever as a desktop game.
      Linux is a geek OS. It will always get picked last for every team except the chess team.
      From a coding stand point it may be vastly superior but from a media science stand point and from a marketing stand point it really is a fucking joke. Much like solar powered cars: they work, they have some vastly superior features, no one wants to party with people who use them on a regular basis. One day I will write a design book demonstrating why Linux has as much chance of really competing with windows as the Sham-wow does. For now I'll leave you guys to hope against hope. And before you go crowing about the server market remember, it doesn't count if you get invited to the party and they lock you in a closet all night.

         

    44. Re:Antitrust avoidance by shanen · · Score: 1

      Actually I'm in the IBM food chain, but my impression is that very little of that money comes from Linux. I don't feel I'm at liberty to say anything substantive about the internal dynamics of the Linux situation, but summaries of the financial results are available online. Just my opinion, but I definitely regard much of our Linux-specific "investment" as closer to "charity" or "advertising".

      As regards Redhat your figures are ridiculous. No one has over 80% of profit from their total sales. Well, maybe Bernie Madoff--but even he couldn't keep it up. However, the last time I did look into the Redhat situation, their actual revenue was almost purely from specialized services. Their choice to specialize in Linux rather than Windows does impact their financial model, but...

      From your lack of response to the main body of my post, I receive the impression that you didn't understand my main point. Kind of hard to think you agreed with it or found it too obvious. Perhaps it will be easier to understand in reverse? Microsoft has a business model that most people understand and that definitely works, regardless of the ethical considerations.

      --
      Freedom = (Meaningful - Coerced) Choice != (Speech | Beer^2), and sad sock puppets' bad mods avail them naught.
    45. Re:Antitrust avoidance by speedtux · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The problem with pretending that any Linux distro is a competitor to anything is that none of the Linux distro's have a viable economic model. Living on charity doesn't cut it for real programmers.

      Will you stop spreading this kind of FUD? Linux developers are generally well-paid, by companies that know exactly why they are paying for this kind of development. There is little "charity" involved in developing open source software.

      That's not possible without competition to define the true value of the software.

      Open source defines it just fine: the competitive price of the Windows OS should be zero; an efficient OS development business can obviously cover all its cost from other revenue streams.

    46. Re:Antitrust avoidance by SlashDev · · Score: 1

      Whether or not they are a monopoly, is irrelevant. The fate is inevitable, Windows will slowly be replaced by Linux and some sort of Google product.

      --

      TOP DSLR Cameras Reviews of the top DSLRs
    47. Re:Antitrust avoidance by Yvanhoe · · Score: 1

      Wait Windows 7 will be sold ?

      --
      The Wise adapts himself to the world. The Fool adapts the world to himself. Therefore, all progress depends on the Fool.
    48. Re:Antitrust avoidance by arizonagroovejet · · Score: 4, Insightful

      They embedded their own borked web browser, then made the automatic update/patch processes only work with theirs, disallowing any 3rd party browser from being used to simplify fixing/patching their OS.

      Having the user install updates to their operating system via the web browser is such terrible idea that I think it's actually a good thing you can only do it with Internet Explorer.
      Installing operating system updates via web browser means you have to give the web browser the ability to modify parts of the operating system. I'm sure I don't have to explain why that's not good. Also it trains users to expect things in their web browser to ask them for permission to install things on the machine and since a lot of users will simply click on pop up messages without reading them properly just to get rid of them, well, you can see where I'm going with that I'm sure.

    49. Re:Antitrust avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Microsoft enemy is themselves.
      Although I do care about Open Source and all, I would still use their OS, which isn't bad by any means(if you forget ME and Vista), if they weren't so obtuse with activation.
      Sell me an uncrippled OS and I will possibly buy it.

    50. Re:Antitrust avoidance by unneekway · · Score: 1
      I don't disagree with some of your points. Microsoft's business practices are reprehensible, and their implementation of standards is laughable.

      But I'm trying to figure out what you meant by this statement?

      They then continued to grab anything that they thought could entice users, and bundle it into the operating system. gui text editors, word processors, games, disk degragmentation, disk compression, networking, to name just a few...

      I'm inferring from your observation that this is somehow wrong, and that an "operating system" should be nothing but a kernel. You seem to be saying that in creating an attractive product by including value-added features like "networking", games and (gasp) a text editor, Microsoft has somehow overstepped their bounds.

      I suppose it would be different if $YOUR_FAVORITE_DISTRO or Apple included such obvious userbait...wouldn't it? Oh, wait...

    51. Re:Antitrust avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Linux is a geek OS.

      The Ubuntu forums prove you wrong.

      Many of the people asking questions clearly have virtually no idea about even the most basic geekery.

      Linux is evolving rapidly. 8 years ago I couldn't get it to do the things I did in Windows. Four years ago I could, but it took some effort and geekery. Now it (mostly) just works. And Cannonical are spending money directly on addressing the (mostly).

    52. Re:Antitrust avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, because writing off a post because of some snarky lettering makes you so much better.

    53. Re:Antitrust avoidance by Insanity+Defense · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Very good point. The true indicator of Microsoft considering itself to have real competition is when it starts pricing its products competitively.

      Consider their pricing of XP Home on netbooks. It was a big enough change to affect their bottom line.

    54. Re:Antitrust avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      hey yoyhed, why don't you go fuck yourself, you M$ ass kissing sycophant

    55. Re:Antitrust avoidance by koiransuklaa · · Score: 1

      The price was $20-30 last I heard (totally off-the-record remark, so I'm not vouching for that), in any case the price cut is a major one. Linux on netbooks was and is a scary thing for Microsoft.

    56. Re:Antitrust avoidance by The_Quinn · · Score: 1

      The true indicator of Microsoft considering itself to have real competition is when it starts pricing its products competitively.

      If Microsoft products weren't priced competitively, they wouldn't be in business.

    57. Re:Antitrust avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I stopped reading after:

      M$ Winbloze

    58. Re:Antitrust avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Correct. It's quite possible to dislike, and express such dislike towards, both Microsoft the company and/or its products (including Windows versions, Office, or whatever) without resorting to childish spelling antics. I personally believe that the message is strengthened when put forth using "normal" language.

      For the record, I personally think that:
      - Some products of Microsoft's making are ok, some are even great.
      - Some products are not so ok, some are even very bad.
      - A lot of Microsoft's business practices are despicable, some are not.
      - Microsoft does not compete on a fair playing field, in general.
      - Microsoft more often than not abuses the system(s).

      Thus, I tend to avoid Microsoft products where it counts, as is my right as a customer, and I also tend to recommend others doing the same, as is my duty as a friend.

      Using $ or other silly letters when doing the above is not something I do, however.

      For some reason, my message tends to get across more often than not.

      Fancy that.

      (I am not a native English speaker. There may be language mistakes above.)

    59. Re:Antitrust avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      fyi - I'm betting that it was so that M$ can't claim that the op specifically stated their product - you know - lawsuit happy that they are...

    60. Re:Antitrust avoidance by u-235-sentinel · · Score: 1

      This isn't an acknowledgement of Linux, its something to use as ammo to prove that they don't have a monopoly. Don't get the warm fuzzies over Microsoft acknowledging Linux because its just marketing and politics.

      I remember when that happened with Coke many years ago. They acknowledged pepsi was their competitor then wammo! Pepsi's stock and recognition shot up. So yeah, this could turn into something that Microsoft was afraid would happen.

      Personally I don't care. I'm already running Ubuntu on all my computers at home cept for my wife's business computer. And that's because Vegas Video doesn't work under Wine or Crossover Office ... yet :-)

      --
      Has Comcast disconnected your Internet account? Same here. You can read about it at http://comcastissue.blogspot.com
    61. Re:Antitrust avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They are so like children.

      We are not ... you big poopy-head.

      I must say, I'm curious how something like this gets modded Insightful...

      oblig: You keep using that word. I do not think it means what you think it means.

    62. Re:Antitrust avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Why does he lose credibility? He has an opinion and a phrase which sums that opinion up.

      Personally, and from most of the people I deal with (many are even stanch MS supporters), the M$ and Micro$oft labels are just used to reinforce the idea that you pay way to much for what you get. As for Winbloze, again, it's a simple play on words that gets a point across without requiring a small thesis (even my elderly parents can understand my opinion with a single word).

      Using the full Microsoft (Hey, should we include the TM as well?) every time becomes tedious, especially if you do not support or agree with the company (either morally, ethically, or technically; although, I can't understand why two of those apply to a company but to each their own I suppose),

      Now, if I respect a person (or company) I find I will use their full name/title without question, (ever notice you do that?); however, if you don't respect a person (or company) you tend to poke fun/tease/mangle their names, activities, or actions (think school kids as adults will generally ignore them out of politeness). So why should this not be happening to MS? What have they done to earn our respect?

      In my opinion any company (or person) who can not behave properly does not deserve respect, and thus "childish" nicknames like M$ will become common; and in this case too common, but, just maybe, it's deserved?

    63. Re:Antitrust avoidance by agbinfo · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I think he's saying that the fact that they could get away with this demonstrates that they are a legal monopoly.

      If they didn't have a monopoly, the software companies that distributed these applications would have boycotted Windows and Microsoft would have had to stop that practice. Being a monopoly, that threat was irrelevant.

    64. Re:Antitrust avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, but it'll come back to bite them when 2010 is the year of the Linux desktop.

      Jesus christ, you just post lame memes. How do you get past CAPTCHA?

    65. Re:Antitrust avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Regardless of whether you are making good points, you really lose credibility with shit like "M$ Winbloze". Just so you know.

      Taking offense to Microsoft's pet names has become a badge of honor for some. I find it hard to take them seriously when they never seem to defend the likes of "Rat Shack" or "Found On Road Dead". It make you seem tools. Just so you know.

    66. Re:Antitrust avoidance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Totally true. i'm a total ubuntu fan boi, but as soon as i read "M$ Winbloze" I skipped the rest of the comment.

    67. Re:Antitrust avoidance by CodeBuster · · Score: 1

      They are so like children.

      Your logic is undeniable...

    68. Re:Antitrust avoidance by Dachannien · · Score: 1

      Actually, you make my point for me quite nicely. Microsoft considers itself to have competition in the database arena, and prices its products in that arena competitively. But in the OS arena, they still consider themselves to be the only game in town, so they charge uncompetitive prices for their OSes.

    69. Re:Antitrust avoidance by colinrichardday · · Score: 1

      Use the katana, Richard.

    70. Re:Antitrust avoidance by shanen · · Score: 1

      FUD? Sorry, I'm convinced you're the fuddy duddy here. Good economic models usually win in the market place. Linux has NOT won and poses no threat, Microsoft's whining notwithstanding. Or should it be "whinging"?

      I suppose I better include a bit on my qualifications to have an opinion. At home I use Linux (Ubuntu) exclusively on two machines, and in a virtual machine on the third. I've tried lots of distros, but I've mostly been with Ubuntu for several years now. In terms of computer time, I probably spend 95% of my time at home using Linux and regard it as basically superior to Windows. The situation at work is rather more bleak, but I don't feel I should go into details.

      However, you're fundamentally very confused and befuddled, especially about the economics. A computer without an OS is worthless, and insofar as you think computers have any value, the OS is part of that value. Microsoft has succeeded primarily by pretending the OS is free. Microsoft hides their charges by forcing the makers to pay up front, and the makers deliver turnkey bundles with Microsoft's profits buried inside the price. (The Linux people are also pretending the OS is free, but they aren't getting any money out of the makers, and truly free is NOT a working economic model. Someone somewhere is ultimately paying for the beer or the lunch or the OS.)

      With regards to your comment about well-paid programmers, I have to speak rather carefully or circumspectly. I am in the food chain of what is probably the largest of the "companies" of which you speak, and I surely have access to some information that is not regarded as public information. I think there are three appropriate comments within the bounds of what I can say:

      (1) I do think the company is sincere about the money they put into open source software.

      (2) Though the amount of money the company puts into open source software sounds very large by the scale of open source software, on the scale of all of our software development costs, it is not very noticeable. I suppose it's even possible that it's tapped off of the training or competitive research or public good will budgets. What sounds like a lot of money to the open source people probably sounds like a sneeze to Microsoft.

      (3) When push comes to shove, the projects that are making money are the ones that get more money invested into them.

      Remember, those are just some of my opinions, and if you don't like them, I have others--but none of them should be taken as in any way representative of my company's official positions.

      --
      Freedom = (Meaningful - Coerced) Choice != (Speech | Beer^2), and sad sock puppets' bad mods avail them naught.
    71. Re:Antitrust avoidance by metaforest · · Score: 1

      The key point of M$ mentioning competition from Linux in their filing is clearly intended as an attempt to astroturf their monopoly status.

      It's a very lame and laughable attempt.

    72. Re:Antitrust avoidance by metaforest · · Score: 1

      In the "A Book of Five Rings" by Miyamoto Musashi, the author describes a situation where an opponent might be too powerful to defeat with a decisive attack. Musashi, in such a situation advocates applying the principle of "Death by a thousand cuts."

      Applying this idea to Microsoft we can look at each of the various factors that is 'cutting' their profit growth, and see that the powerful giant that cannot be struck a decisive blow, would appear to be slowly bleeding out.

    73. Re:Antitrust avoidance by speedtux · · Score: 1

      Good economic models usually win in the market place. Linux has NOT won and poses no threat,

      What planet are you living on? Linux has killed Microsoft's ambitions in embedded devices, compute clusters, Internet companies, mobile phones, education, and scientific computing. Microsoft wanted to dominate those areas, but they have failed miserably at that. Some of those areas, Linux dominates completely.

      Remember, those are just some of my opinions,

      Well, and against your "opinions", I have some facts, like the fact that I and many others have made a fine living producing open source software.

      What sounds like a lot of money to the open source people probably sounds like a sneeze to Microsoft.

      So what? You were implying that open source programmers work out of charity and that's wrong. We get paid well for what we do. The fact that Microsoft wastes money hand over foot on other things only means that Microsoft is an inefficient company, something that will sooner or later kill them.

      However, you're fundamentally very confused and befuddled,

      If you want to see "confused and befuddled", look in the mirror; you obviously don't have the slightest idea of what's going on in the real world. Microsoft is a dinosaur hanging on desperately to their desktop OS monopoly and becoming less and less relevant.

    74. Re:Antitrust avoidance by shanen · · Score: 1

      Yah, I need to avoid these discussions. I know you're wrong, but saying why just isn't worth the risk of saying too much. Many of the facts are public information--but some are not, and this discussion is not worth the research effort that would be required to make sure which are which. I suppose the only pretty safe thing is to note that Microsoft certainly has failed as regards Windows Mobile--but not for the reasons you evidently think...

      Congratulations. You "win".

      See you at the bank.

      --
      Freedom = (Meaningful - Coerced) Choice != (Speech | Beer^2), and sad sock puppets' bad mods avail them naught.
    75. Re:Antitrust avoidance by speedtux · · Score: 1

      I know you're wrong, but saying why just isn't worth the risk of saying too much.

      Your pomposity fails to impress.

      See you at the bank.

      Yeah, as you're begging for a loan: Microsoft's stock price is down to mid-1990's levels and their growth is anemic.

  3. "Look, we dont own the market, really!" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just looking for excuses to claim they are not a monopoly. Nothing to see here, move along.

  4. According to UNIX.org by vfs · · Score: 1

    If only there was a Linux that was actually UNIX certified by The Open Group...

    http://www.unix.org/what_is_unix/single_unix_specification.html

    1. Re:According to UNIX.org by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      ... and why does that matter? Linux is clearly not "Unix" (and GNU's Not Unix)

      I don't see Free/Open/Net BSDs on those lists either.

      Most of the software available compiles with the Gnu toolchain. The GNU base system (coreutils etc.) isn't exactly the same as on most Unix variants either. Use it on its own merits.

      I hear shit like this from Solaris snobs all the time.

    2. Re:According to UNIX.org by joocemann · · Score: 1

      Linux snob disses Solaris snob.... lmfao.

      You guys are a spectacle. I guess microsoft is like a budweiser, then?

      keep fighting each other, it only makes people like your OS less. Try understanding and unity... see where that takes you.

    3. Re:According to UNIX.org by _merlin · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It matters because as long as GNU/Linux isn't standardised, and can subtly change behaviour between releases, you don't have a stable platform to target. If you're developing against the UNIX 03 specification, you know that your application will behave as expected on any of these systems. Stability and standardisation means a lot when supportability is a major consideration.

    4. Re:According to UNIX.org by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Says the Windows hippie.

    5. Re:According to UNIX.org by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      Windows isn't like Budweiser, it's like the urine that's produced from drinking Listerine.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    6. Re:According to UNIX.org by dna_(c)(tm)(r) · · Score: 1

      It matters according to The Open Group, they are a consortium including several Unix vendors (Sun, IBM, HP, Apple...). It doesn't matter to Linus or RMS, I presume.

      It matters because as long as GNU/Linux isn't standardised, and can subtly change behaviour between releases, you don't have a stable platform to target.

      You mean that all that software running on my server, desktop, laptop and netbook must be completely rewritten every 6 months, when Ubuntu has a new release? Not to mention all the other distributions.

      Can you give some real life examples why this standardization is would be a major improvement?

    7. Re:According to UNIX.org by DragonWriter · · Score: 2, Informative

      It matters because as long as GNU/Linux isn't standardised, and can subtly change behaviour between releases, you don't have a stable platform to target.

      Sure, but the absence of UNIX-certified Linux isn't the same as Linux not having a stable standard that can be targetted. It just means that the standard isn't the Unix standard: the standard for Linux is the Linux Standard Base (LSB). While the LSB does have newer releases, newer versions support all earlier versions, so any version of the LSB targetted is a stable target.

    8. Re:According to UNIX.org by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's right, RMS wouldn't care. Software should be released in source code form, preferably set up to build with GNU auto tools :-)

      If it doesn't behave as expected on your distro, there's something wrong with your distro. Even still you have the choice of fixing your distro, or customizing the source to fit the square peg in a round hole.

      I realize I'm not helping the argument of "Linux being a threat to Microsoft", but this is just the way it is with GNU/Linux. It encourages source releases (or distro specific packaging)

      For the most part, proprietary software gets left out in the cold. It works rather fleetingly and you have no recourse. GNU/Linux is a moving target and I wouldn't have it any other way.

    9. Re:According to UNIX.org by Myrddin+Wyllt · · Score: 1

      Windows isn't like Budweiser, it's like the urine that's produced from drinking Listerine.

      So slightly better than Budweiser then. Splitting hairs if you ask me...

      --
      [ ]Half Empty [ ]Half Full [x]Twice as big as it needs to be
  5. Re-confirmed by thatkid_2002 · · Score: 1

    This is the second major occurance of such an acknowledgment.
    I think that within two years we may see a tipping point where Microsoft will certainly NOT be the "the only company that does..." from the standpoint of management who refuse anything that doesn't have a Microsoft sticker. Consumers are well on their way to this, though there might be a situation where if it isn't Microsoft and it isn't Apple then its still "not worth knowing about".

    1. Re:Re-confirmed by hairyfeet · · Score: 0, Redundant

      Dude, can I have some of what you are smoking? Seriously dude, the OS ain't got shit to do with anything. Hell I work with Windows users all day and frankly they can't tell you which Windows they are using (Unless it is Vista, which is usually followed by a stream of curses) but they CAN tell you what they like to run. They may not know the names, but they can point out the pretty little box in the Wally World.

      And THAT is why Linux is boned. Do you HONESTLY think when Joe can't pop in his CD and get Quicken to work he is gonna think "Oh, I need to find a FLOSS alternative" nope, that box is gonna go back because it is "broke". And NO major software companies are gonna support Linux because of the "No DRM" rule, even though we all know the crap is cracked usually before it even hits the shelves. But with no DRM at all, even Joe can copy a Linux software CD.

      So sorry pal, but no Adobe or EA or Quicken or Quickbooks? No Dice. And please don't say Wine, because that CLI crap is less likely to happen than Joe solving cold fusion in his basement. If Wine "just works" then great, but most of the time it is CLI land, and that won't fly with Joe. Better luck next time.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    2. Re:Re-confirmed by thatkid_2002 · · Score: 1

      I don't wan't what you are smoking, you obviously can't read. I didn't ANYTHING about an OS. I was talking about market and mind-share.

    3. Re:Re-confirmed by thatkid_2002 · · Score: 1

      Wow so many typos. I really should have paid attention to the preview.

  6. Shareholder trust advice by Nefarious+Wheel · · Score: 4, Informative

    It's more of an indication that they want to discharge their obligations in reporting threats to their business from competitors. The stock exchange and rules for publicly traded securities require this sort of disclosure to holders of a company's stock. I think it's purely a matter of adhering to their obligations for honest reporting to the people who own them. NTSHMA.

    --
    Do not mock my vision of impractical footwear
    1. Re:Shareholder trust advice by blackraven14250 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I think it can serve both purposes, if played right.

    2. Re:Shareholder trust advice by derGoldstein · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I think this is the equivalent of an Ox shaking off flies with its ears.
      "Yeah yeah, competition... Sure, disclosure, whatever... Stop bothering me, I'm eating"
      (and if you're thinking of Ballmer while reading the word "Ox", that's your mind, not mine...)

      --
      Entomologically speaking, the spider is not a bug, it's a feature.
  7. ... and have for many years in their SEC reports by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That's the way the cookie turns. That 0.05% desktop can DOUBLE in a few years, and then it's 0.10% desktop share. O-nozzzzz !!

  8. how is this news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    WGA, alreaydy checks for wine registry keys
    http://linux.slashdot.org/linux/05/02/17/1318212.shtml?tid=125&tid=109&tid=106

    plus I recall seeing a "presentation" somewhere around the web (which claimed to be from microsoft), which placed Linux as a much bigger threat than apple to their business...

    and there's enumerable accounts of anti competitive behaviour towards linux, such as getthefacts (to those who remember that campaign, which attempted to place linux as inferior), and a mentality of open source (or was it just the GPL?) being a cancer.

    so how's this even news?
    must be a slow day...

    1. Re:how is this news by Technician · · Score: 2, Informative
      --
      The truth shall set you free!
  9. Variant of UNIX according to their sockpuppet, SCO by Antique+Geekmeister · · Score: 4, Informative

    Watch this sort of announcement very, very carefully. Microsoft loves to describe Linux as a 'UNIX variant'. In both its basic kernel and its accumulated software bundles, it's as valid as calling Windows XP "DOS". (For those new to Microsoft history, XP is actually a Windows NT descendant, which is in many ways descended from VMS and many of its fundamentals stolen by David Cutler from DEC, where David wrote much of VMS and was hired to work on NT.)

  10. Forget Linux, cloud computing is their next enemy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    In 2003 Microsoft wanted everyone to have a 'trusted computer' to make sure the owner couldnt fuck with the proprietary software. of course many software companies and Google realised that wasn't going to happen so they decided to push SaaS and have everything run remotely through a horrible, JavaScript laden web interface.

    but i tell ya its better than the alternative MS was pushing. still because the good old enemy that is MS is being cut down to size does not mean it's a good idea to give up on free desktop-based client software. Web apps and other remote apps are not the best way and certainly not the most efficient method but it is the new way of making money from software.

    As the owner of a webb app you have total control over when it is accessed, you can see everything clients are doing, you can put as many ads on it as you like and nobody will slate you for distributing 'adware' or 'spyware'. As long as you do everything server-side you have almost 0 chance of your stuff being pirated. This is better than DRM, its better than trusted computing and all without the invasive 'get out of my PC' sentiment associated with Microsoft's client-side type of security

  11. Re:... and have for many years in their SEC report by bky1701 · · Score: 1

    And doubling each year, it would only be 9 years before a quarter of the market was on Linux. Not saying that is likely, but no one really expected Firefox to become the standard it has. One should never judge their competition solely on market share, because it cannot be relied upon for the future.

  12. Steve Ballmer is throwing chairs again by Orion+Blastar · · Score: 0

    Linux just made it into his hit list next to Google.

    Will Microsoft buy out SCO and get SCO Unix to compete with Linux? Will they bring back Xenix?

    Will Microsoft start releasing more GPLed code to Linux?

    Will Windows 7 get a "Linux Compatibility Mode"?

    Will Microsoft start developing their own distro of Linux?

    Who knows, anything is possible. Maybe if Microsoft can't beat Linux they will join them? Imagine if Microsoft started to write commercial software for Linux like MS-Office, MS-Money, Visual Studio, etc? What would that mean?

    --
    Remember, Slashdot does not have a -1 disagree moderation, and no, troll, flamebait, and overrated are not substitutes.
    1. Re:Steve Ballmer is throwing chairs again by SilverHatHacker · · Score: 1

      According to Torvalds, it means we've won.

      --
      Funny may not give karma, but +5 Informative never made anyone snort coffee out their nose.
    2. Re:Steve Ballmer is throwing chairs again by Darkness404 · · Score: 1

      Who knows, anything is possible. Maybe if Microsoft can't beat Linux they will join them? Imagine if Microsoft started to write commercial software for Linux like MS-Office, MS-Money, Visual Studio, etc? What would that mean?

      Victory. In all honesty, it would end up being a victory for Linux, you could then choose the OS you really wanted. Either take a free OS with a few proprietary components, a pay-OS that is familiar, and a pay-OS that is tied to a brand of computers. All running the same software.

      --
      Taxation is legalized theft, no more, no less.
  13. It's not just political posturing by HangingChad · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It's not just posturing for the SEC this time. Talked to one of our vendors back east this afternoon and his mom liked his netbook so much he bought her one, then his dad wanted one, then another one for his step-mom. That's bad news for Microsoft for two reasons: One, Linux really is competitive on low-end hardware. The combination of Linux, Gmail, GoogleDocs and online services gives netbooks functionality that makes the OS less significant.

    And, two, Microsoft can't demand their normal margin on a netbook OS. The cost of the unit is so low MS is forced to price their product lower. That's hurting revenues and that trend will only continue to accelerate. Windows 7 will run on netbooks, but not particularly well. Windows Mobile isn't going to gain them any market share and they can't sell XP on netbooks indefinitely.

    The netbook trend caught MS flat-footed and they threw XP at it to fill the gap while they scramble around to try and find a solution. But there isn't one this time. Microsoft built their market at the top end of the scale, not in the appliance market. Their software isn't made to run on low-end hardware, they have no appliance market strategy.

    This time, I think they're entirely justified of being afraid of Linux.

    --
    That's our life, the big wheel of shit. - The Fat Man, Blue Tango Salvage
    1. Re:It's not just political posturing by MichaelSmith · · Score: 1

      This time, I think they're entirely justified of being afraid of Linux.

      I agree but not for the reasons you give. Mobile phones are the new platform. Microsoft, Symbian, Apple and Google are going head to head in that market. Google may push the linux kernel into a leading position against Windows.

    2. Re:It's not just political posturing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Their software isn't made to run on low-end hardware, they have no appliance market strategy.

      Then what are all those Windows CE devices doing?

    3. Re:It's not just political posturing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Their software isn't made to run on low-end hardware, they have no appliance market strategy.

      Then what are all those Windows CE devices doing?

      Being laughed at by everyone that has used it as a desktop OS replacement?

      Windows CE is for embedded applications, not low end personal computing applications.

    4. Re:It's not just political posturing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Windows 7 will run on netbooks, but not particularly well.

      I have to disagree with this.

      I have been running the Windows 7 RC on my eeePC 1000H for a couple of months now and it is much more responsive and much easier to use than the Windows XP that it replaced.

      If the pricing is right (and this is the kicker) then Windows 7 will be a serious threat to the Linux offerings on netbooks.

      Keep an eye out for MS cutting a deal with netbook manufacturers for inclusion of Windows 7

    5. Re:It's not just political posturing by dna_(c)(tm)(r) · · Score: 2, Funny

      Then what are all those Windows CE devices doing?

      Crashing?

    6. Re:It's not just political posturing by Reservoir+Penguin · · Score: 1

      Yet, subjectively, Linux netbooks all but have dissapeared from store shelves after initially making a big splash 2 years ago. Every local store i visit I see multitudes of netbooks from asus, acer, samsung, lenovo and ALL run WXP. I think linux has lost this one.

      --
      US-UK-Israel: The real Axis of Evil
  14. Re:Variant of UNIX according to their sockpuppet, by DesScorp · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "Microsoft loves to describe Linux as a 'UNIX variant'."

    Microsoft is right. Linux is Unix. It's why I started using it. Can it legally be called Unix? No. But if it walks like a duck, etc, it's a duck. Linux is after all a clone of Unix. It's Unix in all but name. A clone of a dog isn't a cat after all... it's a copy of a dog. Comparing Unix and Linux to DOS and XP isn't a good comparison. The former is an OS and a copy of that OS. The later is an earlier OS and it's evolutionary descendant, and XP is more of a nephew to DOS than a son, considering that NT was conceived as a different OS than DOS... it was just built to be largely compatible with DOS.

    --
    Life is hard, and the world is cruel
  15. Linux failed on netbooks. by bcrowell · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I hate to say it, because I'm a linux fanboy, but Linux on netbooks has more or less failed. Manufacturers like Asus dropped the ball by shipping too many Linux machines with screwed up configurations (and also with the crappiest Linux distros available). MS also recognized the threat and entered the ring fighting. The result is that most retailers are pushing netbooks with Windows, and most people buying netbooks are buying them with Windows. Maybe this will change if ARM-based netbooks really take off, but I suspect it will be the same story all over again.

    1. Re:Linux failed on netbooks. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think MS is trying to come up with a solution to the possibility of an ARM future with their current development of "Windows Phone" OS, which I suppose they hope to build into an iPhone OS competitor which can then translate to netbooks and tablets.

    2. Re:Linux failed on netbooks. by Darkness404 · · Score: 1

      Exactly, I feel sorry for the person who used the awful distro that is Xandros and thought that was all Linux was. Asus while the original EEE PCs were good and seemed to be seamless, some of the later ones were strange. Mix in the fact that the hardware was questionable, and no real "advantage" to use Linux and the drop in price on some full laptops (I'm typing this on a $300 new Toshiba with a 15 inch screen, 2 gigs of RAM and an Intel Celeron 900 at 2.2 Ghz) lead to the death of Linux on netbooks. However, it did do a major thing, and that is showing people that Windows is not the only way and showing people the the major big-box stores that people will buy non-windows platforms.

      --
      Taxation is legalized theft, no more, no less.
    3. Re:Linux failed on netbooks. by Technician · · Score: 1

      Please don't confuse marketing and OEM site licencing deals with failure of Linux on technical merits.

      Ubuntu on the Aspire One is great. Marketing played the major role in getting XP on all netbooks. Info on this work in progress is here.

      https://help.ubuntu.com/community/AspireOne/

      --
      The truth shall set you free!
    4. Re:Linux failed on netbooks. by Aceticon · · Score: 1

      The main thrust for Linux on netbooks will be the new generation of ARM based devices which have battery life times which are much longer than those for laptops, comparable to mobile phones, all this with smaller (lighter, cheaper) batteries.

      For ARM processors, MS' only offer at the moment is Windows CE, which is a POS.

      In that arena, the most likely winners (at least in the short term) are Android or some other Linux variant.

    5. Re:Linux failed on netbooks. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And some bought Windows version just because it had more memory or bigger drive (as alternative was not found with Linux), then installed Ubuntu on it.

    6. Re:Linux failed on netbooks. by FudRucker · · Score: 1

      it does not matter what a laptop or netbook has on it, i am going to wipe the disk and install my preferred Linux distro anyway, i do get the point though i would like to see more Linux pre-installs on new product...

      --
      Politics is Treachery, Religion is Brainwashing
    7. Re:Linux failed on netbooks. by oodaloop · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Maybe Linux failed, but if Microsoft had a victory, it was a Pyrrhic one. They were trying to kill XP and move to Vista when the netbooks took off, and instead they had to keep extending XP in order to keep in the game in this emerging market. Netbooks aren't going anywhere, in fact I suspect we'll see a continuing trend of similarly powerful machines at lower costs vice more and more powerful machines at the same or higher cost. Microsoft's products, bloatware they are, are not poised to succeed in this market. Personally, I see a bright future for Linux here. Maybe I'm wrong though.

      --
      Tic-Tac-Toe, Global Thermonuclear War, and relationships all have the same winning move.
    8. Re:Linux failed on netbooks. by Old+Sparky · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Tried to buy a netbook with Linux recently? I have, and I can only find two retailers, with one rather low-end model each.

      I'm still trying to wade through the FUD and determine how much pressure Microsoft has put on retailers to only offer Windows on netbooks. I suppose I'll never know.

      But I do know this;

      Netbooks are selling like hotcakes, but are only offered with spinning hardrives and WIndows XP.

      From TFA, "...Microsoft is trying to discourage the production of inexpensive computers where Windows becomes the most expensive component because it can't make as much money on Windows on these devices, and they could drive down the price of Windows."

      Solid state drives (SSDs) are the obvious choice for netbooks, for obvious reasons.

      And since SSDs cost more, XP has acknowledged problems with wear-leveling on SSDs, and the unknown Microsoft influence factor, manufacturers end up selling thousands of netbooks with WIndows and old-fashioned, spinning hard drives.

      A sad byproduct of this is that according to economies of scale, cheap SSDs should by now be ubiquitous.

      Once again, progress is stifled; we should have cheap netbooks with solid state drives and Linux, but we're stuck with Microsoft's version of How Things Should Be.

      Thanks again, Redmond.

    9. Re:Linux failed on netbooks. by Eli+Gottlieb · · Score: 2, Informative

      When I bought a netbook for traveling this summer, Dell sold me one with Ubuntu 8.04 pre-loaded on it.

    10. Re:Linux failed on netbooks. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      I hate to say it, because I'm a linux fanboy, but Linux on netbooks has more or less failed. Manufacturers like Asus dropped the ball by shipping too many Linux machines with screwed up configurations (and also with the crappiest Linux distros available). MS also recognized the threat and entered the ring fighting. The result is that most retailers are pushing netbooks with Windows, and most people buying netbooks are buying them with Windows. Maybe this will change if ARM-based netbooks really take off, but I suspect it will be the same story all over again.

      Ah, but at what cost? Microsoft is indeed selling the OS shipped on the vast majority of netbooks today, but linux on netbooks is anything but a failure: MS was forced to sell OEMs an out-of-date OS, which they'd been trying to phase out, for pennies on the dollar.

      For the first time since MS got majority share of the OS market, they were forced to compete. They still have the market share, but when they're not making anywhere near the amount of money they could've been (and, for once, the OEMs had good footing to negotiate), it's sort of a hollow victory.

    11. Re:Linux failed on netbooks. by QuarkofNature · · Score: 1
      There's another reason why most people are buying netbooks with Windows. Try and find cases where you can buy the same netbook, at the same price, with your choice of Windows or Linux presented to you, just like any other option (extra memory, bluetooth, etc.) I was looking at the Asus netbooks a little while, and for those few models that were offered in both Linux and Windows, they kept the prices the same, but bumped some other HW spec instead (i.e. 1 model with Linux and 16GB SSD, another with Windows and 8GB SSD). Dell now offers some models with either, and (finally!) lets you configure them the same. I did that for the mini 9 and 10, and found that in one case the difference was $5 and in the other, *they were the same price*, both spec'd with identical hardware.

      Aside from diehards (I'm currently struggling with getting UNR running stably on a mini 10 for my wife...no thanks to Intel's GMA 500 chipset), what incentive is there for people to switch from what they know, to Linux, when companies like Dell are keeping every cent of the "Linux savings" for themselves, rather than giving the consumer a fair choice?

    12. Re:Linux failed on netbooks. by Eli+Gottlieb · · Score: 1

      And if I may respond to myself, their version of Ubuntu was some customized idiocy. Nice of them to add a special device driver or config that makes the multitouch trackpad with buttons under the bottom work nicely, but they only targeted it to their own software sources and wouldn't let me perform an upgrade to Jaunty Jackelope just via apt. I had to install over using a USB drive.

      Sod that.

  16. Re:Hell will freeze over when Microsoft announces by defireman · · Score: 1

    Microsoft Lindows.

  17. Re:Variant of UNIX according to their sockpuppet, by characterZer0 · · Score: 1

    Isn't Linux a Unix variant?

    --
    Go green: turn off your refrigerator.
  18. Just another small step by Dega704 · · Score: 1

    Nothing to get too excited about, but Microsoft's actions speak much louder than the naysayers who yak on about how Linux on netbooks was a total flop. Indeed it didn't take long for XP to dominate, but how many people actually think Microsoft liked using it to get the job done when they were already trying to axe it in favor of Vista? Fact is they had no choice. They aren't stupid enough to just ignore what could grow into actual competition for them, no matter how insignificant it might seem. The question is which will be the bigger threat to their continued dominance, Linux or XP?

  19. Re:Variant of UNIX according to their sockpuppet, by BitZtream · · Score: 0, Troll

    Go ahead and throw the troll mod on me, but Linux is not even a UNIX variant, its a UNIX wanna be. OS X is a UNIX variant, Solaris is a UNIX variant, Linux isn't.

    I realize this is going to piss a bunch of you off and they'll be a bunch of posts about how it is using some silly BS justification that simply doesn't hold true.

    You should be happy its been elevated to that level in their eyes.

    --
    Persistent Volume manager for Kubernetes - https://github.com/dwimsey/openshift-pvmanager
  20. So? They acknowledged the threat in 1998! by atomic-penguin · · Score: 4, Informative

    From the article:

    Microsoft for the first time has named Linux distributors Red Hat and Canonical as competitors to its Windows client business in its annual filing to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.

    Yeah, there are lots of pointless legal disclaimers in 10-K filings to cover respective companies' own asses.

    It's not the first time that Microsoft has acknowledged Linux as a threat to their business model. It might be the first time they have put it in their 10-K report, but I don't consider legal disclaimers in an annual SEC filing to be newsworthy.

    Has anyone read the Red Hat, Inc. 10-K report. Anyone take the time to count the number of competitors, listed by name, in there? Now ask yourself, is that newsworthy?

    --
    /^([Ss]ame [Bb]at (time, |channel.)){2}$/
    1. Re:So? They acknowledged the threat in 1998! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      10K's are written by teams of accountants and lawyers, for the purpose of avoiding shareholder lawsuits. Whoever thought this was newsworthy hasn't read many annual reports, or maybe they stopped after reading the two page letter in front from the CEO which generally has the exact opposite tone (we are on a historic roll here, reinventing the industry so now is the time to load up on stock!!).

  21. Re:In my house, Microsoft need not worry by ducomputergeek · · Score: 1

    It's not multimedia, it's still hardware and software. Recently we needed to get one of our Linux test boxes on wireless lan. So I went out to Staples and googled the only PCI wifi card they had left. According the the results, it was an atheros chipset, therefore it should work. There were even a bunch of positive reviews of the card on linux.

    Got it home and as it turns out it was a different hardware revision from the ones I read about using another chipset. A chipset without Linux drivers. (At least none OpenSuSE could find). I ended up having to use a NDIS wrapper, which worked fine. But I have about a decade plus experience administrating FreeBSD and Linux boxes. 99% of the people I deal with aren't able to do this. They wouldn't know where to begin.

    Same goes with software. They can't install and run any boxed software from the big box marts. Hell, even Best buy/staples/et. al. have a section of Mac software again (although be it one shelf or a very small section).

    --
    "The problem with socialism is eventually you run out of other people's money" - Thatcher.
  22. I smell by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    Bailout money!!!

  23. The Netbook makers and the bad distros. by Zombie+Ryushu · · Score: 1

    Canonical and other Linux players need to take steps needed to make certain that the Linux that the netbooks ship with is not some bizzarely broken configuration. A netbook that ships with Ubuntu should ship with the same Ubuntu you find on the Ubuntu installation CD. No more of this "Custom distro crap".

    1. Re:The Netbook makers and the bad distros. by jmac_the_man · · Score: 1

      Isn't the whole point of the GPL that you can release derivative works based on the original software? Like, maybe, a specific version of the software that works well with a specific hardware configuration. The big netbook makers DO all distribute their custom distros, right? I know Acer didn't try to stop me from putting Ubuntu Netbook Remix on my netbook. BTW, I've never liked Ubuntu on "real" computers, but Ubuntu Netbook remix works really well on my AAO.

    2. Re:The Netbook makers and the bad distros. by MasterOfMagic · · Score: 1

      You've just described Ubuntu Netbook Remix. By default, it provides a netbook interface, but it's a trivial change to switch the a normal desktop. It's a standard Ubuntu install under that.

  24. Re:Variant of UNIX according to their sockpuppet, by filesiteguy · · Score: 1

    No, but "Windows NT is a better UNIX than UNIX." Linux is a minix-like monolithic kernel operating system.

  25. Old news. by killthepoor187 · · Score: 1

    http://ars.userfriendly.org/cartoons/?id=19990307&mode=classic

    I feel like such a nerd for posting such a web comic from 10 years ago....

    1. Re:Old news. by atomic-penguin · · Score: 1

      Ha, BeOs!

      --
      /^([Ss]ame [Bb]at (time, |channel.)){2}$/
  26. Ok Ok.. I get it by joocemann · · Score: 2, Insightful

    .... I'm supposed to load Ubuntu, fire up chromium, load microsoft.com and flip off the screen before jumping on the bed for a quick victory fist pumping.... ........ now my point... what does 'acknowledgment' do to reality? Nothing. It's about as effective as some guy on the side of the road giving you a 'nod' because he looked your way... Doesn't really change anything you're doing, where you're going, or whats actually happening... does it....

    Its nice to see linux prevailing, but lets not all get so worked up about 'acknowledgements' quite yet, lol.

  27. Re:Variant of UNIX according to their sockpuppet, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > Linux is Unix

    Wrong !!

    Linux is _NOT_ Unix.
    Linux is _like_ Unix.
    Both are Posix, Linux sometimes less so.

  28. Re:Variant of UNIX according to their sockpuppet, by guyminuslife · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Correct me if I'm wrong, but didn't Torvalds and Tanenbaum get in a famous fight over the fact that being a "monolithic kernel operating system" is precisely unlike Minix's microkernel solution?

    --
    I don't believe in time. It's a grand conspiracy designed to sell watches.
  29. Re:Variant of UNIX according to their sockpuppet, by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 1

    No. Linux is a kernel that implements some common Unix features (like a single root filesystem), but not all of them. When you run GNU on top of Linux, you get a Unix clone, but there are plenty of people who are not running GNU on top of Linux, or who are only using small pieces of GNU like the linker. Even though the OLPC is running Linux, and has a fairly significant portion of GNU, I would hardly say that an OLPC is running a Unix variant or clone -- it is running what is best described as Sugar/Linux + 1/2GNU.

    If anything is to be called a Unix variant, it is GNU, since GNU implements (mostly) everything that is "Unix."

    --
    Palm trees and 8
  30. Re:In my house, Microsoft need not worry by Dega704 · · Score: 1

    Definitely not disagreeing about multimedia issues on Linux, but I would be interested to hear more specifics on what problems you have. My biggest beef was finding a decent, user-friendly video converter. No such luck until the newest version of HandBrake. Up until that I still primarily used windows for video conversion. Thanks to it, though, Ubuntu is one step closer to converting me as far as multimedia goes. What I do like in Ubuntu is the ability to play any kind of video format in MPlayer and just have it work, whereas in windows there is always the off codec or container that in order to play I have to download some mickey mouse media player made specifically for that one purpose that reminds me to "go pro" and buy the registered version every 10 seconds. So what I'm saying is that Linux has to potential to be a multimedia powerhouse if they can get their act together. Unfortunately Linus doesn't seem to care much about that in particular.

  31. Note the absence of Novell/SUSE in the release by filesiteguy · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I am not surprised to see this kind of release. After all, they need to hold on to that monopoly position on the desktop to keep their server business afloat.

    What was interesting was the complete lack of any mention of Novell's SLED product. Remember, that MS and Novell are in cahoots to put servers out there running both Windows Workstation 2008 and SLES. In fact, I distinctly remember Ballmer last year mentioning "suzie" in one of his speeches at the Visual Studio 2008 launch event.

    Oddly enough, also, there's no mention of a distribution running KDE. Both Ubuntu (which I use now on my laptop) and Red Hat are GNOME-based distros by default. SLED (and openSUSE) are also becoming more GNOME-centric. (I know you can put KDE on any of these, and I run KTorrent as well as KRDC in my desktop.)

    1. Re:Note the absence of Novell/SUSE in the release by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I also find it curious that Novell is not listed. In fact, I think Novell is the most closely tied to corporations like Microsoft and IBM.

      As far as GNOME/KDE, I think you are just another paranoid KDE fan.

    2. Re:Note the absence of Novell/SUSE in the release by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      hahahahaha KDE? hahahahaha! Even hobby users are whining about KDE, and you expect enterprise users to want to use it ? hahahahahahha you are funny! hahahahahah! good one...just in case you didn't know, KDE is a frigging joke, and I know cos I test it...hahahhaaha!

  32. Re:Variant of UNIX according to their sockpuppet, by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 1

    And Minix is Unix clone, which would basically make Linux (assuming GNU is included) a Unix clone as well.

    --
    Palm trees and 8
  33. Linux as leverage against Microsoft. by w0mprat · · Score: 4, Informative

    It seems Dell, ASUS HP and others have invested in shipping linux based machines partly as something to threaten MS with. Simply put, Linux doesn't sell PCs (yet), Windows does. Watch TV, you'll see Microsoft and Apple ads but you won't see a damn thing about linux. TV, Print and Radio validates the product to consumers.

    Add in the the evergreen problem: Windows PC tax is more or less the same regardless if it is a $200 netbook or a $3000 overkill gaming rig. You think PC/Laptop manurfaturers like having only one choice of OS? It's a liability.

    Frankly all the OEMs are probably pissed at having their bottom lines hurt by Vista too.

    Linux offered something they could bludgeon MS with and demand a discount. Result, MS really did come up with cheaper OEM licences and are even producing Windows 7 starter, but only after Linux gained some traction in the netbook arena.

    Google sees the oppurtunity to pimp it's cloud services by doing Chrome OS, which is going to fill the need of PC makers to have yet better tools to apply leverage against microsoft.

    I'm not convinced that Linux will ever squash Windows, the test of this being possible will be seen in the smartphone arena. Can Android conquer the iPhone? If it does then I'd believe Linux becoming the no 1. OS within a decade.

    Frankly, Linux is inside routers, set top boxes, embedded devices, PMPs, mobile phones (WebOS and Android are linux), and runs more than half the internet servers and the majority of the worlds top supercomputers and datacentres. Yet none of these companies are wearing the Linux badge, you don't hear Palm, Google, IBM, Linksys, Cisco evangelising Linux all over the TV and radio.

    It's rather worriesome. I don't really have an answer why.

    --
    After logging in slashdot still does not take you back to the page you were on. It's been that way for 20 years.
    1. Re:Linux as leverage against Microsoft. by wampus · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It's rather worriesome. I don't really have an answer why.

      Because no one outside of the faithful really care. Why would vendors waste time advertising something that is irrelevant to 99% of consumers? At best, for business sales Linux is more of a bullet point than a feature to be trumpeted.

    2. Re:Linux as leverage against Microsoft. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Frankly, Linux is inside routers, set top boxes, embedded devices, PMPs, mobile phones (WebOS and Android are linux), and runs more than half the internet servers and the majority of the worlds top supercomputers and datacentres. Yet none of these companies are wearing the Linux badge, you don't hear Palm, Google, IBM, Linksys, Cisco evangelising Linux all over the TV and radio.

      This is to be expected and, possibly, welcomed. IBM promotes "IBM Solutions/Partnering". Google promotes "Ad Sense" or "Chrome". You pay to promote your trademarked names. Do BP, Shell, Exxon, or Mobile promote "chemistry" or "hydrocarbons" or, even, "oil". No, not even "oil". They promote their branded forms of energy that clean engine gunk with a rainbow in the background. It has been said you could liquify (pun alert!) Coke and simply the brands alone would be enough to rebuild the company in a few years. Coke does not promote "high fructose corn syrup". As linux takes over it does so as part of somebody's branded solution: Tivo, Tom Tom. Something you can sell!

      Why should this be welcomed? You can sell Linux too! And I don't mean you need to become Redhat but you do become an expert at providing software solutions to small and medium business' problems. Or extend the software for customized solutions. As inhouse work (even if you are a contractor), you won't even need to release code aside to people who pay your fees. Neither the CEO nor his cute secretary will care that Linux is under the hood (they will care about low or no licensing costs). Would you rather tell them that this is just Linux and it is 100% free and they could do it for themselves if they weren't such fucking morons? The same might be said for heart surgery or real estate. People who don't know what Linux is don't want to know what Linux is and when you explain it to them they might feel appreciably smarter or more well informed but they want - they need - to get back to that $600 Dell or $1000 Apple that scratches their itch out of the box. BSD got into that Apple now Linux needs to get into that Dell. Nobody cares what BSD is.

    3. Re:Linux as leverage against Microsoft. by andydread · · Score: 1

      IBM was. I remember the IBM ads about linux (Linux the new kid on the block is growing... ) on CNN all the time. At one time almost ever break i would see the little Linux kid. And in magazines and in banner ads right here on slashdot back in the day. Right up until SCO filed a lawsuit against them for allegedly supporting and promoting linux. The ADs with the little linux boy from IBM disappeared. I always looked forward to the progression of those ads as the boy grows up. Too bad SCO suit probably quelled all public linux promotion from IBM.

    4. Re:Linux as leverage against Microsoft. by snadrus · · Score: 0

      Do you know what SSL stack Lotus Notes uses? Nope, no one cares. You don't even see Lotus Notes advertised much anymore, even though it has more *active* seats than any email client in the world. Everyone's watching their advertising dollars.

      --
      Science & open-source build trust from peer review. Learn systems you can trust.
    5. Re:Linux as leverage against Microsoft. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They may not evangelise it, but I recently set up a Linksys WRT54GL for my sister, and was a little surprised to see a sticker/logo on the box (I think, either that or it was on the actual router) stating it runs Linux and it was displayed prominently enough that a normal person would actually notice it, i.e. it wasn't just hidden in the small print.

      Quite honestly, I don't see why they should do more than that. It makes the consumer aware the device runs Linux, which is enough.

    6. Re:Linux as leverage against Microsoft. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Could it be because FOSS negates the whole commodity-logic of the proprietary and closed-source form?

    7. Re:Linux as leverage against Microsoft. by gpfwestie · · Score: 1

      It seems Dell, ASUS HP and others have invested in shipping linux based machines partly as something to threaten MS with. Simply put, Linux doesn't sell PCs (yet), Windows does. Watch TV, you'll see Microsoft and Apple ads but you won't see a damn thing about linux. TV, Print and Radio validates the product to consumers.

      Add in the the evergreen problem: Windows PC tax is more or less the same regardless if it is a $200 netbook or a $3000 overkill gaming rig. You think PC/Laptop manurfaturers like having only one choice of OS? It's a liability.

      Frankly all the OEMs are probably pissed at having their bottom lines hurt by Vista too.

      Linux offered something they could bludgeon MS with and demand a discount. Result, MS really did come up with cheaper OEM licences and are even producing Windows 7 starter, but only after Linux gained some traction in the netbook arena.

        Google sees the oppurtunity to pimp it's cloud services by doing Chrome OS, which is going to fill the need of PC makers to have yet better tools to apply leverage against microsoft.

      I'm not convinced that Linux will ever squash Windows, the test of this being possible will be seen in the smartphone arena. Can Android conquer the iPhone? If it does then I'd believe Linux becoming the no 1. OS within a decade.

      Frankly, Linux is inside routers, set top boxes, embedded devices, PMPs, mobile phones (WebOS and Android are linux), and runs more than half the internet servers and the majority of the worlds top supercomputers and datacentres. Yet none of these companies are wearing the Linux badge, you don't hear Palm, Google, IBM, Linksys, Cisco evangelising Linux all over the TV and radio.

      It's rather worriesome. I don't really have an answer why.

      It will not be the Corporations that change from Windows (desktop), neither will it be personal users.

      It will be the next generation of computer users (our kids).

      The local school in our area has just demo'd 30 Ubuntu PC's very succesfully. The 12-15 Year old students are very quick to move over to the new technology.

      It's all new to them, and they have no bias towards MS, They have equivalents to the MS apps (Open Office for example), plus access to the 'important' things - like Facebook, gmail and the rest via firefox.

      Even better, if they find a new application in 'Synaptic package manager' they want to use, the sysadmins will just install it - no license fees, no problem.

      Ubuntu has been the thing to make Linux 'mainstream' - or nearly mainstream.

  34. Oh Good God... Cutler "stole"? by tjstork · · Score: 1

    which is in many ways descended from VMS and many of its fundamentals stolen by David Cutler from DEC

    If David Cutler stole Window NT from DEC, then Linus Torvalds stole Linux from Tannenbaum... or for that matter, SCO...

    I just love how the FOSS community routinely rips someone else that borrows, but then has no problem supporting their own borrowing.....

    --
    This is my sig.
    1. Re:Oh Good God... Cutler "stole"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I seem to remember there was still dec copyright notices in the Windows NT code src, which was one of the reasons M$ provided a alpha version of windows NT

  35. Re:In my house, Microsoft need not worry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > Windows XP SP2 has been quite stable in my household

    That is more of a worry to Microsoft than Linux is.

    What worries MS is not just whether they go to Linux, but also that they don't do anything and stick with XP. Where's the revenue in that ?

    Unless you are throwing money at MS on a regular basis then you _are_ a worry.

  36. Netbooks are not as powerful by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The last thing anyone needs is a netbook that is running an OS that was intended for a full-power PC. The latest Ubuntu, Fedora, OpenSuse, etc. all ship with features and software that expect lots of memory and CPU time -- not something you are likely to have on a netbook. What should really happen is for the distro maintainers to create their own netbook spins, which cut out a lot of the features that are unneeded on a netbook and slim down the OS.

    --
    Palm trees and 8
    1. Re:Netbooks are not as powerful by Limburgher · · Score: 1

      The XFCE or LXDE Fedora spins would be perfect on a netbook.

      --

      You are not the customer.

    2. Re:Netbooks are not as powerful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why? Regular Ubuntu runs just fine on my netbook, I don't need any custom OS crap. IMO, the Ubuntu Netbook Remix UI is just god damn awful. If an OS feature is not needed on a computer then it shouldn't be doing more the consuming a little disk space otherwise that should be considered a bug, not something to strip out for a netbook edition.

      Ubuntu isn't exactly fat in it's normal edition, it runs well with just 512MB RAM, though a bit more may help, most netbooks come with 1GB these days anyway.

    3. Re:Netbooks are not as powerful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The configuration of PC is getting higher and higher â"â"â"â"â"â"â"â"â"â"â"â"â"â"â"â"â"â"â"â"â"â"â"â"â"â"â"â"â"â"â"â"â"â"â"â"â"â"â"â"â"â"â"â"â"â" Mysite: http://www.shoesnumber1.com/

    4. Re:Netbooks are not as powerful by WuphonsReach · · Score: 1


      Ubuntu Netbook Remix

      --
      Wolde you bothe eate your cake, and have your cake?
    5. Re:Netbooks are not as powerful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      http://www.canonical.com/projects/ubuntu/unr is the latest Ubuntu for netbooks

  37. Re:Variant of UNIX according to their sockpuppet, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    By your analogy:

    1. clone the dog
    2. clone the clone of a dog, but make some vast genetic modifications
    3. ???
    4. Linux

  38. Re:Linux failed on netbooks ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Most buyers were never offered a choice between 'Linux on netbook' and 'XP on netbook'. The reason for this is twofold: 1) MS bribed and bullied manufacturers and retailers into selling XP, in many cases only XP; and 2) Retailers do what makes them the most revenue, with XP they can sell-up on games, 'security' and other add-ons. With Linux this was all that was needed.

    What buyers were offered was a choice between 'XP on netbook*' and 'Vista on laptop'. In many cases the laptop was cheaper. They did not want Vista so they bought XP, it was irrelevant that they were called netbooks because they no longer were.

    When crippled Windows 7 is forced onto netbooks, and no XP, we will see that 'indows netbooks' will just be another small laptop and real netbooks with Linux will be offered again.

    * Netbooks used to be light, cheap, no moving parts, long battery life. XP broke that because they required bigger disks (HD) more processor and more screen real estate so that they became small laptops.

  39. !0-K ??? by DoofusOfDeath · · Score: 1, Funny

    "!0-K"

    Microsoft's secret way of letting programmers that things are not okay!!!

    Quick! To the Bat Chair!

  40. a few millions to Apple will take care of that by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    >This isn't an acknowledgement of Linux, its something to use as ammo to prove that they >don't have a monopoly

    That's why Apple is there.
    Heck, that's why those millions were pumped into Apple, not out of some kind of generosity but rather out of a need to have an option even if its a limited option (which is the best kind for MS).

  41. Re:Variant of UNIX according to their sockpuppet, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    Wrong !!

    Linux is _NOT_ Unix.

    Do you believe in anything that can form a recursive acronym?

  42. Re:In my house, Microsoft need not worry by Darkness404 · · Score: 1

    Did you try a different distro? openSUSE is kinda outdated (last stable release was 7 months ago), and as such might not have as recent of drivers.

    And eventually people will stop running boxed software. Outside of game consoles I can't remember the last boxed software I bought, I honestly think it was a sealed copy of Windows 3.1 I got at a garage sale for about fifty cents. And that was like 2 years ago. Most everyone I know has the same experience as they either download freeware, pirate it, or download it as trial-ware and re-download it when it expires.

    --
    Taxation is legalized theft, no more, no less.
  43. Re:Forget Linux, cloud computing is their next ene by FrostDust · · Score: 1

    Someone wanting to run software a different way than you do doesn't make them your enemy.

  44. Re:Variant of UNIX according to their sockpuppet, by Blakey+Rat · · Score: 1

    Watch this sort of announcement very, very carefully. Microsoft loves to describe Linux as a 'UNIX variant'.

    They do? News to me.

  45. What market? by BrokenHalo · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The "market share" of Linux is hard to define, in any case. Sure, sales of RedHat or other commercial distros can be counted, or you could make a case (maybe) for using the LinuxCounter stats, but the simple fact is that there are many who simply download a distro and distribute it ad lib, which is sort of the whole point of free software. We will never really know how many users are running Linux.

    1. Re:What market? by reub2000 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Don't forget that many linux installations are on computers that originally came with an OEM copy of Windows, which counts as a sale of Windows. The best way to assess market share is through a survey.

    2. Re:What market? by Dragon+of+the+Pants · · Score: 1

      ...it also counts lots of downloads that come from people who want to try it and then get frustrated because it doesn't work like the OS they're used to or they can't find drivers etc. so they give up and go back to their old OS.

    3. Re:What market? by siloko · · Score: 1

      The best way to assess market share is through a survey.

      And the best survey is one which doesn't let humans get involved! I'm guessing these are pretty accurate for desktop share.

      Windows 93.04%
      Mac 4.86%
      Linux 1.05%
      iPhone 0.30%
      Java ME 0.29%
      Symbian 0.14%
      iPod Touch 0.06%
      Windows Mobile 0.05%
      Playstation 0.03%
      Android 0.02%
      BlackBerry 0.01%
      FreeBSD 0.01%
      SunOS 0.01%
      Palm 0.01%

      Server share is more difficult but likely that Linux does well in this sector.

    4. Re:What market? by Insanity+Defense · · Score: 1

      For some reason Hitslink gets quoted as a source quite often. However they just retroactively adjusted all of their numbers in a way that increases Windows and IE market share.

      In the past, we reported only on our raw numbers. As of August 1st, we have implemented retroactive country-level weighting in our reports.

      As examples of their changes:

      Original: Windows total share April 2009 88.71% Revised: 92.67%

      Original: Windows total share May 2009: 87.75% Revised: 92.17

      Original: Mac total share May 2009: 9.81% Revised: 4.25%

      Original: Firefox total share April 2009: 22.48% Revised: 23.84%

      Original: Firefox total share May 2009: 22.49% Revised: 22.75%

      Original: Internet Explorer total share April 2009: 66.1% Revised: 67.77%

      Original: Internet Explorer total share May 2009: 65.59% Revised: 68.1%

      To me retroactively changing their data really hurts their credibility.

      Note: These numbers were arrived at by totaling the numbers on http://marketshare.hitslink.com/report.aspx?qprid=11 this page.

    5. Re:What market? by BrokenHalo · · Score: 1

      And if hitslink uses the commonly-spoofed useragent string to establish the browser's platform, that makes their statistics even less credible.

  46. This TFA is so sfull of shit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Netbooks? Riiight. B&M don't sell linux netbooks because they get returned. Those that do sell and don't come back get windows put on it. Don't delude yourselves and more than that glue makes you. But (fumes...overpowering) I think you're right. 2009 IS THE YEAR OF THE LINUX !! Yowza !!

  47. Re:Variant of UNIX according to their sockpuppet, by RedK · · Score: 4, Informative

    Linux is not Unix. It's a close approximation. For one, the base APIs are not fully POSIX compliant. Right there is a big hurdle to being Unix. If someone were to pony up the cash for certification (RedHat, Novell, Cannonical), there are issues yet to be fixed before it can be called UNIX, so it's not just a question of certifying it.

    --
    "Not to mention all the idiots who use words like boxen."
    Anonymous Coward on Monday August 04, @06:49PM
  48. Re:Variant of UNIX according to their sockpuppet, by Brett+Buck · · Score: 1

    Stole everything but the stability? NT was a lot better than 95/98/ME but hasn't come close to the reliability of VMS.

            Brett

  49. Re:Variant of UNIX according to their sockpuppet, by filesiteguy · · Score: 2, Informative

    Yes, they did. Here's Linus' announcement of his "minix-like" kernel: http://groups.google.com/group/comp.os.minix/msg/2194d253268b0a1b

    And here is the famous Tannenbaum/Torvalds "Linux-is-Obsolete" debate: http://groups.google.com/group/comp.os.minix/browse_frm/thread/c25870d7a41696d2

    " Most older operating systems are monolithic, that is, the whole operating
          system is a single a.out file that runs in 'kernel mode.' This binary
          contains the process management, memory management, file system and the
          rest. Examples of such systems are UNIX, MS-DOS, VMS, MVS, OS/360,
          MULTICS, and many more.

          The alternative is a microkernel-based system, in which most of the OS
          runs as separate processes, mostly outside the kernel. They communicate
          by message passing. The kernel's job is to handle the message passing,
          interrupt handling, low-level process management, and possibly the I/O.
          Examples of this design are the RC4000, Amoeba, Chorus, Mach, and the
          not-yet-released Windows/NT."

    Though I've heard here and in a few other places that NT/Windows is a microkernel, I've also heard teh opposite. No opinion there, as I'm not a kernel hacker, just a PHB.

  50. Re:Variant of UNIX according to their sockpuppet, by filesiteguy · · Score: 1

    ...that's what the SCO lawyers want you to think. :P

  51. Acceptance is the first step... by PhunkySchtuff · · Score: 1

    Acceptance is the first step in overcoming a problem...

  52. Not entirely by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    While I agree with you for the most part, I wouldn't say that Linux has totally failed on the netbook. I recall reading the Dell was claiming 1/3 of their minis were sold with Ubuntu and that the return rate was comparable to the Windows netbooks. What this means to me is that the failure doesn't belong to Linux but rather to the manufacturers. In order for Linux to take off on the ARM-based netbooks, the manufacturers will have will have to not screw-up-by-the-numbers as they did the first time around. If nothing else, their half assed offerings the first time around forced Microsoft to do something that they really didn't want to do (extend XP and slash prices).

  53. They can just try the DMCA card and have a max of by Joe+The+Dragon · · Score: 1

    They can just try the DMCA card and have a max of 10 years for installing linux just like the story about a max of 10 years for moding a xbox.

  54. Re:Variant of UNIX according to their sockpuppet, by ArsonSmith · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Perhaps in the 90s you would be right, but now UNIX is a Linux wanna be.

    Q: "What is Unix?"
    A: "It's an old Linux like Operating System."

    --
    Paying taxes to buy civilization is like paying a hooker to buy love.
  55. Meh by __aazsst3756 · · Score: 1
    A good manager always looks at threats from all sources even if they are small. I'm sure Linux has been on internal reports for years, and just now making the public reports. Not really a huge change.

    Yes microsoft has some good managers. Too many in fact.

  56. And yet, the latest EEEpcs are all Windows-only by rolfwind · · Score: 3, Insightful

    lately. Since February.

    I wish to buy (not have to install) a linux one. But I can't. Just the old models had linux.

    (Which is why Asus lost a sale from me.)

    1. Re:And yet, the latest EEEpcs are all Windows-only by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

      (Which is why Asus lost a sale from me.)

      Who did you buy a netbook from with Linux? At least ASUS tried to do the right thing, but Xandros on the early eee had major problems (major dpkg breakage). I replaced it with UNR and it's been good. I'm not sure why they went XP over UNR, except I heard from a few people who bought eee 701's that "they didn't work" because random apps (Windows, natch) didn't work on them. [some made up percentage] of people don't know that 'operating system' is a noun.

      My eee 1000he is fantastic, and I'm running Fedora 11/KDE on it. The only way to best XP from its throne is to make Linux better than XP. I'm trying to help. If you want to help too, for now you pay the Microsoft tax. Definitely not ideal, but currently necessary.

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
    2. Re:And yet, the latest EEEpcs are all Windows-only by rolfwind · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Who did you buy a netbook from with Linux?

      http://www.alwaysinnovating.com/home/index.htm

    3. Re:And yet, the latest EEEpcs are all Windows-only by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

      http://www.alwaysinnovating.com/home/index.htm [alwaysinnovating.com]

      Interesting device, thanks for the link. I had an n810, it wasn't what I needed. I think when most people talk netbooks, they're low-power x86 devices. This is definitely a cool tablet device with a detachable keyboard, but really in a separate product category.

      Don't get me wrong, x86 isn't inherently superior, it's just that my 1.6GHz Atom is already too pokey for what I want, and it gets the same battery life as this guy.

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
    4. Re:And yet, the latest EEEpcs are all Windows-only by snadrus · · Score: 0

      Asus is the easiest one to "return Windows" with. Don't open the box, call support, drive it to the local shop, get $65. I did it.

      --
      Science & open-source build trust from peer review. Learn systems you can trust.
  57. Re:Variant of UNIX according to their sockpuppet, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It always surprises me at how much bitching, arguing and nitpicking occurs over details for something like this. It's fucking free software that works very well. The squabbling reinforces the stereotype. STFU and keep using Linux.

  58. Apple Prices by copponex · · Score: 1

    Hmm...

    Cheapest Apple Laptop: $999

    Similar Vista Laptop:
    $600
    +200 Full Office Suite
    + 99 Adobe Elements
    + 99 Anti-Virus
    ----
    $998

    Looks like they're competitively priced to me.

    1. Re:Apple Prices by germansausage · · Score: 1

      Can't you at least try to be fair. Why would I spend $99 on anti-virus when there are any number of perfectly good free ones out there. Adobe Elements??? Wtf do I want to spend $99 for that? I can get Picassa or Gimp or Paint.net for free. Chances are the Vista laptop comes with MS Works (mine did) so an office suite seems kinda unnecessary. If not, Open Office will do. So - $600 vs $999. Looks like they're not competing very hard on price.

    2. Re:Apple Prices by copponex · · Score: 1

      I was saying Microsoft does have products competitively priced. If you really want to think about it, using any other product but Microsoft is more expensive for the average person.

      (I'm speaking about small business here, who cannot afford an IT department.)

      Let's give Linux a mile lead and say it's $400 extra to have the licenses for a Windows box versus a Linux box. How much is your average office worker going to be paid? $20 an hour. So, if they lose 20 hours over the life of the machine, Linux loses the price benefit.

      I have multiple clients on 2003/XP networks with sane anti-virus and backup systems who call with PEBKACs and little else. They've been up since 03 or 04. A five person setup was about 6k, plus $750 for anti-virus subscriptions for five years. That's $270 a year per employee, or $20 a month. With Linux, it would be $13.33 a month, under the assumption that they would never need a windows program. You'd also have to assume that they never had to fuss with any document compatibility, browser incompatibility, or extra work because they didn't have a good program for the job, like Visio or Adobe Photoshop.

      Where's the value? Sure, get a company with a 100 or 1000 employees, and it starts to make more sense. But not for the vast majority of small businesses.

    3. Re:Apple Prices by derGoldstein · · Score: 1

      Even if you did need MS Office, who buys that at retail price? Either you're working somewhere and you get a company-discount, or you're studying and have access to the student version/s. Also, so many companies are migrating to Google Docs it's alarming. I used to be the weirdo that didn't have Office installed on every machine (I usually only had it installed on one at a time -- just to do document conversions). Now when people see that I have Open Office installed they give me the "what's that for?" look.

      And, while I completely agree with the above about Elements and an anti-virus, even if you *did* want to pay for these things (which, again, you really don't have to these days), AVG is $55, and Corel Paint Shop Pro Photo X2 is available for $65 if you wait for the happens-5-times-a-year "special discount".

      Oh, and at least on a Windows machine you don't have to buy a new OS every year (with the current exception of the Vista-Win7 crap...)

      --
      Entomologically speaking, the spider is not a bug, it's a feature.
    4. Re:Apple Prices by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Here we go again with the retarded 'additions' to PCs by Apple Fanboys to show things are 'even'. Please tattoo the following on your arm for easy reference:

      NOT EVERYONE NEEDS OR WANTS YOUR STUPID ADDITIONS, THE POINT IS THEY HAVE A CHOICE NOT TO PAY FOR SHIT THEY DON'T NEED.

      Bonus fanboy points though for adding the cost of a full office suite when the Macbook doesn't even come with any semblance of an office suite. And I don't know what the hell you're equating to Elements, iPhoto? LOL.

    5. Re:Apple Prices by Draek · · Score: 1

      I was saying Microsoft does have products competitively priced. If you really want to think about it, using any other product but Microsoft is more expensive for the average person.

      Which is exactly why you should've added $200 for Microsoft Office and $100 for Adobe Elements to the Mac as well, putting Apple straight back into "too fucking expensive" territory.

      --
      No problem is insoluble in all conceivable circumstances.
    6. Re:Apple Prices by copponex · · Score: 1

      What is with this thread? The GP stated "The true indicator of Microsoft considering itself to have real competition is when it starts pricing its products competitively." I stated that Microsoft does have a competitive price point, even by Mac fanboy standards.

      I have a MacBook Pro, and it is too fucking expensive. I could've bought a nice semi-rugged Dell, or a ridiculously quick Precision, but I have clients on Macs, Windows, and Linux, so I triple boot.

    7. Re:Apple Prices by NickFortune · · Score: 1

      Even if you did need MS Office, who buys that at retail price? Either you're working somewhere and you get a company-discount, or you're studying and have access to the student version/s

      ... or you're my father, who's a retired teacher and had to upgrade his PC a few years back only to find out that the only legal options for purchasing MS Office cost more than the price of the hardware.

      --
      Don't let THEM immanentize the Eschaton!
    8. Re:Apple Prices by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      if they lose 20 hours over the life of the machine, Linux loses the price benefit.

      Conveniently forgetting the hours lost to the effects of MS machines - spam bots, viruses, etc.

  59. Re:Variant of UNIX according to their sockpuppet, by derGoldstein · · Score: 1

    I'm more compelled to ask for details than mod this 'troll'. What, specifically, would you be looking for in order for an OS to be a "UNIX variant"? Also, which part of the OS are you referring to? The entire stack? Do OpenBSD/FreeBSD constitute Unix variants? I'm going to assume you don't mean the kernel itself, nor are you referring to the windowing system/s. Care you elaborate?

    --
    Entomologically speaking, the spider is not a bug, it's a feature.
  60. Re:Variant of UNIX according to their sockpuppet, by moon3 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Linux ~ UNIX is a trademark issue, POSIX "Portable Operating System Interface for Unix" compliance is an IEEE standard implementation issue. These are two distinct problems.

  61. Yawn... by SwashbucklingCowboy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This is NOT news. You'll find this in every such filing going back for years people...

  62. nope by robow · · Score: 0

    Linux Isn't a anything to Microsoft because the average user won;t know about Linux or the ease of use Ubuntu has. Also people are afraid of change they wont switch because its not windows.

    1. Re:nope by ustolemyname · · Score: 1

      People aren't afraid of change, people are lazy. People often perceive change as disruptive to their laziness.

    2. Re:nope by robow · · Score: 0

      people not being afraid of change is why the US doesn't use the metric system, right. I mean it is taught in school they now it but won't change because it is not what they are used to dealing with. Besides Ubuntu is an easier operating system it would allow the lazy to be lazier in the long run.

  63. Re:In my house, Microsoft need not worry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    According the the results, it was an atheros chipset, therefore it should work.

    atheros chipset

    ....

    YHBT, hard. HAND.

  64. Re:Bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Bullshit. Most netbooks come with a 1.6 or 1.66ghz Atom processor (about 800mhz-1ghz P3), 1GB of RAM, and a 160GB hard drive. I am currently running the full kubuntu on it and it works fine, though compiling a custom kernel is slow. Sure, booting up might not be the fastest thing in the world, but that is what hibernation is for.

  65. Re:Forget Linux, cloud computing is their next ene by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Cloud computing is the fourth generation dumb terminal:

    Gen I: VT100 (I could technically list real TTYs which printed line by line on paper). Command line and text screen based.
    Gen II: X terminals. Basic graphics, perhaps some XDMCP.
    Gen III: JavaStations/thin clients. A client that has a basic OS, but then connects to a server for all other functionality.
    Gen IV: Cloud computing. Client has a functioning OS, local cache, but the app level is moved to remote.

    Same problems apply. How do you trust your server with your data? You never know if your company confidential stuff is being slurped off to your competitor. You don't know if the apps will remain. A cloud computing company can shut its doors and go out of business stranding everyone. Contracts? Better talk with the bankruptcy trustee. The private data can be sold from a backup cloud provider to another company who doesn't have a privacy policy and who will happily index and sell to the highest bidder all info stored.

    Cloud computing can be a tool if used right, but people are retarded if they think they can just move their business operations to offsite app providers. All it would take is a backhoe cutting the Internet links or a glitch on the cloud computing provider and that company will have no access to their stuff needed for basic daily production.

    Want to know what cloud computing is actually useful for and not just hype? After you got your backup fabric in place, your tapes and your offsite rotation with Iron Mountain in production, you use the cloud as a third line of defense of data, making sure your stuff is encrypted before it leaves your machines. This way, should Amazon decide to just shut down S3 one day, you can still get backup data from your tape safe.

  66. Android? by cybereal · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I know everyone's really excited that their imaginary enemy has finally validated their existence as a threat but let's be more realistic here. If there's anything remotely interesting about this filing, it's that android and the upcoming Chrome OS is not mentioned at all.

    To me it seems more like a message of disrespect to google, a more realistic competitor, than anything...

    --
    I read the script, and I think it would help my character's motivation if he was on fire. -Bender
    1. Re:Android? by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      It's this fixation with workstations that has me stumped. I just moved pretty much all our organization's file server infrastructure over to Samba. By my estimate, this just cost Microsoft several thousand dollars in CALs, and it looks like we may be about to grow, so it's possible that Microsoft may lose even more. In these harder economic times, from my end of the planet, I'm hearing more and more small and medium-sized companies beginning to look at FOSS solutions, at least on the servers. Of course, Microsoft's worst enemies; Windows XP and Office XP/2003, continue to reign supreme on the desktop.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    2. Re:Android? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Presumably Android isn't mentioned because Windows Mobile has other more significant competition, since Microsoft don't exactly have the same kind of market share in that market as they do in the desktop OS market. And Chrome OS isn't mentioned because that is just vapourware at the moment.

  67. 2003 called, they want Microsoft's 10-K back by PCM2 · · Score: 1

    It might be the first time they have put it in their 10-K report...

    It isn't. Here is one from 2003:

    Client
    Although we are the leader in operating system software products, we face strong competition from well established companies and entities with differing approaches to the market. Competing commercial software products, including variants of Unix, are supplied by competitors, such as IBM, Hewlett-Packard, Apple Computer, Sun Microsystems and others, who are vertically integrated in both software development and hardware manufacturing and have developed operating systems that they preinstall on their own computers. Personal computer OEMs who preinstall third party operating systems may also license these firms' operating systems or Open Source software, especially offerings based on Linux. Variants of Unix run on a wide variety of computer platforms and have gained increasing acceptance as desktop operating systems, in part due to the increasing performance of standard hardware components at decreasing prices.

    TFA asserts that this is the first time that Microsoft has named names of Linux vendors, but that's not strictly true either. The same 10-K filing from 2003 says the following in the "Server and Tools" section: "A number of companies supply versions of Linux, including Red Hat and VA Linux."

    Overall, this is yet another total non-story based on sloppy reporting. More importantly, the Slashdot editors should be ashamed of themselves for displaying such ignorance about the competitive history between Microsoft and Linux.

    --
    Breakfast served all day!
    1. Re:2003 called, they want Microsoft's 10-K back by atomic-penguin · · Score: 1

      I figured it was unlikely to be the first time Microsoft mentioned Linux in their 10-K, and chalked it up as inexperienced reporter as soon as I saw the article. Good find on the 2003 10-K.

      --
      /^([Ss]ame [Bb]at (time, |channel.)){2}$/
  68. license costs by falconwolf · · Score: 1

    Our Windows licenses are cheaper than our Redhat licenses

    You probably get volume licenses for Windows. If I wanted to pay Redhat, even though I'm not legally required to do so to use Redhat Linux, a 1 year Basic desktop subscription is $80. The cheapest stand alone version, ie not an upgrade, of Windows Vista Amazon lists is Home Basic, which isn't good for much more than browsing the Internet, using e-mail, or viewing photos and costs $110 whereas for a more capable OS you'll pay more.

    The longer support you'll get from MS makes it worthwhile but all the activation, spyware, and other things MS requires is what made me switch from a Windows to a Linux and Mac user. And with my Mac I actually get more support from Apple, if needed, than I did from MS. However I've used less support for my Mac in 2 years than I needed in one year for each and every one of the Windows PCs I owned. And I didn't pay any more for it than I would have for a similarly specified Windows PC.

    Falcon

  69. Re:Variant of UNIX according to their sockpuppet, by AceofSpades19 · · Score: 1

    Linux is a hell of a lot closer to Unix then XP is to DOS, for one DOS doesn't even have multi-tasking.

  70. Happy birthday :) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Happy birthday to your sig.

  71. Linux zealots by falconwolf · · Score: 1

    They are so like children.

    No more than Mac, Windows, or other zealots.

    Falcon

  72. "legal" monopoly by falconwolf · · Score: 1

    Monopolies themselves are legal. What's illegal is an abusive use of a monopoly. MS having a monopoly in OSes and Office suites is legal, what's illegal is MS barring computer OEMs from installing other OSes and suites on computers, ie being anti-competitive.

    Falcon

  73. A monopoly does not necessarily mean that you have by falconwolf · · Score: 2, Insightful

    no competitors.

    yes it does. wtf?

    No it doesn't. Microsoft was found to be a monopoly, which is not illegal, yet it has competitors.

    Falcon

  74. monopolies by falconwolf · · Score: 3, Insightful

    What is the standard companies are measured against to determine if they are monopoly or not? 90% market share? What ever 'feels' about right? How can one avoid crossing anti-trust laws if one cannot know when they will apply or not?

    It is not illegal to be a monopoly, what is illegal is to abuse monopoly position.

    Falcon

    1. Re:monopolies by fryjs · · Score: 2, Interesting

      That doesn't resolve anything though. How can you know if you're abusing a monopoly position if you don't know whether or not you're a monopoly?

    2. Re:monopolies by selven · · Score: 1

      One rule of thumb is the rule of 2000 - square the percentage market shares of all the providers and add it up. If the result exceeds 2000, it's a monopoly. For example, if you had five providers with 30%, 25%, 22%, 14% and 9%, adding 900+625+484+144+81 gives 2234, so it's a monopoly (technically an oligopoly, but in that situation you get a cartel anyway, see telecom, the recording industry, etc)

    3. Re:monopolies by falconwolf · · Score: 2, Interesting

      How can you know if you're abusing a monopoly position if you don't know whether or not you're a monopoly?

      That's easy, if you're requiring OEMs to pay for a license for every PC sold whether your software is installed on it or not, that's abuse. Or if you require railroads to ship only your oil, or charge competitors more to ship their oil. Which is what Rockefeller did with his Standard Oil.

      Those are obvious cases though, other cases would be harder to judge. To me it it's anti-competitive then it's abusive. And no, dropping prices is not anti-competitive. There are at least two ways to compeat, on price or on quality. Of course there could be competition on features as well as others.

      Falcon

    4. Re:monopolies by fryjs · · Score: 1

      That's detailing what the standard for 'abuse' is, and not the standard for monopoly. Presumably, a small railroad and oil concern, which only has 1% of the market for each would not be considered a monopoly even though it may charge competitors more to ship the oil. So the question still remains, what constitutes a monopoly? (other than 100% of the market with competitors barred from entry by law)

    5. Re:monopolies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So the question still remains, what constitutes a monopoly?

      The law in general never defines things exactly, and contains concepts such as what 'a reasonable person' might think. In some areas of business, a 70% market share may not be easy to abuse (a standalone product with no compatability issues, for example). In other areas, a 70% market share may be enough to perform illegal price dumping (selling below cost drive smaller competitors out of business then jacking up prices again) or to pressure suppliers into not stocking rival proudcts.

      In recognition that it is impossible to set a meaningful fixed percentage market share which constitutes a monopoly and have it apply in all circumstances and to all types of business, monopoly and monopoly abuse are defined in terms of their effect on competition. This is a complex and fuzzy definition subject to interpretation by courts etc. because life (and business) are complex and fuzzy.

    6. Re:monopolies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Under English law a monopoly is 25% market share by one person or group of people working together.
      Fair Trading Act 1973 (amended) 6 (1) (a)

      Your jurisdiction may vary :-)

    7. Re:monopolies by RedK · · Score: 1

      Uh, it's easy, you're a Monopoly when you pull crap like that, and your customers actually go along with it, because it would be suicide for them not to. Imagine for a second, Microsoft saying to Dell : "You sell a Windows license with every PC/server you ship and you never sell pre-load another OS or we revoke your right to sell Windows at all". Dell then shows them the finger. Would Dell still be in business 2 months later selling PCs running Ubuntu ?

      --
      "Not to mention all the idiots who use words like boxen."
      Anonymous Coward on Monday August 04, @06:49PM
    8. Re:monopolies by Dragonslicer · · Score: 1

      One rule of thumb is the rule of 2000 - square the percentage market shares of all the providers and add it up. If the result exceeds 2000, it's a monopoly.

      I don't quite see how that could work. By that rule, any company having 45% market share would create a monopoly, no matter what the shares of other competitors were. While that large of a share would certainly give the company significant influence on the market, it hardly gives them monopolistic control of an industry.

    9. Re:monopolies by Eli+Gottlieb · · Score: 1

      Which they were convicted of in a court of law.

    10. Re:monopolies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Didn't Microsoft drastically reduced its prices to undercut the competition? I have heard they dropped the price of XP to below $15 for netbooks.

      Isn't this comparable to what Standard Oil did to its competition before it got hammered by anti-trust laws?

      I'm surprised no one has picked up on this.

    11. Re:monopolies by selven · · Score: 1

      2000 is a fairly low threshold - if you have 2000, the industry is not monopolized, but that one provider has enough power to make the industry uncompetitive. Everyone has different definitions of a monopoly and an uncompetitive market, but the algorithm I described is, without any specific thresholds, a good indicator of the competitiveness of an industry - industries with a lower score are almost always more competitive.

  75. Yeah yeah, that way the NS doesnt have a monopoly by SmallFurryCreature · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The dutch railroads (NS) never had a monopoly in holland. Not even when they completly controlled ALL rail travel because well, there was always the steam train in De Efteling (attraction park) and even some tourist trains.

    I think most sensible people would have exclude these and say that a company that has 90%+ of a market has a very effect control, even a monopoly. It would depend partly on the market, but MS software is sadly one market where a monopoly quickly arrises. MS software a market? Indeed.

    Lets say that Shell controls 100% of all petrol stations, would they then have monopoly on car fuel? No, cars can run on different things after all, but I would still say that Shell would effectivly have a monopoly.

    MS software only interoperates with itself. It is famous for it, so the question is not so much wether other operating systems exists but wether anyone else can compete with MS on offering software that works with MS software. Just as I can put Shell and Exxon petrol in my car and not have it explode, can I run Active Directory and something else seemlessly together? How about the latest open office files?

    Petrol is standard, and that allows for far easier competition, especially since Shell has no problem selling its fuel to "white" stations.

    Windows and Office are NOT standards, they therefor have become their own market and it is a market MS controls (it can and does change its formats and protocols at the drop of a hat, to stop competitors from offering competing products).

    Monopolies in the real world are not just about market share, and the market is not just a product category but oftne a product itself. For instance, lets say that printer catridges became regulated, that they all had to be the same shape with the same interface. Speculate what this would do to the printer industry? More expensive printers (no longer subsidised by outragous catridge prices) and cheaper catridges and never going to a store to find your model is no longer sold.

    That monopolies are bad is proven by none other then MS itself. Internet Explorer was dying because with no competition, MS had no reason to improve it. Even today IE8 is still the runt of the litter because MS has had enormous problem gettings it people to produce something of reasonable quality again. That MS ignored IE for so long is proof enough they were a monopoly as well.

    --

    MMO Quests are like orgasms:

    You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.

  76. Re:Variant of UNIX according to their sockpuppet, by dbIII · · Score: 1

    Windows NT descendant, which is in many ways descended from VMS and many of its fundamentals stolen by David Cutler from DEC

    That is as true as saying that MSDOS is a full featured version of CP/M - in other words utter bullshit that would be nice if it was really true. NT was a project with far less ambitious goals and far fewer resources devoted to it. David Cutler did indeed use the same numbers and alphabet and the same style of keyboard when he wrote major parts of NT as he did with VMS, and he possibly even wore the same trousers at some point - however these similarities are jsut as irrelevant as the few similarities between NT and VMS. The tiny Microsoft of the time would have been buried by DEC if they dared to reuse any parts of VMS. The minor similarities were enough to land them in court as it was.

  77. Re:A monopoly does not necessarily mean that you h by joocemann · · Score: 1

    Dictionary.com says I"m right.

    "moâ...nopâ...oâ...ly
    ââ/mÉ(TM)ËnÉ'pÉ(TM)li/ Show Spelled Pronunciation [muh-nop-uh-lee] Show IPA
    Use monopoly in a Sentence
    â"noun, plural -lies.
    1. exclusive control of a commodity or service in a particular market, or a control that makes possible the manipulation of prices. Compare duopoly, oligopoly.
    2. an exclusive privilege to carry on a business, traffic, or service, granted by a government.
    3. the exclusive possession or control of something.
    4. something that is the subject of such control, as a commodity or service.
    5. a company or group that has such control.
    6. the market condition that exists when there is only one seller.
    7. (initial capital letter) a board game in which a player attempts to gain a monopoly of real estate by advancing around the board and purchasing property, acquiring capital by collecting rent from other players whose pieces land on that property."

    http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/monopoly

    Apparently what you're referencing is a misuse of the word in application for which the word does not define the circumstance properly.

    Just because a court said something does not necessitate that something to make sense or have perfect wording. Those courts are headed by people, who make errors, and understand things less than 100% correctly.

    Jooce

  78. Re:A monopoly does not necessarily mean that you h by falconwolf · · Score: 1

    So, when are you going to tell the European Commission they're wrong? When will you tell the US Justice Department and judges they are wrong? Fact is is at least one US and one European court has ruled MS is a monopoly. You may disagree with them but they enjoy the force of law whereas you don't.

    Falcon

  79. MS Office on Linux by falconwolf · · Score: 1

    Imagine if Microsoft started to write commercial software for Linux like MS-Office, MS-Money, Visual Studio, etc? What would that mean?

    For years, I wondered why Microsoft didn't release Office for Linux. While they wouldn't have a Windows sell they would have had Office sells. Now however Open Office is, slowly maybe but, growing. And not just on Linux PCs but on Macs and Windows PCs too. Once people use FOSS on Windows it's possible they'll want to try other FOSS software, including Linux. Half a pie is better than no pie.

    Falcon

  80. Re:Variant of UNIX according to their sockpuppet, by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

    Um, OSX is the Mach kernel with a BSD userland. I do wish you Apple retards would get your facts straight.

    --
    The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
  81. Re:Variant of UNIX according to their sockpuppet, by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

    WTF? Minix is a microkernel. Other than the fact that both run GNU userland and have a similar set of system calls, they're entirely different architectures.

    --
    The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
  82. Re:A monopoly does not necessarily mean that you h by Desert+Raven · · Score: 2, Insightful

    You seem to be fixed on #6. The problem is that you don't understand #1.

    #1 doesn't require that there be no competition, only that you have enough influence to control the market. MS has shown in many ways that they had or have that level of control, though I will admit it is eroding.

    At the time that MS had a near 100% lock on the browser market, it was obtained because of their near lock on the OS market. That is monopoly power. At the time that MS bullied the PC makers into purchasing a license for every PC they made, regardless of what it shipped with, that was *absolutely* monopoly power.

    And currently, MS still holds monopoly power over the non-apple hardware desktop OS market. You really can't convince anyone that there is a statistically significant number of non-windows desktop OS installs on PC hardware.

    There's also some argument that they have monopoly in the office software market now. They hold the lion's share of the market, and those small few that do compete live and die by their ability to read/write MS format files.

    As for the server side, MS never really had monopoly there, and probably never will.

  83. Re:In my house, Microsoft need not worry by falconwolf · · Score: 1

    about their relevance in my house.

    It's the same in my house, but for different reasons. Almost 3 years ago I got a desktop, well tower, PC with Linux preinstalled. Then a year later I got a MacBook Pro for my new laptop, which I'm thinking about installing Ubuntu on it to set it up as a dualboot computer. Microsoft is practically irrelevant to me now.

    Multimedia is just broken on Linux.

    Multimedia is why I've thinking of installing Ubuntu Studio on my Mac. It has everything needed for multimedia including audio, graphics, and video.

    Falcon

  84. MS acknowledges the sky is bule. by Cur8or · · Score: 0

    Now how about Ballmer being an alien?

    --
    Winkey shortcut mapping for 64bit windows. WinKeyPlus
  85. I am not surprised to see this kind of release. by falconwolf · · Score: 1

    After all, they need to hold on to that monopoly position on the desktop to keep their server business afloat.

    Microsoft doesn't seem to be suffering much with a decline in web servers as compared to others. By a pretty good margin IIS is still number 2.

    Falcon

  86. Re:Variant of UNIX according to their sockpuppet, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    " and XP is more of a nephew to DOS than a son, considering that NT was conceived as a different OS than DOS... it was just built to be largely compatible with DOS.

    Isn't NT Microsoft's CP/M-ish attempt to have a proprietary XENIX-like OS, XENIX being a UNIX variant that MS once licensed which eventually became SCO UNIX?

  87. That's detailing what the standard for 'abuse' is, by falconwolf · · Score: 1

    and not the standard for monopoly.

    It doesn't matter as long as it's not abused. Only when a monopoly is abuse does it matter what a monopoly is. I do agree though that different people in different places at different tymes have different definitions of what a monopoly is.

    I guess it's kind of like "I can't describe it but I'll know it when I see it."

    Falcon

  88. Re:Variant of UNIX according to their sockpuppet, by Cus · · Score: 1

    In the best tradition of WINE, you might be onto something:

    "Linux Is Not UniX"

  89. As regards Redhat your figures are ridiculous by falconwolf · · Score: 1

    No one has over 80% of profit from their total sales.

    Those are not my figures, they were copied and pasted from Yahoo! which got then from Capital IQ, "except where noted."

    From your lack of response to the main body of my post, I receive the impression that you didn't understand my main point.

    I was not replying to your "main point", I included only the part I was replying to, specifically "The problem with pretending that any Linux distro is a competitor to anything is that none of the Linux distro's have a viable economic model. Living on charity doesn't cut it for real programmers." Redhat is a Linux distributor and makes a profit. Therefore it has a viable economic model. The same with IBM.

    Falcon

    1. Re:As regards Redhat your figures are ridiculous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can add Intel to the list -- they aren't making money off Moblin directly, but that doesn't mean there isn't a good business model behind it...

    2. Re:As regards Redhat your figures are ridiculous by shanen · · Score: 1

      Well, I can publicly say you're wrong, but I can't in public say why I know you're wrong. I can't even offer to explain in email, unless you can prove to me that you're somewhere in the same food chain as I am--and if you were higher in that food chain than I am, then you wouldn't have written what you wrote...

      Hmm... This is the problem with secret information.

      I'm just going to say that if you're some kind of corporate spy fishing for information, then "I know nothing. Nothing!"

      --
      Freedom = (Meaningful - Coerced) Choice != (Speech | Beer^2), and sad sock puppets' bad mods avail them naught.
    3. Re:As regards Redhat your figures are ridiculous by falconwolf · · Score: 1

      Well, I can publicly say you're wrong, but I can't in public say why I know you're wrong.

      You can not say I'm wrong because I am not wrong. If anyone is wrong, it's Yahoo!, Capital IQ, and or you. I did not make up or create the data I provided, I simply copied and pasted it from the Yahoo! page I provided the link to. If you have an argument with it your argument is with Yahoo! and Capital IQ.

      Falcon

    4. Re:As regards Redhat your figures are ridiculous by shanen · · Score: 1

      No, I can't say because I'm in a food chain for one of your 'hero' companies and I want to keep eating. It would not be amusing to say too much in a place like this.

      However, if you do believe there are any businesses with profit margins like that, then I'd love to meet you about a bridge. I'm sure this is JUST the opportunity you've been waiting to invest in.

      Actually, I'm basically certain that you've mismatched figures from different columns or that you've mislabeled your numbers. Why you don't want to go check your sources and fix the error is a mystery. However, I'm even more sure that I'm NOT going to invest in Redhat on the basis of your report.

      --
      Freedom = (Meaningful - Coerced) Choice != (Speech | Beer^2), and sad sock puppets' bad mods avail them naught.
    5. Re:As regards Redhat your figures are ridiculous by falconwolf · · Score: 1

      Troll

  90. Re: Fourth Gen by rdebath · · Score: 1

    I suppose this is a quibble, I really don't agree that it's fourth gen

    I agree with the Gen 1 to 2 jump as switching from point to point cables to true networks and at the same time mostly text based to mostly graphical.

    The Gen 2 to 3 jump is the switch from a single protocol at a time to all protocols included in one box. Ie the so called thin client boxes.

    But I don't see that putting the client on a general purpose PC is a fourth generation. Terminal emulators have been around since before there were terminals. The first 'terminals' were actually a remote emulation of the local console of the machine, initially just good enough for data entry (a page at a time) but reasonably quickly becoming the console for many machines.

    By the time you get to X-servers, the console of the main machine has a very good chance of being a memory mapped display with a local X-server running it. Any X-Server is automatically a remote terminal.

    If you still think it's a new idea; go look at the VT103. It's a VT100 terminal with an LSI-11 mini-computer in the box for local processing ... plug in a disk or tape drive and it's complete.

    Even with MS windows remote processing has been around for a long time; hosted Exchange is easy. Terminal services/remote desktop or Citrix can be used to remote anything, even with just a browser.

  91. Re:Variant of UNIX according to their sockpuppet, by Guy+Harris · · Score: 1

    Isn't NT Microsoft's CP/M-ish attempt to have a proprietary XENIX-like OS

    No. NT was originally Microsoft's project to implement the OS/2 API atop a portable kernel that also supported implementing other APIs atop it as well; they eventually implemented the Win32 API atop it and treated that as the primary API. It also originally supported a character-mode OS/2 API and a character-mode POSIX API atop it as well.

  92. consumer operating systems by marafa · · Score: 0

    this is a very interesting list.

    it states the major operating systems targeted to the consumer are mac os, windows and linux. it also shows that 2 out of 3 consumer based operating systems are variants of unix.

    go figure

    --
    _ In Egypt Networks: Network Solutions with a Twist
    1. Re:consumer operating systems by mftb · · Score: 1

      You're right, it does. What's your point?

  93. Re:... and have for many years in their SEC report by ledow · · Score: 1

    The problem is that you, nor anyone else, has *any* idea actually how many Linux, etc. machines are out there. Nobody. You can't even *guess*. And even if you could, how do you count dual-boot machines, Linux recovery CD's supplied with machines (I've seen it - a dd image on a Knoppix boot disk as a recovery CD from a large, reputable PC supplier), etc. I'm personally responsible for at least several hundred (if not thousand) Linux installations just personally... not even work-related.

    Desktop is a poor metric anyway - how about "household"? ADSL routers, wireless routers, PVR's, who knows how many Linux-based devices are in the average household? It might not average out to 1 per household but I imagine it's much higher than you might at first think - and as a metric that means it has much more impact on the world - if it were to disappear, those products would be gone. Linux is even taking over where things like VxWorks were dominating, and people run VxWorks devices and don't even realise it (a lot of ADSL routers, even DVD players, all sorts). I've worked in large IT teams that didn't even realise that half their network routers, firewalls etc. were running some variant of Linux until they looked closely at them. And behind the scenes, most of their upstream suppliers (web hosting, application hosting, firewall, ISP, etc.) were Linux.

    The fact is... nobody really cares about desktop penetration. It's been proved that we can do it - Linux desktops exist and are as good as Windows... hell, we can emulate Windows on them satisfactorily enough for quite a lot of gamers and that's crossing over "acceptable" into "acceptable and we can play fancy mind-games too". I have a Linux desktop sitting here. Every machine I have has a Linux desktop available on it. I get just as much work / everyday stuff done on them as I do on MS. It's not up to anybody to *sell* it to other people as a concept, though. But when they get tired of MS, it's there as an alternative today. But it was a sideline, a distraction, a nice toy project. I work in IT in schools - we can kit out an entire school borough with Linux desktops in hours, but it's not what Linux was really designed for and it's not what people want (apparently people WANT to spend hundreds of pounds on shit OS's... you can't help that and nobody is *really* interested in telling people what to buy, except MS).

    It's fait accompli. Whether people choose to use it is up to them and part of the whole free software concept is that we don't tell them what to do with their computer. We let them choose. But suggesting that the 0.05% or 0.1% or any other published metric actually *means* anything about the operating system is madness. How many homes run Cray supercomputers? Oh, they must be crap, then.

  94. Re:Variant of UNIX according to their sockpuppet, by dna_(c)(tm)(r) · · Score: 1

    YES Extreme Stupidity

  95. Real threat? by uffe_nordholm · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Apart from the obvious "Linux is a threat to us and therefore we are not a monopoly" I think Microsoft may very well percieve Linux as a threat to them, but for slightly less obvious reasons.

    The major reason that Linux is a threat to Microsoft is that it is (usually) free, and nobody can compete with free in the long run. Given enough time, Linux would eventually conquer the desktop. But it would be decades, if not centuries. If nothing else, Linux's small presence on the market means that Microsoft cannot raise it's prices too much, or people will start seriously looking at the alternatives. And if they discover the alternatives are good enough (or better then Windows) for no money (or very little money) the game will be up for Microsoft.

    There is a more threatening aspect of Linux though. It is not one that matters every day, but in the long run Microsoft must deal with the fact that a lot of "Linux" is a community. A community of users and developers spread around the globe cannot be purchased and shut down as if it were a competing company. Suppose Microsoft purchased Cannonical and shut it down. They have not really gained anything, since they can't stop the individual developers from continuing their work, even if it is in their spare time.

    Even if Microsoft started buying all companies that released a Linux distro, they cannot win: once it becomes obvious that to become a millionaire you just have to release a Linux distro, new distros will be popping up so fast that rabbits will reproduce slowly, by comparison.

    I think the only way for Microsoft to keep "winning the game" against Linux is to constantly produce better and better software for lower and lower prices. Since Linux's market share seems to be growing, Microsoft is already under pressure to not raise their prices too high, and this pressure will increase several times over with increasing market share for Linux.

    1. Re:Real threat? by snadrus · · Score: 0

      But it would be decades, if not centuries.

      I've heard this before, but Free software's interest is accelerating not only with tinkerers, but with companies (Dell didn't ship Linux 5 years ago).

      ...winning the game by produc(ing) better and better software for lower and lower prices

      Code commit count ~= software improvements
      Whoever has the most commits wins, and open source has 10x the committers.

      --
      Science & open-source build trust from peer review. Learn systems you can trust.
  96. Re:That's detailing what the standard for 'abuse' by shentino · · Score: 1

    alcoa would disagree with you.

  97. Re:In my house, Microsoft need not worry by dna_(c)(tm)(r) · · Score: 1

    Try VLC, open source, works on OS X, Solaris and Windows too, does streaming, conversions,... Really rocks.VLC's website.

  98. Re:A monopoly does not necessarily mean that you h by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why can't you just read the first definition you pasted and really try to understand it? The important bit is "a control that makes possible the manipulation of prices".

  99. Microsoft Hatred is a disease by cheap.computer · · Score: 1

    Why would you need to tell SEC who you think your competition is ?

  100. Only lost cr4edibility to those already lost by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    You are trying to stop contempt that is wholly deserved being heaped upon MS.

    Only those who want a reason to ignore criticism against MS will use "you said M$" as a reason to ignore them. Because the complaint is accurate and that is all that is available.

    Not having "M$" wouldn't make them believe the critisicm because they do not WANT to believe the criticism.

  101. You have to do that AND GET AWAY WITH IT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Since a non-monopoly trying that shit will be dumped so fast they will think they were born to fall.

    But if you have monopoly power you can pull that stunt and they have no real choice so will have to lap it up.

  102. GNU = ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Aw c'mon, after all these years?

  103. Re:Variant of UNIX according to their sockpuppet, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Year of the Linux Desktop called, it wants its unjustifed exuberance back.

    Linux has brought a lot to the table but credit should be given where due to more than 20 years of work on other systems. It's not even the most widespread UNIX-like OS FFS.

  104. so this is indeed doublespeek by nimbius · · Score: 1

    from redmond if they file each year as SwashbucklingCowboy says they do insisting linux is a viable competitor and a threat to the business model, yet ballmer repeatedly denies this fact?? does he base business decisions on this delusion, or is that cheerleader outfit cutting circulation to his brain?

    I believe microsoft has not learned from the browser wars what competition is and why from a business perspective it, or the potential, should never be ignored. Linux and competitors aren't something that can be squashed by new art from the graphics department and a longer startup noise. failure to take competition seriously has serious repercussions.

    a parallel to draw is automotive manufacturers in the states. while luxury sedans from lexus and acura included more and more interesting and useful gadgets, better fuel efficiency and higher safety ratings, detroit was content cranking out escalade after escalade making increases only in size. 2009 was the first year the model actually saw a size decrease. for a $70k luxury suv it still doesnt include crash avoidance, lane departure detection, or laser cruise control as its competitors from lexus do.

    --
    Good people go to bed earlier.
  105. Re:Variant of UNIX according to their sockpuppet, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In what way? If you look at device support it certainly is -- the most widespread OS in fact...

  106. Re:Variant of UNIX according to their sockpuppet, by gbjbaanb · · Score: 1

    NT was a microkernel, as originally designed and implemented by Dave Cutler and his team for Windows NT 3.51, however, they started putting more and more into the kernel from its old position in userspace starting from NT4. The most notable was the inclusion of the graphics subsystem into the kernel, which made NT4 less stable, but faster.

    I couldn't say how much of Vista/Windows7 is microkernel, but considering they re-architected a lot so we could be protected from the evils of pirate music and video, its probably a fully monolithic kernel now.

  107. Re: Netbooks are not as powerful? YMMV! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I am posting this from a Samsung NC10, with Atom N270 (a hyperthreading single core @ 1.6GHz). I slapped in an extra 1G, to yield 2G onboard. This computer is hardly underpowered, but YMMV.

    I am not sure what the "Ubuntu netbook remix" is all about. I just installed a stock Linux with no ill effects. I guess if the screen is so small that dialogs cannot be displayed, then some optimization could be required. I don't notice any ill effects at 1024x600. So, I am not sure what the intended fixes are all about. Fixes are usually properly directed at offering better kernel support, or normal fixes to applications.

    My stock setup is Slackware 12.2 (with some packages beyond stable including kernel 2.6.30.2, and including Dropline Gnome 2.26.3).

    This is a very usuable configuration. It works out the box (including hotplug devices, hibernation, suspend, automatic network reconnect to wpa wifi (using wicd)). A lot of the stuff which had been broken is gradually getting fixed. And once fixed, it usually works at least as well as the competition. For example, wifi reaquisition upon wakeup definitely works much quicker on this machine than Windows boxes. It went from broken, to industry standard in one jump.

    It also looks very nice. We've come a long way from Red Hat 4.2. Too bad Asus didn't ask for some advice about their distribution before they botched the eee, and went back to Windows. I could've given them hints to get better style points.

  108. 1994 called..... by inerlogic · · Score: 1

    gee, only took 'em 15 years to face the facts....

    maybe next year they'll admit IE is a POS....

  109. MS leaned on Asus to stop shipping Linux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Or you hate to say it cause it's not true. You goddamn shills are all alike. Take your Anti-American cult elsewhere. We're not interested in your revisionist history, The World According to Bill.

    Asus did ship Linux netbooks, but only at the beginning. They sold like hotcakes until MS leaned on Asus to stop shipping Linux. You can't sell what you aren't producing. The period after Asus stopped shipping, MS got its media shills going about a sudden drop-off in sales of linux netbooks. Never mind the demand.

  110. Re:Variant of UNIX according to their sockpuppet, by RedK · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I don't know how you got Insightful. The OpenGroup, in the process of certifying something as Unix compliant and thus be able to use the Unix trademark, issues a testsuite which must compile and run successfully. One part of this test suite is POSIX compliance. Linux wouldn't pass this. As such, it would never be able to use the Trademark. So no, you are wrong, they aren't distinct at all, they are very related.

    --
    "Not to mention all the idiots who use words like boxen."
    Anonymous Coward on Monday August 04, @06:49PM
  111. Re:Variant of UNIX according to their sockpuppet, by foldingstock · · Score: 1

    Who would -want- to use a copy of Unix? Unix was a terrible operating system that had a few good ideas that were poorly implemented. The unix-releated systems we have today: Linux, *BSD, OSX, Solaris, HP-UX, etc are all huge improvements over original Unix implementations.

    Linux is not a copy of Unix. Linux was originally designed to be a free alternative to Minix. Saying "Linux started out as a Minix clone" is more accurate than "Linux is a copy of Unix." Keyword: started. Linux started out as a clone of Minix, but has evolved into its own niche. Compare Minix-3 to Linux-2.6.*.

  112. Re:Variant of UNIX according to their sockpuppet, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Right. Every UNIX system is POSIX compilant.

  113. Re:Variant of UNIX according to their sockpuppet, by RedK · · Score: 1

    What was wrong about what he said ? OS X is a Unix variant, certified as UNIX 03 (since 10.5). Yes, it is built on a Mach kernel and uses BSD userland tools. But you know what, your facts and his facts weren't contradictions.

    --
    "Not to mention all the idiots who use words like boxen."
    Anonymous Coward on Monday August 04, @06:49PM
  114. They both failed by Cro+Magnon · · Score: 1

    Linux failed because netbook vendors shipped crappy non-standard distros. But Windows also failed because MS had to provide an 8 year old version of Windows to run on them, since their mainstream Vista barely works on top-of-the-line desktops.

    --
    Slow down, cowboy! It has been 4 hours since you last posted. You must wait another few hours.
  115. Microsoft has warned about Linux for years by ChuckOp · · Score: 1

    For many years now, MSFT's annual report has warned about the competative threat that Linux poses, including desktop, server and embedded platforms. There are several direct mentions of this in Microsoft's 2005 report, availble here: http://www.microsoft.com/msft/reports/ar05/staticversion/10k_fr_bus_06.html Old news.

  116. Re:Variant of UNIX according to their sockpuppet, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Or, you know, GNU

  117. Re:Variant of UNIX according to their sockpuppet, by ChuckOp · · Score: 1

    If not "Unix variant" then what would you call Linux then? Linux isn't the only Unix knock off, there are the purer variants, such as FreeBSD and related. If you're going to claim that the Windows NT kernel was VMS "stolen by David Culter" then it would be equally valid to say that Linus Torvalds stole MINIX from Andrew Tanenbaum. PS: Culter was the head of 20 folks from DEC to work on Windows NT, all of whom worked on VMS.

  118. Re:Variant of UNIX according to their sockpuppet, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    XNU isn't quite Mach. It's Mach-derived, for the most part, but if you're going to be peevishly pedantic, at least do it right.

  119. Many DO classify Linux as a UNIX... apk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Microsoft is right. Linux is Unix. It's why I started using it. Can it legally be called Unix? No" - by DesScorp (410532) on Tuesday August 04, @10:22PM (#28950899) Homepage

    Technically? Linux HAS already been classified as a *NIX (UNIX) variant by others, & thus, it IS a UNIX...

    See here, on that account/note:

    http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/1998/09/08/BU85830.DTL&type=tech_article

    ----

    PERTINENT QUOTE EXCERPT:

    "Linux is a form of Unix, the system that runs the basic functions for big corporate computer networks. But unlike most other kinds of Unix, which are designed for computer workstations, Linux works fine on your average Intel-based desktop computer."

    ----

    and, here also:

    http://www.informationweek.com/blog/main/archives/2006/02/letter_writers.html

    ----

    PERTINENT QUOTE EXCERPT:

    "Taylor and other writers have pointed out that Unix as an operating system is not disappearing because of Linux. Linux is Unix"

    ----

    Good enough for me... &, apparently others from information week &/or sfgate.com also!

    APK

    P.S.=> Personally, I've always considered Linux a UNIX for the PC, which is the "why" of why I bought it back in 1993-1994 at a local computer fair in the city I then lived in - to have an actual UNIX for the PC, that was free (to keep 'brushed up' on *NIX scripting really)... apk

  120. wha? by Hierophant7 · · Score: 1

    There's a big difference between "threat" and "competition." This is stupid.

  121. Re:Variant of UNIX according to their sockpuppet, by petermgreen · · Score: 1

    And the standards you have to follow to get a license for the unix trademark are a distinct thing again.

    --
    note: i'm known as plugwash most places but i screwd up registering that here somehow in the past and now can't register
  122. Re:Variant of UNIX according to their sockpuppet, by petermgreen · · Score: 1

    The third way is to have an approach where modules/drivers can be built and loaded seperately from the main kernel but are still loaded into the same address space and run in kernel mode. Afaict this is the way that both windows and linux ended up going.

    --
    note: i'm known as plugwash most places but i screwd up registering that here somehow in the past and now can't register
  123. This story screams something by Hottie+Parms · · Score: 1

    "I use Linux! ACKNOWLEDGE ME!! ACKNOWLEDGE ME!!" And yes, I do use Linux. So I'd appreciate it if somebody could mod this up so I feel acknowledged.

  124. CONGRATULATIONS, Slashdot! by malevolentjelly · · Score: 1

    It seems the great linux menace has finally moved out of your imaginations and into the real world. Now, over a decade after its inception, linux has become loosely competitive with Windows in the client market. Pat yourselves on the back. You've done what Microsoft did for a couple hundred thousand dollars in the 80's with a mere $1.2 billion.

  125. Re:Variant of UNIX according to their sockpuppet, by malevolentjelly · · Score: 1

    Linux is not Unix. It's a close approximation. For one, the base APIs are not fully POSIX compliant. Right there is a big hurdle to being Unix. If someone were to pony up the cash for certification (RedHat, Novell, Cannonical), there are issues yet to be fixed before it can be called UNIX, so it's not just a question of certifying it.

    A weird thing has happened though, hasn't it? They've built linux up as its own fairly strong brand.. but I think the community does lack the attention to detail to make this jump, anyway. The linux kernel is pretty *messy* compared to even BSD. I think this small shift in functionality is probably harder to attain than they let on. At its very best, Linux is an almost-Unix.

    If anyone really does need a full compliant UNIX, opensolaris is quite free.

  126. Re:A monopoly does not necessarily mean that you h by joocemann · · Score: 1

    Apparently you missed the words 'exclusive control' in #1.

    I can use dictionary.com to define exclusive for you if you're not already aware of the definition of that word.

    We can do this all day.

  127. Re:Variant of UNIX according to their sockpuppet, by filesiteguy · · Score: 1

    Ahh, Dave Cutler. The One who designed NT 4 and Win 2K.

    I was just talking about him to some of my managers the other day and how Win2K - his last main project - was the last "good" Windows variant in my opinion.

  128. Re:Variant of UNIX according to their sockpuppet, by Antique+Geekmeister · · Score: 1

    Look again at the source code, the copyrights and authorship. It is most certainly _not_ a clone, neither legally nor functionally nor in quite a number of its core kernel functions. It's why cross-porting core software is sometimes so awkward.

  129. Re:A monopoly does not necessarily mean that you h by plague3106 · · Score: 1

    Just because a court said something does not necessitate that something to make sense or have perfect wording. Those courts are headed by people, who make errors, and understand things less than 100% correctly.

    So is language and dictionaries... you don't have a point.

  130. About time... by apexwm · · Score: 1

    I think Microsoft has been feeling the heat from open source for a while now. But, since their failure with Windows Vista, users are finally seeing the light that there are better alternatives out there. Considering Linux is still less than 2% of the desktop share, it can be set up by any moderately technical user and maintained. Which, hardly requires any maintenance. I am a sys admin for over 12 years running Windows and Linux side by side. I choose to use Linux because it doesn't fail, is always FREE and has no licensing woes, and just works better and is simpler to run. http://members.apex-internet.com/sa/windowslinux

  131. Re:Variant of UNIX according to their sockpuppet, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And the OpenGroup and its process of certifying something as Unix is related to Unix exactly how?

  132. Re:Variant of UNIX according to their sockpuppet, by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

    Linux is not Unix. It's a close approximation. For one, the base APIs are not fully POSIX compliant. Right there is a big hurdle to being Unix.

    You're mixing up design philosophy with standards mediated by random organizations.

    By that measure, UNIX (in the lab at Bell Labs) isn't UNIX. That would be internally contradictory, so it's false.

    It's both helpful and confusing to say, "Linux is unix, but it's not UNIX."

    --
    My God, it's Full of Source!
    OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
  133. Ugh.... by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    Linux is great, but it bites the dust when compared against UNIXes like AIX and Solaris.

    Really, it does.

    To portray UNIX in that light is simply ignorant.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  134. Re:Variant of UNIX according to their sockpuppet, by RedK · · Score: 1

    Geez. The OpenGroup is the owner of the UNIX Trademark. They get to decide what is and what isn't UNIX. The certification cost + testsuite decides that. If you can't pay or can't pass or both, you aren't Unix, exactly the situation which Linux is in and you can't call yourself UNIX. You'd think after numerous posts on this very subject people would know a thing or two about it now.

    Everything I just said I already said, either you're trolling for attention or you're really clueless.

    --
    "Not to mention all the idiots who use words like boxen."
    Anonymous Coward on Monday August 04, @06:49PM
  135. Significant Ommisions by TW+Burger · · Score: 1

    Why is Google and Apple Missing? I think MS is blowing smoke up our collective backsides.

  136. Re:Variant of UNIX according to their sockpuppet, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Your argument is precisely the one I'm challenging. I thought it would have been more obvious.

    In your world cannabis must be illegal in netherlands too.

  137. Wanna know how this news sounds to bystanders? by Hurricane78 · · Score: 1

    It sounds like the Linux community would say, that after long hopes to please please be loved... or at least hated..., Microsoft now finally pays them the attention that they so desperately need. And while it still is hatred, at least it is *something*.

    Who in the community actually is *that* desperate and pathetic, that he needs the acknowledgment of Microsoft that Linux now is allowed to be a "big boy" and be "taken seriously"?? How weak must one's self-confidence be, if that is something even worth mentioning?

    I really wonder where this comes from, as I see the Linux community as powerful, and so strongly growing, that the question is not if it will bring Microsoft to its knees, but when(, and how hard they will suck ^^).
    And I think we won't even notice it, or remember that MS was relevant, when it's happening.

    But maybe I'm from the big part of the Linux community, that's more self-confident, than those who try to imitate MS to no end. (The desktop environments mostly.)

    --
    Any sufficiently advanced intelligence is indistinguishable from stupidity.
  138. Re:Variant of UNIX according to their sockpuppet, by RedK · · Score: 1

    Not much of a challenge then. Unless you were trying to challenge yourself to not be retarded, in which you just failed miserably.

    --
    "Not to mention all the idiots who use words like boxen."
    Anonymous Coward on Monday August 04, @06:49PM
  139. Did someone say something? by 3seas · · Score: 1

    I heard a noise

  140. Re:A monopoly does not necessarily mean that you h by joocemann · · Score: 1

    My point is that the primary reference for definition of the word 'monopoly' holds that my understanding of the definition is correct.

    Keep trying... you're doing it so hard...

  141. Re:A monopoly does not necessarily mean that you h by joocemann · · Score: 1

    I can't because part of the definition talks about exclusivity and complete control of a market... I can't just take a PART of the definition that is convenient and ignore the rest... Thats something a lawyer would do, our a shitty court.... like the people that are being 'referenced' as 'evidence' of such a case where a monopoly is not exclusive... lol.

  142. Re:A monopoly does not necessarily mean that you h by joocemann · · Score: 1

    Why don't you tell them for me now that you've been educated? You seem to be much more closely aware of their faults. I'm not interested in telling every fool out there about their misuse of words --- only you, so far.

  143. Re:A monopoly does not necessarily mean that you h by falconwolf · · Score: 1

    Why don't you tell them for me now that you've been educated? You seem to be much more closely aware of their faults. I'm not interested in telling every fool out there about their misuse of words --- only you, so far.

    You are the one who cited the Dictionary.com definition not me. If you were not interested you would not have cited the definition.

    Falcon

  144. Re:Variant of UNIX according to their sockpuppet, by gbjbaanb · · Score: 1

    and ever since, its been style over substance from MS. Unfortunately, they've got him working on Azure now, hopefully he's just doing that for a laugh.

  145. Failed? by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1
    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  146. Re: They do have a monopoly by Douglas+Goodall · · Score: 1

    They have a complete monopoly on the sale of "WIndows" and certain awful server software and browser. Fortunately for everyone else, people are learning that alternative operating systems work all right too, especially when Windows is so expensive.

  147. Wake up!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Guys, wake up. The reason why Microsoft is quoting Red Hat as a competitor is so that antitrust investigations are not restarted by the Obama administration.

  148. Re:Forget Linux, cloud computing is their next ene by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0