Posted on 01/06/2003 4:00:44 AM PST by chilepepper
From the title of this paper you may have guessed that I am less than pleased with the guys in Redmond. One might even say that my dislike for Microsoft is a pet hate gone out of control in an almost quixotic fashion. Why is this?
Of course I have been accused of personal antipathy, of being jealous of Bill Gates and his billions, and of being prejudiced against all things Microsoft without any reason whatsoever. But none of this is true. I have nothing personal against Bill Gates. Why should I? I don't know the man, I've never met him. I agree with those who say he might be the most succesful salesman in history. And I've always thought that even one billion in almost any currency is more than I could reasonably spend.
No. It's rather his business practices, and that of his company, that I am opposed to, for a large and still growing number of reasons, most of which are plain, verifiable facts. Let me explain.
Microsoft controls the current software market and has a de facto monopoly on the desktop. This monopoly has not been achieved and is not being maintained by offering the user community better products than Microsoft's competitors can offer. On the contrary, Microsoft has earned a reputation for selling unreliable software.
Windows is a technically inferior operating system with a seriously flawed architecture, weak security model and sloppy code, while other Microsoft applications are equally kludgey. New Microsoft products offer no essential improvements over previous or competing products, and their Return On Investment is between small and zero, in spite of Microsoft's boasts about being innovative and customer-driven.
Instead of making better software, Microsoft has focused on using brilliant but doubtful marketing tactics to force their products upon the user community in order to establish and maintain their monopoly. These methods include a tight integration of applications into the operating system, the bundling of applications with Windows to force competing application vendors out of the market, the mandatory bundling of Windows with new computer equipment, deliberate limitations in the compatibility of their own software with competing products, contracts that prohibit third parties to do business with anyone but Microsoft, and retaliatory practices against non-cooperating vendors. In addition to this, third-party developers are induced, through cheap or free development kits and the sabotaging of alternatives, to develop applications that contain proprietary system calls, are virtually non-portable, and are therefore bound to the MS-Windows platform. These methods only serve to further inflate Microsoft's already obscene profit margins, at the price of the interests of the user community, the IT market and the field of computer technology as a whole.
(Excerpt) Read more at euronet.nl ...
I resemble that remark!
Actually, I think this article puts it mildly.
Am beginning to think there's a special spot reserved in a very hot place for those upper leaders involved with a fraction of Redmond's infuriating fiendishness.
Funny, I can go online right now and order a computer sans operating system. This is an old axe he's grinding here, worn dull.
Getting an OS-free PC is a fairly new phenomena typically limited to REFURBISHED machines and you have to know where to look to find those...
Of course, since day one you could assemble your own computer from components and install whatever OS you wanted...
As for the article, it presents many new facts i wasn't aware of: in particular Windows XP is really not much more than NT... I thought it was a new code base (should have known better)
IIRC, IBM pretty much ignored it too; OS2 suffered from it's own maker's indifference as much as anything else.
If Microsoft breaks the law, they should be prosecuted. I believe there was a trial ... but I do not recall too much wrong-doing being proven.
If the government passes legislation to benefit Microsoft, than that is un-American. I believe there was a trial ... in which the US government tried to punish Microsoft.
The way I see it, Microsoft competes, within the letter of the law, and trounces all opponents. But the opponents are still out there, so that all the Microsoft haters can use the opposing software, if they wish. Why cry about that?
I'm a UNIX guy. But people who hate Microsoft really irk me. Businesses which follow the law should be allowed to thrive if the marketplace delivers profits to the business.
That's capitalism. I'm a conservative. Do the math.
Microsoft AGAIN AND AGAIN uses its monopolistic power to try to stifle competition, as do all monopolies. Check
THIS article on what M$ did to the Sendo Phone Company.
You should read the entire article Why I Hate Microsoft. It is one thing to support the free market in theory, but by the same token the exchange of information regarding the ethics of a company is one of the factors which needs to be considered by a consumer in making their choice in order to assertain the VALUE of what they are buying:
or do you feel that Microsoft should have FREE REIN and the history & corporate philosophy & truth about their products should be suppressed?
Obvious political bribery going on there it seemed to me.
Given the fact that Linux won out on that one, I can't help but wonder of those hundreds of millions will ever materialize(?)
Agreed. I write software for MS systems at work and at home use both Win2000 and Linux (just built a new machine last week and upgraded to Redhat 8.0). I like both OSs. But though the Linux OS is stable its apps crash much more often than the apps on my MS machines. Whoever says Linux apps are more stable than MS apps is just blowing smoke.
OpenBSD FreeBSD NetBSD The 1 BILLION flavours of Linux (some popular flavours are are Red Hat, Mandrake, SuSe and Slackware)
LindowsOS
Apple's MaC OS X
and that's just starters...
However, Microsoft does engage in monopolistic practises. If a monopoly did NOT engage in monopolistic practises, then i wouldn't have a beef over this. The practises are the bad part, not whether or not they are a monopoly...
But this is the core of what I think is wrong with the Microsoft haters!
You don't like the tactics? Well, are they illegal? Doesn't seem so to me. Or the US government. The tactics displease you. Boo-frickin-Hoo! France displeases me. But it's not going anywhere.
You don't like the quality of its products? Don't buy the products! Businesses that have poor quality go out of business. Microsoft isn't going out of business. The company quite obviously provides something of benefit to its customers. Standardization is not a bad thing. I remember the alternative.
I believe that corporations should have free rein to do anything they want within the letter of the law. In general, I think we have too many laws that restrict economic success. But that's a side point. Given the laws today, I think Microsoft should do anything it can, and if it goes too far, then it will get sued and it can take take its lumps. I'm a capitalist. If you want more laws on the books to limit Microsoft, go lobby for more laws.
This bashing of corporations which are trying to generate profits and trying to employ greater numbers of Americans is something I expect from Gore supporters.
I have it on good authority that the pre-nuptial specified that Melinda wouldn't do windows...
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