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For god sake Microsoft is NOT A MONOPOLY!
All these ridiculous lawsuits posed against them always seem to lay the burden of proof on them.
"You are anti-competetive" "No we're not" "Prove it!" Which of course opposite to how anyone else is tried in the US. First things first: What is a monopoly? The term itself is vague, but economically it means the SOLE provider of a good or service. What good or services does Microsoft currently provide? 1. PDAs 2. Operating Systems 3. Office suites 4. Keyboards/Mice 5. Internet Browser 6. Instant messenger client 7. Webmail 8. Media Player Are they the sole provider of ANY of these? Absolutely NOT. They are of course the sole provider of MICROSOFT products, but Coke is the sole provider of Coke products, and no one makes a fuss over that. Microsoft CANNOT charge whatever they want for these products because companies will simply look elsewhere. Of course it seems ludicrous to charge $400 for a $0.69 disc, but then again you're not paying for a blank disc, you're paying for the information within, and THAT is what's expensive and takes a long time to develop. They are recouping FIXED costs, not variable ones. So get off your high horse: Microsoft dominate the industry for a lot of reasons, none of which is they are a monopoly. Does Microsoft make inferior products? If you believe the Linux zealots (and I partly do) then yes, microsoft makes inferior products. Their products are on desktop computers not because they have some strangle-hold on the market, it is because of the millions of blue collar Joes who make conscientious decision to buy computers with Microsoft products, the thousands of companies who program software solely for the Microsoft OS, and the big name computer suppliers who pay licensing fees to put XP into their computer bundles. None of these decisions have been made under the direct and authoratitive economic control of Microsoft. Now I'm not some microsoft fanboy: I don't use their browser, their hardware, their IM client, or their webmail. I do use XP and Office, mostly because I am too lazy to try Linux or OpenOffice. I don't think the benefits they offer will be great enough for me to switch? Plus, like most desktop users, I didn't pay a dime for MS software. |
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rich, most people don't even know what they're talking about when they say microsoft is a monopoly. |
They have about a 95% share of the browser market and a 97% share of the desktop operating system market. Add onto that that MS has "But Microsoft, because of its market dominance, may be disproportionately affected. LeTocq said Office's market share is "in the low nineties in the U.S. and in the eighties most everywhere else." Source
It's pretty safe to say they are a monopoly. Being a monopoly in part ensures you stay a monopoly for that very reason. It's anticompetative, stiffles inovation and does mean MS can do almost anything they want, including charging over the odds for their products. Once very good example of this is IE6. IE6 is a bag of shit when it comes to standards on the web and about 95% of people use it (or worse still older versions!). But MS is refusing to update it even as standards progress. The result is people are forced into designing sites that work with IE even if this means ignoring good new technology. Now if MS hadn't bundled this program with their OS (as was ruled was anti-competative by the Us courts) IE would not have such market dominance and standards and innovation could progress. |
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People use IE6 because they don't know any better. In the long run, like most business monoliths, sloppy products will be their downfall, it just takes time. |
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and that's what the people care about. Who gives a damnn about the fact that firebird has a better cookie management. Quote:
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I hate the fact that most websites works best using IE because they were designed too!
So even if I like Mozilla better I choose not to use it. :mad: |
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"Absolute monopoly in the economic sense -- 100 percent of the market -- is a rare phenomenon" And there ya go, Microsoft is not an 'absolute monopoly', as if there were really any other kind. In fact the only absolute monopolies that have ever existed were government mandated ones. US Postal Service anyone? They also lump in 'stifling' competetion, whatever the hell that means. Even when you are the sole provider of something, competitors may not exist, but the phenomenom of competition is very real and cause enough to maintain high standards. This law is simply judicial vaguery, as are most laws unfortunately. It also clearly lacks any economic sense and in the end will do far more to protect shoddy businesses. Case in point: Netscape. So yes, these laws may be the only ones that 'matter' in terms of prosecution, but it is these very laws that are the problem; its moral foundation is questionable at best. |
Microsoft charge 2 much for there over sized bloted Operating systems.
Windows xp is so easy to break....its stable but if i try to game...it makes me nervious... There silly slight upgrades of office and expect people to pay. Microsoft try every sneeky trick in the book to make sure knowone goes up agenst them. Bill gates uses his money to push him to make it seem Microsofts products are no 1.. use them or use nothing. Some people build websites use silly IE standerds instead if W3C's web standerds only cause of there lazyness and simply see that 80% of there websurfers use ie because there lazy......Ie works......it may be buggy and old and un reliable and full of security holes and lack no new features compared to opera/Netscape/Mozilla etc.. but it works...... And then there is "Microsoft certified" courses oh yeah.....there is a few misleaded minds. Ignorance is bliss huh ? Im sick of saying the same old thing about M$. Im sick of bitching about it .. here is a handy site to read : www.microsuck.com im geting a Mac ASAP...when i got the money to do so. |
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1. MS has crappy products - agreed, but that doesn't make them a monopoly. 2. Thousands of people making independent decisions have chosen to use MS standards rather than other standards - then they are idiots for making that choice. MS didn't make them choose it, they did. 3. Bill Gates wants you to use his products rather than someone elses - No fucking shit, is there a business in the world without this motive? 4. Microsoft stifle competition - I would like one iota of proof that Microsoft has eliminated the notion of competition in the OS marketplace. Unless some law prevents me from choosing different products, I can guarantee you will have a hard time showing me this. Historically the only monopolies that ever persist are government sponsored ones, where competition is illegal. Hate microsoft for making shitty software, but not for some imaginitive notion that they are 'controlling the market'. |
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edit: They do control the market and stifle competition. And holding a monopoly does not force anyone into maintaining high standards, it makes it possible to control the market in a way so that people accept lower standards. |
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But unfortunately what the law says and what EVERY ECONOMIST IN THE WORLD THINKS are entirely different. And who has a better handle on what a monopoly and its threat to society is: a politician or an economist? It is this law that is the very problem. Quote:
If you can demonstrate how MS has stifled competition (which is a very different thing from a competitor) I may lend your argument some credence. Even if a businesses manages to perform so incredible that no other competitors can can make a product better or cheaper, that business must still maintain or improve their standards or another business WILL crop up to steal away their market share. One need only read the history of business mega-giants who have fallen from grace not because of laws, but because they failed to continually perform. |
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As was stated in the link I provided previously: Quote:
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That's what my book above was trying to cover, ty zootm :).
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2) "Have chosen to use MS sandards rather than other standards" - really? And what standards are you speaking of, exactly? I know of people deliberately using Microsoft standards to make things work with Microsoft software, but what are you speaking of, as I'm afraid I've yet to see a Microsoft standard get adopted by a technical community, rather than forced upon them. 3) Yup. And he's very good at stepping on other buisnesses to do it. 4) Then look for yourself. It's pretty god damn obvious, and there are plenty of such examples in this thread already. [edit] changed some bad grammar, then edited again to add this[/edit] |
in addition to the reply to point 2, microsoft chose deliberately not to use communal standards, which with their existing market share forces companies to use their arbitrary standards which in many cases are not public and hence cannot be legally used on non-MS PCs, which reduces the usefulness of such systems and introduces difficulties in the uptake of them. they're using their existing dominance to stop the perpetuation of rival products. that is monopolistic behaviour.
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That is true. SMB, NetBEUI, and printing protocols, off the top of my head.
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the replacement for SMB's license has something specifically forbidding its use in open-source software, i think i read somewhere. possibly on here, as a disclaimer.
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Haha, yeah, I know. You can't license a protocol, though, fortunately. Only documentation/procedures surrounding it.
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Just the fact that most tech support places ask you what windows version you run automaticly should say something. Not what operating system or even system specs. It's assumed you have it since it's loaded onto 99% of retail computers.
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I think it's closer to 99.9%, but yeah. Windows has become, by Microsoft's anti-competative actions, the only viable choice in many situations.
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WRONG. True monopolies DO OCCUR as I mentioned above. These include the US postal service. A free market monopoly is very very rare simply because the mechanism of the free market prevents them from happening. Only government mandated monopolies exist. Politicians are indeed guided by 'experts', but ultimately politicians care about one thing: re-election. Since it has become so popular to hate big business, passing laws that hurt these businesses have become a great way to garner votes. And you can bet that his economist told him Microsoft isn't a true monopoly, but it isn't about what's factual, but what the tyranny of the majority believe in. Just look at American steel tariffs. Quote:
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That is an important point. People resist change, especially something as discontinually innovative as an operating system. They WILL NOT SWITCH unless the advantages are HUGE. Now there are lots of OSes to choose from, are the advantages huge? Tough to say, but there have been tons of articles stating why these operating systems (Mandrake, RedHat, Macs, etc.) lack a HUGE comparative advantage. It's going to take time for people set in their ways to convert. The stupid factor also plays a role, but so does the ignorance factor, who outside our universe has heard of Firebird? 2. Webstandards, .doc standards, etc. You choose to code in whatever you want. If you want to help the movement to stop using MS code, then do so. The more people do this the more other browsers will be accepted. Don't think they are indomitable. How do you think pdfs have become so popular? That innovation clearly wasn't 'stifled'. And I won't even go into details regarding the server market. The movement is coming, but it's going to take time. 3. Give me a BREAK! All businesses 'step' on each other. That's why we live in a competetive environment. 4. You're gonna have to clarify. Quote:
Everyone is ignoring or side-stepping the most plain and simple fact that is a PRIME requisite of a monopoly: they are not the SOLE provider of anything they provide. |
No one is the SOLE provider of anything they provide, with the exception of certain countries where it is illegal to compete. What exactly does the USPS provide that others don't? Absolutely nothing. You can send anything via UPS that you can send via USPS. UPS will come to your house to pick up packages. UPS has drop-off points. Other companies provide PO Boxes. You can get money orders in multitudes of places. The only thing that the USPS provides that others don't is delivery to PO boxes under USPS control. Wow, there's a fucking shocker. Microsoft controls those O/Ses that can use Windows Update - that argument is stupid.
Microsoft is as much of a monopoly as the USPS is. The kind of monopoly you speak of is fictional in the United States, and probably most first-world countries. 1) What product did Microsoft offer that was 'better' (in fact, provided a "HUGE" advantage, according to how people tend to switch, according to you) than an Apple product. I'd like to hear of it. Please, name the competing products so I can see how Microsoft's is better when Apple had "90%" share. 2) WEB STANDARDS? The only thing Microsoft has done to web standards is mutilate them and then fool web developers into thinking it was "the" standard. See http://www.w3.org/ for some ACTUAL web standards. DOC standards? Who uses all non-microsoft software and .doc files? Um, how about no one? PDFs have become the standard because even Microsoft doesn't fuck with Adobe. Adobe is the top provider of just about all it encompasses, and PDFs, if I recall, are based upon an open standard, though I could be mistaken in that. Furthermore, PDFs don't suck. See http://news.com.com/2100-1040_3-978607.html and http://www.planetpdf.com/mainpage.asp?webpageid=1992 3) Buisnesses have always "stepped on each other", true, but not in such decietful and anti-competative ways as Bill Gates has. See http://www.euronet.nl/users/frankvw/IhateMS.html for some relatively accurate history, or buy a book on Microsoft. 4) Let's take an example. Microsoft's "Embrace and Extend" method for using open standards to their advantage. Open up Microsoft Visual C++ 7.0 and you'll see countless additions and modifications to the language, clearly designed to tie you to Windows. The .h files for the Windows API only compile with these extentions turned on, so while you arn't forced to use these extentions, you'd better have a sharp eye for those things that are Microosft extentions. To be fair, however, the Microsoft documentation does mark extentions to the language as such. Microsoft has done, or attempted to do, the same to HTML, Java, Kerberos, and several other things that I can't recall off of the top of my head. See http://en2.wikipedia.org/wiki/Embrace_and_extend - though it is a bit biased. |
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The huge comparitive advantage is this: Since Microsoft has managed to force companies to sell their products rather than other people's, and brbed gamers to make games work on windows, and do all that sort of thing, the advantage they hold is that more products work for them than any other O/Ses. I don't have to mention that they did illegal stuff to reach this point. Did I say that Microsoft is a monopoly? No. Did I say that Microsoft tries to step on competition? Yes. It's so obvious. [edit]nice new avatar Bazman:up: [/edit] |
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erm, don't mind me. You guys just carry on right after this.:)
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ROTFL @picture
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killswitch1968 - please check who you're quoting when you quote. also nothing you said disproved any of the points you were contesting.
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I would not hate microsoft so much if they just gave us the OS. with add on disks and insall as u want. : Internet Exploer,Outlook express,Windows Media Player,Paint,Wordpad,MSN Messanger/Explorer etc...
Also allowed the sale of blank machines if you wanted to buy a machine without the nonsince if u wanted to. But no if you buy a new pc it comes with Windows Pre installed even if you have the Right of a Windows disk off youre older machineor if you bought it seperate. Thats a nasty forsed upgrade. |
heh also i never of Microsoft Does not crash edition.
;) |
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Microsoft may legally employ tactics to undermine their competitors, but as do others. When Wal-Mart undercuts cuts prices, it is their desire to out-do their competetitors. However this is not ANTI-competetive, but glorious, raging, free market competition come to life. Such as it is with Microsoft. When someone releases a competetive web-browser, Microsoft undercuts them by giving away their product for free and bundling it. Make no mistake: Netscape was defeated because they offered no competetive advantage. Their browser was equally shitty, if not more so, than the IE that was included on people's computers. Had they simply had features people wanted, and explicitly stated these features, they would have had no problems. Or would you rather still be PAYING for a browser that rivalled IE in mediocrity? Quote:
My favorite example is WindowsME. Clearly the WORST OS I have ever used in my life. Microsoft did indeed realize this and the only way out of it was by supplying an operating system that actually functioned and was user-friendly. Enter XP. Even its harshest critics agree that it is far superior to the cack that was Windows ME. So the burning question remains: Why does such a horrible product exist when other clearly superior products exist? Knowledge. Nobody knows about alternatives and most don't even care. Everytime I have switched from using an MS product it was because their competitors offered an advantage GREAT ENOUGH for me to switch. With Opera it was a popup-blocker, with Calendarscope it was a friendlier GUI, with Miranda it was a clean interface, etc. etc. During the WindowsME debacle I did indeed TRY to use RedHat (it was supposed to be more stable). The results? I couldn't even get past the login screen after downloading GIGS of software on 3 separate discs. Am I computer illiterate? Perhaps, but so is the rest of the desktop market. Linux has always been dominated by geeks, and they know this. Mandrake may indeed take over the desktop market, but not until they offer the significant comparative advantage and offer a desktop that grandma and grandpa can easily use. This is a significant hurdle. yet the evidence suggests MS is on its way down; their stocks have indeed stopped rising. And this will not be because of litigation but because they make bad software and the free market will usher them out. Quote:
Don't forget Moviemaker and that stupid xerox directory, I hate those things! Quote:
But at least we agree that they are indeed not a monopoly. I clicked on virtually every link, including the heavily biased microsuck.com, and without a doubt a point was proven to me which I already knew: MS products suck. What was deflty neglected were the shortcomings of the alternatives, the rise of competetive products (pdf and apache) in this 'anti-competetive' environment, or the fact that MS is a sole provider of any one software or hardware. Some rubbish from microsuck.com Quote:
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The list goes on and on and in the end the same conclusion is drawn: MS makes crappy products but are not the sole provider of anything they provide. And ONLY by being the sole provider can the troublesome economic monopoly scenarios be demonstrated. Offer me a better product and I will adopt, as I have in the past. I'm just waiting for a Mandrake release like this. |
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i don't have time to reply to the rest (working in like 5 minutes), sorry! |
The rise of Apache is most likley to it running on unix platforms that are most widely used to host websites due to Unix's massive advantages as a server.
It appears you see everything MS does as bad programming when it is really just lock in and designed specifically with the purpose of grabbing users who can then never escape. |
Oh, CRAP. I had a nice long post written out, I forget about, and erase it. Fuck you. I'll retype it later.
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I don't like how they are known for taking little coding pieces of other programs and implement it into thier own shit. I may not be code but it's very "Johnny-come-lately" and very fucking annoying. And thier Media Player and it's Vis SUCKS btw.
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killswitch1968, you do know that one does not have to get rid of ALL competition in order to be anti-competitave, right? you seem to be confused there.
You are probably right when you say people don't know about other products and/or don't care, which is why they don't buy/download them. Ever read Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury? You (killswitch1968)said: Quote:
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Farenheit 451, I thought that was about censorship and burning some books. I actually haven't read it. In the case of the SpyGlass example, they licensed the program and was thus perfectly legal for them to give it away. A rather risky gambit to dethrone Netscape's comfortable position that eventually paid off. I have the feeling that a lot of people who use Microsoft products are the quickest to excuse them of having a monopoly. It's far easier to blame someone else on your own misgivings as an uninformed consumer than to do your research and discover other products. |
Although it's talking about Canada this is a good source of information: http://strategis.ic.gc.ca/pics/ct/aodsummary.pdf
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My apologies about the F451 statement. What I meant to add was that in F451, being stupid and not knowing that other things in the world exist leads to a everybody becoming a bunch of boring drones.
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You should note that although Microsoft is not an "absolute" monopoly, they do everything in their power to act like a monopoly. As I already mentioned in my post b4 my last post, Microsoft is not on top because they have beter products. They are still on top because they have, for lack of better (or nicer) words, used extortion to make many companies "see their side of the arguement" and make products/computers for Windows only. |
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