Slashdot Mirror


Slashdot's "Instant" Legal Analysis of the MS Ruling

As soon as Judge Jackson's decision was available for download (from this mirror site, among others), I was on the phone with Washington DC attorney Don Weightman, who often serves as the informal "Slashdot legal interpreter" on federal law, especially for antitrust and regulatory matters. Click below for a transcript of the phone conversation Don and I had as we read the decision together. Don makes some great points!

Don - This decision from Judge Jackson is the best legal field guide I've seen to the new economy. It's great. This judge really gets it!

Robin - What do you mean?

Don - The judge appears to understand why and how people have been fighting the battle they've been fighting about software. Where Microsoft has been getting its competitive advantage and what it's been doing to keep it. What's more, there's a clear account of the relationship between big fish like MS and perhaps Sun and Netscape and the thousands of smaller developer who have to cope with program interfaces and live and die on the the competitive possibilities that the big fish allow them.

Note: Don says to pay particular attention to Paragraph 18 of Judge Jackson's ruling, which says the market MS controls is for PC operating systems, and also says Mac, Linux, and handheld appliances aren't in the same "ballpark" as PC OSes. Two other critical paragraphs Don notes are numbers 33 & 34, where the Judge describes why he considers that MS controls that market.

Paragraph 38 talks about the economics of software and #39 talks about positive network effect, or "why if everybody else has a piece of critical software you have to get it too." Paragraph 50 specifically mentions Linux, but Don says "I'll leave that one to you guys to decide how spot-on it is." :)

Beyond that, you might as well read the decision yourself. Don says, again, "This Judge really gets it!

Now back to the questions...

Robin - Now what happens? Does every software company that feels MS ever abused it file on them?

Don - I'm going to read to you from paragraph 93 ... "It is Microsoft's corporate practice to pressure other firms to halt software development that either shows the potential to weaken the applications barrier to entry or competes directly with Microsoft's most cherished software products." These are Judge Jackson's words for what happens to you if you try to compete with Microsoft. A lot of software company will be sharpening their word processors tonight...

Robin - How do you think consumers will react?

Don - When they realize that they've had to pay more for computers because MS has charged high prices for their OS, they may take the issue more personally. It's close to certain that someone, somewhere will file a class action suit.

Robin - What about the "browser wars" that actually started the whole thing? Where do they fit into all this?

Don - It looks as if (he stops for a moment to laugh some more) the Judge is finding that MS went after Netscape with both guns blazing, giving Explorer away with one hand and preventing Netscape's installation on new computers with the other, and that all of this was done for anti-competitive purposes. The other thing I'm seeing on the browser wars is that it's pretty clear that the Judge did not buy MS's story on why MSIE was bundled with Windows. He says, "Microsoft's actions have inflicted [collateral] harm on consumers who have no interest in using a Web browser at all" because Win98 runs more slowly it would if they hadn't put the browser in.

Also in paragraph 173 -- which I just quoted part of -- it says,"Microsoft has forced Windows 98 users uninterested in using [it] to carry software that, while providing them with no benefits, brings with it all the costs associated with carrying addtional software on a system. These include performance degradation, increased risk of incompatibilities, and the introduction of bugs."

Note: (At this point Don starts laughing and says, "It gets even better..") Really, you do need to read the decision for yourself! Don says, "You get the feeling that the Judge is a disgruntled Windows user!" But unlike most disgruntled Windows users, this one has the power to do something about it. Right on, Judge Jackson!

Robin - But Don, all the lovely legal language and Windows-knocking aside, isn't this decision going to end up getting appealed forever?

Don - Yes. However, it is unlikely that an appellate court will want to get its hands under the hood of the relationship between Windows and browsers and between MS and its competitors at level of detail shown by Judge Jackson's findings. It's possible to overturn this but it would be hard.

Robin - Don, how much do you figure MS has spent on legal fees so far, and how much more are they going to spend before this is over?

Don - I'm guessing that they've spent more than $50 million so far. And when you say "when all this is over," if you include the industry suits and class action suits brought by private plaintiffs, you could could be talking about real money. Even for MS.

Robin - What's "real money"?

Don - It depends on whether someone nails them for damages. A $10 rebate for each customer who has bought Windows would run into billions. When you add in the damages that could be claimed by other software makers besides Netscape [like Corel], and by users who ended up with MS products, perhaps at excessive prices, because others weren't available, then only the sky is the limit.

Robin - Do you think Bill Gates will have a "House For Sale" ad in the Seattle newspapers next Sunday?

Don - It depends on how fast and far Microsoft's stock price drops. It's already started to drop, according to a story that just went up on ZDNet.

Robin - Don't forget: all that happened today was that Judge Jackson decided MS was naughty. He didn't say what kind of punishment they should get, which he won't do until he hears a whole new set of arguments. Don's best guess is that the ruling on punishment won't come out "until early next year."

Don Weightman and I will try to get a "Microsoft antitrust legal issues" follow-up together by sometime next week. Or perhaps you would like to do it? If so -- and if you're qualified -- e-mail roblimo@slashdot.org and we'll talk about it.

- Robin "roblimo" Miller

301 of 455 comments (clear)

  1. M$'s website by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Interesting how MS has the finding of fact in both Word and WordPerfect formats, of course, they wouldn't put it in .txt format or anything, that would make it easier for someone who doesn't use windoze.

    1. Re:M$'s website by Baggio · · Score: 1

      That's funny, I guess they converted it, but from what source? WordPerfect? :)
      Time flies like an arrow;

      --
      Time flies like an arrow;
      Fruit flies like a bananna
  2. Oddly enough by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Washington DC attorney Don Weightman, who often serves as the informal "Slashdot legal interpreter" on federal law,

    Odd, searching slashdot for Weightman returns:
    1 Feature: The Broadband Wars by Roblimo on Tuesday July 20, @09:17AM EST 301

    One article does not "often" make... but:
    When you say "Slashdot", You mean Andover.net, don't you?

    1. Re:Oddly enough by Roblimo · · Score: 3
      When we - and I mean Slashdot editors - have a question about a point of federal antitrust law or FCC regulation, Don is always happy to give us advice or steer us to someone who can. The "Broadband Wars" story to which you refer was his only previous *public* appearance here, but a lot more "behind the scenes" work goes into Slashdot than most people realize. (Believe it or not, Rob and Jeff don't spend all day playing with Rob's robot dog. They bust ass most of the time!)

      Anyway, I think Don deserves great thanks for having blown part of a Friday evening with his family to share his insights with us. He works long, hard hours -- and I happen to know that today was particularly busy for him. ;-)

      - Robin

    2. Re:Oddly enough by grmoc · · Score: 1

      Do you think that Andover could afford to hire
      a lawyer to do this for us as a semi-permanent thing?

      (by which I mean that we can ask questions, and get answers. I know that I'd be willing to contribute towards something like this.. maybe other people would, and perhaps even some corporations..)

    3. Re:Oddly enough by UnclPedro · · Score: 1

      Anyway, I think Don deserves great thanks for having blown part of a Friday evening with his family to share his insights with us. He works long, hard hours -- and I happen to know that today was particularly busy for him. ;-)

      Indeed. On behalf of those of us who constantly post IANALs, thank you, Don, for your expert breakdown of the Finding.

      ------

  3. Hold on just a minute by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I don't want to sour the party at all, but before we get too happy lets stop and look at the facts.

    1. Microsoft will NOT be broken up. I have heard some people discussing this as possibillity, but it's simply not going to happen unless Microsoft *chooses* this(and they won't). I don't care what anyone says, its just not going to happen. Standard oil was a completely different case this is different. With software you can simply revoke your competitive advantage (i.e. open source it) and you will no longer be a monopoly.

    2. This won't change much for the final OS market. Linux won't suddenly gain marketshare because consumers aren't going to decide to stop using Windows just because a judge somewhere thinks that Microsoft uses unfair marketting practices.

    The good news, on the other hand, is that this will certainly make it easier to purchase computers without windows pre-installed. One of Microsoft's many ways of forcing windows on it's consumer base is to force PC manufacturers to pay for each computer made, not how many copies of windows it actually installs. This practice will almost certainly be stopped.

    Bottom Line: The war with Microsoft is far from over, but this is an excellent start.

    -Cyberllama

  4. Simple way to fix this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1


    Just make them completely document all protocols,
    API's, and file formats.

    That is enough to let them stay ahead if they
    truly innovate; but if they drag behind the
    industry won't have to suffer as we are now.

    Mark

  5. Re:NOT a "NAUGHTY" ruling! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Actually, findings of fact are where the judge says what he's decided is proven as to the facts of a case. He's listened to both sides and has decided who he believes. In a divorce case, for example, he might say in the Findings: the defendant (say the husband) acted like this and like this on such and such a day and the result was that the wife ended up in such and such a hospital. He'll state what he finds the husband's income to be (usually more than the guy tried to say it is). He'll state what the children's names and DOBs are and that they are entitled to support, that they are his kids, etc. He will be writing in the facts that MATCH the law's requirements. It has to reach all the necessary elements of the law for the divorce to be granted. It isn't random. He's touching all the necessary bases. THEN, in the conclusions of law, a separate document, he says what laws apply to the case, which section of the divorce law, for ex., and states what is to be done. But the two docs are related. You don't write the Findings and later think about what your conclusions are. In the MS case, he didn't just say they are a monopoly, he said they damaged not only the competition but also held back innovation and hurt consumers...he was touching all the necessary bases, legally. That's why MS statements are all stressing how much they care about innovation...how consumers are the beneficiaries of the healthy business rivalries... just amazing speeches, if you don't understand the law... You can see what's likely to come from the findings of fact, and can CLEARLY see who has prevailed and who the judge is going to favor. This judge says MS was naughty, all right. Findings of fact means exactly that -- he didn't buy their story. What he will do about it is what's to come -- first both sides present to the judge what they think the laws are that he ought to consider and how they relate to what should happen. Then he decides. He's not without his own ideas already however! In real life, what usually happens in a situation like this is settlement talks start ASAP in hopes of avoiding le deluge .. as per Gates' statement on how much they would like to put this case behind them, etc. Unless his lawyers see something legally, not morally, they think they can use on appeal, they will certainly be talking settlement. And these findings are so incredibly detailed... appeals aren't based on a different point of view. The appeals courts don't usually get into facts, that is, they don't retry a case, only overturn cause of things like mistakes of law or prejudice from the judge, that kind of thing.

  6. Re:Stock Market - Dow Jones by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Don't forget Friday night isn't exactly the most active time of the week. Alot of serious people are home with the kids. I don't expect the price to crater. I do think there will be some spillover to all pc related stocks. Most of it negative. OTOH I doubt a great deal on the downside Monday. What I do expect is something like Phillip Morris's stock chart. The only difference is MO has better lawyers.

  7. Re:Anybody else think this is a BAD thing? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2

    When you live in a nation of laws you expect to be punished if you break those laws. No one forced Microsoft to act the way it did. If microsoft broke the law they should be punished. Anything less makes laws just words.

  8. Re:I love living in DC. by Roblimo · · Score: 1
    Sounds like fun. Maybe I can bring my wireless laptop and you can contribute some commentary...

    - Robin

  9. History by hogwaller · · Score: 1

    I'm still digesting the FOF. But one thing strikes me. This is an history making document. Our biz will be different from here on out.
    The funny thing is, Microsoft sees fit to quote only Section 408 on its website:


    408. The debut of Internet Explorer and its rapid improvement gave Netscape an incentive to improve Navigator's quality at a competitive rate. The inclusion of Internet Explorer with Windows at no separate charge increased general familiarity with the Internet and reduced the cost to the public of gaining access to it, at least in part because it compelled Netscape to stop charging for Navigator. These actions thus contributed to improving the quality of Web browsing software, lowering its cost, and increasing its availability, thereby benefitting consumers.


    Poor MS. I guess that one paragraph is about the only spin it can find in this whole document.




    1. Re:History by RatBastard · · Score: 1

      It's too bad that both Internet Exploder and Netscape 4.x suck so bad.

      --
      Boobies never hurt anyone. - Sherry Glaser.
  10. Re:Document Formats - Here's another reason by farrellj · · Score: 1

    WP has had a lot of acceptance in the legal field because of it's ability to create large libraries of standard verbiage for legal documents. A lawyer can create a iron-clad contract for hundreds of different situations simply by picking the correct verbiage macros and typing in the specifics. It takes them all of 10 minutes to do so. Once you know the system, and you know that it is thoughly debugged, why change? And since WP corp made sure that their software fully met the specifications of it's customers they have no reason to change. Hey, imagine that, listening to customers and giving them what they want rather than dictating autocraticly what they will get!

    ttyl
    Farrell

    --
    CAN-CON 2019 - Ottawa's only book oriented Science Fiction Convention! October 18-20, Sheraton Hotel, Ottawa, Canada h
  11. Re:Hm. Appealed forever? by Chris+Johnson · · Score: 2

    The disconcerting part is that the MS people show _no_ signs of backing down even now. They haven't changed their tune one iota. I think they're all brainwashed, they're just going to stonewall it to death (theirs).

  12. Re:I'm happy by phil+reed · · Score: 1
    I finally finished reading most of the FOF and can say that I'm astounded by the one-sidedness of the this document. It reads like David Boiles or Joe Klein were the authors.

    Or maybe, just MAYBE, Microsoft really did all those bad things? Is that even remotely a possibility?


    ...phil

    --

    ...phil
    "For a list of the ways which technology has failed to improve our quality of life, press 3."
  13. Re:reason why decision was on Friday at 6:30... by Erik+Hollensbe · · Score: 1

    You obviously never used doublespace, or QEMM, or DR-DOS. Oh yeah, what about them stacker folks?

    MS has been doing this since day 1... I'm honestly surprised it took this long.

    -Erik-

  14. Re:NOT a "NAUGHTY" ruling! by Erik+Hollensbe · · Score: 1

    "Monopolistically Competitive" is an oxymoron.

    -Erik-

  15. Re:NOT a "NAUGHTY" ruling! by Erik+Hollensbe · · Score: 1

    Every company has a monopoly in their own product. That's why we have copyright and patent laws.

    Coke and Pepsi are healthy competing products of the same type, I see no monopoly there. A monopoly has a blanketed market share to the point where competitors are insignificant. Hence competitiveness at any sense with something "insignificant" is hardly possible.

    -Erik-

  16. Re:QEMM, DR-DOS??? by Erik+Hollensbe · · Score: 1

    Doublespace contained a good deal of code from Stacker.. In fact, it was so significant to the point where certain drive utilities would recognize doublespaced drives as stacker drives.

    QEMM is an excellent memory manager that always has to have a fixpatch for every single version of windows, for some reason M$ kept breaking it's support. I eventually got tired of using it after having to buy new versions just to support windows.

    DR-DOS would not work with Win3.1, despite the fact that it was more than compatible as a fully functional dos.

    I should have explained myself better, these are examples of M$'s destruction of other companies' products through market dominance.

    -Erik-

  17. They're going to lose employees... by Ami+Ganguli · · Score: 3

    Probably the most immediate and tangible effect this will have on Microsoft is in employee turnover.

    As I understand it, MS doesn't really pay that well, except employees get rich on the stock options. Suddenly those stocks aren't so attractive. MS will have trouble holding on to its talent, or hiring new staff.

    Anybody know how much it would cost Microsoft to pay market rates for it's staff?

    --
    It is tempting, if the only tool you have is a hammer, to treat everything as if it were a nail. - Abraham Maslow
    1. Re:They're going to lose employees... by mattdm · · Score: 2
      Funny you should mention that. Have you seen this?
      http://www.billparish.com/msftfraudfacts.html

      --

  18. Re:Digression -- GM trucks by RatBastard · · Score: 1
    Let us not forget that the case against GM was dealt a severe blow when it was discovered that model rocket engines were planted on the trucks to get the tanks to explode on que for the cameras.

    The government almost lost the case on that day.

    --
    Boobies never hurt anyone. - Sherry Glaser.
  19. Re:HTML Version of the Findings is available by pb · · Score: 1

    Hey, thanks, that *is* easier to read!

    Anyone with mod points, bump this up, if it hasn't been mentioned already.

    I just converted the .pdf file to text, but the HTML document is much more accessible, as it is on what is commonly called a "web page", found on the "Internet". (did this give anyone else Dr. Evil flashbacks? 'Using a "laser", I will punch a hole in the "ozone layer"'... :)
    ---
    pb Reply rather than vaguely moderate me.

    --
    pb Reply or e-mail; don't vaguely moderate.
  20. Re:NOT a "NAUGHTY" ruling! by Danse · · Score: 1

    Yes, he mentions these things. But the good Judges task was to decide whether or not Microsoft was a MONOPOLY.

    That was certainly the most important issue he had to decide, but it was far from being the only one. He had to determine (after the trial proceedings and a review of all the evidence) what the facts of the case were. The facts, as he's determined them, say not only that Microsoft is a monopoly, but that they used that monopoly in ways which will almost certainly be deemed illegal when they get around to the findings of law portion.

    He laid out many facts that will be of much help to other companies and individuals who have brought (or will soon bring) suits against Microsoft. Caldera is a perfect example. This will be a great boost for their case since they will not have to prove that Microsoft is a monopoly since Judge Jackson already determined that they are.

    All in all, this is a very bad thing for Microsoft. Yes, they will appeal it as long as possible. But the DOJ has a nice advantage after this point. These facts can't be appealed. Only the findings of law can be appealed. I think the facts are damning enough that they won't have much luck with their appeals. If some useful injunctions are put in place while the appeals process goes on, and they are actually enforced this time, then perhaps something good was accomplished by this suit.

    --
    It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
  21. Re:Hm. Appealed forever? by Danse · · Score: 1

    People have had a lot of hope over the last year due to the fact that the DOJ actually seemed to have wised up a bit. They realized that Microsoft laughed off their consent decree and they apparently decided to try and do it right this time.

    This has given many companies the courage to do something besides dance to Microsoft's tune. Were it not for this suit, Linux would have much more bleak prospects than it currently does. I doubt we would have seen the investments from the likes of IBM and Intel if the suit hadn't happened. People have had reason to show confidence in Linux' chances of becoming a real competitor to Windows. Much of this is only possible because of the DOJ case.

    --
    It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
  22. Re:Worst Case.. by Danse · · Score: 1

    What are your yammering about? Have you ever tried using WindowMaker, Gnome, or KDE? Somehow I doubt it or you wouldn't have been spewing that crap in a post here.

    --
    It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
  23. Re:Worst Case.. by demon · · Score: 1

    Umm. For someone who has nothing to say, you sure are saying a lot of it.

    I guess I don't see your problem. XFree86 is not a GUI, but a graphics server, and you run a window manager and apps that define the look of the graphical environment. So what are you whining about?

    --

    Sam: "That was needlessly cryptic."
    Max: "I'd be peeing my pants if I wore any!"
  24. Re:Mirror of ruling (Another) by lordhades · · Score: 1

    http://federal.gallerywatch.com/ms-findings.ps

  25. Re:Mirror of ruling (Another) by lordhades · · Score: 1

    Make that:
    http://federal.gallerywatch.com/ms-findings.pdf
    but, both are there...;)

  26. appeals, finding of facts, etc. by hawk · · Score: 2

    I am a lawyer, but this isn't advice. etc.

    1) You can always file the initial appeal, which willl be heard. This is part of due process.

    2) Findings of Fact *can* be appealed. However, the standard of review makes it improbable that they will be reversed. Conclusions of law can be altered by an appellate court easily; the appellate court just substitutes its own judgment. Factual findings, however, whether by a judge or jury, can only be overturned if the appellate court finds that no reasonable person could have come to that conclusion given the evidence before them. A *very* tough standard.

  27. Re:NOT a "NAUGHTY" ruling! by hawk · · Score: 2

    >"Monopolistically Competitive" is an oxymoron.

    Not if you have any idea what it means :)

    It describes a market in which each firm has a monopoly in their own product, which is distinguished in some way from other products (Coke & Pepsi). Each firm has some market power, but must compete with other monopolists.

  28. Re:You have not read it by hawk · · Score: 2

    > Caldera's case is kind of on shakey ground,
    >IMHO, because they didn't own DR-DOS during a
    >time where it would have mattered.

    Completely & utterly irrelevant :) Part of DR-DOS when they bought it was the potential claim against ms.

    > They bought
    >DR-DOS only after it was fairly clear that
    >DR-DOS wasn't a viable product anymore. But
    >#include

    Yep. But they bought it wounds & all

    hawk, esq. (but this isn't legal advice)

  29. Agree, Judge "gets it" by ChrisRijk · · Score: 3
    I've read most of the "Findings of Fact" - skimmed some bits. Not bad reading actually. I'd followed the trial pretty closely (mostly by reading stuff at The Register who did include a lot of detail and analysis) and I can see where pretty much all the points Judge Jackson brought up. I agree pretty much right on with just about everything the good Judge said. I'm no lawyer though... but my studies in Economics helped!

    I remember an article that appeared on Infoworld about a year ago, basically saying that if MS is offically declared a monopoly, it'll basically open the sluice gates for law-suits against MS.

    It'll probabaly have a decent effect on the two other major current MS lawsuits - Sun against MS over Java (that Judge for that lawsuit is expected to re-rule on some major points soon) and the Caldera one which will go to trial soon. (couldn't find any references to Caldera in the "findings of fact" though)

    Another interesting point is that it is (apparantly) possible for the DoJ to ask for any full appeal to go directly the the Supreme Court! (or something like that) Uh oh... ^-^

    Finally... I wish the people I do share dealings with would do "future" shares - basically betting that the share price will fall, as I had some money I'd quite happily put on MS's shares falling. Oh well... It'll be interesting to see the affect on MS's main competitors.

    1. Re:Agree, Judge "gets it" by m0nkyman · · Score: 1

      Finally... I wish the people I do share dealings with would do "future" shares - basically betting that the share price will fall, as I had some money I'd quite happily put on MS's shares falling. Oh well... It'll be interesting to see the affect on MS's main competitors

      It's called shorting, and if they don't do it, find a competent broker.

      --
      ~ a low user id is no indication I have a clue what I'm talking about.
    2. Re:Agree, Judge "gets it" by mochaone · · Score: 1

      First thing Monday morning I am going to contact my lawyer to discuss whether we should pursue opening a class-action lawsuit. I personally feel that MS has harmed me by overcharging for it's software and I plan to seek legal redress.

      I'm sure some of you reactionary, right wing, republican types will howl at this comment, but I don't care because I honestly believe in what I will be doing Monday morning. I suspect I won't be the only person pursuing justice either.

      --
      Hates people who have stupid little sigs
  30. Nice mercury news article by ChrisRijk · · Score: 3
  31. read it. by mattdm · · Score: 2
    The Court defines the market as that of OSes for Intel-compatible desktop personal computers. It pretty convincingly argues that there are no other significant companies in that market -- Linux and BeOS notwithstanding. Hence, monopoly.

    --

  32. Bye, bye Appeals Court by David+Jensen · · Score: 2

    There are two reasons the Appeals Court won't do much with this. One, it is a finding of fact. appellate courts have to have an extremely good reason to overturn a finding of fact. They regularly tell the judge that he didn't understand the law, but are expected to be able to show that the finder of fact was totally clueless before overturning a finding of fact. This finding of fact may not be 100%, but it is still top notch. The rest of the case will depend on this finding of fact.

    Two, the whole thing might be certified directly to the Supreme Court when all is said and done. If so, the DC Circuit won't be able to say anything.

    1. Re:Bye, bye Appeals Court by rew · · Score: 1

      This finding of fact may not be 100%

      Yes, I was VERY impressed by the accuracy of the judge's ruling.

      One thing though: "at all times in the last x years microsofts marketshare was above 90%" is technically incompatible with "when in 9x OS/2's marketshare was over 10%".

      (I didn't go back to the original ruling to find exact quotes for this, so treat with care... )

      Roger.

    2. Re:Bye, bye Appeals Court by miscellaneous · · Score: 1

      Hmmm....there's no constitutional issue involved here, really (although microsoft will almost certainly try to find one, as part of the coming PR campaign), but the Court has appeals jurisdiction over this case, ultimately, and they tend to take on major cases, even if there are no constitutional issues. Also, the judges rule not only on constitutional issues, but on issues of federal law, and you can bet that microsoft is going to make this a big issue with regard to federal law interpretation. They will if they're smart, anyway--the findings of fact are the wrong way to go with this.

      IADefinitelyNAL

      --
      -k. ^-^ ^D
    3. Re:Bye, bye Appeals Court by miscellaneous · · Score: 1

      Ya, I just meant that if it did come to an appeal (and given MS's hubris and lack of common sense regarding this case, to date, it might, IMHO), I don't think that the Supreme court is necessarily going to refuse to hear such an appeal, either on the fast track or through normal channels.

      --
      -k. ^-^ ^D
    4. Re:Bye, bye Appeals Court by plunge · · Score: 2

      IT's actually not likely that the Supreme Court would hear this case. Finding of fact, and... can you name the constitutional issue involved? I can, but they're all heavily in favor of a ruling against Microsoft... Unless Rehnquist is feeling REALLY cocky.

    5. Re:Bye, bye Appeals Court by mushroom · · Score: 1

      There is no appeal yet because there is nothing to appeal. Remember, all Judge Jackson is make certain conclusions about what the facts in this case are, he hasn't fashioned any remedy yet. The right to appeal is automatic, but you can only appeal from a final judgement, and this is not one(A final judgment will be in the form of an Order making MS do certain things and say that it is final). Microsoft could then appeal the judgement, and amongst its arguments are that the judge got the facts wrong. Still, at best MS could get a new trial, based on some evidentiary screw-up by the judge. No way an appeals court will throw Jackson's findings of fact and come to its own conclusions. The sun would fall out of the sky first(if it did, it's corrupt). But in reality, the only thing MS could fight is the remedy, which it won't because most likely there will be some sort of consent decree with Justice and the states.

      --
      -Every time I see you flourishing with a metaphor I experience the same anxiety I feel watching a child with a razor-
  33. Re:I'm probably going to get beat up over this but by Evangelion · · Score: 1

    ...you would know that it's impossible.

    Bzzzt. Wrong.

    98lite.net

  34. Re:Finding format by mmontour · · Score: 1

    every format? Not really. For example, there was no Applixware native format. What I was was one proprietary format (Wordperfect, presumably what the document was created in) and a few other mostly-open formats like PDF and HTML. This seems reasonable to me. Text might be nice, but HTML is close enough (since it's all a single page; just strip the tags).

  35. A solution by doobie · · Score: 1
    There should be a class action lawsuit placed against Microsoft totalling $10 * every copy of Microsoft Windows 95/98 every sold. Anyone who can prove they have a license should get $10 for each license they hold. The money they cannot give out should be given to the FSF to promote the future of free/open software.

    My $.02

  36. Re:He does get it. by osu-neko · · Score: 1
    I don't know, I thought the jab at Larry Elison was pretty funny...

    --

    --
    "Convictions are more dangerous enemies of truth than lies."
  37. Re:Please vote honestly by Eck · · Score: 1
    Thanks for pointing out this poll.

    Your suggestion that we vote exactly what we believe is great. Sadly, this disgustingly biased Harris Poll only offers choices that imply Microsoft is some kind of victim rather than the abusive perpetrator the courts are showing them to be!

    "Did Microsoft get what they deserved?" means what? Microsoft hasn't gotten anything yet! Then the choice of three answers includes two which favour Microsoft? Nice to see anyway that those two don't get as many responses combined as the "yes" does.

    For "what do you think will happen next?" the only choices are for Microsoft to get the best it can still hope for or else it's "drawn out" and "bitter"?!

    Amazing. I'll have to save this as a reminder not to ever trust Harris Poll results even as far as the Slashdot ones.

  38. So what's this mean for the Dow, Win2k? by J.+FoxGlov · · Score: 1

    You realize Microsoft was one of four new companies (plus Intel, SBC and Home Depot) that recently made it onto the Dow Industrial Average. How's the stock market going to cope? What's that say for the Dow, that they're putting megalithic evil companies up with the set standard?

    Then again, they have had Ford.

    And what about Windows 2000? That's scheduled to come out Feb. 17. Not that lots of people are gonna yank it off the shelves, but does it have much of a chance now?

    J.

    J.

    --
    damned vulpine http://sb.drtwister.com/
  39. Re:A judge wrote this? by pudge · · Score: 1

    Of course he gets it. He has been on this case for more than four years. He has been hearing about programming interfaces for longer than most Slashdot readers. His well-publicized reactions and statements in the courtroom on this leg of the case are clear evidence that he gets it; the finding of fact is mere confirmation of it.

  40. Re:Did anyone else notice the contradictions? by James+Youngman · · Score: 1
    Say that again? How is it that a *FREE* OS made by people that do not get paid for their services are able to enter the market and compete quite well? That's a high barrier?
    The barrier is the cost of development of a new operating system. This requires such a large (manpower) investment that it has taken thousands of volunteers several years. To do this commercially would take many millions of dollars.
  41. Re:WordPerfect format by jmcmurry · · Score: 1

    Lots and lots of legal people use WordPerfect. In fact, more than a few law offices actually still use WordPerfect 5.1a for DOS.

    They also use a lot of NetWare, as I understand it...


  42. Re:Document Formats - here's why it's WordPerfect by cpt+kangarooski · · Score: 1

    Lawyers can be dumb, but they're smart enough to generally avoid typing in the first place. They have secretaries type. And they have very strict requirements on the formatting of their documents so it seems that WP has turned out to be the best suited. Want to effect a change? Make an emacs lawyer mode. It would probably catch on quickly as long as it can import WP files without a hitch.

    --
    -- This and all my posts are in the public domain. I am a lawyer. I am not your lawyer, and this is not legal advice.
  43. Let's try to keep a semi-level head here.... by Chas · · Score: 1

    While I rejoice at this ruling as much as anyone else, we still have a ways to go. By itself, this ruling is essentially meaningless. Once we start seeing all the other charges answered, and all the penalties assigned, THEN we can start going ape-shite and comparing it to David and Goliath's big brother Chip. Hell. I'll even buy a round for anyone showing up on my doorstep when it happens!


    Chas - The one, the only.
    THANK GOD!!!

    --


    Chas - The one, the only.
    THANK GOD!!!
  44. Re:Document Formats - Here's another reason by Chas · · Score: 1
    My mom still uses WP5.1 for DOS (albeit on a P2 333 that I built her) for medical transcription for just this reason. She has literally hundreds of terminology fragments and common usages (she works for one ultra-workaholic neurosurgeon and has been doing this for nigh on 10 years for him now). She initially started on WP4.2 and when I bought 5.1 she upgraded and took a class to learn it. She absoloutely REFUSES to go Windows-based word processors, even WP for Windows. She claims, rightfully, that she's more productive in DOS than she ever could be mouse-clicking like a nut in Windows. I actually type faster than she does, but she knocks documents out faster than me for two reasons:
    1. I do my formatting AFTER I finish typing up the document (and in Windows, that formatting is a bit slower than 3 keystrokes.
    2. Again, her vast library of macros. She actually had to cut back because she'd overloaded her macro directory (of course she WAS storing entire DOCUMENT SHELLS as macros).

    Up until June of this year (she'd been banging away on an old 486/33 with 20MB RAM (16 of which I'd put in) and a 230MB HD. The only reason she upgraded was that I dismantled her machine one day while she was at work and put the new machine in there. Then told her that the old one had fried it's HD (but I'd "luckily" had the new machine laying around (sorta like my uncle just had a 10MB IBM HD "laying around" when I built my first 8088 system) and that the old system wouldn't like the 3GB drive it had in it).


    Chas - The one, the only.
    THANK GOD!!!

    --


    Chas - The one, the only.
    THANK GOD!!!
  45. Re:Careful about class action lawsuits: by Kiwi · · Score: 1
    The cost of the OS is a factor with the new crop of PCs that cost less than $400. Once you get below the $400 mark, the $100 cost for Windows becomes significant enough that you either don't include an OS, or have the system in question run Linux or BeOS.

    - Sam

    --

    The secret to enjoying Slashdot is to realize that it should not be taken too seriously.

  46. Re:Why we shouldn't care about this ruling by Darchmare · · Score: 1

    Not all of us have the same ideology as you do. Some of us think it'd be great if it were easier for ethical developers of commercial software can do business without the threat of being crushed.

    Those who develop software in part for financial gain are not The Great Satan. They are your friends, family, and anyone else who has to work for a living. Having code open-sourced is a great thing, but it's not a prerequisite for an ethical company.

    I'm for choice, not for 'choice as long as it falls under the GPL'.

    - Darchmare
    - Axis Mutatis, http://www.axismutatis.net

    --

    - Jeff
  47. assorted comments (if anyone finds them) by unc_onnected · · Score: 2

    i wouldn't say there is any indication of microsoft stock dropping appreciably. friday, 630 has an obvious effect, the judge had no wish to precipitate a market panic.

    microsoft can not afford to settle this out of court. odds are they cant and wont. they tried to settle in 1995, and they lied to the federal gov't. our gov't, for various reasons, doesn't trust microsoft or bill gates. gates apparently boasted in private after settling that he hadnt changed any of his business practices.

    also, bill gates has been extremely arrogant in his entire treatment of the US and due process of law. the judge IS NOT STUPID, he KNOWS that bill gates perjured himself on video. and the false evidence with the win98 switch couldnt have helped either. plus, the rather heavy-handed lobbying of the Senate and House and the cheap-shot paid-for "independent" supporters of Microsoft could easily be construed by the judge as indirect attempts to evade justice. Judges treasure their autonomy and power. they will not take this kind of thing lightly.

    on the other hand, dont count on any of this ever bankrupting bill gates. first of all, itll take years before they get anywhere. but even so, bill gates can only stand to make more money. if they force microsoft to license windows code, they surely won't make him do it for free. and if they split microsoft into smaller companies, he will get filthy rich.

    Rockefeller reached the height of his wealth (even if it began the dismantling of his power base) by the Government-coerced split of the Standard Oil trust. He ended up owning stock in all of the descendants, each of which increased in value. I imagine that splitting Microsoft would result in something similar (even if it didn't last very long, it would be enough in the short run).

    besides, if we all get where we want to, by the time future decisions based on this one have any binding effect the whole idea of windows and a closed operating system will be irrelevant anyway. Right?

    unc_

  48. Steve Jobs Kicking Himself... by Sixty4Bit · · Score: 1

    Because he would be getting $1.5 BILLION instead of $150 Million from Bill. Their case did not have anything to do with being a monopoly, but if the judge says that they were keeping people from bettering their products then Steve may have had a case. Very interesting indeed.

    --
    This is not the sig you are looking for...
  49. Re:reason why decision was on Friday at 6:30... by bonehead · · Score: 1

    Actually, I found DOS 3.3 to be quite stable and reliable. I noticed a significant INCREASE in crashes once I upgraded to DOS 6.22. (Although it was an improvement over versions 4 & 5.)

    Just my observations.

  50. Baby Bells - Wrong Implementation by Dr.Hair · · Score: 1

    I think the AT&T break up provides the best anti-example of how to break up a monopoly. The judge put in to place a group of non-competing effective monopolies for local phone service. It was left to Congress to sort out exactly when and what competition would occur in the local and long-distance markets for phone service. Consumers are still suffering from the lack of local competition and the fact that it is re-spawning the vertical Trusts (such as AT&T & MCI providing all services) to thwart horizontal market competition from new market entrants.
    Rather than dividing Microsoft along divisional lines, it would be better for competition and restoring the "invisible hand of the markets" if Microsoft was split horizontally with 3 or 5 sub-classes inheriting all of the IP of the parent and then beheading Microsoft such that no current executive at Microsoft could have contact with any of the "Baby Bills" and that no contacts were allowed between any of the 3 or 5 for some number of years.
    If you think that it should be along application lines, read Bill Joy's comments in this month's Linux Magazine about the need to reproduce competition in the Office Suite market to seriously affect the desktop OS market.

  51. Re:could Win2K be delayed? by craw · · Score: 1
    If you read the FOF, separating the browser from the OS is trivial and can lead to an improved OS. However, it would not behoove MS at this time to do this separation as it would only boister the DoJ case.

    Win2K is going to be very interesting to watch. In the corporate world, this OS is being sold as the next best thing since sliced bread. Win2K is suppose to be the Unix killer. OTOH, I believe that there is no scaled down version for the average user. That is why MacOS X should be interesting; bringing Unix to the masses.

  52. I'm happy by craw · · Score: 2
    Smirking aside, the FOF as pointed out by this thread is extremely one-sided towards the argument of the DoJ. While the stock market may rock and roll on Monday, many companies will actually see their stock go up. Who? MS competitors and the various companies that were portrayed as being negatively affected by MS actions. Some of these companies are rather big; IBM, AOL, Sun, Intel.

    I've looked at this thread and the previous one. Many expected reactionary comments abound. I finally finished reading most of the FOF and can say that I'm astounded by the one-sidedness of the this document. It reads like David Boiles or Joe Klein were the authors.

    My final comments. MS loses big time. The FOF essentially says that the MS witnesses had very little credibility. MS stock will initially go down (as it doing now). However, the various media folks (investment experts) will try to stop the bleeding. Investment advisers will also do the same. Both will do this because they did not see this coming.

    Ultimately, all pyramid schemes collapse under their own weight. If MS valuation goes down, then their ability to take a shotgun approach to investing in other companies will come to an end. Carefully watch the Portland AT&T case as MS has staked their claim on the internet connectivity via cable.

  53. Re:He does get it. by glyph · · Score: 1

    "Consumers could not turn from Intel-compatible PC operating systems to Intel-compatible server operating systems without incurring substantial costs, since the latter type of system is sold at a significantly higher price than the former. A consumer intent on acquiring a server operating system would also have to buy a computer of substantially greater power and price than an intel-compatible PC, because server operating systems generally cannot function properly on PC hardware. ... "

    I don't think the judge "gets it" at all.

    First of all, that is blatantly incorrect. The costs associated with switching from a "PC operating system" to a "server operating system" (I assume he means Win98/BeOS vs. commercial UNIX, since he's obviously not considering linux or *BSD.) is not the cost of the system itself, but the re-education and adjustment period of figuring out how the new system works. Consider the cost of a company switching to linux. Is $2.00 for the CD really going to set you back? Even Solaris x86 can be had for a fairly reasonable pricetag, compared to the maintenance cost of NT... but teaching everyone in the office to use an entirely new operating environment could really bite into your computing budget.

    I'm as happy as the next guy that MS is getting kicked in the balls, and I'm glad to see their stock dropping. Since our stupid system of intellectual property (how did we start to consider an operating system with no support and no features a salable good?), enforced by our government, is what got MS into this sweet position to begin with, it's nice to see it turn around and bite them on the ass. But we should realize what it is: this finding of fact is not well informed. It is a case of Sun FUD + Netscape FUD + Corel FUD + DOJ FUD > MS FUD. Granted, Sun and Corel and NS and the DOJ have more truth on their side, but they are NOT interested in painting an accurate picture to the judge than Microsoft is. And, as we can see from the fact that the judge classifies "servers" and "PCs" as two magical, completely disparate kinds of hardware, this can lead to some pretty severe misunderstandings. I really hope that the precedents this sets are never used again...

    That said, I also hope this drives their stock price through the floor :-). I just wish it had been a suit about fraud, since that's what I really object to -- all the lying that they do in their advertising, in their prospectuses... hell, they even lied to the court, repeatedly and under oath.

    --
    Glyph Lefkowitz - Project leader, Twisted Matrix Labs
    Writer, Programmer - Not a member of the TSU
  54. You are an idiot by tilly · · Score: 2

    First of all the Dow Jones Industrial Average may be hit, but that isn't going to stop this judge.

    Second the findings of FACT are that Microsoft did hurt people, and it lists various forms of damage.

    Third yes, they will get sued to hell and back again. The result of that will cast doubt on the future of their OS and that will help Linux.

    Fourth MSFT's products are also damaging US industries. I am sure we will survive nicely with a little collateral damage.

    And the biggest point that you have missed in your FUD is that the tone of the article most certainly indicates that lowering the application barrier is a likely goal of the outcome. And *THAT* is something that we all look forward to!

    Ben

    --
    My usual seat in the cluetrain is at A HREF="http://pub4.ezboard.com/biwethey.ht
  55. Please vote honestly by tilly · · Score: 2

    Vote exactly what you believe.

    :-)

    Cheers,
    Ben

    --
    My usual seat in the cluetrain is at A HREF="http://pub4.ezboard.com/biwethey.ht
  56. You have not read it by tilly · · Score: 3

    The judge ruled, as a finding of fact, that Microsoft is a monopoly and has maintained that monopoly through anti-competitive behaviour that resulted in collateral damage to customers, consumers, and third parties.

    And this is not "naughty" behaviour? These facts completely suffice to determine that Microsoft has violated US law. The facts as stated open up further ground, for instance many companies could - Monday - file a lawsuit against Microsoft for costs incurred due to web browsing on computers that had browsers installed for no good reason.

    HP could sue for increased support costs. It only takes 3 support calls before an OEM is no longer makes a profit. They had the lowest support calling rate in the business (better than Apple's) until Microsoft forced them to use a crappy boot sequence.

    IBM could sue, WOW could they sue!

    And, of course, AOL owns Netscape. They could *definitely* sue.

    Plus this will help the Caldera case (even though Dr. DOS took place before the events covered in the document).

    I am looking for a lot of lawsuits. And they will be for big - as in 8-9 digit figures - chunks of change.

    :-)

    Cheers,
    Ben

    --
    My usual seat in the cluetrain is at A HREF="http://pub4.ezboard.com/biwethey.ht
    1. Re:You have not read it by Surak · · Score: 2

      The judge ruled, as a finding of fact, that Microsoft is a monopoly and has maintained that monopoly through anti-competitive behaviour that resulted in collateral damage to customers, consumers, and third parties.

      Yet this is only a finding of fact, and not yet a legal victory. There will be another round of the trial where punishment is to be decided. Microsoft will have to prove that they although they have a monopoly, they don't deserve punishment because they didn't abuse it in an illegal manner.

      Plus this will help the Caldera case (even though Dr. DOS took place before the events covered in the document).

      Caldera's case is kind of on shakey ground, IMHO, because they didn't own DR-DOS during a time where it would have mattered. They bought DR-DOS only after it was fairly clear that DR-DOS wasn't a viable product anymore. But #include <ianal_disclaimer.h>

  57. HTML mirror of ruling...? by leonbrooks · · Score: 1

    Can you mirror MS in HTML and plain text as well? That way I won't have to crank up StarOffice to read the Word/perfect dox... or is there a monopoly^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^Hcopyright issue here?

    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
  58. Re:reason why decision was on Friday at 6:30... by Baggio · · Score: 1

    Guess we should have already known what the decision would be then... If the findings were for MS, then the anouncement would have been made Monday morning to boost the market... ;)

    Time flies like an arrow;

    --
    Time flies like an arrow;
    Fruit flies like a bananna
  59. Linux PROVES a high barrier to market entry by deusx · · Score: 1

    I don't think MS's customers would put up with a significant rise in it's prices. In fact, I think the only reason that MS has been so successful is that they systematically under-price their OS's below competition.

    I firmly disagree with this. I think, right now, my company would put up with a fairly significant rise in price due to changing licensing. And in fact, compared to the pricing of hardware, one could say the price of Windows has risen in proportion to the cost of a full system.

    Because, there currently is no alternative. Linux is approaching that status, but won't be there for some time. MacOS is nice, but tied to hardware under Apple's thumb.

    Then he says "Second, Microsoft's dominant market share is protected by a high barrier to entry."

    Say that again? How is it that a *FREE* OS made by people that do not get paid for their services are able to enter the market and compete quite well? That's a high barrier?


    Actually, I think that's a loud and clear sign that Microsoft is able to maintain a high barrier to entry. Why could no other company challenge Microsoft? Why did it take a mass of protesting programmers working in their spare time to create a competitor? I guarantee, had all those Linux developers been employed by a company, it could not have afforded to fund the effort, and (though this is speculation) I bet it would have been purchased or squashed by MS when it became a challenger.

    So, basically, I see the collaborative act of creating an OS like Linux as a consumer revolt and protest against Microsoft.

    For the most part, they're not getting paid, or making profit from Linux. Some are, but the fact that a mass of people had to work for free or pay for Linux development seems to me quite a price to pay for market entry.

    Ack, will have to respond to other points later, have to run!


  60. Re:reason why decision was on Friday at 6:30... by artdodge · · Score: 1

    The long-term timing of this is awful... Microsoft became one of the companies whose stock value determines the DJIA just a few days ago. So if MSFT's stock tanks, watch for panic in the streets as "The Dow" takes a serious hit.

  61. Re:borland by Speed+Racer · · Score: 2
    I remember the Borland formerly known as Inprise formerly known as Borland.

    They get It(tm) and have for many years. With the annoucement of Kylix (RAD for Linux), they continue to get It(tm). I hope that there is a major benefit for them in all this as I use and admire Delphi on a daily basis. They make Windows bearable, a tough feat for any software company.

    btw, there have been several /. articles on Borland recently. Try a search to see how many people "remember" Borland.

    --
    Free Mac Mini. Yes, I'm
  62. Re:Concerned with the judge by Lando · · Score: 1

    No, the judge does not appear to be slanted. He speaks very fairly and points out facts. There is little that can be construde as opinion. He expresses his conclusions and how he reaches them.

    Please, read the document, it is very user friendly.

    Lando

    --
    /* TODO: Spawn child process, interest child in technology, have child write a new sig */
  63. Reading... by Lando · · Score: 2

    Interestingly enough, it took me 4 1/2 hours to read the entire document. I guess I must be slow because of all the responses I see posted at 7:30 pm.

    Sigh.. Anyway, one of the points, in fact the main point that the judge brings up in his documentation is the fact that Microsoft did this because it was scared. Not scared of a browser or that people could use the browser to view web pages, but the fact that the browser allowed access to api's that would make program written on it write once and run anywhere. And yes I am purposely using java's motto, because the judge does.

    Java and Navigator both made api's available to programmers allowing other programs to be designed on the top of their systems. This was not bad in microsoft's view. What was bad was that these programs who run on other OS's without having to do significant revisions. Porting would be simple. And that is why Microsoft attacked them.

    Other companies are mentioned, but the major topic was Microsoft's, specifically Bill's decision, that Netscape was a competitor. Almost the entire article then shows how Microsoft set about to destroy them. Always stopping just short of being illegal, or at least usually stopping, but the intent was there and that is what he is showing.

    Specifically, that by Microsoft attempting to protect it's marketshare has had a negative effect on innovation and customer worth. Going so far as to say that customers where forced to upgrade to 98 to get new hardware support but also receiving and inferrior (sp?) product.

    This is paraphasing of course.

    I do agree with other posts, this judge has Microsoft nailed. He gets it.

    I want to tell everyone that the language is not technical (legaleze) it's very readable. Definately tech, but this judge wants everyone to understand what is going on and he make a dam* good presentation of the facts that anyone can understand or at least get the guist of.

    He clears Microsoft of a couple of charges but does basically say that Microsoft is a monopoly and has used it's position to unfairly influence the market to retain that position.

    Other than that, I was astounded at complexity of Microsoft's plan. I can see why they figured they could walk circles around the judge, they are very, very slick. As a matter of fact I have a whole new appreciation for Bill. He is incredibly intellegent and has a few good people working for him. I can see that he has some normal executives, but he and the sharp ones are the ones that control the company.

    I wouldn't mind having some of that knowledge. Being a tech though I pretty much say things as they are and try to be fair. Probably why I am saddled with a money losing business, which don't get me wrong I love, and Gates is the riches man in the world at least until Monday.

    Grin

    Lando

    --
    /* TODO: Spawn child process, interest child in technology, have child write a new sig */
  64. Mirror of ruling by Barbarian · · Score: 2

    For people coming in late now, maybe you'll see this mirror: here

  65. reason why decision was on Friday at 6:30... by Barbarian · · Score: 3

    It's obviously to avoid stock market chaos. Now we have a weekend to analyze this, and people will talk about it. So on Monday, when MSFT goes down 10 or 20 points, it won't drag the rest of the market with this.

    1. Re:reason why decision was on Friday at 6:30... by IntlHarvester · · Score: 1

      I would think that IBM probably does have a legitimate case against Microsoft over OS/2, although it would be a tough one to win.

      I know of several graybearded IT pros that went throught OS/2 v2 pilot programs and actual deployments. Suffice it to say that MS isn't the only reason that OS/2 didn't become the standard business operating system. Microsoft could muster thousands of witnesses and internal corporate reports showing this. Of course, this doesn't address preloads and bundling, but OS/2 wasn't marketed as a consumer operating system until "Warp".

      Not to mention other, political issues, such as the buddy-buddy relationship between the MS Windows 2000 group and IBM's server application team. I'd think a IBM v. MS lawsuit is very unlikely.

      The Intel product was some sort of desktop video system, I believe.
      --

      --
      Business. Numbers. Money. People. Computer World.
    2. Re:reason why decision was on Friday at 6:30... by IntlHarvester · · Score: 1

      Yes, I wouldn't be suprised if MS offered 'special access' to Windows 2000 in return for burying the whole OS/2 thing - MS does this kind of thing all of the time.

      Now, the managers at IBM could be smarter than both of us put together -- better IBM Windows 2000 software products limit the adoption of MS BackOffice and put customers in a better position to buy high profit IBM midrange solutions. That strategy is probably more profitable than suing MS over a product (OS2) that's not really important to IBM's current strategy.

      As for a shareholder suit, they would need to prove that OS/2 diminished IBM's share value. Considering that the mainframe business was losing billions a few years back, and the PC company is currently losing billions, that would be hard - OS/2 lost money but not that much money.
      --

      --
      Business. Numbers. Money. People. Computer World.
    3. Re:reason why decision was on Friday at 6:30... by SerpentMage · · Score: 1

      Nope you are wrong on that one. The market right now is a bit dicy. And with things like this happening it could seriously cause the stock market to drop.

      Remember MS has the highest stock valuation in the world.

      --

      "You can't make a race horse of a pig"
      "No," said Samuel, "but you can make very fast pig"
    4. Re:reason why decision was on Friday at 6:30... by Spud+Zeppelin · · Score: 2

      ...surely the laws you have in America provide you with adequate rights to appeal?

      Since I take it you're not an American, a brief civics lesson:

      Suppose I am tried and convicted of something... I have every right to appeal, but:

      The appeals court has every right to refuse to hear the appeal. Appeals get refused all the time in this country -- all the way up to the Supreme Court, which only hears those cases it chooses to rule on. (Or those in which it has original jurisdiction, but that's another matter entirely).







      This is my opinion and my opinion only. Incidentally, IANAL.

      --

      MOO;IANAL.
      There used to be a picture linked here.

    5. Re:reason why decision was on Friday at 6:30... by SoftwareJanitor · · Score: 2

      Heck, the stock of Microsoft's competitors (Sun, Corel, IBM, Red Hat, etc) may go up as a result of this.

    6. Re:reason why decision was on Friday at 6:30... by Forward+The+Light+Br · · Score: 1

      its not a conspiracy theory;

      its considered politeness

      most governemental agencies wait to announce things that have any bearing on the stock market until after 4:30 (the close of the market)

      important things often get delayed so the weekend can "cool the news off"


      We are all in the gutter, but some of us are looking at the stars --Oscar Wilde

      --

      Grrr. my nick is "Forward the Light Brigade"...
    7. Re:reason why decision was on Friday at 6:30... by Forward+The+Light+Br · · Score: 2

      The stockmarket will probably reward tech stocks for this, consider the following:

      Microsoft has a huge P/E ratio (price to earning ratio) meaning the ratio of its worth to its earnings is insane...

      this decision, in the minds of the stock brokers, means that revenue is going to shift between MS and other companies.

      But those other companies have lower P/E rations, and hence for less money down, you get more of the profit... this is a good thing...

      and when people compete for stocks, stocks rise.

      when stocks rise, people buy them for their own sake. Yes this can be taken too far, but also realize that there are a lot of undervalued stocks in the tech industry.

      For example (mind that I am a linux user) Be Inc.

      Be is the prime example of a company that stands to win as a result of this decision. So will the clueful analysts attest. The clueless ones will not understand that there is a huge gap between standing to win and winning, and will buy the stock anyway...

      but then again, just like the stock market, everything I said here is pure speculation

      We are all in the gutter, but some of us are looking at the stars --Oscar Wilde

      --

      Grrr. my nick is "Forward the Light Brigade"...
    8. Re:reason why decision was on Friday at 6:30... by GregWebb · · Score: 1

      I'm no lawyer and I'm British, but IIRC you're granted an automatic apeal if you're given a death sentence. One reason so many are on Death Row.

      Or have I got this one wrong?

      Greg

      --

      Greg

      (Inside a nuclear plant)
      Aaaarrrggh! Run! The canary has mutated!

    9. Re:reason why decision was on Friday at 6:30... by deltavivis · · Score: 1

      now who's being naive...

      OBVIOUSLY the decision was released on a friday after the market closed so as not to cause a panic, doesn't take a genius to figure that out. A good argument can be made that the global economy is most influenced by the US economy, and the US economy is currently most influenced by tech stocks. What tech stock has performed so reliably well for years that it gave investors confidence in technology--M$. If investors doubt M$'s viability, maybe they'll think twice about all these other much more risky tech stocks they've inflated the price of. If this decision was released at the opening of trading, all it would take would be a couple of panic filled hours to have many billions of $ of the speculative worth of corp.'s disappear into the void.
      I'm not saying that it would be guaranteed to happen, but the potential for great damage is definitely there. How could this needless damage to the lives of millions across the globe (not to mention the damage to a certain public official's reputation) be averted? Thats right, release the news friday evening and give enough time for clearer heads to prevail. It would be imprudent in the extreme for a judge supposedly defending the rights of a free market economy to create such a threat to it.

      -travis

    10. Re:reason why decision was on Friday at 6:30... by MacBoy · · Score: 1

      10 or 20 points? That's laughable. It will drop a lot more than that.

    11. Re:reason why decision was on Friday at 6:30... by cloos · · Score: 1

      Can an appeals court actually refuse to get involved? I know we're talking about M$ here, but surely the laws you have in America provide you with adequate rights to appeal?

      I beleive it is the case that at the appelate level only matters of law are relevant. Matters of fact -- such as those in the Findings of Fact released today -- can not be argued.

      (Disclaimer: IANAL, but a lawyer has mentioned this to me, referencing -- in fact -- this case.)

      -JimC

    12. Re:reason why decision was on Friday at 6:30... by ItsBacon · · Score: 1

      IANAL also, but I was under the impression that you could not appeal a finding of fact, so it really doesn't matter yet.

      I'm probably talking out of my ass here...

    13. Re:reason why decision was on Friday at 6:30... by GoofyBoy · · Score: 1

      >most governemental agencies wait to announce things

      This is true. Most economic data is released at 8:30am, before the market opens.

      Anyways, who cares. I'm getting tired of the whole subject. Its still along way until this is finalized. MSFT might even come out smelling like roses. MSFT/Bill Gates are not going to disappear overnight, even if the company gets split up.

      --
      The surprise isn't how often we make bad choices; the surprise is how seldom they defeat us.
    14. Re:reason why decision was on Friday at 6:30... by greenrd · · Score: 1
      Appeals get refused all the time in this country

      What are legitimate grounds for refusing an appeal? Is "refusing an appeal" the same as "summarily rejecting the appeal"?

    15. Re:reason why decision was on Friday at 6:30... by greenrd · · Score: 1
      I have to say, though, MS QBasic never ever crashed on me, and I never found a single bug in it (thought I had a few times, but it was my fault not MS's). They've gone downhill since then...

    16. Re:reason why decision was on Friday at 6:30... by xmedar · · Score: 1

      Stock market dealers are in the main herd creatures, and if they hear something really bad, they can all jump off a cliff like lemmings, just look at all the stock market crashes, eventually prices go back to a more reasonable level after a huge overshoot downwards, by Monday they will be all a lot less panicked and the market may drop a bit, but it is unlikely to fall through the floor. To my mind Judge Jackson has exercised good judgement, even in after hours trading, which by its nature is of much less volume MS dropped about 5%.

      --
      Any sufficiently advanced man is indistinguishable from God
    17. Re:reason why decision was on Friday at 6:30... by mochaone · · Score: 1

      Initially perhaps. Eventually it will go back up, and when I say up, I mean way up.

      Bill Gates and MS stockholders make out like fat cats no matter what happens. People selling MS stock right now are complete idiots. I don't own any MS stock but it sure isn't a bad time to think about picking some up.

      --
      Hates people who have stupid little sigs
    18. Re:reason why decision was on Friday at 6:30... by mantis_p · · Score: 1

      So you are saying that the legal system is worried about whether or not MS stock goes down?

      Come on... conspiracy theories are fun and all... but they should actually be plausible.

      "The legal decision was released this Friday because I am throwing a Bash Microsoft party tonight and Judge Jackson wanted to make sure my party guests had something about which they could talk."

      ~m

    19. Re:reason why decision was on Friday at 6:30... by mantis_p · · Score: 1

      I was not by any means suggesting that MS stock will NOT fall. On the contrary, I believe the release of this decision will have a fairly significant impact on its price.

      However, although I believe this decision will affect the stock market I do not believe this had anything to do with when the Justice Department decided to release it.

      Call me crazy, call me misguided... but I simply do not think the conspiracy theorists need to hop on this one quite yet.

      ~m

    20. Re:reason why decision was on Friday at 6:30... by mong · · Score: 1

      [ Appeal Court, avoid getting involved ]

      Can an appeals court actually refuse to get involved? I know we're talking about M$ here, but surely the laws you have in America provide you with adequate rights to appeal?

      What do people think the final ruling will be btw? Are we looking at lots of "Baby-Bills", like you have "Baby Bells"? That'd make sense.

      I hope all this litigation doesn't end up putting MS out of business, hard as it is to stomach, they were one of the reasons why computing became widespread. Now if only they'd get back to their old ideal of making good software...

      Mong.

      * Paul Madley ...Student, Artist, Techie - Geek *

      --

      *...Slacker, Artist, Techie - Geek *
      Remember: Nothing is Cool.
    21. Re:reason why decision was on Friday at 6:30... by plague3106 · · Score: 1

      No, everyone has a right to appeal...i think tho that the previous poster meant they would just agree b/c they don't want to re-investige everything again.

      PS - I think ms stopped making good software once win3.1 came out...dos 6.22 was the only ms product that didn't ever seem to crash (and at the time was the only ms product i had).

    22. Re:reason why decision was on Friday at 6:30... by reptilian · · Score: 1

      The stock market doesn't act as rationally as you imply. The original poster likely observed, and IMO quite correctly, that if this ruling came out while the stock market was still open, you'd have what we tend to call "investor panic," which would affect more than just MSFT. The entire tech stock arena would be hit, and hit hard. With the weekend to cool off, investors have a chance to listen to the analysts, and make clear rational decisions about what they sell come monday morning.

      --

      72656B636148206C72655020726568746F6E41207473754A

    23. Re:reason why decision was on Friday at 6:30... by hipworld · · Score: 1

      Typically, announcements which can have major repercussions on stocks or the stock market in general are made after hours to give the analysts and spin meisters time to digest the information and, hopefully, not panic the investing public. I'm sure Judge Jackson is not oblivous to this as well, thus, the timing of his annoucement which gives everyone the whole weekend to think about it. Look for some major spin in M$ press releases before opening bell on Monday to try to dampen the downward pressure their stock will be getting.

    24. Re:reason why decision was on Friday at 6:30... by cruise · · Score: 1

      I hate to be one of those doomsday types...

      But lets just play "what-if" (and a really big one at that)

      Lets suppose the stock market does go south as a result of this. Lets say that Windows is so deeply embedded into every aspect of business that the loss of this company as a viable entity would also result in the loss of operations for some other big shots who also watch in horror as their stocks drop to nothing.

      Is this the apocolypse?

    25. Re:reason why decision was on Friday at 6:30... by kickahaota · · Score: 1

      That's not quite true.

      Basically, the distinction between matters of fact and matters of law on appeal is this: The appeals court judge is presumed to be able to judge the law as well as the trial court judge did; and the appeals court judge may well have a better overall knowledge of the law--after all, there's presumably a reason why that judge was appointed to the appeals court to begin with. So the appeals court judge is entitled to review most issues of law de novo--considering them from scratch, and giving the original judge's findings no weight at all.

      On the other hand, when considering issues of fact, a judge (or a jury) often has to analyze things in a way that would be very difficult for an appeals judge to fully recreate. For example, the findings of fact are often heavily dependent on the judge's or jury's views on the credibility of the witnesses; and it's often much easier to judge someone's credibility when they're sitting in the courtroom than it is from just reading their words on a transcript, or even seeing them on tape. So, in considering findings of fact, the appeals judge is required to give heavy deference to the findings of the trial judge and/or the jury; the appeals judge is usually only allowed to reverse findings of fact in the case of "plain error"--overwhelming evidence that the finding of fact was wrong.

      By the way, here's my own spin on the findings of fact: I get the feeling that the judge is somewhat frustrated with the whole thing. As we've learned so far from following all this (and as Microsoft is so fond of pointing out), the antitrust law in areas like this is very limited; the courts are very disinclined to get involved in the engineering details of software. The DC court of appeals has already overruled the trial judge during this case; and, if the conclusions of law go the government's way (as it's almost certain that they will), I wouldn't be at all surprised if the appeals court reverses many of them. So the judge may be using the findings of fact to make his own statement about the inadequacy of the antitrust law in this area; the message of the trial may wind up being 'Even if the facts are this clearcut, the law still doesn't provide a remedy.'

      (Obligatory disclaimer: IANAL. Not to be taken internally. May cause drowsiness; alcohol may intensify this effect.)

  66. High barrier? Yes! by Cironian · · Score: 1

    > Then he says "Second, Microsoft's dominant
    > market share is protected by a high barrier to
    > entry." Say that again? How is it that a *FREE*
    > OS made by people that do not get paid for their
    > services are able to enter the market and
    > compete quite well? That's a high barrier?

    You say that the fact the only major competition to Microsoft can arise from thousands of people working their asses off for free over several years is not a high barrier? Is there any way that you could put any more effort into a system? I do not think so, which shows that the barrier MS built is as high as it can get. Every attempt to create a profit-oriented OS to compete on the Windows home market has failed, only because you have all those people putting in work without getting anything out of it, Linux can succeed there. And its still a very rough game, even with this advantage.

  67. Re:I'm probably going to get beat up over this but by RayChuang · · Score: 1

    Hooray!!

    Someone finally out there says it all: Linux in its current state is NOT yet a good substitute for Windows 98/NT/2000 if you're not computer literate.

    My suggestion--namely forcing everyone to sell the operating system as a separate cost item when you buy your computer--will actually BENEFIT the Linux crowd, because they'll be finally forced to add ease-of-use features that will make Linux easy to install, configure and use in order to compete against Microsoft in the all-important home user and corporate user market.

    People out there forget that most computer peripherals first have a Windows 95/98/NT driver available, because that's what most users will be running. Let's see how long before we'll see Linux drivers for most inkjet printers, backup peripherals, USB peripherals and IEEE-1394 peripherals.

    --
    Raymond in Mountain View, CA
  68. Re:I'm probably going to get beat up over this but by RayChuang · · Score: 1

    This is why my suggestion of separating out the sale of the operating system itself when you buy a computer is such a great idea.

    Because everyone will have to be play "fair and square" to get OS sales, there is the incentive to lower costs and also improve the end user experience for the operating system.

    Unfortunately, in such a scenario, it exposes Linux's biggest fault, namely that unless you have actually learned how to run UNIX (mostly from taking a lot of classes in college), it's still beyond the expertise of most end users. Yes, I know about the much-improved installation of Caldera OpenLinux 2.3 and Red Hat Linux 6.1 and Corel's plan for a supposed very easy to use Linux, but its hardware support is still way behind Windows as of now.

    Note I said "as of now"; with the equal chance for Linux (or FreeBSD or BeOS) to be installed on machines in the future, I am hopeful that Linus Torvalds and the thousand or so programmers that write Linux OS code will rapidly make improvements so we will finally see a much wider selection of software drivers, plus support for "hot docked" devices that connect through the external USB and IEEE-1394 ports.

    This is the golden oppurtunity for the Linux; DON'T squander it by being "behind the curve" in hardware support, because Intel have already started designing motherboards that will dispense with parallel and serial ports, even PS/2 keyboard and mouse ports in favor of every external device plugged in through the USB and (very likely) IEEE-1394 ports. I hope that the upcoming Linux 2.4.x kernel will allow for Linux to finally "hit the big time" for large scale corporate use and even increasing home use.

    --
    Raymond in Mountain View, CA
  69. Re:New administration by RayChuang · · Score: 1

    However, if the DoJ as constituted by George W. Bush becomes reality, the DoJ will still set the precedent (remember the 19 states in the suit are using the DoJ precedent). In this case, we might see the DoJ drop the suit or settle for a much-reduced punishment.

    What I'd LIKE to see the DoJ go after are the big media conglomerates, because they could seriously affect what we see on TV, hear on radio and even the content we see on the Internet. But given the fact that the Clinton family has many close friends in Hollywood, the last thing the Hollywood Left wants in the DoJ being sicced on them for decreasing choices in the mass media.

    --
    Raymond in Mountain View, CA
  70. Hrrmmm by Chokai · · Score: 1

    I found this interesting: "It depends on whether someone nails them for damages. A $10 rebate for each customer who has bought Windows would run into billions."

    This raises a question. what if this happens? What if it is more than that. Lets say MS has to drop the price on all its software. Can you imagine being able to buy Windows 2000 Consumer for $25? (Not that many of us would.) Do you know what that would do to companies like RedHat? It would force them to drop their prices, make their revenue fall and set of a spiral effect. It may also push Windows users through the roof in terms of numbers. This is a catch-22 you don't win if the prices are high and you may not necessarily win if they are low either. Frickin' Increasing Returns theory...

  71. Why we shouldn't care about this ruling by trance9 · · Score: 1

    This ruling represents a potential reorganization of power within the ranks of proprietary software developers. It's about what one proprietary software developer (Microsoft) is allowed to do to others (Sun, AOL, Oracle, Lotus, IBM, etc.)

    If it succeeds in putting a dent in the Win32 monopoly it may result in a few more *commercial* applications for Linux--a natural consequence of platform diversification is that more applications will be ported to more places. However, these will be proprietary applications such as Microsoft Word, Corel Draw, Excel, commercial games, etc., no doubt a slight gain to people who run Linux systems.

    But since these will be commercial applications, this is a meaningless event for the free software movement. It doesn't help create any additional free software--it may even lead to making the Linux platform less free than it currently is.

    It doesn't even offer anything from the perspective of the opensource movement: these commercial applications which will arrive on the Linux platform will not come with source code. At least, not just because of this ruling.

    So if you are a callous person who doesn't give a damn that the Linux platform was brought to you out of the ideology and actions of the free software and the opensource software movements, you may think this is a good thing.

    But if you truly care about free software, or at least about opensource software, then you will ignore this ruling and get back to work writing killer apps under your favorite free or open license.

  72. Re:I'm probably going to get beat up over this but by TrentC · · Score: 2

    I actually dont mind the Windows OS and am glad they integrated the browser into Windows.

    Then you're an idiot, because it's extra baggage for a machine that doesn't need IE installed -- say, a machine that's not going to be connected to the Internet. (Those do exist, you know; I have six of them.)

    Some people will start screaming Mac, Mac, Mac but I cannot easily replace a chip in a Mac to make it a bit faster, a faster modem is 3 times the cost of a PC, RAM costs much more, a video card is outrageously priced, etc....

    Out of curiosity, do you think it would be that way if Mac had, say, a 40% market share on desktops instead of 10% or whatever it is?

    I will be the first to admit that Apple hasn't made the smartest business decisions, but Jackson nailed at least one of MS'c crimes on the head; Apple very likely would not be endorsing or installing MSIE now if Microsoft didn't threaten to kill off MS Office.

    I do not agree with allot of the judges "finding of facts" and I really believe this huge waste of my damn tax dollars should never have begun.

    Are you just assuming that Jackson made all of this stuff up? News reports of the coverage showed the DOJ's lawyers utterly (and rightfully) destroying the credibility of Microsoft's "experts". As for poor, defenseless MS, no one put a gun to their head and made them submit a forged video demonstration as evidence, put their CEO on the stand unable to withstand cross-examination, or buy "independant studies" and "grassroots support from the little people".

    Microsoft has played dirty pool every step of the way of its existence, up to and including its handling of the trial. It's about time someone called them on the carpet for it.

    I sometimes build computers for people that have never used a computer. It is much easier for them to start the computer, click on the big globe, dial up to the Internet and then surf around for a while and that is who most of the users are. They may change their desktop to put a picture of their kids on it, but that is about it.

    Great. More power to you. I have no problem with MS having a monopoly because their stuff is better, cheaper, or easier to use than any alternatives; if I recall, the Sherman Act protects such "natural monopolies". The problem, is, it's not better, cheaper, or easier to use, at least not in every case.

    If I install a Linux OS on their computer, it is going to be nearly impossible for them to get help with problems with their computer and they are going to call me. If they have Windows, they can usually get tips/tricks/help from people they work with, friends, family, etc. They are not going to want to get into IRC or newsgroups to solve problems.

    And this would be that "positive network effect" that Jackson was speaking of.

    39. Consumer demand for Windows enjoys positive network effects. A positive network effect is a phenomenon by which the attractiveness of a product increases with the number of people using it. The fact that there is a multitude of people using Windows makes the product more attractive to consumers. The large installed base attracts corporate customers who want to use an operating system that new employees are already likely to know how to use, and it attracts academic consumers who want to use software that will allow them to share files easily with colleagues at other institutions. The main reason that demand for Windows experiences positive network effects, however, is that the size of Windows' installed base impels ISVs to write applications first and foremost to Windows, thereby ensuring a large body of applications from which consumers can choose. The large body of applications thus reinforces demand for Windows, augmenting Microsoft's dominant position and thereby perpetuating ISV incentives to write applications principally for Windows. This self-reinforcing cycle is often referred to as a "positive feedback loop."

    Now I understand that if I took the time to show them how to compile a piece of software, or modify their path or mount drives, etc, they wouldnt need to find help or call me all the time, but face it, the average user does not want to know how to do this, they want to point and click and Windows has done a fairly good job at this.

    I have no problem with Microsoft doing all of that work (or Apple, for that matter); to make a program "intelligent" or "intuitive" often means a lot of work on the part of the programmers.

    The Mac is much simplier but the cost of a Mac and the upgrade ability over shadows its ease of use to most people.

    Again, we're back to "positive network effects" and economies of scale; it's likely that Windows peripherals might cost more and Mac peripherals might cost less were the PC desktop market more like 60%/40%.

    Look at the cosumer market for other products. The clapper for example. How many times have we made fun of that commercial? I actually know a few people that bought it. Bread machines are another example. People want the smell, taste and texture of fresh bread, but they dont want to spend the time rolling the dough, letting it rise and then baking it. They want to open the packets, dump the ingredients in and then go watch soaps.

    Again, you're missing the point. I have no problem with Microsoft having a monopoly on operating systems, and keeping that monopoly by having a flat-out better product.

    But the problem is, antitrust legislation doesn't allow you to use a monopoly in one market (Intel-based PCs operating systems) as leverage to get a monopoly in another market (in this case, web browsers). At the time MS was trying to crush Netscape, it did not have the better product.

    Now as far as browsers go, I prefer IE over Netscape.

    That's your right.

    I have less problems with IE than I do with Netscape. They both crash just as often, but rendering HTML is better in IE.

    Which can probably be chalked up to Netscape not putting a new or updated version of their browser out in what, a couple of YEARS? Yes, I know and hope that Mozilla will kick IE's ass when it's done. The thing is, it's not done, and people have to surf the web now as well in the future. (Which was the whole point of Microsoft's mission in the first place; once everyone is using MSIE and IIS to serve the "dynamic content" you extend protocols like you're rotating shield frequencies on the Enterprise to keep everyone else playing catch-up.)

    I believe if there was a better solution out there for your average person to use easily, it would blow Windows out of the water, but it has yet to arrive.

    And if the yet-to-arrive product weren't Open Source, Microsoft would probably have tried to buy or otherwise drive the maker out of business. How long do you think the makers of Opera and iCab for the Mac would have lasted if this trial weren't going on, or (even worse) Microsoft had not been found at fault?

    The chip industry is a prime example. How long did Intel rule the world for processors?

    Now that AMD has come out with lower cost, faster chips they are giving Intel a hell of a run for their money. I love that!!! That's the american way.


    Again, it's apples and oranges. The rules for physical products and intangible products (one could say "intellectual property") are different for a reason.

    That is what we need, competition, not the tax wasting government to tell us/MS they are a monopoly on the desktop. DUH! We know that!

    That's not what they're telling us, dolt. They're telling us that Microsoft is using its monopoly power to make sure it has a monopoly on everything else that isn't nailed down or on fire.

    As another poster pointed out (I want to find a source for that story!) an oil/steel/banking consortium was able to amass so much power at its time that the head of that consortium was practically in a position to replace the Federal Government!

    Now, instead of being owned by Standard Oil, it'd be people logging onto Microsoft WorldNet with Microsoft Passport on Microsoft Internet Explorer to use Microsoft's BillPay Wizard to pay the bills to Microsoft Interactive Cable Network and Microsoft Office Application Distribution Service, and to check your Hotmail account just in time to get the weekly coupons from Microsoft Grocery Service, and Microsoft/Amazon.com.

    If we would have spent the tax dollars on further developing linux or BeOS and making it easier to use than Windows and make it free for computer manufacturers to OEM it on the new PC's,

    You are aware the the BeOS is a proprietary product, right? Are you saying that you think it would be okay for the government to subsidize a private corporation to compete with Microsoft? Or that the feds should subsidize the cost of bundling it on PCs? That would be less of an intrusion into the private sector then finding Microsoft guilty of commiting crimes under antitrust law?

    Hey Redhat 6.1 came with XMMS instead of X11AMP. I am going to sue Redhat because it did not include my favorite MP3 player. You're bad RH. You're evil!

    Now we're comparing apples to bananas. It's a fact of antitrust legislation that the kind of things corporations can do to gain or keep market share are illegal for a corporation that is found to be a monopoly to do.

    If Red Hat wants to agree to bundle a product or a service made by another company to the mutual benefit of both, that's one thing. I don't even think there'd be a case if Microsoft had made a strategic alliance with Netscape against a third party (say Opera had come along 5 years earlier) because in theory Netscape can end that alliance or Opera might make Microsoft a better deal.

    And of course, we're ignoring the whole Open Source factor; anyone can take Red Hat's installer, RPM package manager and other GPLed goodies and build a Red Hat-style distribution that uses X11AMP instead of XMMS (or KDE instead of GNOME, tcsh over bash, pine over mutt, yadda yadda yadda), and let the better distribution win.

    Think of Windows as a car. You get pissed at, kick it, hit it and scream at it sometimes, but would you rather ride a horse or walk?

    Not the same thing at all. You're supposing that there is an alternative to Windows that we could switch to on Intel-based PCs. There was in OS/2, but the trial is full of tidbits on how Microsoft killed off that competition by means other than having the better product. I suspect that BeOS was/is next...

    If you dont like the color of your living room, you paint it, you dont go sue the house builder because you soon realized that the color of the wall clashed with the window treaments you decided to buy.

    You do if the house builder makes you sign a contract before your house is built that says you can't repaint your house, knock out walls, add an extra room later for a nursery, or sell the house without the house builder's approval; and you have no choice because he's forced all of the other house builders in the area out of business or hired them to work for him.

    Dont go suing them because you think linux is better or you wanted Netscape instead of IE.

    Thanks for demonstrating that you have no idea what this case was about. It was about a company using its time, money and resources to prevent you from having as little choice as possible as to which OS your home PC uses (soon to be followed by web browser, streaming media format, office suite, and who knows what else in the future?)

    The development of Linux and the Open Source model may have been the one force that Microsoft could not have bought, put out of business or FUDed into oblivion. Then again, the "Halloween Document" outlined out a strategy to deal with that as well...

    Jay (=

  73. Re:could Win2K be delayed? by Agathos · · Score: 1
    OTOH, I believe that there is no scaled down version for the average user.

    Really? The buzz I've heard from people who have beta/rc versions is that it's a better desktop OS than Win 9x in just about every way.

  74. To bet a stock will go down: "Sell Short" by mrflip · · Score: 1
    You can bet that a stock will drop precipitously. It is known as "selling short;" you sell a stock at the current price, but agree that the actual sale will not take place until some time in the future. Therefore, I lock in today's price, then wait until the day of the actual tranfer and buy at that price.

    So for instance, if I thought that MS stock would go down, I could have sold short on thursday, with the transfer date of tuesday. Say the stock was at $100 on Thu, but dropped to $95 on Tuesday, and that I sold 1000 shares short. I sell the stock for $100, but buy it for $95, making $5000.

    The problem is that your losses are not capped: you are liable for potentially infinite penalties. If instead the stock rose to $150, I would be out $50,000...

  75. Re:Anybody else think this is a BAD thing? by wapentake · · Score: 1

    the law is 'just words'. antitrust doesn't make sense. it took a judge to interpret the law before anyone could definitively say that microsoft violated it. antitrust law is too vague for anyone to know whether they are breaking the law. the law is supposed to be black and white. before a theif steals, he knows that he is breaking the law.

    the judge can't even say that any specific action of microsoft's was wrong. he has to consider the sum of the actions which put micros~1 into a monopoly position. the monopoly position is the defining characteristic. without the monopoly power, micros~1's actions would not have been found wrong!!

    antitrust is a bad thing. it distorts the concept of justice.

  76. IE-less W2K = Probably impossible by IntlHarvester · · Score: 1


    I've looked at the betas of Windows 2000, and removing IE would not be trivial. Not only does it have the 'ActiveDesktop' shell (with no option to not install it), HTML content is all over the OS, including such common dialogs as "Configure your Server" and "Add Hardware Wizard". It's clear that MS thinks the future is a user interface written primarily with DHTML.

    And yes, EXPLORER.EXE still sucks memory and crashes...
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    Business. Numbers. Money. People. Computer World.
    1. Re:IE-less W2K = Probably impossible by IntlHarvester · · Score: 1

      Note that by-in-large the complaint is not that Microsoft integrated IE, but that they used their monopoly position to limit market access for Netscape.

      KDE isn't going to make any ISP dump navigator in favor of the KDE browser. KDE isn't going to force websites to use KDE-specific features in return for space on the KDE Channel Bar. And, if the day comes that KDE has 90% desktop market share, we can worry about it then. (they currently have maybe 0.5% market share).
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      Business. Numbers. Money. People. Computer World.
    2. Re:IE-less W2K = Probably impossible by chow · · Score: 1

      Win2K uses explorer.exe and the underlying libraries for just about everything. I think it's actually a smart move because it allows them to concentrate all of their efforts on one display engine. As much as we all might hate M$, anyone who has used all the browsers out there will tell you that IE's rendering engine is the fastest out there. For them to remove it from the OS would be tough, although perhaps hiding it would be easy enough. But personally, on this one I don't think Don or the judge get it. Having an integrated browser can be kinda nice, as anyone who uses KDE knows. Are the Fed's going to screw KDE development too? Don't laugh, it could happen. Additionally, the judge's assertion that IE integration added nothing to the OS and just introduced bugs was the same argument many UNIX and DOS users made about GUI's years ago. There are very few computer users today, however, that would say that an integrated GUI is just a buggy, useless feature that shouldn't be part of an OS (no, I'm saying normal computer users, not the dotheads on this site :). I think it's important to realize that while M$ makes all of us sick, have any of us been able to stand the government lawyers any better? The US government always makes the argument that it is doing things in the interest of the people when it screws us all. This gives them plenty of excuse to screw up the computer industry that we all love. It's always good to have a healthy fear of the government.

  77. Re:could Win2K be delayed? by IntlHarvester · · Score: 1

    NT Workstation 4 is already a better (business) desktop OS than Win 9x in most ways, but that hasn't got it much market penetration. Windows 2000 is not that much different.

    Little things, like USB and better ISA PNP support, might convince businesses to deploy Windows 2000, but many will just stay put with 9x. Sometimes old DOS and Win3.1 applications force the use of Win9x, but mostly it's voluntary.
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    Business. Numbers. Money. People. Computer World.
  78. Re:Document Formats - Here's another reason by IntlHarvester · · Score: 1


    Also, relative to other businesses, law firms spend far less on IT. One big reason that WordPerfect is still in use is that many lawyers are still running 386s/486s and DOS/Win31, and couldn't switch to Word 97 if they wanted to. (As others have said in this thread, there's no reason to have anything more than a 386 if you are word processing 100% of the time.)

    Another reason, besides the "standard verbiage" libraries is older document management systems that plug into WordPerfect. Many lawfirms have all their documents tied up in such systems, and it would be very difficult to move to something that was compatible with, say, WinWord 2000 or WordPerfect for Linux.
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    --
    Business. Numbers. Money. People. Computer World.
  79. Re:WordPerfect format by IntlHarvester · · Score: 1

    Microsof t&nbsp&nbspi s&nbsp&nbspi n f a m o u s&nbsp&nbspf o r&nbsp&nbsps e n d i n g&nbsp&nbspU n i c o d e&nbsp&nbspo v e r&nbsp&nbspt h e&nbsp&nbspw i r e&nbsp&nbsp-&nbsp&nbsp&nbspb l o a t i n g&nbsp&nbspb a n d w i d t h&nbsp&nbspr e q u i r e m e n t s .
    --

    --
    Business. Numbers. Money. People. Computer World.
  80. *huh* ? by Augusto · · Score: 1


    That is what we need, competition, not the tax wasting government to tell us/MS they are a monopoly on the desktop. DUH! We know that!

    The government can spend all my tax money it wants, to prosecute these vultures !!!
    Yes, we need competition, we need fair competition. We don't need a huge company, that owns the APIs of the OS running 90/95% of the computers on the globe, "innovating" by squashing real innovations that other companies make.

    You say you don't care about MS being a monopoly, but what you care or you don't care about doesn't mean anything outside your little boxed world. Wake up and get a clue , extremly unfair business practices by a monopoly require extremly fair legal actions from a responsible government. We live in a democracy not an anarchist state.

    --

    - sigs are for wimps.
  81. Re:QEMM, DR-DOS??? by Cadaver · · Score: 1

    DR is Digital Research.

    --

    --
    I ate something that disagreed with me. Maybe I should have cooked him first.
  82. Re:Written in Microsoft Word by Cadaver · · Score: 1

    I got the one from the usvms.gpo.gov site, without the MS artifacts, and it has the meta tag:


    So it looks like you just got a screwed up copy.

    --

    --
    I ate something that disagreed with me. Maybe I should have cooked him first.
  83. Re:Written in Microsoft Word by Cadaver · · Score: 1

    That's a nuisance. I posted in "Plain Old Test", and the tag was eaten.
    The tag I attempted to post, by the way, was:
    META NAME="Generator" CONTENT="TextPad 3.0"


    --

    --
    I ate something that disagreed with me. Maybe I should have cooked him first.
  84. Re:Another formatting irony... by Cadaver · · Score: 1

    Don't you mean:
    [!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 3.2 Final//EN"]
    [HTML]
    [HEAD]
    [TITLE]Findings of Fact - United States of America v. Microsoft Corporation, C.A
    . 98-1232; State of New York, ex rel. Eliot Spitzer, et al., v. Microsoft Corpor
    ation, C.A. 98-1233[/TITLE]
    [META NAME="Generator" CONTENT="TextPad 3.0"]


    --

    --
    I ate something that disagreed with me. Maybe I should have cooked him first.
  85. Re:billy by bmetzler · · Score: 2
    No, now bill will have to play by a much more restrictive set of rules than everyone else does. Everyone else has the freedom to add new features, and the freedom to tell people "don't like it, don't buy it." Gates doesn't.

    No, now Bill won't be able to prevent everyone else from playing by the same rules they play. They innovate, and will always have the right too. However, they have prevented other companies from innovating in areas that Microsoft controls. Now, the other companies will once again have the freedom to innovate, just like Microsoft does.

    This is what we all want, isn't it?

    -Brent
    --
  86. Great time to buy MS stocks by Dionysus · · Score: 1

    Maybe not on Monday morning, but I figured by Tuesday, it probably hit its low. With Win2000 out in February, I will bet with anyone here that the MS stock will jump back up no matter the ruling.

    --
    Je ne parle pas francais.
  87. Re:Thank you, Slashdot! by wilkinsm · · Score: 1

    Yes! A Slash-lawyer is a wonderful idea!
    God knows how many times we argue about points of legal trivia!

    I will take the good man's advice and read the FoF from cover to cover.

    Gee, it's not too late for me to enter law school...

  88. I just finish reading the whole thing... by wilkinsm · · Score: 2

    I have to say, this thing rocks. Here's the super-abridged version:

    Guns are dangerous.
    Microsoft has a big gun in it's hand.
    The gun is smoking.
    There are many empty shells on the floor.
    There are many bloody bodies around (netscape,sun,ibm)
    Many companies have been terrorize by Microsoft, when they point the gun at them.
    Most give in.
    Some don't, and pay dearly for their actions.
    In then end, Consumers end up both paying for the ammo, and picking up the pieces.
    This is wrong, and something should be done about it.

    *sniff* It's almost enough to make me believe that perhaps that sometimes our legal system can work right. This almost makes up for all the times it has personally let me down - well, almost.

    Judge Jackson should get a medal for just being able to comprend the complexity of the allegations. My head started to swim when I got knee deep in the OEM/ISP/Browser War testimony.

    This case is over - once MS's lawyers look closely at the wording and the coesiveness of this FoF, they will see that there is no way they are going to prevail. I predict a settlement within a month.

  89. Re:I'm probably going to get beat up over this but by warlock · · Score: 1

    Everything well said, appart from a minor detail you missed...

    XMMX *is* X11AMP... changed name along development. There goes that silly argument too I guess =)

    Anyway... take SuSE 6.3 for example... 6 bloody CDs with software! it'd be hard to find something that isn't already included with it... RH definitely is not doing /that/ kind of a distribution, they are more picky, but you can always go to freshmeat and download more software.

    Point is, thereare lots of POP3 servers, lots of Web proxies, lots of http servers etc. - even if RH becomes a 'standard' in the sense of a high market share, we will not be locked in as we would be if NT/IIS became the norm... most important of all, there would be no incentive for RH to muck with the protocols to proliferate their clients... it doesn't make sense - for starters, the source is there... if they stop putting the source up there (ie develop proprietary services, closed source) RH will be history and we'll move on to another distro... easy as that.

    -W

  90. Re:He does get it. by Compuser · · Score: 2

    I'd argue that the good judge gave a better
    definition of a network computer than
    Larry Ellison ever did. He has also given
    the reference definition of what an
    operating system is, so further legal cases
    could start from it.
    The first half of his ruling should be part
    of an orientation for CS majors.

  91. Re:could Win2K be delayed? by _dim · · Score: 1

    An IE-less version of Win2K would be pretty hard to make now. They already have "integrated" IE into the help system, the patching system (Windoze update), and the entire system configuration interface (MMC). If this whole mess had to be untangled by order of a judge, I guess it would take them a few months at least... :-)
    --

  92. Re:Could we forget MS for a sec? by mlc · · Score: 1

    Sorry to be rude, but if you bothered to create an account and log in to it, you could set a preference to not see any MS stories. Then those of us who see the relevance of this issue could still read about it, and you wouldn't have to.

  93. Thoughts by mlc · · Score: 1
    Ok, I know this's been said before, but I actually bothered to read >90% of the whole damn thing, so I'm gonna post my comments whether you like it or not.

    Basically, the Judge seems to know what he's talking about. It's awfully verbose and legalese-filled, but I'd hardly expect anything else on a document written by a judge in an important case. Anyway, the judge shows us exactly what MS did that's monopolistic; the two chief examples are MSIE promotion and Java extensions. And it seems to me a quite reasonable set of facts that have been found. We'll see what all this means whenever the next decision is made. (How long'll that take? Any ideas?)

  94. Re:Did anyone else notice the contradictions? by Fizgig · · Score: 2

    This is now a "fact". I don't think this is true in the slightest. I don't think MS's customers would put up with a significant rise in it's prices.

    That's different from what the judge said. He said "a price for Windows substantially above that which could be charged in a competitive market", which they are charging. The cost of computers have gone done (in nominal terms) about 50% in the last 2 years, yet the cost of Windows stay the same. In a competive market, the price would go down (ok, it's possible it would go up because of that whole complimentary product thing, but that's negligible compared to this). It is a great enigma why the price stays the same. But MS says "No. We're not budging". So even though the price hasn't gone up, it is an example of what Judge Jackson is talking about.

  95. Re:Section(s) on Linux by DaKrushr · · Score: 1

    I agree about Linux users not mainly using Linux for servers... while I'm a highschool student, the Linux boxes I use (or admin, or have set up for my sister at college) are:

    1 webserver, running 2.0.0 (obviously, I don't admin this, and I'm frankly appalled :)
    1 Beowulf (hehe - I also have a part-time job at Kent State University, where I'm taking Calculus)
    1 development machine/calculation server (where I do my Beowulf coding)
    My desktop machine (a K6-200)
    and finally, the 586 my sister uses for email and such.

    So, is this all servers? I think not!

  96. Re:idiot by Felinoid · · Score: 1

    Naa just failed to get Cobalt stock

    I see for the long term Microsoft repositinging Windows so they can compeate better. Marketting Windows where it really dose preform the best. Windows CE moved from PDAs where it dose poorly to game consoles as Windows preforms quite well as a game platform.
    Windows NT moved from server to workstation/home market. Windows 9x moved into the obsolete catagory and joins MsDos in the oblivion pile.

    Microsoft moves from software develupment to open source tech support. Getting contracts from open sorce authers to provide open source tech support in exchange for funding the open source develupment. But leaving the open source develupment itself outside of Microsofts offices. Instead they focuse on marketting/hyping the software they support... even more so when they get an exclusive something that would be hard to get.

    About 10 to 20 years from now I see a monopoly forming in the tech support department.
    I believe it will NOT be Microsoft, IBM, RedHat, Andover or any of the other current major players. It may be a current bit player with some history and I have a few names but I'd rather not say who as they are really cool companys right now.
    Most likely it'll be a new company that opens for busness a few years from now and builds it's history. A company with problems. Posably run by a reformed spammer.

    All I can say is if someone starts playing tech support monoploly games with us thats a company to back off from.

    Thats just my vision.. I'm not a visionary I'm a lunatic with a flashlight. :)

    --
    I don't actually exist.
  97. Re:Thank you, Slashdot! by kijiki · · Score: 2

    Can we ask this lawyer about the issues involved in a Linux software-only DVD decoder?

  98. Re:could Win2K be delayed? by pnkflyd51 · · Score: 1

    [Windows 2000 is] "better than Win98 in every way" ???

    Except that it costs more... Microsoft needs this two tiered pricing structure to bring in more revenue. One product that is priced towards consumers and one that will be sold to businesses- who are willing to pay more $$$. (this is not a rant or anything... simply true)

  99. could Win2K be delayed? by pnkflyd51 · · Score: 2

    Hmmm... I wonder if there's any chance of Windows 2000 being delayed past Feb 17th 2000.

    I suppose the only way it could be is if MS and the DOJ settle- 'cause if it's dragged through the court systems, there'll be years of appeals before any "penalty" or "remedy" occurs- even if it gets fast tracked to the Supreme Court like the AT&T case.

    I wonder if Microsoft has an IE-less version of Win2K waiting in the wings in case of a settlement. While I'm an avid Linux user, I've also been anticipating the arrival of Win2K and would hate to see a delay.

    Anyway, I think we've already seen MS's competitors become more brave since the trial began. One example is that there are quite a few companies standing (meekly?) behind Linux. I hope they'll stand taller now.

    I hope in five years, we'll be able to look back on Win2K as Microsoft's swan song from a monopolist OS vendor point of view.

    1. Re:could Win2K be delayed? by Surak · · Score: 2

      Except that it costs more... Microsoft needs this two tiered pricing structure to bring in more revenue. One product that is priced towards consumers and one that will be sold to businesses- who are willing to pay more $$$. (this is not a rant or anything... simply true)

      Well, MSFT will actually be offering an "upgrade" price for existing Windows 98 users (I think $175 or something) but you're right: the two-tiered system is designed to generate more revenue.

  100. Monopoly -> Regulation Re:NOT a "NAUGHTY" ruling! by MeanGene · · Score: 1
    Once Microsoft is recognized by the government as a monopoly, there's going to be A LOT of consequences for both its stock performance and day-to-day operations. Essentially it will be forced to behave the same way as, say, your local utility.

    1. Monopolies have their "rates of return" on capital set by the BPU (Board of Public Utilities).

    For example, MS will have to prove to BPU that they made a prudent investment of, say, $1 billion to develop Windows 2001. Then BPU will allow them to earn 12% return on that investment - the excess will have to be returned to the customers instead of shareholders.

    2. If MS spins off an unregulated subsidiary (for example, MS Office), they will have to institute a strict information separation between the regulated company MS OS and unregulated MS Office.

    This separation will mean complete API disclosure - exactly the thing we were fighting for!

    3. Every time MS will want to buy another company, they will have to go through a special market power case before BPU to prove that this new purchase is not going to affect competitive markets.

    4. I am not a lawyer... ;-)

  101. Re:Malda by Imperator · · Score: 1

    Rob Malda posts under the username CmdrTaco.

    --

    Gates' Law: Every 18 months, the speed of software halves.
  102. Yet still another mirror by Wntrmute · · Score: 1

    PDF (337k)

    Gzipped ASCII (118k)

  103. Re:Hm. Appealed forever? by alfredo · · Score: 1

    all this action, Linux being loaded on IBM's Dells, and such would not have been possible before the trial. Gates had such a strangle hold on the PC vendors, that they feared would lose their license if they even tried to sell PC's with any other OS.

    The competition you see now is the result of the trial. MS had to be on it's best behavior for the judge. It didn't work, the judge ruled against MS. Just think of all that money Gates gave to charity. Where was all that giving before the trial? Gates is a scumbag.

    MS gave the 150 million to Apple to prop them up to make the appearance that they were not a monopoly. You know Jobs gave him that idea.;)

    --
    photosMy Photostream
  104. Re:Stock Market - Dow Jones by kvajk · · Score: 1


    Yes, thank you! This has been worrying me, too.

    I want Microsoft's over-valued stock price to go down, but I want it to happen very very very slowly.

  105. Re:Did anyone else notice the contradictions? by Surak · · Score: 2

    I'm sure thats what Jackson was thinking when he siad that "a price for Windows substantially above that which could be charged in a competitve market." The point you make the price of Windows not going down is valid: in fact, this point was brought up by Jackson himself in the trial (no I don't have a link, but I do remember reading about it on news.com)

    Also note that other software prices, including Microsoft's own prices, have gone down with the industry. When Microsoft bundled all the applications together that make up Microsoft Office, they essentially lowered the price on word, excel, etc., in order to compete with its competition of the day (Lotus and WordPerfect). Now that Office dominates the market, the price of Office has actually gone up. (Office 97 is more expensive than Office 95 was, but I'm not sure if Office 2000 is more expensive than 97, but even if its the same price, my point has been made. Incidentally, Access used to be a $100 upgrade to Office, and now its a $200 upgrade)

  106. Re:Did anyone else notice the contradictions? by Shadow+Knight · · Score: 1

    Just to throw in a word: Yes, Office2000 is more expensive than Office97 was. Not hideously more expensive: it's $30 more for the upgrade than before.

    --

  107. Did anyone else notice... by zak · · Score: 1

    That one of the journalists called Gates "Billy" when asking him a question?
    Seemes to somewhat amuse the bastard; I wonder if the journalist made it to his car alive :)

  108. Re:Night of the living Microsoft by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 2

    breaking up Microsoft into different companies may not be punishment on the long term

    I agree. Microsoft or it's spawn is going to continue to be big. Contrary to most people's thinking, their stockholders are not going to lose a penny. BUT MS WON'T BE AS BIG AS THEY WOULD HAVE BEEN OTHERWISE.

    AT&T doesn't have the market share they used to have. MCI Worldcom is a worthy foe and may become more so if the FTC lets them acquire Sprint. IBM is huge, but they have a small fraction of the PC business. The Standard Oil companies have competitors like Shell and BP, as well as infighting amoung the 34 units the original was broken into.

    What is going to happen is that whatever remidy happens Microsoft will gain serious competitors. One way or another. Which will be great for all of us.

  109. Re:Microsofts Monopoly by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 2

    Same end result, two different mechanisms. One of which you favor.

    Building added functionality into the operating system is not the issue. The issue is Microsoft coming out with their own version of a proxy server and then threatening Dell that they are going to withold their Windows license if they don't preload their server and only their server along with Windows. Or if they call up Apple and say "we'll cancel Mac Office if you don't preload our Mac proxy server, and deep six your own version for Windows."

    If all Microsoft did was product innovation The Judge would have not ruled that Microsoft engaged in predatory practices.

    paragraph 93 ... "It is Microsoft's corporate practice to pressure other firms to halt software development that either shows the potential to weaken the applications barrier to entry or competes directly with Microsoft's most cherished software products."

    This has nothing to do with Microsoft developing better products and everything with Microsoft hurting the computer industry and consumers by trying to restrain innovation for their own benefit.

    It's high time someone put an end to this charade and put a little more competition back into the PC market.

  110. Re:Section(s) on Linux by Abigail-II · · Score: 1
    If you're trying to make a profit by selling your software, would you write your application for the OS that runs on (a) 90% of the computers out there, or (b) 4% of the computers out there (I'm making up the numbers)?

    That entirely depends on the type of software. If you write something, and then have to resort to advertisment to convince people they really, really need it, you better go for the 90%.
    On the other hand, if you write software on demand, you have a small loyal customer base, or you write systems that'll run on dedicated servers anyway, marketshare of the OS matters a lot less.

    If you are a very big company, and you are going to shell out $60 million for some custom software, marketshare of the OS it runs on will be a minor issue.

    -- Abigail

  111. Re:IP Monopoly? by Abigail-II · · Score: 1
    Oil tankers and miles of copper wiring aren't amenable to easy division and distrobution, but this is INFORMATION, guys.

    Code and information alone does not make a big company. Being a huge multinational means having a lot of infrastructure as well.

    Care for a little "what if"? Suppose M$ does get broken into pieces. Or even have all its code and other IP be put in the public domain. Just imagine for now, there would be no M$ anymore. There still will be a couple of hundred million people out there needing software.

    Ok, so we get a whole queue of new companies writing software. OSses, applications, etc, etc. Of course, each new little company wants to protect its stuff, so we get lots and lots of new, propriatery OSses and applications. This time, fully backed up by US law.

    Who gains by this? The consumers? No, not at all. Currently, if you are on a windows system, you have a reasonable chance your applications work on your neighbours computer as well - as he's likely to have windows as well. Same for documents; word documents might be a propriatery format, and not very compatible with older versions - half the world does run the current version of word and is able to read your document.
    Perhaps the programmers? Nah. Whether they write for platform X, or platform Y, they'll get paid the same on average. All the incompatabilities make life just more frustrating.
    There will be a bunch of suits and investors that'll profit from many new companies though. And lawyers.

    Oh, you might say, that will never happen. Well, I think it will - it has happened in the computer world so often. Look at the Unix world; a twisty little maze of OSses, all different. I cannot take my Solaris program and run it on HP. Even with the source code, it needs to be "ported". Attempts of creating languages so that you can "write once, run everywhere" don't quite work. Java, for instance, has various, incompatible virtual machines - and not just because of M$. And for a language like Perl, that has one implementation on Windows, Unix and VMS, there are too many dependencies on the underlaying OS to truly "write once, run everywhere".

    I find it very cynical that the DoJ case stems from a browser war. Remember Tim's original idea? Make information accessable to all - by having open standards: HTML and HTTP. That went all fine, untill we got a player in the market that wanted to just like Microsoft: Netscape communications. They ignored the standards as much as they could, invented their own "extensions" instead of implementing proposed standards. All with one goal, gain money and marketshare. Microsoft goals with Microsoft techniques.

    I am very grateful Microsoft decided to produce its own browser, and compete with Netscape. Hadn't it been for Microsoft, Netscape would have monopolized the HTML/HTTP market, and it would now be all propriatery.

    Don't get me wrong. I'm not at all a Microsoft fan. I might have used a computer running an OS from Redmond perhaps 10 times in my life. Probably less. But the computer world outside Microsoft is a big, incompatible mess; even if you only look at Unix. In fact, I doubt M$ would have ever grown so big if it wasn't for the Unix mess. Users aren't helped with incompatible systems. For them, life without Microsoft would be scary.

    -- Abigail

  112. Re:I'm probably going to get beat up over this but by Abigail-II · · Score: 1
    You defend Microsoft by saying that everyone should use Windows because Linux is hard. Don't you realize that if it weren't for the monopoly then Linux might have the commercial support to make it easier?

    Huh? Linux isn't "hard" because there isn't commercial support. It's "hard" because it's a Unix. There has been commercial Unices even before Bill Gates first uttered "windows".

    Unices are perfectly fine OSses, suitable for many tasks, and many people. It's not suitable as a desktop machine for Sally Q. User.

    Ferrari's and 24 wheeler trucks are very good cars. They are however, unsuitable for most people who just need to pick up their kids from school.

    -- Abigail

  113. Re:I'm probably going to get beat up over this but by Abigail-II · · Score: 1
    And you're playing into it perfectly. They've positioned themselves so Joe Public will say "Well everyone's using Windows so if i use Linux my freinds can't help me."

    Ah, yes, and the Unix world is so much better.

    wavy lines
    Suppose I have a problem with my Linux machine...

    • Friend 1: I am sorry, I run OpenBSD, and that works fine.
    • Friend 2: Well, on my Solaris x86, I would do it like this...
    • Friend 3: Sure, you can borrow my HP-UX manuals.
    • Friend 4: Ah, in IRIX, we do....
    • Friend 5: Cool, do you also like AIX?
    • Friend 6: If you don't do SCO, I cannot help you.
    • Friend 7: I've been waiting for the Hurd for 12 years now.
    • Friend 8: Yeah, I run Linux. But all I do is install Red Hat RPMs. Oh, and you run Debian? Sorry...
    Now, I'm out of friends, and still have this problem... wavy lines

    Unix isn't for Joe Public.

    -- Abigail

  114. Re:He does get it. by freddevice · · Score: 1

    The moderators don't get it. I would not drscribe this comment as funny. Insightfull would be closer to the mark.

  115. Re:NOT a "NAUGHTY" ruling! by deranged+unix+nut · · Score: 1

    Actually, in the finding of fact, the judge lists actions like pricing Win98 at $89 instead of $49 when $89 was the profit maximizing price and $49 was a competitive yet profitable price. Other actions like bullying other companies around also would seem to me that the Judge has already stated that Microsoft is a monopoly, and Microsoft is using that monopoly power to eliminate competitive pressure to their main products.

  116. Re:QEMM, DR-DOS??? by ConceptJunkie · · Score: 1

    "DR" originally stood for "Digital Research", the company that developed it. Currently, Caldera owns it and it is the subject of yet another lawsuit involing Microsoft...

    I didn't go from Win3.1 to Win95 until there much so much software I wanted to run but couldn't run that I caved in. I think it was about Feb '96...

    Also, Microsoft has had buggy software since way before Windows. Anyone remember DOS 3.0...? I personally lost a lot of data (well, for the early 80's it was a lot) because of it. Also, DOS 4.0 was pretty awful, too. DOS 3.3 seemed really rock solid. 5 and 6 seemed good too if you didn't use all the extra stuff (DoubleSpace really sucked!). Win 3.1 was reasonable once you got it configured. NT 3.51 was solid, and 4.0 was too until the Service Packs from hell (2 and 4).

    The problem with Microsoft is they can't leave well enough alone. They are always adding unreasonable complexity to their products, sticking with bad designs far too long and then foisting complete redesigns on us that are worse because they are so enormous and poorly tested.

    Did anyone remember when MS came out with the commercial about the software testers about a year ago? Who else laughed themselves hoarse?

    Convicted monopoly or not, Microsoft is going to lose in the end because they are in quality freefall.

    --
    You are in a maze of twisty little passages, all alike.
  117. Re:NOT a "NAUGHTY" ruling! by Gorgonzola · · Score: 1

    Economics at high school level may state that a monopoly can only involve one firm, but economics at college level and economic analysis of law usually use the following definition of monopoly: "Monopoly is the power to manipulate price" Which Microsoft clearly has.

    --
    -- Spelling and grammar errors tend to be a sign of erroneous thinking.
  118. Applications barrier to entry by Zoltar · · Score: 2

    We lose. We have been manipulated and robbed. In the name of innovation Microsoft has taken every action available to them to kill innovation. Slick marketing campaigns endlessly spew rhetoric which have now been shown to be lies.

    Empirical Evidence of the Applications Barrier to Entry...
    Empirical Evidence of Microsoft's attempts to kill innovation....

    Are these actions taken by a company with the consumers best interests at heart? Are these the actions taken by a company with integrity ??? Integrity would be the opposite of Microsoft. Some of their products are good, but unfortunately this has only helped them to victimize consumers.

    "Microsoft's actual pricing behavior is consistent with the proposition that the firm enjoys monopoly power in the market for Intel-compatible PC operating systems."

    "Microsoft thus opted for the higher price."

    Why ??? because they had a better product ? No, because they are a monopoly. No longer will the argument that people use Windows because it's superior hold any weight.

  119. NOT a "NAUGHTY" ruling! by plunge · · Score: 2

    I may be wrong on this, but the judge ruled that Microsoft was a monopoly. As much as we'd like it to be, that's not illegal- case law has shown that companies are perfectly within their rights to attain a monopoly as long as they do it competitivaly, which M$ will now be trying VERY hard to prove that they did. This judge was authorized to rule on findings of fact, which was basically limited to whether or not M$ was a monopoly or not, NOT whether it was an illegal monopoly or not. That gets decided later, and a different question of law. So even if this ruling implies that Microsoft was "naughty" the judge isn't yet empowered to legally rule on that (he can say so all he wants, but that's not the ruling, just like Supreme Court justices go on and on about things that may not bear on their actual findings).

    1. Re:NOT a "NAUGHTY" ruling! by plunge · · Score: 2

      But Jackson also ruled that Microsoft abused it's monopoly power. So it IS a "naughty" ruling. he can rule anything he wants, but because it was a finding of fact, not criminality, it isn't itself the deathblow ruling or sentancing. That may be much more certain now, but still not assured.

    2. Re:NOT a "NAUGHTY" ruling! by k_187 · · Score: 1

      Economics states that for a monopoly there can be only one firm. If a firm is monopolisticly competitive liek you sugest, then it cannot be a monopoly.

      --
      11 was a racehorse
      12 was 12
      1111 Race
      12112
    3. Re:NOT a "NAUGHTY" ruling! by k_187 · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry but, a monopoly is a price setter, but it cannot charge more than a market will allow. The people do keep a monopoly in check, by not allowing the monopoly to charge whatever it wants. If the price was too high the consumers would not buy it. And the _College_ defination that I have is taht a monopolistic market has ONe(1) firm. If firms have the ability to set somewhat the price they charge they are in momopolistic competition(its not an oxymoron). Getting away from the MicroSatan verdict. The local phone companies are monopolies. Lays Potato Chips are in monopolistic competion. They can set their price, but they cannot charge too much because of their competiting products. Monopolistic competitive firms have non-homogenous goods, that is how they can set price, yet still be bound buy the other (albeit few) firms in the industry.

      --
      11 was a racehorse
      12 was 12
      1111 Race
      12112
    4. Re:NOT a "NAUGHTY" ruling! by plague3106 · · Score: 1

      Name the other "firms" that make OSes that you can use to actually get some work done?

    5. Re:NOT a "NAUGHTY" ruling! by Stephen+VanDahm · · Score: 2

      But Jackson also ruled that Microsoft abused it's monopoly power. So it IS a "naughty" ruling.

    6. Re:NOT a "NAUGHTY" ruling! by wadeomatic · · Score: 1

      True, this isn't the coffin door closing on M$. But the descriptions of how M$ limited technology by using it's OEM muscle against Intel, Apple and others definitely goes into anti-trust areas. See the paragraphs relating to NSP and Quicktime around 96-100. Hopefully, the DOJ will prove that you can't squash out innovation with your money and expect get away with it. If your product sucks, make it better, don't force out the innovator.

  120. Re:i did indeed read, we aren't disagreeing by plunge · · Score: 2

    Uh, so why are you insulting me- we aren't disagreeing. All I'm saying is that unlike what Don implies, this is NOT the deathblow ruling from the government as a matter of illegal monopoly law. As you note though, it makes filing and winning civil lawsuits against M$ much much much easier, because their monopoly is no longer a legal matter of argument. Think of that- they CANNOT make the argument in court that they aren't a monopoly! If they so much as hint that they aren't the judge can rebuke them on the spot! That's like OJ not being able to claim that he wasn't in the house when his wife was killed. This will hurt them a lot.

  121. What happens to BillG's net worth? by webmaven · · Score: 1

    Does anyone know how much of Billy Boy's net worth is still tied up in MS stock?

    Regardless, he's still turned a pretty profit on the million dollar trust fund he started with.

    meanwhile, check out the Bill Gates Personal Weath Clock


    --

    --
    The real Webmaven is user ID 27463. I don't rate an imposter, because my ID is such a lame-ass high number.
  122. Yet another mirror - html, zip and rar by freakho · · Score: 2

    Html 399Kb
    Zip 120Kb
    Rar 109 Kb

    fh

  123. Section(s) on Linux by chandoni · · Score: 1
    Here are the 2 sections of the decision that specifically discuss Linux/OSS. Comments?

    50. The experience of the Linux operating system, a version of which runs on Intel-compatible PCs, similarly fails to refute the existence of an applications barrier to entry. Linux is an "open source" operating system that was created, and is continuously updated, by a global network of software developers who contribute their labor for free. Although Linux has between ten and fifteen million users, the majority of them use the operating system to run servers, not PCs. Several ISVs have announced their development of (or plans to develop) Linux versions of their applications. To date, though, legions of ISVs have not followed the lead of these first movers. Similarly, consumers have by and large shown little inclination to abandon Windows, with its reliable developer support, in favor of an operating system whose future in the PC realm is unclear. By itself, Linux's open-source development model shows no signs of liberating that operating system from the cycle of consumer preferences and developer incentives that, when fueled by Windows' enormous reservoir of applications, prevents non-Microsoft operating systems from competing.

    51. Since application developers working under an open-source model are not looking to recoup their investment and make a profit by selling copies of their finished products, they are free from the imperative that compels proprietary developers to concentrate their efforts on Windows. In theory, then, open-source developers are at least as likely to develop applications for a non-Microsoft operating system as they are to write Windows-compatible applications. In fact, they may be disposed ideologically to focus their efforts on open-source platforms like Linux. Fortunately for Microsoft, however, there are only so many developers in the world willing to devote their talents to writing, testing, and debugging software pro bono publico. A small corps may be willing to concentrate its efforts on popular applications, such as browsers and office productivity applications, that are of value to most users. It is unlikely, though, that a sufficient number of open-source developers will commit to developing and continually updating the large variety of applications that an operating system would need to attract in order to present a significant number of users with a viable alternative to Windows. In practice, then, the open-source model of applications development may increase the base of applications that run on non-Microsoft PC operating systems, but it cannot dissolve the barrier that prevents such operating systems from challenging Windows.

    1. Re:Section(s) on Linux by chandoni · · Score: 1
      So, to keep my opinions on this separate:

      On 50... the majority of linux users are only running servers? I don't think that's the case any more; at least most "servers" are also running things on the desktop. Of course the same argument used to be made about OS/2... "sure it has 15 million users, but most of them are ATMs, not PCs."

      On 51... this seems to be untrue in practice, since there is such a wide variety of apps available for linux which you would never imagine anybody could need. I think "cannot" is too strong; "might not" would be more realistic. Certainly legal action which slows or harms MS could only help dissolve the barrier, just as early adoption of Linux was helped by court cases which slowed down its potential competitor, BSD.

      JMC

    2. Re:Section(s) on Linux by Grapes4Buddha · · Score: 1
      If you're trying to make a profit by selling your software, would you write your application for the OS that runs on (a) 90% of the computers out there, or (b) 4% of the computers out there (I'm making up the numbers)?

      The critical mass for Linux to really catch on -- I mean really catch on -- is an order of magnitude or more than it is now.

      Don't get me wrong -- I love Linux. However, I don't see many corporations switching their standard desktops to Linux-based PC's.

      Linux finds itself challenging Windows for the general population's desktop, but it's based on an OS that nobody ever planned to do this with.

    3. Re:Section(s) on Linux by forthy · · Score: 1

      I think the judge took Microsofts own FUD ("Linux Myth page") as arguments against their defeat ;-). I think that makes live easy: Microsoft can't argue in court that Linux is a thread while outside court they tell everybody that Linux isn't worth a try.

      Since the punishment isn't clear yet, I propose to deny them all the lock-out actions; i.e. force them to give out good API docs (and if they fail to deliver, they'll have to release the source), file formats/network specs and future API plans; keep also device manufacturers responsible for publishing informations (if they fail, but provide a Windows driver, they are aiding illegal actions - if they really want to keep their driver secret, they have to provide it for several popular alternative OSes, too).

      I'm not a fan of ESR's "let the market decide". The market already has decided to make M$ a monopoly. As long as I remember, M$ software was worse than the competition, and I remember the days when M$ primarily sold Microsoft BASIC. People choosed uninformed, and they still do. Adam Smith's marked requires high competence on both sides (seller and buyer), in the software industry, we have low competence on both sides.

      --
      "If you want it done right, you have to do it yourself"
    4. Re:Section(s) on Linux by Shelled · · Score: 1

      The problem with both these points is that the judge didn't consider the possibilty of developers releasing commercial applications for a free operating system. He writes as if everything related to Linux must remain free just because the OS is free. If - sorry, when - Linux develops a wide enough user base companies will no doubt start releasing commercial products. Once commercial developers start cranking the apps, their companies can reasonably be expected to lend more support to the OS at the development level to bolster their investment, creating a stronger OS, in turn generating more apps, etc. And since the OS remains free, the applications can't be priced at Microsoft levels. This would be my guess for the future of Linux once it hits critical mass.

  124. Re:Digression -- GM trucks by donarb · · Score: 1

    That was the case against one of the national news reports. GM sued saying that the show had planted incendiary devices to make the gas tank blow up on camera.

    It had nothing to do with the government case.

  125. Better than hoped by homunq · · Score: 1
    As this trial was going on and stories were being leaked, I was somewhat contemptuous. "The whole thrust of the trial is on the Netscape vs. IE issue. While I wouldn't mind it if that was the particular slung shot that brings down the MS Goliath, it is a relatively trivial issue next to other microsoft practices (the "AARD" code, bullying of OEM's). The whole thing is predicated on that early-internet hype that a combination of Netscape and Java was poised to replace the OS or make it irrelevant."

    But this judgement succeeds in showing exactly why the browser war was important. Netscape is clearly portrayed, not as a competitor for IE, but as a competitor for Windows. And it's not because anyone would use Netscape instead of Windows. Even if Microsoft had played nice, it's doubtful that that would have happened. The argument that Netscape threatened Windows itself is the following:
    • Any universally deployed API (such as Netscape had the potential to provide) makes it easier to write software that's a little more portable.
    • Just as Microsoft's power comes from the difficulty of cross-platform development, any reduction of that difficulty, even a small incremental reduction, reduces that power.
    • Since the price of a Windows license is a result of MS monopoly power, Microsoft is forced to guard, not only against actual OS competition, but against the potential for such competition. Useful, non-portable windows apps are money in the bank for Microsoft.
  126. Watch the election money by Magnifico · · Score: 1

    It is still at least a few months away from a final ruling, but this is by prediction.

    Call me a cynic, but 2000 is an election year in the USA. Watch the money going to the candidates running for US president.

    There will be a new president, and consequently a new executive branch. A newly elected president, especially one with a warchest funded by numerous, large Microsoft associated campaign contributions, will most likely not have the DoJ further appeal, or if the DoJ is still 'winning', orders will be given to be not overly aggressive in negotiating an out-of-court settlement. (I also doubt that if it were dropped by the DoJ after an appeal reversal, there would be large public outcry.)

    With the change in power, I doubt it will be appealed all the way up to the US Supreme Court.

  127. Re:He does get it. (CORRECTION) by alexalexis · · Score: 4


    In my second paragraph I used the word "illegally" .. it shouldn't be there -- this is just a Finding of Fact. Of course, one could deduce that Microsoft's actions are illegal (especially regarding the licensing issues), but this was not a legal ruling on the case.


    Sorry if I caused any confusion.

  128. He does get it. by alexalexis · · Score: 5


    I've read the first hundred pages of the FoF, and Judge Jackson really does get it. He spells out very clearly what Microsoft has done, how Microsoft did it, and why it's an abuse of monopoly power. He clearly spells out their position in the market relative to other operating systems. He goes to great lengths to define the difference between the OS, applications, and APIs.


    In summary, he states that Microsoft illegally used it's control over the operating system market to gain advantage over Netscape and Sun in regards to the web browser and java runtime environment markets, through restrictive licensing agreements and deliberately smearing the line between application and operating system. (That is my understanding thus far -- there are quite a few smaller issues that he touches on)


    I know a lot of people are going to read the press clippings that are saturated with some pretty charged statements from both Microsoft and the Judge Jackson. Unfortunately, they really don't give a good representation of the FoF, which is not only an easy read, but a very enlightening one.


    I HIGHLY RECOMMEND THAT YOU READ THE FIRST 25 PAGES OF THE FoF. Educate yourself before you become a victim of the avalanche of spin doctoring that's going to consume the media for the next week.

    1. Re:He does get it. by cfish · · Score: 1

      As a Computer Science and Economics person, i have to say that he's got it BOTH! wow. sun of a gun.

  129. New administration by SedentaryZ · · Score: 1

    OK, so here's a thought I had recently. Assuming that MS does not settle and drags out the proceedings as much as possible (intentional delays, appeals, etc), what happens if this case is still in the court system in 2001 when we get a new administration? Will significant changes in the staffing of the DoJ from a Republican administration have an effect on the final outcome of all of this? Could the new higher ups at DoJ just drop the whole thing or make a favorable (for MS) settlement offer?

  130. HTML Version of the Findings is available by cloos · · Score: 3

    Note the the GPO site has not only PDF and WP but also HTML versions of the Findings up.

    It May be a bit easier for some to read....

    -JimC

  131. Re:WordPerfect format by spectecjr · · Score: 1

    Word does, after all, store the file as UNICODE. So it'll be ~ twice as long.

    --
    Coming soon - pyrogyra
  132. Re:Microsofts Monopoly by spectecjr · · Score: 1

    Take internet connection sharing for example. I've gone through wingate, sygate, and finally winroute, all shareware applications operating in a viable market. Now microsoft in windows 98 second edition has come out with 'internet connection sharing' - which makes the entire market defunct!!! Microsoft is going around squashing honest programmers and companies.

    So what would you do if I'd ported the same functionality from Linux over to Windows and released it under the GPL? Probably nothing. You wouldn't be jumping up and down about it.

    Same end result, two different mechanisms. One of which you favor.

    Hypocrit.

    --
    Coming soon - pyrogyra
  133. Re:WordPerfect format by spectecjr · · Score: 1

    Hmmm... you would appear to be correct. It's probably all that OLE structured storage stuff that's ballooning it up.

    --
    Coming soon - pyrogyra
  134. Re:Microsofts Monopoly by spectecjr · · Score: 1

    I wrote:
    Same end result, two different mechanisms. One of which you favor.

    Then Eric wrote:
    Building added functionality into the operating system is not the issue. The issue is Microsoft coming out with their own version of a proxy server and then threatening Dell that they are going to withold their Windows license if they don't preload their server and only their server along with Windows. Or if they call up Apple and say "we'll cancel Mac Office if you don't preload our Mac proxy server, and deep six your own version for Windows."

    But what does this have to do with the post I responded to? Answer: absolutely nothing.

    --
    Coming soon - pyrogyra
  135. Re:WordPerfect format by spectecjr · · Score: 1

    Bloatware has always been a MS tactic, not some act of sloppy coding that most people attribute it to. Bloatware has always been about propelling the need for higher end systems with more storage and ram to support MS's larger OS's.

    Ummm... actually, look at Star Office, or any other fully-fledged Unix GUI program - they're big and BLOATY, because that kind of stuff explodes what the program has to carry around, so I'm not entirely sure that your argument holds water...

    --
    Coming soon - pyrogyra
  136. Re:The good stuff... by rking · · Score: 1

    And if you're a good little Government department, you might even settle because you have other offenders to go after too and limited resources.

    I'm not advocating that they should, just that if they can get a good enough settlement they should, not keep going out of bloody mindedness.

  137. WordPerfect format by MatriXOracle · · Score: 1
    I find it pretty funny that M$ would actually put the file in WordPerfect format on their own site. What's even funnier is this (right from the M$ page):

    Word Format (851k)
    WordPerfect Format (438k)

    Can you say "b-l-o-a-t"?

    1. Re:WordPerfect format by mochaone · · Score: 1

      Bloatware has always been a MS tactic, not some act of sloppy coding that most people attribute it to. Bloatware has always been about propelling the need for higher end systems with more storage and ram to support MS's larger OS's. MS wants to drop the consumer desktop OS as soon as possible and stick with the one size fits all server OS. They are one iteration of their OS away from reaching this dream. Actually, I should say they were one iteration away from their dream.

      --
      Hates people who have stupid little sigs
    2. Re:WordPerfect format by nanomech · · Score: 1

      Why, this is not b-l-o-a-t, it is Microsoft i-n-n-o-v-a-t-i-o-n.

  138. The Evil Empire is falling by EricHeinz · · Score: 1

    It looks as though microsoft might finally be falling. Now if only I could get a complient browser for Linux.

    --

    "I don't like this deep shit about crazy crap"
  139. Great transcript -- by Kyrrin · · Score: 1

    Thanks Robin, this is a great analysis for those of us who haven't been able to get to any of the mirrors yet -- this discussion promises to be valuable as hell. Top-notch journalism!

    1. Re:Great transcript -- by Kyrrin · · Score: 1

      > He's right however. Good coverage, with exactly the right level of bias ;)

      "She", actually. ^_~ And I'm serious. It's nice to see /. proactively reaching out and doing some pieces about the impact of the news that gets reported, rather than linking to work done by others. While there is nothing wrong with the latter, and it is certainly how /. got its reputation, that reputation has now brought /. to a place where it is an excellent repository for original content such as this.

    2. Re:Great transcript -- by mong · · Score: 1

      The above comment should be awarded a 5(Five) for being the most sycophantic thing ever written on SlashDot.

      He's right however. Good coverage, with exactly the right level of bias ;)

      Bias? I meant "objectivity", or something...

      Mong.

      * Paul Madley ...Student, Artist, Techie - Geek *

      --

      *...Slacker, Artist, Techie - Geek *
      Remember: Nothing is Cool.
  140. You forget the img tag, Duh by My_Favorite_Anonymou · · Score: 1

    Lynx doesn't read img tag. Actually I would use lynx a lot more if I know how to do "open this link in new window" in Lynx win32.



    CY

  141. Time for a nuisance suit! by Ugmo · · Score: 2

    Maybe we users can start some nice class action suits against M$. Anyone have ulcers from having to support Windows at work? Not gotten a job because the company wanted your resume in M$ Word format?

    Oh Yeah, sell all your Microsoft Stock and invest it in some Law Firms.

    1. Re:Time for a nuisance suit! by Mihtjel · · Score: 1

      Yes, and sue Microsoft for making nasty looking logos...

      There are great ways to use this:
      'My machine broke down while I was running Windows and a client for the RC5 project. I might have won during the reboot.'

      'The default background color of the desktop gave me an epileptic attack'

      'I got deaf from listening to M$ error sounds'



      -----------------------------------

  142. Palm DOC and Plaintext by SingleTracker · · Score: 1

    I converted the PDF so you can put it on your palm pilots (is this legal??? If not, somebody tell me and I'll remove the files)

    Palm Doc File (with bookmarks!):
    http://freefall.penguinpowered.com/findings.pdb

    Text File:
    http://freefall.penguinpowered.com/findings.txt

  143. Finding format by dfreed · · Score: 1

    Did anyone else notice that the finding was posted in every format exept MS Word? Interesting.

    1. Re:Finding format by timeless · · Score: 1

      I know WP7 and beyond have save as (and edit in) html. (I can't remember anything about Novel WP 6.x)

      Someone complained about WP; remarking that it needs windows. This is wrong. WP is of course available for linux from Corel for free (to individuals, not businesses). WP for macos is also free (albeit it's an old version).

      I don't think MSWord runs on linux (I can't imagine WINE being anywhere near good enough to handle word's miriad of ...)

  144. And now the fun starts... by chazR · · Score: 2

    This ruling will change the world. But not very soon.

    There will be (probably) years of legal wrangling before it's all over, but I don't think the key points (Microsoft is a monopoly and has abused it's position) can be seriously challenged.

    My (extremely limited) understanding of the law is that the US Government now must (after appeals) do something to ensure that Microsoft doesn't abuse it's position again.

    My bet is that the company will be broken up into at least three companies (Operating systems, Office applications and 'other stuff')

    Before that happens, however, there is a good chance that the MS share price will collapse. Given that most MS employees are strongly motivated by stock options, this will make it hard for them to retain good people and hire new ones. This could lead to a very rapid vicious circle.

    The next week will be very interesting.

    Feed the hungry. Save the Whales. Free the mallocs.

  145. Geos still available as NewDeal (Was: Re:Stand bac by Lifewolf · · Score: 1

    Geos is still available for the desktop as NewDeal. See the NewDeal, Inc. website. Their online store offers NewDeal Release 3, plus an office suite and web browser, for less than a Windows 98 upgrade.

    I do find it rather saddening that their web site is served out by IIS. I liked Geos so much more than Windows, but I had to switch due to a lack of applications.



    --
    "Be Happy or Die." -- AoN
  146. The good stuff... by Thalia · · Score: 1

    Ah yes, the judge does get it... from Para 302

    --Microsoft threatened to terminate the Windows license of any OEM that removed Microsoft's chosen icons and program entries from the Windows desktop or the "Start" menu. It threatened similar punishment for OEMs who added programs that promoted third-party software to the Windows "boot" sequence. These inhibitions soured Microsoft's relations with OEMs and stymied innovation that might have made Windows PC systems more satisfying to users. Microsoft would not have paid this price had it not been convinced that its actions were necessary to ostracize Navigator from the vital OEM distribution channel.--

    This, by legal definition is called TYING, and it's illegal. There is very specific case law on this.

    I can't wait for the actual verdict. Although my predition is that M$ will attempt to settle by providing discounts on future M$ products (it worked for GM!) This would force people to buy even more M$ product. I don't expect the judge would sign that agreement...

    1. Re:The good stuff... by Brave+Little+Toaster · · Score: 2
      Although my predition is that M$ will attempt to settle by providing discounts on future M$ products

      I agree that Microsoft will try to settle now. It is the only sensible option, unless they really want to spend more in legal fees and then wind up paying out to the consumer anyways. The whole point of a settlement is to avoid greater cost in the long run.

      Having said that, why would the Government accept a settlement offer? The judge clearly favors the prosecution's case, and the government would probably do better letting the judge decide the penalty than if MS tries to strike a comprimise.

      The government won't settle, it has nothing to lose.

      -Toaster

      --

      --
      brave little toaster

      "Remember, don't try this at home until the statute of limitations has expired."

  147. IP Monopoly? by jesdynf · · Score: 2

    You know, when the DoJ came after Standard Oil and formally Got Some, they had to break 'em into little companies, because there wasn't anybody else out there willing and able to move oil like they could.
    When the DoJ came after Bell Telephony and Got Some, they "had" to break them up, because nobody else had phone lines laid.
    But the issue HERE -- the monopoly -- is held mainly by intellectual property -- code.

    Oil tankers and miles of copper wiring aren't amenable to easy division and distrobution, but this is INFORMATION, guys.

    What all might happen if the judge simply ordered MS to hand over all their IP -- API documentation, say -- and order MS to publish/post it under some license -- I'll let you guys argue about which one, but my favorite rhymes with "EPL".
    He could even let MS off the hook for the [possible] zillion-dollar fine in exchange for prettying it all up and posting it on a web server.

    Wouldn't -that- be fun. The WINE people would have heart attacks. (:

    --
    Yahoo! Pipes are awesome. How awesome? http://pipes.yahoo.com/jesdynf/slashdot
  148. Most of it factored in already by GoofyBoy · · Score: 1


    Not saying it will not go down, but there has been alot of analysts talking about what could happen to MSFT if something like this occurs. The trial has been going on for sometime.

    Besides MSFT will put the best spin on things.

    Of course it is in the Dow Jones Industral and I _believe_ it was down 2 in after the market trading.

    --
    The surprise isn't how often we make bad choices; the surprise is how seldom they defeat us.
  149. What you mean Crist has already been? by mark.odonohue · · Score: 1

    Damn and here's me still waiting for him. Is he going to return? I mean, well his cup of tea is getting cold.


    Oh well now I'll have to wait for his second comming.

  150. Re:Gov't just speeded up process of free markets. by Eric+the+.5b · · Score: 1

    That's because the Democratic party doesn't have core principles, it has alliances of interest groups. Just like the Republicans.


    Libertarianism, and the LP, are about private, consensual activity instead of governmental, coerced activity. I have a hard time swallowing that the government forcing an issue that admittedly was already being addressed by private activity is something any libertarian, no matter of what stripe, could go for.

  151. All very nice but.... by RallyDriver · · Score: 1

    ...when will I be able to buy a decent (branded) laptop without paying the MS-tax? The OEM licenses are the root of this problem. If the only remedy is to force vendors to honour the refund on OEM Windows licenses and to make Microsoft pick up the tab then I'll be more than content.

    I don't see any reason why MS should not bundle IE, nor why they shouldn't integrate it into Windows. This is no more or less reasonable than every major Linux distro bundling bash.

    If you don't like it, don't buy it - which brings us neatly back to the crux of the matter.

  152. Re:Libertarians by jcr · · Score: 1

    This libertarian would like to see MicroSquish get severely punished for the crimes they've comitted.

    The *crimes* I'm referring to, are software piracy (Stacker, Digital Research) and fraud (Intuit.)

    -jcr

    --
    The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
  153. Market rates... by jcr · · Score: 1

    For coders as shitty as MicroSquish uses run about $10/hr, or $150/hr if you get them from Arthur Andersen Consulting.

    -jcr

    --
    The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
  154. Re:Sorry, no, this is what governments are for. by 1010011010 · · Score: 1

    Nearly everyone agrees that the economy runs best when left to itself.

    Right on! People seem to want to equate capitalism with anarchy, but capitalism actually cannot work without a strong government to enforce the rules. "The rules" being, essentially, no fraud or initiation of force. The FoF describes MSFT's use of both fraud and force.

    This is exactly what the government is for.

    --
    Napster-to-go says "Fill and refill your compatible MP3 player", which is a lie. It's not MP3. It's WMA with DRM.
  155. Document Formats - here's why it's WordPerfect by slaker · · Score: 2

    Brief note on document formats:
    People are commenting on the fact that a Word
    copy of the document was not provided, while
    Wordperfect, PDF and HTML were.

    Most legal documents submitted in electronic
    format have to be submitted in WordPerfect format.
    It was the industry standard for many years,
    and the document format has been stable for
    at least the last three releases of the software.

    My mother is a paralegal, and she whines on a
    daily basis about the fact that there is such
    a tremendous intertia within the legal community
    that is centered on WordPerfect 5 for DOS and
    WordPerfect 6 for Windows. She uses a 300MHz
    Pentium II to run WordPerfect 5.1 for DOS every
    day. The lawyers she work for say it's the only
    thing they can use.

    I'm not sure why that inertia exists, but at
    least where I live, if you hand the court a
    floppy disk, it'd better have a wordperfect file
    on it. Everything else is simply unacceptable.

    --
    -- I wanna decide who lives and who dies - Crow T. Robot, MST3K
    1. Re:Document Formats - here's why it's WordPerfect by mat+catastrophe · · Score: 1
      the inertia exists because lawyers are not really all that smart.
      in fact, they can be outright dumb..

      http://www.freespeech.org/mat/spam/lawyersrdumb.ht ml

      now, as for a real answer, who knows? maybe they just spent so much time learning WP in the first place, they don't think they could learn anything else.

      --
      sig not found
  156. Another formatting irony... by _vapor · · Score: 1

    This is from the html version of the findings of fact straight from the gpo.gov website. Isn't it a bit ironic that they apparently used a MS prog to generate the html? Just posted this because I thought it was worth a chuckle.. ;)

    [!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0 Transitional//EN"]
    [saved from url=(0034)http://usvms.gpo.gov/findfact.html]
    [HTML][HEAD][TITLE]Findings of Fact - United States of America v. Microsoft Cor$
    [META content="text/html; charset=windows-1252" http-equiv=Content-Type]
    [META content="MSHTML 5.00.2314.1000" name=GENERATOR]

    --
    www.poak.net
    1. Re:Another formatting irony... by _vapor · · Score: 1

      ummm... not the one i looked at.. hrmmmm.. oh well. : /

      --
      www.poak.net
  157. Re:The Crash of 1999 by xmedar · · Score: 1

    ...anyone serious about investing will buy and hold for a long period of time - say 10 to 15 years or more...

    A good percentage of daily volume is now daytraders who are looking for short-term gain, I expect many of them to be shorting MS and buying Puts (optins to sell), this has the potential to get ugly if they do.

    --
    Any sufficiently advanced man is indistinguishable from God
  158. Re:The Crash of 1999 by xmedar · · Score: 1

    And I almost forgot, of course if I were an MS employee with options I would exercise them Monday and sell them off immediately, this could have implications as in the earlier /. article on MS finances.

    --
    Any sufficiently advanced man is indistinguishable from God
  159. Wait for the appeal by GFD · · Score: 1

    I don't think everyone should start dancing in the streets until after Micro$oft goes through the appeal process. I can remember some early news articles stating that the court that would handle the appeal for this trial was quite conservative as far as "government interference" in commerce.

  160. Re:Hm. Appealed forever? by mochaone · · Score: 1

    Judge Jackson states that Linux is becoming an option on the server side, but that it no where near competing with MS on the desktop front for at least a few years. If you read the Judge's release,which I suspect you haven't, you would have found that he elucidated voluminous, well-founded arguments on why MS has made competition on the desktop impossible.

    --
    Hates people who have stupid little sigs
  161. Re:I'm probably going to get beat up over this but by mochaone · · Score: 1

    People out there forget that most computer peripherals first have a Windows 95/98/NT driver available, because that's what most users will be running. Let's see how long before we'll see Linux drivers for most inkjet printers, backup peripherals, USB peripherals and IEEE-1394 peripherals.

    Bro. Did you read Judge Jackson's finding of facts at all? He sums up the exact dilemma you refer to -- the chicken and the egg problem. MS's domination of the dekstop OS market has created an environment that it makes it difficult for new desktop OS's to become viable. A big part of this reason is that developers prefer to develop for markets that have large numbers of users, i.e., potential customers. Customers, equally, don't want to use desktop OS's that lack in the number of applications that they use or plan to use in the future.

    Sure there are a lot of open source developers out there doing great things for Linux. But the majority of harware manufacturers have yet to embrace Linux yet because they are too busy supporting the Win/Intel platforms.

    --
    Hates people who have stupid little sigs
  162. Re:I don't think Don gets it. by mochaone · · Score: 1

    We would all demand that. No one wants to see any one company in control of the computer field. We've already slowed progress under MS's strangle hold already. We don't want to waste any more time.

    --
    Hates people who have stupid little sigs
  163. Re:The Crash of 1999 by cathode.r.tube · · Score: 1

    "we all know the drop is coming":

    the market's reaction is not only influenced by
    a piece of news, but of the piece of news plus
    the anticipation of it. thus it can for example
    happen that something quite bad about a certain
    stock comes out, yet the price goes up since the
    popular wisdom on it was worse still; conversely,
    a company can release very very good operating
    numbers and still get clobbered since expectations
    were running higher still.

    this is not to say that msft will not drop.
    neither am i saying that it will. i have no
    basis for either statement. my point is to
    tell you that it is simplistic to take into
    account the piece of info by itself.

  164. You're missing the point. by Toodles · · Score: 1

    The point isn't that MS can't bundle IE4 w/ W98, the point is that W98 customers didn't have a CHOICE about whether it is there or not, a choice that should have been given because the existance of the browser is counter productive to the OS (Yes, this is what Judge Jackson put into the finding. Not verbatum, but that Judge knows his sh1t) As the current installation goes, RedHat wouldn't have that problem, since yuo can CHOOSE to: #1 Not install said text editor, web browser, Perl module, Httpd, whatever when you first install RH. #2 Remove samesaid module at any time using tools such as 'rm' or 'rpm'. In Windows 98, you do not have the choice to remove, or not install in the first place, IE4. Its existance is counterproductive (I dont think anyone here would disagree that Win98 is slower than Win95, right outta the box. This is not good for someone who does NOT use the web...)and the purpose of putting in was shown to the Judges conviction to be not to add value to the OS, but to use MS's leverage in one field (OS's) to strongarm its way into another (Browsers) Of course, Im also a hyprocrit. I am typing this in IE5 on NT4Serv. :) But my level of respect for this judge after reading his finding is high. I also encourage everyone to read the finding (its more technical, and very little legal-ese. Enjoyable), and not just cheer the 'Microsoft ==Evil' ruling. Toodles

    --
    Toodles D. Clown
  165. Re:I'm probably going to get beat up over this but by Griliard · · Score: 1

    If you read the FOF, you will find that it is not about Microsoft capitalizing on the laziness of people. It is about Microsoft's abuse of its monopoly position in the market place. The ease of use features you tout in Microsoft's products are the types of innovation that Microsoft quashes in other products. They buy up or undersell any product that might threaten their monoply position which slows down innovation across the industry. If you look around, you will find may testimonials stating that the ease of use, power, and configurability of OS/2 is much greater than Windows. If Microsoft competed in the market place fairly, we wouldn't be having this conversation. Everyone would also probably be using a much more stable and advanced operating system instead of one that needs to be rebooted periodically rebooted just to keep it from crashing.
    You say that we should just develope a kick ass operating system to kick Microsoft's ass but with Microsoft's unethical and monopolistic business practices, even if we a develope the perfect OS, we wouldn't be able to win. That is the whole point of government intervention in business. When it gets to the point where the monopoly is abusing is position to keep competition from appearing and harming the consumer through high prices/bad products, the government steps in to correct the problem.

  166. Re:Either way, MS stock goes up by cfish · · Score: 1

    Me think the stock goes down if MS is fined 50 bil, you think?

  167. my 286 laptop has WP5.1 by cfish · · Score: 1

    my 286 compaq laptop:

    640k RAM. 35M HD. CGA display. a broken floppy that i cannot detach, and full battery. DOS and WP5.1 and iomega guest driver runs like a champ.

    MS Word cannot get to legal system because of bugs.

  168. Re:Anybody else think this is a BAD thing? by cfish · · Score: 1

    Do you think you would be paying 10 cents, or down to 4 cents per minute long distance if AT&T weren't chopped?

  169. Re:foolish little dumbasses by cfish · · Score: 1
    let's see. Apparently you don't know fuck about economics and don't know fuck about how to write a ASCII text.. but lets see..


    First of all, trade defincit has nothing to do with MS but everything to do with the domestic savings rate. if the domestic saving rate is unchanged, deficit stays the same.

    Secondly. you hold a lot of MS stocks, you are the dumb ass who didn't sell. people who are holding AOL, Sun, IBM stocks are prolly all cheering tomorrow while you weeping your ass out.

    The money that does not go to MS or the stock market will be invested somewhere else. one firm will not change the saving and investing habit of a country.

    You are darwin challenged. that super power crap is entertainnig, tho.

  170. Sorry, no, this is what governments are for. by jflynn · · Score: 2

    Nearly everyone agrees that the economy runs best when left to itself. It's notional that it can run without any interference from government. The government is inextricably involved in the infrastructure of people, cash, communications, and law that make the economy possible.

    If someone runs a protection racket, do you suggest that an insurance company with lower rates will solve the problem naturally -- and without government intervention? No, of course not, because a free economy can't work if force distorts it's feedback mechanism. That's the government's role - to keep the playing field force free, even, and open to new entrants -- so that the quality of businesses and products determine their success.

    Microsoft had used its leverage to effectively close the OEM distribution channels to alternate OSes. Did they leverage the quality and cost-effectiveness of Windows? No, they used threats based on their monopoly. The judge argued very well, and correctly in my opinion, that this was an unfair barrier to competition. It's an application of force that distorts the natural result of the market. No one else gains any advantage at all from the closure of distribution channels for non-Microsoft software.

    I hope the penalty phase takes into account the real problem here -- that competition is being skewed. It isn't being distorted because Microsoft is so large and monolithic, it is due to the anti-competitive, bullying business practices they engage in, made effective by their marketshare. I would very much like to see a behavioral remedy that prevented Microsoft from engaging in wide acquisitions, exclusionary deals, closed APIs, or proprietary formats.

  171. Re:The Crash of 1999 by MikeBabcock · · Score: 1
    Actually, anyone serious about investing will buy and hold for a long period of time - say 10 to 15 years or more.


    I've always figured that statement is just an insult (slam) on those who don't. The point is that if you believe in a company and want to invest in that company, you should hold for long periods of time.

    However, as recent legislation in other tech areas attest, technology stocks shouldn't be treated the same as the car industry or an oil company. Tech companies can rise and fall overnight and one's shares in those companies should be treated accordingly.

    Whereas Bell Atlantic, Royal Bank of Canada and Ford Motor Company should be expected to be around for dozens of years more (as they have been already), AMD could disappear tomorrow (unlikely) as could Netscape (ooops, it is gone! :), or Real Networks.

    People serious about making money more than in investing (yes, some may disagree on the ethics, but there isn't legislation preventing using teh market to make money, now is there?) will watch a company carefully and pull some of their money out when it looks like a fall, and put in when it looks like they're climbing ...

    - Michael T. Babcock <homepage>
    --
    - Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
  172. I love living in DC. by ZahrGnosis · · Score: 1

    The commentary is good. It was fun to watch all the stuff going on at the courthouse, too. A lot of people took turns talking to the press... the press asked a few questions, but never of Microsoft people, which seemed funny to me.

    We should hold a larger party when the final legal ramifications thing comes out in January or February. Anyone interested?

  173. Careful about class action lawsuits: by ZahrGnosis · · Score: 1
    Don - When they realize that they've had to pay more for computers because MS has charged high prices for their OS, they may take the issue more personally. It's close to certain that someone, somewhere will file a class action suit.

    One thing I noticed in the reading of the document was the Judge's REPEATED note that an increase in the cost of the OS, even a high percentage increase (ala Windows 2k???) wouldn't appreciably increase the cost of a computer. [Read it, Judge says this often in just the first dozen pages]. Wether true or not, it conflicts with Don's statement, so class action suits based solely on this document will run into problems there.

  174. Re:Agree, Judge "gets it" (For the most part) by Cryp2Nite · · Score: 1

    Agreed, the Judge get's it but still is somewhat off on points 50-51:
    In theory, then, open-source developers are at least as likely to develop applications for a non-Microsoft operating system as they are to write Windows-compatible applications. In fact, they may be disposed ideologically to focus their efforts on open-source platforms like Linux. Fortunately for Microsoft, however, there are only so many developers in the world willing to devote their talents to writing, testing, and debugging software pro bono publico.

    The judge misinterprets the fact that allthough Linux (or any other OpenSource OS) is free, noone is inclined to make applications running on these OS's free!
    The points made about an insufficient installed user base for these OS's at the moment still stands though.
    --
    two-thousand-zero-zero
    party over, it's out of time

  175. Ruling Question by chrgray · · Score: 1

    Where does M$'s other OS fit? (NT)

    Here's my 2 cents,

    Yes MS is a Monopoly, So what are you going to do about it?
    Nothing. What can you do, close them down, sure, they move all of their 30,000 employees to Canada(not likely, but think about what you would do to save your company if you are the richest person on the planet. Make your own country). Oh, boy what will the US gov do then.

    Also, nearly every government for nearly every country is dependant on Microsoft, and Microsoft related products. Are you going to tell them that no one can fix their software related problems? No more hot fixes.

    Closing them is not a solution, it only creates more problems.

    Here's a couple more questions I've been pondering.
    Why does a word processor cost more than an operating system?
    When does the NT shell get ported to Linux?

    Thanks
    Chris Gray

    If you want to install 98 w/o IE
    I shouldn't have to tell you to click.

    --
    Without computer security, there would be no hackers.
  176. Re:Anybody else think this is a BAD thing? by normiep · · Score: 1

    Why does everyone bring the economy into this?

    um... because the laws that microsoft may or may not have broken were originally designed (maybe not in the best way) to help the economy...

    There have been monopolies broken up before. We got through it just fine.

    You're correct in saying that we got through it. But the better question, and the question that is harder to answer, is are we better off because of it. I'm not completely sure of the answer to that. (If you were around back in the days when there was just ma bell, would you say that telephone service is better or worse now... my mother claims its worse, but I really don't know.)

    You see my fear is this: they find that micrsoft did break the law and then go ahead and break up the company. Now, the vast majority of businesses that rely on Microsoft software will have an absolute nightmare getting support, upgrades or anything else from what used to be Micrsoft until everything has settled back down, which could take years. Lots of money and time is lost by everyone, even if they do switch over to a different platform (which I doubt they will anyway). Is anyone really better off after this... probably not.

    But its all probably a moot point anyway, since the likelyhood that the government would actually break microsoft down into smaller companies is rather unlikely. Probably just lots of rebates to users and what not.

    --

    -- Point? None! Cob.

  177. Compete technically by slag187 · · Score: 3

    This ruling has a chance to finally level the playing field.

    Many of us are Linux and/or *BSD users. We've known for quite a while that we have a technically superior OS in many ways. There are also others like BeOS that are trying to compete on the ease of use of their OS.

    All I would like to see is enough change instituted so that the playing field can finally be leveled, so that all users can chooses the operating systems and applications that suit their needs and tastes. (Thinking in terms of punishment is the right thing, because that doesn't necessarily change their future behaviour.)

    Hopefully we can also see a movement to better embrace ISO, IETF, W3C, etc standards so that me using Linux, and you using Be, and someone else using Windows2005 can all share info, etc.

    Now's the time to push for real positive change and not just see how much money we can bleed away from MS (although I'm sure that will happen too).

  178. Re:Hm. Appealed forever? by Stonehand · · Score: 2

    {shrug} Their loss.

    It's *theoretically* possible that they honestly believe that they haven't violated the law, but that may not be the most expedient way to go compared to a Clintonesque response -- "We did wrong, we're sorry, and let's move on."

    If they stonewall, and this drags on and depresses the stock price, I wonder if any lawyers would pounce.

    --
    Only the dead have seen the end of war.
  179. Hm. Appealed forever? by Stonehand · · Score: 3

    Not if it gets to the Supreme Court, it won't be.

    It's probably not in MSFT's interests to be fighting this for that long, either, if they can get a settlement that'll end speculation over what the judicial system *might* do; and the DoJ lawyers would get to go home pointing to winning results in a *very* big case. Eh, guess we'll see.

    --
    Only the dead have seen the end of war.
  180. what kind of timetable? by Supergrass · · Score: 1
    I realize that the real ruling is expected sometime next spring, but what I really wonder is how soon Joe Six-Pack will feel the repercussions from this case. Five years, ten years, fifteen years? Will this be lower prices, a choice of pre-installed operating system, or a broken-up Microsoft?

    I guess it largely depends on the punishment/settlement reached in this case. In the meantime, hurrah, hurrah, this finding of fact is a great thing indeed!

    --
    Wherever there's a will, there's a motorway.
  181. Re:Could we forget MS for a sec? by plague3106 · · Score: 1

    This actually does matter, since MS is part of our nerd business (ie, computers). And i'll have to point out to you, there ARE other articles on slashdot. In fact MANY more then the ones about MS. So stop bitching and just ignore the ones you dont' like. Geez...its people like yoiu ruining things for everyone else.

  182. Re:60% articles involve MS. by plague3106 · · Score: 1

    Really? Counting the articles today (sun, at 10am EST) until the end of friday, i count 5 MS aricles out of 25 articles total. Now unless im doing my math wrong, thats 1/5 articles that are related to MS. Or 20%. Which if memory serves me correctly, would be high b/c of the MS ruling on friday; i remember days where MS is meantioned once or not at all. So please, enlighten me on how that means that 60% of the articles are on MS.

  183. Re:QEMM, DR-DOS??? by plague3106 · · Score: 1

    Ya, i never used those DOSes. I didn't know there was something newer then 3.3 until my grandfather got 5.0. And by the time i got that my dad had gotten 6.22 so i went from 3 to 6.

  184. The WINE People would LOVE IT... by OmniGeek · · Score: 1

    Once their heart rates stabilized, the WINE project would get VERY quiet for a while, and then would come the announcement on Freshmeat. Oh, if only it would come to pass...

    --

    "My strength is as the strength of ten men, for I am wired to the eyeballs on espresso."
  185. Remember Word Counts? by OmniGeek · · Score: 2

    There is an important reason Word loses out here: its word-count function is implemented in a manner incompatible with the needs of legal briefs.

    I remember seeing something a few months ago to the effect that a US court was discouraging use of Word and preferring WordPerfect for legal briefs. The court went so far as to specially re-count any brief written in Word, 'cause some such briefs wound up over-length and got bounced.

    It seems that for legal briefs, which have rigid word-count limitations, page headers/footers count toward the total, but tables of contents don't. (I may have a detail wrong here, so caveat lector!)

    Word doesn't let you count the headers/footers if you word-count a text selection (as one would do to exclude the TOC); that option gets grayed out when you select a block of text.

    Wordperfect, on the other hand, apparently allows the necessary flexibility in word counting to accommodate the special needs of legal briefs.

    (Even MS own law firm uses WordPerfect, according to The REGISTER, http://www.theregister.co.uk)

    It's interesting how a major product like Word fouls up on a major market segment like lawyers. Just another tiny niche market, I guess.

    --

    "My strength is as the strength of ten men, for I am wired to the eyeballs on espresso."
  186. Microsoft Ruling: Call for Action by __aaeaks4554 · · Score: 1

    Microsoft ought to be subjected to one of two outcomes.

    1. The corporate DEATH penalty. Close them down with forfeiture of all assets. All shareholders lose their shares, and all officers are barred forever from working in the industry. Then we will get true innovation!

    2. Less stringent, a fine of one TRILLION dollars, half of which would go into an account to pay claims from those who lost their businesses to Microsoft's illegal activities and to users of their buggy, insecure software.

  187. rebate only for people who bought it? by jesser · · Score: 1

    A $10 rebate for each customer who has bought Windows would run into billions

    So people using pirated copies don't get a rebate? They should, because they were basically forced to use windows and probably didn't have the money to pay for something else, but still ended up running an unreliable operating system.

    --
    The shareholder is always right.
  188. KDE's not an OS. by addison · · Score: 1

    Which is the first problem with your statement.

    Yes, I can. If I don't NEED HTML support, why would I want it?

    And KDE's not forced on people. OEM's aren't being charged an arm and a leg to ONLY install KDE, and not to install GNOME.

    You can easily run a Window Manager that doesn't know a thing about HTML. And if you're in a low-memory situation, you just might want to.

    The issue isn't that they included HTML support, or a web browser. The FoF is quite clear that MS did this *to damage Netscape*. Not out of innovation, or regards for the customer/consumer.

    They said that, but its quite obvious that they were making excuses because they were scared what HTML and Java represent.

    Notice we're not HAVING to use Windows to read and post here?

    There's (not much) that Microsoft can do to then change API's or yank the carpet out - as they did in Windows 2, 3, 95, 98....

  189. Re:I'm probably going to get beat up over this but by Katydid · · Score: 1
    one question, is it so hard to uninstall IE after installing/running windows? i admit it might be a little harder for a newbie to do this, but thats what its all about, learning.

    Um... You didn't bother to read the FoF, did you? And you must not have been following the trial very closely, either, and can't possibly have tried to uninstall IE in Win98. Because if you'd done any of these things, you would know that it's impossible.

    One of the major points of the trial, and thus the FoF, is that MS has removed the ability to uninstall IE in Win98, including not offering it as an option in the Add/Remove programs dialogue. Go ahead, try it yourself. Also, it's impossible to use Windows Update without IE. And WU is necessary to fix all of the bugs, security holes, and other detritus that comes with being a Windows user. MS' contention that the browser is integrated into the OS was proven false by the program a professor of some kind was able to write to remove it. Why can't other people write such a program? Well, he was only able to because he had access the Windows source code.

    Please, in the future, read the relevant material before making comments. Ignorance like this simply worsens the signal to noise ratio for the rest of us. Most people on /. already know these things and, I'm sure, resent the repetition. If I've gotten anything wrong, though, feel free to correct me.

  190. Re:I'm probably going to get beat up over this but by Katydid · · Score: 1

    I was reading his "uninstall" as meaning "using the utilities that come with the OS", not "searching the internet for something to do it." I was not aware of 98lite or what it does - it looks like a good program, thanks for letting me know. However, my argument still stands; running it will "break" Windows in that you'll be unable to use Windows Update (which is needed for security, if nothing else).

  191. Re:Written in Microsoft Word by FireWhenRady · · Score: 1

    The headers indicate that it was generated by MSWord as this is probably the standard word processor available to him.



  192. Re:Written in Microsoft Word by FireWhenRady · · Score: 1

    The headers indicate that it was generated by MSWord as this is probably the standard word processor available to him.

    <META HTTP-EQUIV="Content-Type" CONTENT="text/html; charset=windows-1252">
    <META NAME="Generator" CONTENT="Microsoft Word 97">

  193. But Wait,the best part is coming by flyneye · · Score: 1

    the spanking phase in which wild bill bares his
    chapped cheeks to the world and penguins snicker
    from their polar vantagepoint.

    --
    *Repent!Quit Your Job!Slack Off!The World Ends Tomorrow and You May Die!
  194. $10 refund, can somone explain this to me?? by FugaziMan · · Score: 1

    Ok, I completely agree that microsoft should be punished for anti-competitive tactics. But I am questioning the $10 refund. I think that microsoft should give a complete 100% refund to people who buy a computer pre-loaded with windows and never use windows, I believe this because it is very hard to buy a computer without windows on it.
    Now.. on to my second point, why should microsoft be made to give a 10$ refund to people who actually USE the OS?? I can see very clearly why a refund should be given to people who don't use it, but if you buy the computer and use the OS then you should pay whatever the asking price is for the OS.
    Maybe I'm missing something???
    I'd appreciate someone's opinion or point of view on this. Thanks

    1. Re:$10 refund, can somone explain this to me?? by NTT · · Score: 1

      $10 is prolly the lawyers (conservative??) estimate of Win's overprice.

  195. Anybody else think this is a BAD thing? by Fyndlorn · · Score: 1

    I mean come on, I will be reading the entire report with greater scrutiny, but right now I feel that almost any of intrusion of the government against free enterprise is a Bad Thing. I will only hurt our economy in the end. We've seen Linux jumps leaps and bounds over the past year or so, the way I can see it, this will only hamper Linux development. As far as browsers go, good ones are being developed as we speek that can easily compete with IE. Ugg, I see nothing good about this report, I guess I just feel like this has turned into a witchhunt for so many /.'ers and I'm disgusted by it. There, I've said my peace. goodnight

    1. Re:Anybody else think this is a BAD thing? by JohnG · · Score: 2
      Why does everyone bring the economy into this? There have been monopolies broken up before. We got through it just fine.

    2. Re:Anybody else think this is a BAD thing? by emmons · · Score: 1

      Nearly all of Microsoft's actions on their own were legal or at least gray areas in the law, but when brought together they show a trend of using monopoly power. That is what is illegal. Not the actions in their own right, but rather the sum of MS' actions.

      This is done every day in normal court also. If you get caught speeding, the officer says "don't do that" and you go merrily on your way. If you get caught another time, You pay $100 bucks and go merrily on your way. If you get a third time, the same. If you get caught a fourth or fifth time, in most states you get your drivers licence taken away and possibly a fine. Why? Because you have shown a trend of being an irresponsible driver. Every one of your single actions were not really so bad, but the sum of your actions mean you don't get to drive for a while. You can contest this in court, and then [the judge] has to consider the sum of the actions.

      See my point?

      -----

      --
      Do you even know anything about perl? -- AC Replying to Tom Christiansen post.
    3. Re:Anybody else think this is a BAD thing? by Autonomous+Cow · · Score: 1
      I agree 101%.
      RMS/FSF/GNU/BSD/Linux/etc. was helped (or should I say pushed) immensely by the enormous costs for UNIX software several years ago, and the ridiculous quantity of bugs and high cost of Windows more recently. Now the free software / open source community is in danger of losing a big reason to continue the battle.
      Yes I despise Windoze and avoid using it whenever I can. But I would much rather have people choose free software because it is better and much less expensive, not because the DOJ swatted Micro$oft.
      By the way, search /. for issues regarding governments and count the times we the posters rail on politicians for their general lack-of-clue about this industry, and our general resentment of their intrusions. Then notice that anytime Micro$oft is mentioned the general feeling runs exactly opposite -- is that hypocrisy or what.
      I would rather think that we (open source developers) could beat billy boy and the windoze of doom on our own. Don't we have any pride at all? Why do we admit defeat so early? Do we really want to make a pact with one devil to squash another one?

      --
      The Autonomous Cow. Moo.
  196. The Simpsons Are Prophets!! by degauss · · Score: 1

    Does this remind anyone else of the episode of the Simpsons where Homer tries to start a computer company (the one where he sticks his pencils in butter and has to write lots of "tasty memos)?? Cause later in the episode Bill Gates walks in and has 2 goons just trash the place... Could it be that The Simpsons' writers saw this coming (the forcing smaller companies to give in) and that they knew about this all before we did..??

    --


    CoyboyNeal is God
  197. Re:Same Rules...... by AndyL · · Score: 1

    FACT: Computer of all types use Binary, now what?

    FACT: All novels or other textual works are recorded either in binary or with ink upon paper.
    Well there goes the whole copyright system. Actualy my point is that I think the judge ment something like this. This sentence : "Computers use binary." is not copyrightable. This sentence : "The princess kissed the frog and the turtle." is even though it's recorded in a binary form.

  198. Re:I'm probably going to get beat up over this but by AndyL · · Score: 2

    "If I install a Linux OS on their computer, it is going to be nearly impossible for them to get help with problems with their computer and they are going to call me. If they have Windows, they can usually get tips/tricks/help from people they work with, friends, family, etc. They are not going to want to get into IRC or newsgroups to solve problems. " This is a DIRECT result of Microsoft's monopoly. If nobody used Windows do you think it'd be easy to get support for? If Windows had the user-population of Linux and vice-versa you'd be installing Linux on the newbies' computers for the same reason. There's nothing inherent to the OS that means there's support available. It's because of MS's monopoly. And you're playing into it perfectly. They've positioned themselves so Joe Public will say "Well everyone's using Windows so if i use Linux my freinds can't help me." That's what this ruling is about. They've made it so you, when installing OSes on the computers of newbies, have NO CHOICE about the OS to install.

  199. Stand back... by Antony+T+Curtis · · Score: 1
    It is time to stand back and mourn the loss of other worthy operating systems which were crushed by the Microsoft Juggernought...

    The roll call includes:
    RiscOS - A brilliant multitasking OS from the UK

    AmigaOS - Yet another great UK operating system

    GeoWorks - Another good OS (IMO, prettier than Winblows)

    DR-DOS & GEM - GEM died early on... DR-DOS was worthy until Microsoft made sure Windows wouldn't run with it. Go Calderia... Go get 'em

    IBM OS/2 - The Most worthy alternative to the Winblows platform... Died because of "deals" struck between MS and ISVs which prevented them from publishing products for this OS.

    Perhaps now, there may be some justice... And hopefully a morsel of revenge.

    --
    No sig. Move along - nothing to see here.
    1. Re:Stand back... by Willennium · · Score: 1

      Another two I'd like to add to that list:

      Gem - Kicked Win1.0's ass but died 'coz the company behind it couldn't get new versions out in time.
      Geo - Microsoft saw it coming and crushed it before it got big. Survived as the OS used in Nokia's cellphones and handhelds.

  200. Re:The Crash of 1999 by colnago · · Score: 2
    Metcalfe said it would happen on November 8th.

    *They* don't call it Black Monday for nuthin'.

    Actually, anyone serious about investing will buy and hold for a long period of time - say 10 to 15 years or more. MS even broken up will probably continue to generate high rates of return for stockholders even after taking an inital, short-term hit in its stock price.

  201. Re:I'm probably going to get beat up over this but by JohnG · · Score: 1
    You defend Microsoft by saying that everyone should use Windows because Linux is hard. Don't you realize that if it weren't for the monopoly then Linux might have the commercial support to make it easier? Just look how far it's come in terms of usability with Corel, Caldera, and RedHat. They've all made very easy installs. It it had the big support from the beginning then it would be far easier to use and more hardware would work on it.

  202. Re:I'm probably going to get beat up over this but by JohnG · · Score: 1
    Yes there are commercial UNICES and most of them have great hardware support. But when is the last time you seen Quake, Unreal, Civilization, Railroad Tycoon, Heroes of Might and Magic, Heavy Gear, etc. running on HP-UX. The fact of the matter is Linux is making it onto the desktop. Projects like KDE and Gnome are making it happen even quicker.
    Linux would be ALOT more practical for example if we could get the shockwave plugin, or a quicktime one. But for that we need commercial support, not from the companies that make/distribute the OS but from third parties. THAT is what MS is keeping out of our reach.
    You talk about ferraris and 18 wheelers but the thing is Linux is neither. Linux is more like a Mustang or a Diesel Dodge RAM. Built solid, and runs fast/pulls hard. Windows on the other hand is a Yugo. Great grocery getter if you have a cell phone to call the tow truck everytime it breaks down on you.

  203. Time to break up Chicago by briancarnell · · Score: 1

    "MS's domination of the dekstop OS market has created an environment that it makes it difficult for new desktop OS's to become viable. A big part of this reason is that developers prefer to develop for markets that have large numbers of users, i.e., potential customers. Customers, equally, don't want to use desktop OS's that lack in the number of applications that they use or plan to use in the future."

    Right on Brother. People in this part of their country tend to base their businesses in Chicago rather than my podunk town. Why? Because of network effects -- more people brings more people.

    After he's done reaming MS, I hope Jackson goes after big cities to level the competition with us small towners.

    Fight the power!!!

  204. Stock by ParadoXIII · · Score: 1

    All I can say about this is, Microsoft's going to get its ass short-sold when the market opens down 10% Monday. I pray that the tech market regains its stability soon.
    As for the impact on the way tech companies do business in the future, I think this will make start-ups a little more common, as the all-too-common buyout/squelching by a big company in the same field will be reduced by this ruling...

  205. mirror by emmons · · Score: 1

    I just put up another mirror here.

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    Do you even know anything about perl? -- AC Replying to Tom Christiansen post.
  206. Night of the living Microsoft by Thats_Zena_with_a_Z · · Score: 1

    Interestingly enough breaking up Microsoft into different companies may not be punishment on the long term. Historically, large companies that have been found guilty of anti-trust violations and have been have been "punished" have manged to crawl out of the grave and return in a bigger form. Look at Standard Oil, IBM, AT&T, all of which were found guilty of anti-trust violations. They all fought it tooth and nail in court, and lost, and became mega-powerhouse companies. Standard Oil became the giants Exxon, Mobil and Chevron. AT&T was broken up only to spawn regional mega bells. AT&T itself is re-invading the home via cable. IBM was pursued by DOJ for monopolizing the mainframe market only to return and invent the PC market and give un-holy birth to Microsoft in the first place. Scary, huh?

  207. Re:Get excited. by Mihtjel · · Score: 1

    I would say the exactly opposite. Dont get too excited. M$ is such a big company, this ruling might not matter much, they could buy off the judge anyway, if they wanted to. Stay calm.
    Ofcourse, party anyway. It is great fun.

    -----------------------------------

  208. A judge wrote this? by Case42 · · Score: 1

    I have to agree with Don that Judge Penfield "gets it" My initial response when I started reading the decision was that it sounded more like a techie wrote it than a Judge. I mean a lawyer type discusssing the importance of APIs and cross platform compatibility? After finishing I was impressed that he not only understood the general technical issues involved but also the market dynamics of the computer industry. Of course this is only the first step in the process, there are still sentencing and appeals processes to go through. All that has been established thus far is that Microsoft does hold a monopoly for x86 compatible operating systems, any implications of impropriety contained in the FoF are just that, implications. More fun to come. If you haven't read the entire FoF I recommend reading it all.

  209. Re:I'm probably going to get beat up over this but by Graabein · · Score: 1
    XMMS is X11AMP. They just changed the name.

    See: www.xmms.org

    -- Gunnar

    --
    And remember kids: Never trust a computer you can actually lift.
  210. Right on! woo woo! by Chompster · · Score: 1

    thats all i can say. finally there is "official" evidence for what has been nagging us for so long... and it came from a Judge!
    I'm not sure it would be the greatest thing if M$ went totally bankrupt, but then again.. its very complex... so it might reignite real competition between the I-Tech Corporations. We can only hope for the best... maybe M$ will get the 'ol splitter that Bell got? I just am glad that they finally got what was coming to them. And thanks, don, for the great interpretation.

    --
    This isn't a redundant post; I just set my threshold to 6.
  211. MS Freedom to Innovate Rally of Borg Troops by in8 · · Score: 1

    Looks like the MS lobby is going to Rally Borg troops to counter attack via congress.

    I just visted MS Freedom to Innovate and am feeling rather ill at their abuse of patrotic (USA) symbols. Looks like they are encouraging people to write letters to congress. (and sign up for free MS propaganda) I'm certain that they will get a LOT of MS consultants and Drones to write to congress. (see the cast your vote link.)

    Hmmm - this came just in time for Bill Gates to change the spin on his Fall Comdex Keynote!

  212. Get excited. by Tamriel · · Score: 1

    Even if this IS "only" a Finding of Fact, it makes it soooo much more likely that M$ will either get punished or settle with the DoJ. The Judge has said he finds that M$ is a monopoly and uses its power unfairly. Party.


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    I rather like cows.
  213. Re:I'm probably going to get beat up over this but by junkie+deep · · Score: 1

    Then you're an idiot, because it's extra baggage for a machine that doesn't need IE installed -- say, a machine that's not going to be connected to the Internet. (Those do exist, you know; I have six of them.)

    one question, is it so hard to uninstall IE after installing/running windows? i admit it might be a little harder for a newbie to do this, but thats what its all about, learning. when you first started using linux, or whatever os you use, did you automatically know how to do everything? i highly doubt it. i think that if people are going to bitch about it, and won't take the time to learn how to do it for themselves, then they have no right to bitch and don't deserve special attention. i seem to recall a wonderfull phrase that coinsides with this.

    "you can't help those, who can't help themselves."

    now, i do feel that ms has played somewhat dirty within the industry, that is a fact that cannot be denied. but i cannot agree with some of this bitching that is useless, and will ultimately drain more of my tax dollars to make these sorry people happy. i am also all for DomitianX's idea of developing an os that can rival windows in stability/usefullness/ease of use, or even making linux a bit more 'computer illiterate user-friendly'. till that happens, i guess all those newbies out there are stuck with windows and IE.

    ---i am one for compromise. run two comps, one with windoze, the other with linux.

  214. I'm probably going to get beat up over this but... by DomitianX · · Score: 1

    I know this is going to start a slam fest and I know it is going to causes some serious flames my way but...

    I actually dont mind the Windows OS and am glad they integrated the browser into Windows.

    Just to let you all know, I prefer Linux to Windows, but as for ease of use and configuration for people I build computers for, I prefer Windows and the apps I use for my job requires MS Windows.

    Some people will start screaming Mac, Mac, Mac but I cannot easily replace a chip in a Mac to make it a bit faster, a faster modem is 3 times the cost of a PC, RAM costs much more, a video card is outrageously priced, etc....

    I do not agree with allot of the judges "finding of facts" and I really believe this huge waste of my damn tax dollars should never have begun.

    I sometimes build computers for people that have never used a computer. It is much easier for them to start the computer, click on the big globe, dial up to the Internet and then surf around for a while and that is who most of the users are. They may change their desktop to put a picture of their kids on it, but that is about it.

    If I install a Linux OS on their computer, it is going to be nearly impossible for them to get help with problems with their computer and they are going to call me. If they have Windows, they can usually get tips/tricks/help from people they work with, friends, family, etc. They are not going to want to get into IRC or newsgroups to solve problems.

    It is kind of like owning a Benz or Saab. Finding people to repair them is allot harder than a GM or Ford.

    Now I understand that if I took the time to show them how to compile a piece of software, or modify their path or mount drives, etc, they wouldnt need to find help or call me all the time, but face it, the average user does not want to know how to do this, they want to point and click and Windows has done a fairly good job at this. The Mac is much simplier but the cost of a Mac and the upgrade ability over shadows its ease of use to most people.

    Average user: "Why is it telling me I need to be root to do this?"

    Average user: "Why do I have to remember all these passwords?"

    Average user: "What is /dev/hda1?"

    Average user: "What is make? Do I do make or make install?"

    Look at the cosumer market for other products. The clapper for example. How many times have we made fun of that commercial? I actually know a few people that bought it. Bread machines are another example. People want the smell, taste and texture of fresh bread, but they dont want to spend the time rolling the dough, letting it rise and then baking it. They want to open the packets, dump the ingredients in and then go watch soaps.

    Now as far as browsers go, I prefer IE over Netscape. I have less problems with IE than I do with Netscape. They both crash just as often, but rendering HTML is better in IE.

    The most annoying thing about Netscape is that if the HTML writer forgets to put the /table tag or /select or mispells the tag, Netscape displays only part of the page or anything at all. That is annoying. Now I know you are going to say "It's not Netscapes fault the developer is lazy or cant spell" or something similar but I think minor assumptions on the browsers part is fine. "Hey this guy started a table, but he didnt end it, maybe I should put an /table tag here instead of displaying a blank page."

    Now I do have both installed and many versions of each on my Windows PC, but I prefer IE over Netscape.

    I believe if there was a better solution out there for your average person to use easily, it would blow Windows out of the water, but it has yet to arrive.

    The chip industry is a prime example. How long did Intel rule the world for processors?

    Now that AMD has come out with lower cost, faster chips they are giving Intel a hell of a run for their money. I love that!!! That's the american way.

    That is what we need, competition, not the tax wasting government to tell us/MS they are a monopoly on the desktop. DUH! We know that!

    If we would have spent the tax dollars on further developing linux or BeOS and making it easier to use than Windows and make it free for computer manufacturers to OEM it on the new PC's, Bill Gates would be cleaning the toilets of the local McDonalds instead of the government blowing my tax dollars on a lawyers' vendetta because of a "General Protection Fault" or he wanted Netscape instead of IE. Hey dickhead, D O W N L O A D I T ! ! ! !

    Hey Redhat 6.1 came with XMMS instead of X11AMP. I am going to sue Redhat because it did not include my favorite MP3 player. You're bad RH. You're evil!

    Until something better comes along and is easy for the average "computer illiterate" person to turn the computer on without calling me to figure out how to untar or ask me what the hell gzip is, we will have to deal with Windows. Quit blaming Microsoft, pointing fingers at Microsft and develop something that can replace it. Think of Windows as a car. You get pissed at, kick it, hit it and scream at it sometimes, but would you rather ride a horse or walk? I would prefer the heated indoors of a car before I would shovel horse shit or walk out to the barn to feed the horse in the middle of Winter, even if I did get a flat or need an oil change/tune up.

    If you dont like the color of your living room, you paint it, you dont go sue the house builder because you soon realized that the color of the wall clashed with the window treaments you decided to buy.

    If you dont like Windows on every desktop and controlling the PC desktop market, make something better that can replace it. Dont go suing them because you think linux is better or you wanted Netscape instead of IE.

    I am so f**king sick of this "I am going to sue you because I dont like the way I am being treated and I am not happy" world that it makes me sick when people back this huge, worthless waste of my f**king tax dollars.

    My $0.02

  215. Re:I'm probably going to get beat up over this but by DomitianX · · Score: 1

    I never said anybody "should" use anything. I am saying the reason most people use Windows is because people want "ease of use". They want things as easy as they get.

    Microsoft did not create the laziness of the world, they only capitolized on it and sales soared because of it and the monopoly began.

    Start looking around your house to see the laziness of your self.

    Do you have a remote or do you walk up to the TV and turn the channel?

    Do you have a Microwave? Why? Because you want to heat up those left overs quickly.

    Do you have an automatic or a stick shift in your car? Why? Because you get stick of pushing in the clutch.

    Do you use chop sticks to eat chinese food or do you use a fork? Why?

    Somebody that knows nothing about computers would rather point and click than sit at a prompt with a blinking cursor.

    Think about it. Dont blame Microsoft because most people want things as simple as they get.

    I enjoy using Linux. I enjoy compiling software, tweaking, playing and figuring out things I dont know, but most "computer illiterate" people dont. If they start getting into computers heavily, they usually turn to an alternative OS such as *NIX.

    Instead of cyring/blaming/suing Microsoft, develop Linux/BeOS/BSD, etc to kick MS's ass and take over the desktop instead of Windows.

    The reason Linux was never had big support in the begining was because it was not initially developed to overtake Windows. It was more of a college project. If it would have began as an alternative to MS Windows and marketed/promoted as such, it might have taken off.

  216. Re:I'm probably going to get beat up over this but by DomitianX · · Score: 1

    MS is no different than any other big business. They are all kinds of under the table deals along with black mail, bullying in big business.

    MS is no different than any of the other big business companies.

    They all do it, just some get more news than others. Bill just pushed a bit too far and got caught.

    It's like poking somebody in the back of the head until they finally turn around and knock the shit out of you.

    I have sat through that download of Netscape many times when I preferred NS over IE. Especially in the days of IE 2.0 and 3.0l.

    I spent all day downloading Service Pack 6 for NT. I wanted it, so I downloaded the 35MB.

    If I want a piece of software I put up with the download. That is like saying anybody with a strong prefereance to RH will not sit through the numerous hours of downloading the ISO from CROM.com. I have done it. I am downloading Slack 7 right now and I dont think it will be done until Sunday on my 56K dial up. I put up with it.

  217. Re:I'm probably going to get beat up over this but by DomitianX · · Score: 1

    Another thing to think about.

    If Pizza Hut is the only place in town that delivers but you REALLY want Joe's pizza that is 20 minutes away, you will probably get in your car and drive down to Joe's instead of settling for Pizza Hut correct, or are you going to sue Pizza Hut because Joe's pizza is harder to get?

    I know MS did smoe shayd dealings with people and may have used it's monopoly to get its way, but that has been going on for years in other areas.

    How about construction companies that pay city council people to not allow another contractor to get a license in the area or how about a major resturant chain paying city officials to not allow another chain to get a liquor license in town.

    Us consumers have been dealing with this type of thing for years.

  218. Will someone save the M$ confernce audio? by ClarkEvans · · Score: 1

    It's absurd. It's pretty supid. I'd love a slash dot comment on it. Let's get it saved, transcribed, and collect a response.

  219. QEMM, DR-DOS??? by Poingggg · · Score: 1

    You obviously never used doublespace, or QEMM, or DR-DOS. Oh yeah, what about them stacker folks?

    Uhhh....Doublespace was MS, and indeed, it sucked. But QUEMM was a Quarterdeck product, DR-DOS was not M$ (forgot what DR stood for), and Stacker was not M$. So what are you trying to say here???

    Personally I have had no trouble with MS-DOS 6.x, avoided Doublespace because i knew it sucked and (sort of) skipped W3.x for the same reason. (Now I'm using W95, didn't know in time it also sucks :-(. )


    --
    What person will donate an airborne act of love?
  220. M$ ramblings by a reformed attorney/geek by rootrot · · Score: 1
    I've read the FoF twice and am really taken aback by how "good" it actually is. We do not have a history of many judges really getting their brains around the technical issues in matters before them. Thus we tend to get the application of *old* style case law to our current market litigation. At times it works...usually it doesn't.

    This judge really did get his brain around an incredibly complex modern monopoly. He has laid the groundwork in his FoF for a strong response to M$' behavior. Consider Section VII [The Effect on Consumers of M$'s Efforts to Protect the Applications Barrier to Entry](pp. 408-412). The implications are *very* clear that the *only* remedy to M$'s stranglehold on an entire industry is via its breakup.

    While people are going to bemoan or hail this, the fact is it will probably be better both for the public and, truly, for M$ and its shareholders (who will probably be seeing a 3-5 to 1 stock split in the not so distant future). The smaller units will compete with eachother and others and arguably innovate/evolve better and faster .

    Look at the history of similar predecessors, Standard Oil and ATT. What was lost in both cases in economy of scale was more than made up for through new competition and smaller, more dynamic companies. ATT, for one, is still spinning off units without Gov. intervention...Lucent is up what, 727% or thereabouts???? Consider some of those broken up "remnants," Chevron, Amoco, Gulf, Ameritech, BellAtlantic etc etc etc.

    The smartest thing M$ could do right now is to stop fighting and proactively cut themselves apart. They are already into this litigation in the neighborhood of $50MM in attorney fees. I do not foresee the FoF being sucessfully challenged. It is time to smell the future.

    Break it up and have 3-5 strong companies move forward. The alternative is another year or two of stunningly expensive heal dragging.

    rootrot

  221. Simple cost/benefit analysis... by rootrot · · Score: 1
    As a follow-up to my earlier critique it occurs to me that a simple cost/benefit analysis wholly supports M$'s behavior throughout. Judge Jackson has painstakingly detailed M$'s anti-competitive and monopolistic practices and demonstrated repeatedly the direct and negative impact this behavior had on the industry and consumers...SO WHAT.

    Weigh on one side the "cost" of such practices: $50MM++ in legal fees, another few hundred MM dollars related litigation costs/settlements, add anticipated costs of a breakup and/or civil/criminal liability of anywhere from $1 to $10BB. Realistically the downside could fall somewhere in the $2BB to $10BB range.

    Having just spent an hour or so poking about M$'s financial history (http://www.microsoft.com/msft/history.htm) I find that M$ is sitting on about $19BB in *cash*. The bottom line is that in the great scheme of things, M$ has made *WAY* more money via monopolistic practices than those practices will ever "cost" them.

    That said, perhaps we should remember the greatest of all corporate cost/benefit analysis...the Ford Pinto case. Ford's actuaries based their analysis on a human life being worth about $200K vs. a repair cost of about $3.68/car. The first judgement came back around $2.4MM and they took a bath. Perhaps that will happen here. I doubt it.

    FWIW I think M$, evil manipulative bastards as they may well be, is a great stock buy right now. One way or another I think we are going to see the birth of several strong companies out of the golden ashes of M$.

    rootrot

  222. While lacking the purulent content of the Starr... by rootrot · · Score: 1
    Report it does make a damn good read from a "history of the industry" standpoint. If, however, the judge wants to market this 207 page gem it needs some sex appeal. To that end, I offer the following rumors I have heard about the forthcoming Index.

    First, it has been said that the index will contain the detailed reports of M$'s use of fetal tissue to create the inks it uses in it's manuals.

    There is also an analysis of the unsubstantiated rumor that much of M$'s bloatware is the product of thousands of chained, blindfolded and nude young college grads trapped in the Redmond Dungeons, randomly pounding on keys to created the outstanding applications inflicted upon us all.

    Further, the index will detail M$'s poorly conceived "collectible" Certificates of Authenticity, embossed on human skin.

    Assuming Judge Jackson is willing to tell the *true tales* of M$'s morally bankrupt practices and not just page after page of monopolistic and anti-competitive drivel he could end up with the greats of the bench, Judge Starr and Judge Ito.

    I'm going to go read the last section over and over till I drift off to sleep...........

    rootrot

  223. Re:Only 2 points for M$; FoF more than I expected. by mushroom · · Score: 1

    The FoF is so goddamn clear its a work of art. It's legal writing at its best.

    --
    -Every time I see you flourishing with a metaphor I experience the same anxiety I feel watching a child with a razor-
  224. Only 2 points for M$; FoF more than I expected. by Retief · · Score: 1
    After reading it all, it looks like a near sweep against M$. I found just 2 points in M$'s favor in it:
    1. They didn't pursue control of ALL web presentation.
      "384. Although the suspicion lingers, the evidence is insufficient to find that Microsoft's ambition is a future in which most or all of the content available on the Web would be accessible only through its own browsing software. The evidence does, however, reveal an intent to ensure that if and when full-featured, server-based applications begin appearing in large numbers on the Web, the number of them relying solely on middleware APIs (such as those exposed by Navigator) will be too few to attenuate the applications barrier to entry."
      )
    2. They did encourage lower browser prices and provide competition (and an alternative) to Netscape for a time.
      "408. The debut of Internet Explorer and its rapid improvement gave Netscape an incentive to improve Navigator's quality at a competitive rate. The inclusion of Internet Explorer with Windows at no separate charge increased general familiarity with the Internet and reduced the cost to the public of gaining access to it, at least in part because it compelled Netscape to stop charging for Navigator. These actions thus contributed to improving the quality of Web browsing software, lowering its cost, and increasing its availability, thereby benefitting consumers."
    M$ must see it the same way as they're already pointing out number two in a press conference as the "favorable aspects" of the ruling. I'd like to see them try to tout number one too. :-)

    Actually, the FoF goes way farther than I expected it to. Not only does it say, "Yes, M$ has a monopoly; yes, M$ used that monopoly to force IE on people." (Which I thought was the point, I may not understand the law well.) It also states that M$ did all these things specifically and delibrately to protect its OS monopoly from even a potential threat of competition.

    We should also note that the FoF very clearly talks about "PC Systems" as opposed to server systems.
    I wonder what effect this case (which does focus on browser/desktop) will have on Win2K/Office2K/ActiveDirectory which, IMHO, includes a very clear attempt to use the Windows and Office monopoly to force people away from Internet standard services (DNS/DHCP/LDAP) toward the M$ Win2K "enhanced" versions.

    The FoF document is clearly the work of a non-computer person who has labored very hard to understand the complexities of the industry--and done a good job of it.

    Retief

  225. Re:I don't think Don gets it. by Dracos · · Score: 1

    This is not big bother trying to regulate the software industry--it's big brother stopping m$ from regulating the Intel software industry.

  226. Stock Market - Dow Jones by recon1984 · · Score: 1

    As we can all guess, MS's stock will probably pulmet upon opening on monday. Which, frankly, would be fine by me, excempt for one thing.

    The Dow Jones average, often and incorrectly, is used as an economic indicator by many, many individuals and media personnal. And guess whose stock was append to the Dow Jones on November 1st, that's right, Microsoft.

    Monday opening should cause a sharp, and artifical, drop in the Dow Jones Industial. Which can be safely ingored by any educated individual. However, me assumation is that many investors are not sufficient knowledgable on such things.

    Thus trading volume on services such as E*Trade,etc. will be quite high on monday, as hundred of thousands of "E Traders" panic, try to cut their losses and end up losing their shirts.

    All I can hope is that this will not cause some sort of idiotic panic, thus sinking everyone along with Microsoft.

  227. Thank you, Slashdot! by Travoltus · · Score: 1


    For bringing in a credible legal source to provide us professional opinions and insight on legal issues in the industry. I hope that you do this quite often on other issues as well.

    --
    --- Grow a pair, liberals... stop letting the Republicans bully you!
  228. THe MS ruling may not mean much after all by whitey07 · · Score: 1

    THis judge has been over-ruled several times on previous MS decisions he has made, especially regarding some of the fof about IE. The appeals court has previously ruled that Judge Jackson is in no postion to make a technical determination of internet explorer for example paragraph 173 that ie has a negative effect on consumers. That is only one example of some of the questionable findings from a legal point of view that judge jackson made. He is right about some things - MS does things that are restrictive and anticompetive and the court should require that MS change some of its practice. I wish I had the time and space to to go through the fof line by but i don't. Just don't be surprised if the appeals court overrules judge jackson and restricts the type of damages he can order plus changes the fof despite what the /. legal expert says. This trial is not over by any means and the only way to tell who truly won is to wait a few years and then make a determination. Ed Bailey

  229. Same Rules...... by PAS · · Score: 1

    I doubt that Microsoft or any software manufacture will have much luck if they do enough research. I personally was involved with a Federal Copyright Lawsuit and the Judge ruled in a Summary Judgement the following: "A person(s) cannot copyright something that is based on fact" FACT: Computer of all types use Binary, now what?

  230. The Judge - the Ultimate Geek by Boom11 · · Score: 1

    Having read the full ruling and being well versed in programming, law and business, I cannot help recommending all ./s to read the complete ruling carefully. This man seems to know about computers as much as most of us do and he seems to know business better than most MBA's I know. His legal quals obviously need no comment. Use the force, Luke!

  231. Concerned with the judge by hellman69 · · Score: 1

    While I do believe MS did have monopoly and possibly used its power in that position more so than it should have, I'm not comfortable with the judge's comments. He seems blantanly biased. Heck, /.'s legal consultant even mentioned it. I feel better results would be had if someone more netrual had presided over this case. I don't know, maybe I just have too much faith in the legal system operating the way it was meant to. -Trevor

  232. Re:The Crash of 1999 by gigawatt · · Score: 1

    The last time a company that had such an extensive pyramid scheme with their stocks was in existence was 1929 - Edison. They had a margin call scheme involving their stock that eventually led to the great depression. Checks and balances being what they are today, I would be surprised if that happened .. but all of MS's pratcies are in question, so let's not lose perspective on that. They pay employees with stock options that are based on a 3 month point of employment strike price ... translated, when an employee joined in 1991, the value of their stock options was written as the value at the 3 month period of employment. The employee gets vested 3 years later when the stock is worth considerably more in 1994 - where did the money come from for this? Expenses among otehr things. MS does not perform their accounting properly and in accordance with acepted practices. Employees are paid with money that exists only in the value of the stock ... this leads to a loss in value for all programmers. They jump ship. Where does that leave MS? When you developed a competing software package to anything MS was doing, they would levy a fee for you using their tools of about 6 bucks per packge ... you don't see anything remotely monopolistic in this? I can't install TCP/IP without MSIE on my system. If I have a low resource PC, it will get dragged into an upgrade cycle. Granted, HW vendors appear to benefit with all of this support and cost associated and referred to as "value" but when all is said and done the only winner in thie has been heir Billy. This matters SO MUCH to the software industry ... it signals a coopetive model is now to be the norm. MS is in a win-win position though ... They have the existing user base. They stand to stay a large corporation with tax losses going forward they will benefit from forever. They stand to be broken up into accountable, profitable sub entities just like during the AT&T divestiture. They already have a greater mindshare due to the lockstep support structure hat they have fostered in the industry. For a million reasons, this is likely the watershed ruling of the industry and the beginning of the need for a digital economic laws model to be implemented. We all won. Judge Jackson is spot on in all his findings. MS is attempting excercises in blame management and damage control, but as a couple writers have pointed out, you can ask to have an appeal heard, but this decision could be relatively final. 50 million is the very tip of the iceberg for MS. If I owned MS stock I'd sell "today" and wait for the buying opp next week ... the stock will go down until this is sorted out. Oh ... and I'd buy Sun with the money I had. it will go up in the short term as a knee jerk to all this.

  233. Re: Slashdot's "Instant" Legal Analysis... by ixia · · Score: 2
    Redundancy plus: An FoF mirror with navigation or download plain text.

    Reference Don's paragraph cites in a flash, dot.

  234. Re:I don't think Don gets it. by persist1 · · Score: 1

    This is the first step of the feds to regulate the computer industry. Their foot is now in the door.

    I've never really seen that. What I see, is the government insisting that Microsoft (and the rest of the s/w industry) follow the same basic rules as the rest of the American business community. Or: to the extent that this gives the government a running start toward prohibiting Microsoft-like behavior in the future, maybe it does put their foot in the door.

    Let's also not forget the large amount of money that large companies have been pouring into Linux. If say they make windozes free, or open the code up to everyone. Who will want to invest in Linux? We already have a hard enough time getting real top of the line apps like it is. Linux's biggest thing is that it works alot better than winblows, and it's free.

    But, if Windows is completely opened, then Microsoft will have no incentive to invest in it, either. Bye-bye business plan! Besides, that doesn't change the fact that *x is still a better example of good s/w engineering.

    Plus, why have companies been switching to Linux? Not because it runs cool apps, but because it's stable, because it's not at the mercy of what billg&co decide to do with their OS.

    Linux has gained many new users over the past year. One common question I see in newsgroups is always about apps, and hardware support. We are just beginning to get companies to move in our direction for a choice. A free windoze might reverse that.

    ...Temporarily. I think that the mandating of exposure of Windows code at a low opportunity cost is the best way to go - it keeps M$ in the business, forces them make sincere efforts toward innovation, and opens up the market. Besides, who in the open source community would put as much heart into Windows, as they have into *x?

    Breaking M$ up isn't going to solve anything. Opening it up would, but at the same time it would harm Linux as a whole a lot more. Will the feds tell Redhat what text editor they can include just because some company sells one?

    Breaking up MS would in the long run do wonders for the economy, by dispersing talent throughout the industry (yes, Microsoft actually has some of that, hard as it may be to believe) to organizations that can make more-efficient use of it. It would annihilate the marketing tactics that Microsoft has used to such immense success, especially in this decade.

    ...And if Microsoft were broken up, Linux developers would be presented with a golden opportunity, 'cause they quickly be able to offer the most coherent product support. e.g. such a breakup would create a power vacuum which the *x community is presently best-positioned to fill.

    There are two very important questions, though.

    • If Microsoft were broken up, how would the other titans (Compaq, IBM, and especially Intel) respond?

      All I can say is, people will eventually have nightmares over the answers to this question.
    • If the *x community was suddenly handed this opportunity to fill a vacuum, would they be able to do it without squabbling themselves to death?

      I certainly hope not.
    --
    ...When in doubt, think for yourself.