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Reply to: So Microsoft have done it
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Previously on "So Microsoft have done it"
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Originally posted by bored View PostWhat does that have to do with Sun?
In any case, a bundled product has more value for the consumer - in most other industries bundling is a common and natural practice, why should software be different?
Most other industries , my friend , don't have the phemomena Microsoft , so you cannot compare. To be honest I don't know if this monopoly is for good or bad.
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Originally posted by 2uk View Post
In any case, a bundled product has more value for the consumer - in most other industries bundling is a common and natural practice, why should software be different?
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After the Microsoft antitrust case found that Microsoft held and had abused monopoly power, AOL filed suit against it for damages.[9] This suit was settled in May 2003 when Microsoft paid US $750 million to AOL and agreed to share some technologies, including granting AOL a license to use and distribute Internet Explorer royalty-free for seven years.[10][11] This was considered to be the death knell for Netscape.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Netscape
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Originally posted by 2uk View PostIf you have missed , Sun a couple of years ago had a successful case against Microosft. The case was that MS has not disclosed enough information about Windows internals making Sun's product less , less , less... capable of working correctly on Windows.
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Originally posted by 2uk View PostThe case was that MS has not disclosed enough information about Windows internals making Sun's product less , less , less... capable of working correctly on Windows.
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Originally posted by AtW View PostThis is one of the biggest rubbish myths out there - secret APIs that made Microsoft stuff better.
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[QUOTE=thunderlizard;403412]I used Netscape up until 3 or 4 years ago, when they released a version that had the hugest memory leak I've ever seen QUOTE]
Or Windows had a secret feature ...
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Originally posted by d000hg View PostNetscape were the ones who lost out to FireFox through ludicrous decisions.
Good thing is that they funded Mozilla however - otherwise we'd be stuck with IE.
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Netscape's foul-up is web-known and their own fault. MS ensured they are the dominant browser but Netscape were the ones who lost out to FireFox through ludicrous decisions.
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Court case had wrong vector of attack - they somehow tried to argue that bundling IE was anti-competitive whereas it was 100% Microsoft decision to do so, what WAS anti-competitive is Microsoft's threats to remove Windows license from OEMs who would bundle Netscape as well - now THAT was 100% illegal action by Microsoft and this is what prosecution should have focused on.
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The court case was just for show. Microsoft stalled until it didn't matter..It was a win win for them.
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I used Netscape up until 3 or 4 years ago, when they released a version that had the hugest memory leak I've ever seen (that must have been v4 - thanks AtW). They were good for a while but threw it all away long ago.
Michael Lewis's book about Jim Clark is a thumping good read though, and a great way to relive the 90s.
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