Novell's WordPerfect Antitrust Suit Ends In Mistrial
According to a Bloomberg News article carried by Business Week, "Jurors said today they were unable to reach a unanimous verdict in Novell Inc.’s antitrust trial against Microsoft Corp. over the WordPerfect computer program. A mistrial was declared by the judge presiding over the case in federal court in Salt Lake City ... Novell sought as much as $1.3 billion in damages over allegations that Microsoft, while developing the Windows 95 operating system in 1994, blocked an element of the software to thwart Novell’s WordPerfect and Quattro Pro programs."
Clippy: I see you are trying to reach a verdict.
It's a small world and it smells funny; I'd buy another if it wasn't for the money; Take back what I paid (SoM)
Excellent, we got a non-verdict almost 18 years after the events subject to the trial, during which time Microsoft, Apple, and most of the other serial abusers of anti-trust and/or patent law have only maintained or even increased their presence in the market.
I'm satisfied with our justice system. Everything looks totally cool. Everyone else happy?
and it defaults to mistrial.
The 7th amendment says "In suits at common law, where the value in controversy shall exceed twenty dollars, the right of trial by jury shall be preserved, and no fact tried by a jury, shall be otherwise re-examined in any court of the United States, than according to the rules of the common law."
One of the parties asked for a jury trail.
and it sounds like one guy held up the whole thing. It was an 11-1 vote AGAINST Microsoft. Sounds like we spotted a fanboy!
hey!
Wow... Back then I was doing tech support in my first IT gig. It was a summer job while I was in College. I was doing tech support for a reseller that serviced small to mid-sized businesses. One of our clients had purchased Windows 95 PCs, an HP Laserjet 4si, and WordPerfect for Windows 3.11. Due to a bug between Windows and WordPerfect, the client was completely unable to print. There was no fix -- WordPerfect's printing engine was completely incompatible with Windows 95. I was completely unable to fix the problem. Is this the same issue they're litigating over?
I remember Lotus 1-2-3...OMG has it been that long?
"That's right...I said it."
WordPerfect was by far the best word processing program at the time. WordPerfect for windows sucked, yes, because MS made sure of that, as you would realise very quickly if you would peruse the Novel exhibits in this case. I remember at the time we kept using the DOS version - even running it under Windows was far preferable to rescuing with Word.
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Friends don't let friends enable ecmascript.
Yes, Lotus Word Pro was great. Lotus 123 was everything that its history suggests it should be. Anyone else notice that Microsoft's Haaa-mazin' "Ribbon" is just Lotus' info-box, from the mid 90's, pinned to the top of the screen, where it takes up room the user needs for other things?
Prediction for end of Universe #42: Fencepost error in Quantum_bogosort.cpp
cook your food, sell you your clothes, and work in the factories that make those monitors, are all using phones, not fancy computers.
and they out number you 99:1.
Alt F4 is part of the Common User Access standard built by IBM http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IBM_Common_User_Access
I remember when WordPerfect for Windows first came out, we wondered whether they had shipped with the debug code still in, because it ran so slowly. Upper management then made the decision to go with Word, which caused me no end of problems in retraining the secretaries. All the document management macros had to be rewritten for Word too. That probably soured my attitude to MS permanently ;-)
When Microsoft's on trial, a guilty verdict has to be unanmous?
Normally in a Civil trial unanimity is not required.
I remember being at the Microsoft Professional Developer’s conference (PDC) in 1993 in. I sat behind a row of Word Perfect programming managers. They slept late, came in mid-morning, seemed to think it a great joke that they had been sent out of town on a junket for Windows, which was *never* going to take off. They laughed, passed notes, and dozed, paying little attention as they knew no one would ever want windows for real work. They were looking forward to Disneyland on Thursday night, though.
And so it went for a week of introductions to the MFC.
Two years later, WordPerfect for windows did not seem to be actually written for windows, and wordperfecomplained they had been tricked. To an observer, though, it looked as if they never tired, and then tried to shift blame later.
I spent a month on a jury dealing with a multimillion dollar squabble between a developer and a contractor. Personally, if it had been up to me, I would have taken the money from both of them and awarded it to somebody else completely, but that's not how trials worked.
By the end I thoroughly hated all parties involved.
LIke most folks in the MSDOS world we used word perfect. When we went to Windows 3.1, obviously before 95, we tried various WYSIWYG word processors. Word worked ok, AMIPRO was fine (and my favorite) and WP for windows was just awful. Word had the advantage of being developed for the MAC which gave MS a significant headstart. I would assume the same for excel. The seamless tie-in of word, excel and powerpoint made if difficult for anyone else to compete. The better product won.
As an aside I believe word perfect for dos cost several hundred dollars and lotus 123 was $495. Now this buys you the office suite.
I like a good joke-in-song-lyrics as much as anyone but this was way off-base, not funny and you're trashing possibly the best song that the Wilson sisters ever wrote.
Pain is merely failure leaving the body
20 years ago.
I am so glad to see *nix become a standard.
Bring on the voice activated TVs...
For in politics, as in religion, it is equally absurd to aim at making proselytes by fire and sword. - Publius
Yes it is - it's just the lawyers are the 'somebody else' you get to choose from.
Or someone who's about to mysteriously come into a lot of money.
"Bribery!" is the geek's shout-out to any legal decision he doesn't like.
If it is not the judge who was bribed, it was the jury. If it was not the judge or the jury, it was the lawyers. If it was not the lawyers. it was the lawmakers.
First of all let me make it clear. I don't give a rats ass about this case! I was never a fan of WordPerfect and this case is so old it's ridiculous. Novell will never regain its place in the word processing market. Frankly I think it's disgusting that this case hasn't been concluded long ago.
"Bribery!" is not only "the geek's shout-out". It's used by all manner of people in the world. Do you know why? Because it's so fucking common! Hell the US government has practically legalized it and now calls it a campaign donation.
A lot of this case is claiming that MS told Wordperfect "This is the interface to use", but then went and cut the interface when releasing '95. Wordperfect had done alot of work on that interface, which had to be scrapped.
Maybe AmiPro had missed (or ignored) the memo, and escaped the 'trap'.
Prediction for end of Universe #42: Fencepost error in Quantum_bogosort.cpp