Posted on 02/23/2006 7:31:29 AM PST by N3WBI3
Not in the current business environment, but at the time IE was made free it was an exercise in monopolistic dumping.
You read the blurb. Read the whole story.
"I end up having to be fairly vocal about it, just because I have to explain to people -- most of whom hate DRM -- why the key-signing clauses are problematic, and why we don't even want to entertain upgrading the license as it stands now."The difference between Linus and Stallman is easily summed up here:
I think Linux has made the GPL more 'socially acceptable,' by being a hell of a lot less religious about it than the FSF was. ... To me the point of the GPL is not the 'convert the infidels' logic, but something totally different: 'quid pro quo.'"
In the article he still says now way as the draft stands now (see my other post). It is still a draft. He may accept the GPL3 final version for Linux if they remove the offending parts.
What does that have to do with any of this?
In the context of a monopoly it was dumping. The OEM thing was technically tying, another aspect of monopolistic practices. These things can be okay in general, but the context of the (then) current business environment and state of technology they were illegal.
Where's your proof? Why should I believe anything you say, I've already busted you for lying on this exact thread!
Got something from Microsoft, saying this is allowed and that you face no liability for running it on Linux?
Apple dumped Linux supporter IBM's chips to allow users to dual boot Windows and OSX on Intel, a response to Linux gaining on if not already passing Apple market share.
Hysterical! Do you even know what you just linked? Do you even know the difference between Palm and PalmSource, or what me and renuzit were talking about? Apparently not! But, it didn't stop you from coming along with one of your foreign sources and claiming to! LMAO!
Obviously, as we are now seeing. Practically everyone else will to, it's Stallman's lead.
That's the first time I've heard that one. Most believe it's any or all of these reasons
No doubt the notebook processors were a big reason why, but free Linux is eating *nix's lunch in many cases, and that includes OSX. Solaris can now go toe to toe on Intel, and so will OSX. Not sure how you never understood what was going on, when two of the most well known journalists covering Linux and Apple were all over it.
http://www.eweek.com/article2/0,1895,1824810,00.asp
http://www.marketwatch.com/News/Story/Story.aspx?guid=%7BD0E8469A%2D28FC%2D415D%2D9281%2DC97B5FA2CA3D%7D&siteid=mktw&dist=nbs
Huh? Apple dumped Intel because they were not happy with the heat issues on the G5 that kept apple from putting their top of the line processors in the powerbook. It was a good decision based on the architecture of the chips and apples needs. Linux was nowhere by apple was mentioned as a factor.
So what? They are obvious and natural competitors, battling for number 2 on the desktop. The point remains, the threat of free software like Linux is causing heretofore unthinkable partnerships, from Palm and Microsoft, to Sun and Microsoft, to Apple and Intel. Without the arrival of open source like Linux none of those partnerships would have happened. To think it was all simply simultaneous coincidence is laughable. IBM is the only major vendor contributing to GPL software, all others are either exploiting it, isolating it, or buying it and killing it.
So... unless youre a mindreader you have no factual basis for the statement "they did it because of Linux"
I don't think I've ever seen a thinner spine. At least you haven't balled to the moderator yet, or maybe you have but they figured it's time you finally spent an afternoon on your own.
You mean Mr. "I've been becoming increasingly unhinged lately" Dvorak?
Linux is nowhere a danger to Windows or OS X on the public desktop for the near future. The user experience is too fragmented for Joe User. If it were warranted, Apple had ample opportunity to be afraid of Linux already since Linux has been running on PPC for a while. Linux Torvalds' preferred machine is Linux on a PowerMac.
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