Plateforme Level Extreme
Abonnement
Profil corporatif
Produits & Services
Support
Légal
English
Friday evening musings...
Message
De
06/05/2000 23:39:40
 
Information générale
Forum:
Visual FoxPro
Catégorie:
Autre
Divers
Thread ID:
00366947
Message ID:
00367056
Vues:
25
Barbara,

Thing is, modern business is war. Nasty, ugly, and sometimes illegal which should be punished vigorously in the courts.

The trouble I see here is that Sun, Netscape, et al used the federal government to wage their battle rather than do it themselves. I suppose a case could be made that this is exactly when a government should step in and I'd tend to agree but in this case I also think that the goverment is also more than a little afraid of the power center moving from Washington, DC to Washington State. IOW, I do not think the government's motives were/are as pure as they'd like others to believe.

This troubles me a lot as I see punishment of success displacing punishment of the abuse of the competative process.

As the government's actions are all post facto they can do little about the future.

Best,

DD

>>I was sitting out on my patio last night, having a couple of cold ones, and a thought occurred to me. This isn't terribly unusual, however, the normal course is for me to totally discard it the next day. This is the exception.
>>
>>I was considering the "remedy" that the DOJ is going to try to impose on Microsoft. For the sake of completeness here, let's review:
>
>< snip >
>
>George et al., IMHO the DOJ has the wrong end of the problem. Anyone who truly builds a better mousetrap should be able to reap the rewards. And anyone who doesn't think that MS' ability to link Word, Excel, WSH, VFP etc. etc. isn't a better mousetrap wasn't around when every PC had a slightly different DOS (MS-DOS, IBM-DOS, CompaqDOS, EagleDOS) and a different way of formatting floppy disks. This is equivalent to your car only being able to use gasoline from one supplier. If your local BrandBuick gas station was out of gas or too expensive you couldn't go to the BrandNissan down the street.
>
>Now that is NOT the same thing as using clout to stifle competition. Where I think DOJ has a case is with the way MS forced computer sellers to license and install only MS software, thus damaging Netscape, Sun/Java etc. This is the area (again, IMO) where DOJ should make their changes. This may be their intended approach: Separate out the OS section, and Dell/Gateway/etc. will be able to negotiate with MS-OS for a good deal on installing Win2000 on new computers without their being any pressure to install IE/Word/etc.
>
>Unfortunately I'm a firm believer that almost every businessman will use as much inside information as he can get. If people used snail mail instead of email and shredded the mail after reading (as well as deleting the original docs after printing, of course) there could be a lot of collusion without much of a record. If they made their deals while walking through the local park, there'd be even less.
>
>On a slightly different note, I was listening to NPR and heard a lawyer who had worked on the AT&T/Baby Bell breakup. She said the ONLY reason it worked is because AT&T cooperated and actually broke themselves into pieces. Her opinion was that MS will be bigger than ever in 10 years.
>
>< steps off soapbox >
Best,


DD

A man is no fool who gives up that which he cannot keep for that which he cannot lose.
Everything I don't understand must be easy!
The difficulty of any task is measured by the capacity of the agent performing the work.
Précédent
Suivant
Répondre
Fil
Voir

Click here to load this message in the networking platform