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Opinion: Microsoft faces a turning point
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| Instead, Microsoft's decisions have been shortsighted: It has turned software
| antipiracy measures into a strategic initiative; it has delivered
| Web-based "Live" products that require a program installed on the client; and
| its CEO, Steve Ballmer, has asserted that Linux infringed on Microsoft's
| intellectual property. These are not the hallmarks of a company leading the
| technology industry with strategic vision.
|
| So now Microsoft wants to buy Yahoo, badly? Where was that kind of conviction
| in 2005? Deep-pocketed Google has already won that war. (It's not by chance
| that it did so by iteratively refining its products to make them easier and
| more fun to use.) In the words of Ken Mingis, Computerworld's managing news
| editor, Yahoo is becoming Moby Dick to Microsoft's Ahab. While Ballmer and
| team are obsessed by the fish that got away -- Internet search and ad
| sales -- Google is slowly plotting its way into Microsoft's enterprise
| business.
|
| Microsoft needs to get its mojo back -- to regain its customer focus. But
| it's not alone in failing to do so. The entire IT industry could use
| inspiration. Tweaking your software license to increase profits is not
| innovation. And leadership isn't putting a stake in the ground with a promise
| of delivering a key new enterprise technology to box out smaller competitors.
| That's the very essence of shriveled, short-term thinking.
`----
http://www.computerworld.com/action/article.do?command=viewArticleBasic&taxonomyName=operating_systems&articleId=322035
MugabeSoft has helped computing as much as Fidel Castro helped Cuba and Stalin
helped society. Ferocious is not 'successful'.
Recent:
Litigating against innovation: Legal attacks on Linux
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| Patents and how they're controlled are damaging the way technology is
| developed - and the Linux case is a key example of this.
|
| [...]
|
| Litigation as a mode of business is fashionable in the current climate, but
| offers little or nothing of benefit to users or developers. Authorial
| copyrights in the US have been extended to 70 years after the author's death.
| The law that made this possible, the Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension Act,
| was passed in 1998. Patent law, meanwhile, increasingly protects the
| interests of the powerful, encroaches upon notions of innovation and freedom
| to operate, and is used to inhibit competition. Both are in critical need of
| reform.
`----
http://www.itpro.co.uk/features/199785/litigating-against-innovation-legal-attacks-on-linux.html
Memo to Microsoft: Put up or shut up on patent claims
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| They have signed innumerable contracts based on the claims, contracts which
| assume the truth of the claims, and caused the production of products whose
| chief selling point is that their makers admit the legitimacy of the claims.
|
| Microsoft seems in no hurry to change the status quo. They are not going to
| put up, in the form of a lawsuit. They are not going to shut up, either,
| given the commercial advantages they have created.
`----
http://blogs.zdnet.com/open-source/?p=2460
'PatentGate,' one year later: Microsoft against the open-source world
,----[ Quote ]
| "Claiming you have IP that folks are infringing isn't the same thing as
| proving it," wrote Pamela Jones, author of the open-source legal blog
| Groklaw.net, in an e-mail. "I think they [Microsoft] are in a weaker position
| because they did the [cross-licensing] deals. It makes them look needy,
| like they can't make it any more without Linux."
|
| "The [legal] threat [to open-source] is no greater" today than a year ago,
| wrote Mark Radcliffe, a lawyer with DLA Piper's Silicon Valley office and the
| general counsel of the Open Source Initiative, which oversees the approval of
| open-source software licenses, in an e-mail.
|
| Take Redmond's attempts to persuade vendors to sign cross-licensing deals
| that include protection from potential open-source patent lawsuits by
| Microsoft.
`----
http://www.computerworld.com/action/article.do?command=viewArticleBasic&articleId=9087438&intsrc=news_ts_head
Feeling the heat at Microsoft
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| If I ask you who is Microsoft's biggest competitor now, who would it be?
|
| Ballmer: Open...Linux.
`----
http://www.news.com/Feeling-the-heat-at-Microsoft/2008-1012_3-6232458.html?tag=ne.fd.mnbc
Related:
Sun exec accuses Microsoft of 'patent terrorism'
,----[ Quote ]
| The efforts of Microsoft to pressure the Linux community over alleged and
| unspecified patents is akin to "patent terrorism", according to a local
| executive for Sun Microsystems.
`----
http://www.zdnet.com.au/news/software/soa/Sun-exec-accuses-Microsoft-of-patent-terrorism-/0,130061733,339280437,00.htm
Microsoft, the art of Corporate Terrorism.
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| Microsoft, no longer the technological leader in the Computer Desktop
| market, is taking on a terrorist role in its attempt remain in power
| at all costs. (see the link to the CNN story below)
|
| The tactic is intended to frighten current, and would be, free
| software users away from products that Microsoft just can't compete
| with. It's not a new tactic, but for the first time desperation is
| beginning to show.
`----
http://sweetcomputing.com/index.php?wiki=Microsoft_Terrorism
Convicted Monopolist Terrorizes Software Industry
,----[ Quote ]
| That headline is designed to grab your attention. Sensationalistic as
| it may be, it also happens to be true, if what you mean by 'terrorize'
| is to provoke fear.
|
| If you've been following the presidential race in the United States,
| you know the present crop of candidates have been exploiting the fear
| of the American people as they never have before in the history of
| the country.
`----
http://www.linux.org/news/opinion/ms_threats.html
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