Archive for April 22nd, 2009

Everything You Need to Know About M$

ECIS, the European Committee for Interoperable Systems, has gained intervenor status in the EU v M$, a case about tying the IE browser to that other OS. ECIS published a report that documents well the long history of anti-competitive acts and harm to consumers done by M$. You must read it.

Here are some excerpts:

“This anti-trust thing will blow over. We haven’t changed our business practices at all.”
— Bill Gates, Microsoft founder and then-CEO (1995)3

“If we own the key “franchises” built on top of the operating system, we dramatically widen the “moat” that protects the operating system business…. We hope to make a lot of money off these franchises, but even more important is that they should protect our Windows royalty per PC…. And success in those businesses will help increase the opportunity for future pricing discretion.8

” Most operating systems are purchased by original equipment manufacturers (“OEMs”), such as Dell and HP. OEMs preinstall operating systems on the computers they manufacture before selling the computers to consumers. In the late 1980s, Microsoft began requiring OEMs to pay Microsoft a “per processor license fee” for each computer they shipped, regardless of whether they installed Windows on the computer.28 This arrangement gave OEMs a powerful incentive not to pay for and install competing operating systems. In 1994, the U.S. Department of Justice (“DOJ”) filed an antitrust suit against Microsoft challenging this conduct, resulting in a consent decree under which Microsoft agreed to stop using per processor license fees.29 But the anticompetitive practice had already been quite effective in reducing competitors’ share, particularly when combined with Microsoft’s other actions directed against DR-DOS.30 The DOJ consent decree also sought to impose some forward-looking relief by prohibiting Microsoft from bundling other products into its now-dominant Windows operating system. The decree included a proviso that permitted Microsoft to build “integrated” products, however, and Microsoft later took the position that, under the
decree, it could bundle “‘a ham sandwich’ in the box with a PC preinstalled with Windows 95”and “require OEMs to take the whole package.”31

” Also in the mid-1990s, Microsoft took a series of steps to punish IBM for promoting a competing operating system and personal productivity application suite. At the time, in addition to developing software in competition with Microsoft, IBM was also a major OEM, selling personal computers. As such, IBM was a major customer of Microsoft’s. Microsoft retaliated against IBM for developing competing software products by charging IBM discriminatorily high license prices for Windows, delaying licensing negotiations with IBM for Windows 95, and withholding technical support.33 Microsoft informed IBM executives that it would only stop treating IBM less favorably than other OEMs when IBM ceased competing with Microsoft’s software offerings.34 This resulted in $180 million in lost revenue for IBM,35 and other damages IBM eventually brought suit against Microsoft and Microsoft settled the claim for $775 million.36

This goes on for 33 pages and leaves no doubt that M$ is not a reliable provider of IT in an open market. There are details of which I was not aware but this document puts everything in one place. I was not involved with servers in the 1990s so I was interested to read how M$ obtained dominance in servers on the LAN. Embrace, extend, extinguish all the way. They kept changing things so that no one could interoperate with them. I saw that in my recent struggle to get a terminal server running GNU/Linux to authenticate with 2003. What a waste of time and barrier to migration. How much easier it would have been to start up LDAP and use only GNU/Linux but how many organizations of any size want to expose their accumulated data to a risky/uncertain changeover?

M$ is a monster. It is horribly real. We must avoid dealing with it as customers. Let is starve. How sad that justice is so delayed in these matters.

- Robert Pogson



Archives by Month

Recent Comments

My Mission

My observations and opinions about IT are based on 40 years of use in science and technology and lately, in education. I like IT that is fast, cost-effective and reliable. I do not care whether my solution is the same as yours. I like to think for myself.

My first use of GNU/Linux in 2001 was so remarkably better than what I had been using, I feel it is important work to share GNU/Linux with the world. I have been blessed by working in schools where students and school systems have benefited by good, modular software easily installed in most systems.

I have shown GNU/Linux to thousands of students and hundreds of teachers over the years and will continue in some way doing that until I die in spite of the opposition.

Posts

April 2009
S M T W T F S
« Mar   May »
 1234
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
2627282930  

    Writing

    3433 articles
    30636 comments

      Comments

      platforms
      linux 17488
      windows 12787
      macos 206
      sun 3
      wp 2

      browsers
      firefox 23938 
      safari 11872 
      chrome 11724 
      ie 4651 
      iceweasel 4268 
      opera 1643 
      konqueror 198 
      netnewswire 14 
      epiphany 2 
      flock 0 
      bonecho 0 
      lynx 0 

Bad Behavior has blocked 6598 access attempts in the last 7 days.