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MS May Be Forced To Sell Stripped-Down OS In EU 666

An anonymous reader submits "According to this article at Infoworld, Microsoft may be forced to sell a stripped-down version of Windows in the EU as a result of antitrust rulings, unless a settlement is reached during the next month to six weeks." (See this post from last week for more background on the EU's antitrust proceedings.)
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MS May Be Forced To Sell Stripped-Down OS In EU

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  • by Deraj DeZine ( 726641 ) on Wednesday February 25, 2004 @12:20AM (#8382653)
    Would this be the 99 cent Diet Coke I've heard so much about?
  • by detritus` ( 32392 ) * <awitzke AT wesayso DOT org> on Wednesday February 25, 2004 @12:20AM (#8382656) Homepage Journal
    Does this mean apple may have to start shipping OS X without Quicktime? Seriously though, as much as a despise MS, have a default media player is nice, whats going to happen next, no notepad allowed as it competes with XXXXX wordprocessor? Make it like it used to be, an option when installing Windows, so if you dont want it, deselect it...
    • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday February 25, 2004 @12:23AM (#8382684)
      apple is not a convicted monopolist.

      when you are a convicted monopolist. the rules suddenly change.

      so dont bother with those comparisons, they just dont work
      • by pla ( 258480 )
        Why did this get a "+5 insightful"?

        I mean, fair point, but let's consider what products we deal with here...

        MSIE, a free web browser, vs Netscape/Mozilla, a free web browser.

        WMP, a free all-in-one multimedia playing app, vs Winamp3/5, Quicktime, RealOne, and a few other free all-in-one multimedia playing apps.

        As for Word and Excel... Well, I didn't get them for free with Windows... What deal did you get?

        I hate Microsoft as much as the next guy, but telling them they can't include a free product to
        • by ZeeTeeKiwi ( 615374 ) on Wednesday February 25, 2004 @02:53AM (#8383615)
          MSIE, a free web browser, vs Netscape/Mozilla, a free web browser.

          But MSIE is not free, in either the libre or gratis sense. MS is on record the IE costs them over USD100M per year and the cost of that is built into the cost of the OS. Win XP should be $40 per pc cheaper, and then the user can be be free (libre) to choose whether they want MS media player or not.

        • by Anonymous Coward
          Where did you get this free Internet Explorer, and free Media Player? I have been to www.microsoft.com, but they don't give those products away for free. Reading the end user license agreement, you are not allowed to install them, if you did not already pay for them, which you do when/if you buy a copy of windows. You cannot buy IE or WMP without Windows, and you cannot buy Windows without IE or WMP. That is known as bundling, in some countries even illegal bundling.
      • hen you are a convicted monopolist. the rules suddenly change

        Which, when you step back about ten feet and view it with an objective perspective, is absolutely insane.

        One day you're perfectly legal trying to gain market share by bundling two of your products together. Next day you gain one customer too many, and what you did yesterday is now illegal. There is no philosophical or ethical foundation for this, only a vague sense of "big==evil" political kneejerkery.

        Lady Justice is always depicted with a bli
        • by SideshowBob ( 82333 ) on Wednesday February 25, 2004 @03:19AM (#8383709)
          No it isn't vague or kneejerk. The citizens of the U.S. have decided that the public has an interest in seeing healthy competition, and has enacted laws that govern how companies compete. Those laws are designed to reign in monopolies when they've crossed the line. They are *supposed* to be restrictive, if they weren't they wouldn't be effective.

          If you can't see that unbridled capitalism is not only not good for the public, but ultimately self-destructive, as one company gobbles up its smaller competitors until there is no competition whatsoever and the whole thing comes crashing down from its own weight (causing collateral damage on the way to imploding), then I guess the rules might look a little vague. That doesn't prove that they are vague mind you, only that you lack an education on the subject.

          Right now MS is guilty as charged but not serving the sentence, due to a lax enforcement policy of the current pro-big business administration. If the antitrust laws were being enforced as designed, MS would be under a lot more scrutiny and greater sanctions.

          The Europeans have their own laws and if MS wants to do business in Europe then it must obey the laws over there. We wouldn't expect anything less of a foreign company doing business in the U.S. would we?
        • One day you're perfectly legal trying to gain market share by bundling two of your products together. Next day you gain one customer too many, and what you did yesterday is now illegal. There is no philosophical or ethical foundation for this, only a vague sense of "big==evil" political kneejerkery.

          You forgot the real gem in the whole silly concept. There's no objective, consistent definition of when a corporation becomes a monopoly. It's like the obscenity of business - "I know it when I see it". Pract

      • by Flyboy Connor ( 741764 ) on Wednesday February 25, 2004 @08:56AM (#8384844)
        when you are a convicted monopolist. the rules suddenly change.

        Although IANAL, I am pretty convinced this is not true. The rules are the same for everyone. The point is that a monopolist can do things others can not, such as killing off a competitor in another market by bundling applications or making sure your competitor's stuff is incompatible with yours.

        Being a monopoly is not illegal, using your monopolistic force to your advantage is. You are not allowed to do things others cannot do because they are not a monopoly. However, as a monopoly you do not suffer from restrictions others lack.

        Of course, when you are a monopolist who abuses his power, a court may put special restrictions on you as a punishment.

    • by DRUNK_BEAR ( 645868 ) on Wednesday February 25, 2004 @12:32AM (#8382780)
      In my opinion, I think it mostly means that if you have a default player installed, you should have the ability of removing it. Unless I am wrong, Internet Explorer and Win Media Player are two examples of software that are not "removable". This is the difference. It is possible to remove notepad in Windows.
      • by Anonymous Coward
        Another difference is that MS is trying to push their media formats with that player. And it's a little bit trickier to convert a DRMed WMV file to something useful than getting rid of all those superfluous \r's at the end of lines.
    • by Disevidence ( 576586 ) on Wednesday February 25, 2004 @12:42AM (#8382865) Homepage Journal
      I highly doubt this is a slippery slope, and the analogy with Apple is misleading.

      In the article it states that many media content companies are making files and movies available only in Windows Media Formats, because its the only Media player they know thats going to be on the system. Since a overwhelming of desktops use Windows, this is amounting to the fact that the market tends towards using Windows Media, and thus whats the point of getting other formats/players?

      The commission is hoping to open up the media player market a little, only to allow more competition and "a fair go" for other media players/formats. People still have the choice of getting Windows Media with the OS, so this isn't really hurting anyone, just allowing for a free market.

      On the issue of interoperability, there was this little gem-

      Bolkestein warned that ordering Microsoft to reveal code, which is protected by copyright, and to a lesser extent by patents, could make the Commission vulnerable to a legal challenge by the company at the European Court of Justice in Luxembourg.

      Im quite unclear on Bolkestein's motivation for that comment. Opening up the code to allow interoperability will not take away the fact that the code is Microsoft's, so Copyright is preserved. The commission isn't (as far as I can tell) letting competitor's simply copy MS's code so they can interoperate, but rather allow the code to be shown so they can code their own products to allow cleaner interoperability with MS's code. Any since patents are required to be published anyway, and need to be licenced, the patent comments is a non sequitur.
      • by cujo_1111 ( 627504 ) on Wednesday February 25, 2004 @01:07AM (#8383048) Homepage Journal
        Let us just imagine that the EU forces MS to sell a stripped down version of Windows. When the normal user gets home, plugs it in and fires it up, they are going to want applications to help them along.

        First, IE has to come with the OS just so they can utilise the standard web browsing capability. To download new software they need to be able to get to the web sites, why would they download another browser if they already have one? If IE is not included, where are these people going to go to get their software? It will be like going back to the trumpet Winsock days.

        Secondly, a fairly sizable number of web sites offering sound and video clips use WMP format files to deliver their content, the user will download WMP to be able to watch/listen.

        The stripped down version of Windows has now become the full version through the wants of the user.

        The only people who will buy the stripped down version of windows are probably the same people who use Linux/Mozilla/Thunderbird/OpenOffice, the only reason for them to change is to play games.
        • by k_head ( 754277 )
          Most people buy their PC with bundled software. The resellers like dell, compaq etc would choose what browser they include with their system and more then likely include more then one browser.

          I remember when any PC you bought used to have an icon for AOL and compuserve, it would be just like that.

        • by Deternal ( 239896 ) on Wednesday February 25, 2004 @05:55AM (#8384187) Homepage
          It's the good old opt-in vs opt-out argument.

          I personally see no special problem in an OS coming without a browser, without a mediaplayer, mail reader etc.

          I personally think all these items atleast should not be installed by default, but installed if the user opts to do so during the installation.

          They could also do it the way SuSE does: Default, Default with office, Custom, Minimal. There you go.

          If they'd done that instead of making it part of the OS from 98 onwards, and allowed OEM/VAR's to install other mail, browser and media app's then this wouldn't have become a problem. But they choose to leverage their monopoly instead of competing - probably because they knew their products weren't the best (well it is true that IE 5 was the best browser around when it surfaced - it didn't take long for it to loose it's throne though, and it never did take it back).

          I don't see why anyone can defend the status quo since it does harm competition, it does stiffle innovation and it does hurt us, the users/consumers.
    • [...]de-commoditize protocols & applications[...]

      Does it remind you of something ?

      The official reason is that they bundle a default media player, just as they bundle a browser.

      The non-official reason is that Microsoft is already decommoditizing madia files by implementing a file format that can only be red by WMP. If, as too many people here, you are sticking to the argument "Joe Average will need a media player and a browser, then let's MS do it", you should migrate back to Windows. Computers is

  • by silentrob ( 115677 ) on Wednesday February 25, 2004 @12:21AM (#8382663)
    Microsoft may be forced to sell a stripped-down version of Windows in the EU

    Why just the EU? Why can't we all have access to the stripped down version?
  • by U.I.D 754625 ( 754625 ) on Wednesday February 25, 2004 @12:22AM (#8382673) Homepage Journal
    I wonder if Americans would be able to purchase the EU "light" version. I'm positive we'll be able to pirate it anyways though.
  • Antivirus? (Score:3, Interesting)

    by ack154 ( 591432 ) on Wednesday February 25, 2004 @12:23AM (#8382682)
    Of course, once this settlement is reached, they can start a new lawsuit over them putting Antivirus [slashdot.org] into XP SP2...

    Though yes, the AV does serve a much better purpose than RealPlayer and WMP and such...
    • Re:Antivirus? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by LostCluster ( 625375 ) * on Wednesday February 25, 2004 @01:26AM (#8383185)
      This brings up an interesting question... just what is an operating system?

      Linux, in a pure techical state, is nothing but a kernel. A kernel alone is pretty useless, so that's why there's there's shells to provide an interface. There are multiple choices for windowing systems, multiple choices for basic word processors, multiple choices for just about everything...

      Now, replacement shells for the WinNT kernel are possible... but Microsoft doesn't sell a release of Windows that doesn't contain a shell, which is why most everybody is using Explorer and there aren't too many other shells in circulation. So, most people think that Explorer is an intrinsic part of Windows, but in reality, you can live without it if you had another.

      Isn't that the atomic level of an operating system? Wouldn't that be the true level Windows should be required to strip down to if it's going to be unbundled from all other software?
  • by stonebeat.org ( 562495 ) on Wednesday February 25, 2004 @12:23AM (#8382689) Homepage
    If MS is forced to exclude media player from windows, what is stopping them to put it up on the windowsupdate.com. So the next time a unknowing user goes to windowsupdate to get patches, he/she might get (automatically) Media Player as well. After all MS can term the Media Player a update (eventhough it is not).
    • by Clockwurk ( 577966 ) on Wednesday February 25, 2004 @12:36AM (#8382808) Homepage
      WMP 9 is offered on Windows update, but you need to select it specifically to install it. Even if you have windows set to automatically download updates, it won't install a new version of Media player. Microsoft doesn't seem especially keen on forcing current users to upgrade, why would they do any different with new customers.

      Far more likely is that MS will allow vendors to bundle it (or slipstream it onto recovery media) and most will do it. I wouldn't want to be the OEM that shipped a PC without media capabilities from the start. The support headache just wouldn't be worth it.
    • I wouldn't be surprised if they did just that. Whenever I patch the vanilla install of IE that comes with XP, Outlook express miraculousy comes back. I have to boot into safe mode to erase the files.
    • Like the unknowing user uses Windows Update in the first place.
  • by superpulpsicle ( 533373 ) on Wednesday February 25, 2004 @12:24AM (#8382697)
    M$ can strip this out, that out and have a million different versions.

    But in the end windows 2000 + XP nowadays really only differ by a few registry keys. Some programs can do the magic for you. Cough.... NTswitcher.... Cough.

  • But...but.. (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Xpilot ( 117961 ) on Wednesday February 25, 2004 @12:25AM (#8382704) Homepage
    Bill said it's *impossible* to do that, since extra crap like web browsers are an *integral* part of the operating system (I wonder how they made operating systems before web browsers were invented). If they do this, does it mean it suddenly and miraculously became possible?

    Will they sell it in other countries, or to customers who want it? Back during the Netscape/IE fiasco, I read one of Microsoft's supporters say "customers must buy what is sold to them, not what they want". Uh huh. Right now Linux has exactly what I want, and I don't even have to pay for it. Beat that, MS!

    • by prockcore ( 543967 ) on Wednesday February 25, 2004 @12:41AM (#8382859)
      I wonder how they made operating systems before web browsers were invented

      I wonder how Apple made OSes before Quicktime was invented.
    • Re:But...but.. (Score:3, Interesting)

      by LostCluster ( 625375 ) *
      Nothing a previous version was able to do is ever impossible... it's only a question of how many revisions they have to go backwards to get themselves into compliance. :)
  • just wmp? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Coneasfast ( 690509 ) on Wednesday February 25, 2004 @12:25AM (#8382706)
    Microsoft has argued that unbundling Media Player from Windows would prevent the operating system from working properly.

    really? didn't know an operating system needed a media player to work correctly.

    unless for some reason other applications integrated wmp, in which case offering wmp as a seperate download is just as good. it annoys me when they make such dubious claims.
    • Re:just wmp? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by michael_cain ( 66650 ) on Wednesday February 25, 2004 @12:57AM (#8382977) Journal
      really? didn't know an operating system needed a media player to work correctly.

      Without defending the MS design decisions, they elected to provide certain audio and video playback capabilities by incorporating WMP code "into the OS." Some of the design decisions were driven by the choice to give application developers services at the level of "play the audio stream in this file and notify me when it's done." The OS service makes all the choices about codecs and drivers and moving data in a timely manner. Given that choice (and some of the known problems with scheduling and such on some Windows variants), it seems inevitable that there would be OS code that looked like a media player. A simple media player "app" then becomes little more than a frame and a few buttons -- all the hard parts are done by the OS services.

      Linux and other UNIX-like OSs made a different set of design decisions. Low-level audio support tends to live in the OS, video support tends to live in user space (although that might not be true if X didn't live there). At this point in time, it seems more reasonable to assume that a consumer-oriented OS would have audio and video services available for the app developers, than to assume not.

      • Re:just wmp? (Score:4, Insightful)

        by cyril3 ( 522783 ) on Wednesday February 25, 2004 @02:09AM (#8383407)
        I agree that the incorporation of that functionality into the os is not in itself a bad thing. But that doesn't mean that a version can't be shipped that doesn't have the outer layers that use the hooks or that the hooks can't be designed for use by any codec.

        I suspect rivals would be happier if they had a real opportunity to compete with MS on the player/codec side where they didn't have to convince users to get rid of WMP first whether it be getting rid of the whole thing or just the interface. It's like someone else said though, every time you change something on XP you seem to get Outlook Express, Messenger, and WMP back in the menus and desktop and reclaiming the default app position.

        • Re:just wmp? (Score:5, Insightful)

          by spectecjr ( 31235 ) on Wednesday February 25, 2004 @02:37AM (#8383536) Homepage
          I agree that the incorporation of that functionality into the os is not in itself a bad thing. But that doesn't mean that a version can't be shipped that doesn't have the outer layers that use the hooks or that the hooks can't be designed for use by any codec.

          The hooks are designed for use by any codec. Media Player doesn't only play WMV or WMA files - it'll handle anything you write a codec for. There are only two companies who don't write generic codecs that will work happily inside Windows with no external player application; one company is called Apple, the other is called Real Networks.

          Look at DivX - that works quite happily inside Windows Media Player. As do most MPEG codecs used by things like Intervideo WinDVD. It's only the companies who require that you use their "skin" around the codec for marketing and branding purposes who seem to have a problem with playing nicely with Windows.
  • by Sergeant Beavis ( 558225 ) on Wednesday February 25, 2004 @12:26AM (#8382721) Homepage
    Some guys stripped out all the crap that was loaded onto Windows 98 and all of a sudden, it because a pretty damn good OS.

  • by Johnny Fusion ( 658094 ) <(zenmondo) (at) (gmail.com)> on Wednesday February 25, 2004 @12:29AM (#8382748) Homepage Journal
    Back in the day when Netscrape was making noise about Internet Exploder being bundled with windows, Microsoft just integrated Exploder into the interface so that at one point it became "neccesary". So now windows users basicly use a web browser to navigate their files on their own hard drives.

    I predict that a future version of windows will integrate sound and video into the interface. Making Media Player the new file-navigator, with animated talking program icons or some such.

    Probably will call it WindowsMediaExplorer.
    • by actionvance ( 635238 ) * on Wednesday February 25, 2004 @12:35AM (#8382797)
      good prediction... someone has read up on longhorn. Think about this: Why SHOULDNT a desktop management system utilize a 128 mb card that is just sitting there? You can use your good ol bash shell... while your kids navigate thier "information" using mock meatspace experiences.

      "files" are passe. its relations... memories and information that people want. it does not need to be flat.

      I see the future! said the flatlander.
      • by Moraelin ( 679338 ) on Wednesday February 25, 2004 @06:09AM (#8384225) Journal
        Much as generally I'm fairly pro-Microsoft, IMHO this doesn't make sense at all.

        "Why shouldn't a desktop management system utilize an 128 MB graphics card?" Let's see:

        1. Because it's a straw man argument. You can use all the fancy graphics you want to, even without being a web-browser tied into the very operating system. You can write the exact same Windows file- and/or desktop-manager in user space, _without_ making it a web browser, and it will work just as well. In fact, heck, you can even make your full 3D real-time manager, one that even _needs_ a DirectX 10 graphics card, and it still won't need to be a web browser, nor to be intimately tied into the OS itself.

        Noone says that need to go back to a command line prompt. You can have your relations, memories and information, or whatever else, and you can have them presented with as much fancy graphics as you want to. All I'm saying is: there is _no_ real reason why the drawing program _has_ to be a web browser, and there is _no_ real reason why it can't be replaceable with other programs that do the same thing.

        2. Because it doesn't need to. All that a file/desktop manager like Windows uses is some 2D and font acceleration. That's all. There is no real need to use 3D texture-mapped environment-bump-mapped pixel-shaded full-screen-antialiased anisotropic-filtered graphics just to display a list of files, nor to paint a border around a window. We're talking a relatively primitive 2D app, not a FPS game.

        3. That goes double for the codecs and media playing capabilities. There is no way in heck to say you need streaming video codec hooks into the very OS itself... to make a file or desktop manager. How and where the heck would that file or desktop manager even use those codecs? For what? Unless it's going to have DivX movies instead of icons, there is exactly _zero_ need for it to even know what a codec is.

        (Just in case someone wants to jump in with a stupidity like "it needs codecs to play the media files when you double-click them": *bzzzt* Wrong answer. What happens when you double-click a file is launching an external application which knows what to do with the file. A media player app for WMA files, Word for .doc files, a browser for .html files and so on. The file manager does _not_ need any intrinsic knowledge about how to handle all those files. It just needs to know what application to launch for each of them. That's all.)
  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday February 25, 2004 @12:38AM (#8382833)
    Sell full version of Windows at normal price, and sell stripped version at DOUBLE, via mail order.

    That should do an end run on the EU.
  • by funked ( 719114 ) on Wednesday February 25, 2004 @12:51AM (#8382934)
    It's too bad that it takes the EC in order to bring about the possibility of these changes. I know it's not the same system [insert pro-America comment here], but aren't these the type of things that the United States should be fighting for?

    Monti may also demand that Microsoft itself should propose "within a few months of a ruling" what Windows computer code it should reveal in order to make the operating system fully interoperable with rival software makers' programs for servers

    Long overdue in my opinion, Microsoft is bundling way too much s&*^ together these days. They've built their entire market strategy around this idea; Just try to ask your Microsoft rep about any one product. The conversation may start with InfoPath, Sharepoint, Office, whatever, but will undoubtedly end up with discussions on Server 2003, MS SQL, Exchange, Commerce Server, ad infinitum until you have seen every single, poorly designed intertwined product they own. The truth is, Microsoft is right - their products only work well with each other.

    I already have the source code anyway ;>

    Last August the Commission told Microsoft that its practice of bundling Media Player into Windows amounted to an abuse of the operating system's dominant position because it placed rival music and video players at a disadvantage.

    Since I have never opened Media Player on my Windows box, I have no idea what sense Microsoft's position makes... Although their crowd control, err DRM, may not work properly.
    • by Soko ( 17987 ) on Wednesday February 25, 2004 @01:50AM (#8383320) Homepage
      They've built their entire market strategy around this idea; Just try to ask your Microsoft rep about any one product. The conversation may start with InfoPath, Sharepoint, Office, whatever, but will undoubtedly end up with discussions on Server 2003, MS SQL, Exchange, Commerce Server, ad infinitum until you have seen every single, poorly designed intertwined product they own. The truth is, Microsoft is right - their products only work well with each other.

      This is so true it hurts.

      Anecdote begin

      Back when Windows 2000 was about to be released, I had a big problem with a NT server. I was in a newspaper - a multi-platform shop that happens to have a daily deadline. Besides the PCs running Windows for business functions, there were lots of Macs in the creative and news rooms, along with various other servers on other OSes in the data centre. Anyway, the NT machines (fully patched and updated) kept on corrupting the Servies For Mac file index - and I kept on trying to rebuild it. I called MS support for $200 (or whatever it was) and complained about this problem, and even had an idea for them to pursue in order to possibly get a quick solution. After the "Let me ask my colleague" response from the MS techie, he forgot to turn off the mic. I overheard his colleague snidely remark "Tell him to ditch the Macs. Haha". I knew then that I wasn't about to get any help, since my company had the unmittigated gaul to use Macs instead of Windows.

      I bought a server operating system from them for tidy sum, and they were making a joke about wanting to use something else besides thier OS for the clients of that server. Never mind the millions invested in Apple hardware, software, training and methods - they made a joke about thier OS holding up a deadline. To boot, I got the "Upgrade to 2000 when it comes out, SFM is 10X better" line. Nice, since all of the NT boxes were DEC Alphas, for which Windows 2000 support had just been pulled. They wanted me to spend millions in "upgrades", in order to fix a bug in their code. And I paid for the privilege of having them tell me that.

      Microsoft earned my eternal scorn that day.

      Rant^WAnecdote end.

      Microsoft has gotten very, very arrogant - to the point that they believe that no one else on the planet is capable of a good idea. They make some good products to be sure, but whenever and wherever I can, I push OSS solutions ahead of Microsoft solutions, so I can still pick and choose what tools I deploy with a minimum of fuss about whose product that tool is. RedHat 7.2 is still a nice OS on an old AlphaServer 3305, and it doesn't discriminate as to what OS it provides services for. It just does exactly what you ask it to, and asks for precious little in return.

      Soko
    • Reason why US doesn't care

      1) our high speed internet penetration is pathetic

      2) what high speed internet there is, is in the hands of our local monopolistic telecom

      3) Media streaming requires high speed connection

      4) monopoly profits MS reaps ends up being Taxed in the US quite nicely

      5) MS pays nice amounts of money to people getting elected

      6) MS gives all kinds of free stuff to US schools
      While in college I purchased my copy of win2k, winXP, Office, and frontpage for $5 each. I was then given Visual
  • by lawpoop ( 604919 ) on Wednesday February 25, 2004 @12:54AM (#8382964) Homepage Journal
    If MS is forced to sell XPLite or whatever, all that will happen is that MS spends a negligible amount to disable some features in Win XP, make sure it is on the shelves for a while, and then retire it. Is there a requirement to have this as an option on new OEM computers? Will computers that come with XP Lite installed be cheaper? I doubt it.

    Seriously. No one will buy this.

    It won't hurt MS one bit. They will jump at the first chance to get rid of this product. The question then becomes, how long can the courts force MS to make a product available, when no one is buying it? More importantly, why? Will it really address the issues?

    • by LostCluster ( 625375 ) * on Wednesday February 25, 2004 @01:19AM (#8383129)
      It reminds me of MS-DOS 6.21...

      DOS 6.2 contained DoubleSpace which was ruled to have infringed on patents that were held by the maker of another drive-compression software called Stacker. As a result, Microsoft was required to release MS-DOS 6.21, a version that didn't contain DoubleSpace and had no other functional changes. What's more, they were also required to put out a step-up disk that'd upgrade 6.2 users to 6.21, all it did was delete the infinging program and upgrade command.com to report as the new version number, and price it at $10.

      I remember seeing the step-up disk at Staples. It was in a small cardboard box with the front torn off, and the least attractive packing for a 1-disk program ever. No manual, just a small mailer-like wrapper around the individual disk. The store had only one box of 10 out, and it was shoved off to the side.

      Microsoft didn't want to put this product out, nobody sane wanted to buy it... and it all showed.

      BTW, the patent issue was later resolved in the typical Microsoft way. They settled the lawsuits by buying the company. MS-DOS 6.22 quickly came out, with the new patent-worry-free DriveSpace software, that did exactly the same thing DoubleSpace did with a few interface tweaks.
  • by Geekonomical ( 461622 ) on Wednesday February 25, 2004 @01:06AM (#8383038)
    That is of course if I still want Windows. Why would I buy some crippled stripped down version while consumers who pay somewhat similar get a better working version elsewhere?

    I am worried how EU will enforce that the stripped down version work the same way as the other one.

  • Missing the mark (Score:5, Insightful)

    by dmaxwell ( 43234 ) on Wednesday February 25, 2004 @01:06AM (#8383040)
    All of these antitrust "remedies" miss the mark completely. Bundling software into Windows is only one anticompetitive tactic and it isn't even the most important one. It is amusing in a watch-a-train-wreck way to watch them kill categories of software. AV vendors are about to feel the pinch. But then, we've been bitching at MS forever to beef up their security.

    Besides as given categories of software become ubiqitous people start expecting more things to come with the OS. MS would probably have to bundle a browser and a media player even if destroying Netscape and Real weren't on their minds at all. Now they need to bundle a firewall and an AV scanner to protect the rest of the net from their own customers.

    The true factors that give their monopoly power are secret OEM agreements and undocumented protocols and file formats. Breaking them up won't necessarily fix those and neither will dictating what MS can and can't ship with their OS. Take away the gun away from vendor's heads and document the formats and protocols. Their source code is not needed, wanted, or even particularly useful. It would have to be reverse engineered for those specs anyway.
  • so.... (Score:3, Insightful)

    by JVert ( 578547 ) <corganbilly@hotmai[ ]om ['l.c' in gap]> on Wednesday February 25, 2004 @01:07AM (#8383046) Journal
    do they have to change the title of this stripped down version? or can they still call it xp embeded?
  • Its all about... (Score:3, Interesting)

    by distributed ( 714952 ) on Wednesday February 25, 2004 @01:16AM (#8383111) Journal
    a) giving a clear choice... instead of the 'only for advanced users' install time configuration allowing you to explicitly choose installables with an easy to use interface.

    b) and keeping open-interfaces(even if not open src), so that other players can easily integrate their products into windows.

    now how tough (or harmful) can that be ? (both a question and statement)

    additions/mods to the list welcome...

    It seems nothing short of total domination will satisfy microsoft... yet somehow that seems to be the only way to make money :( (are there others ?) ....and MS always seems to like shutting the door on the competition instead of providing a better product than it.
  • by Kris_J ( 10111 ) * on Wednesday February 25, 2004 @01:20AM (#8383143) Homepage Journal
    I always thought that the Plus! packs were pretty cool concepts. Why doesn't Microsoft just do a barebones OS then a cheapy Plus! product with all the extra crap nobody needs?
  • by Jartan ( 219704 ) on Wednesday February 25, 2004 @01:22AM (#8383162)
    Theres nothing WRONG with Microsoft bundling in it's Media Player or Web Browser or whatever. Doing that is no different than them including Notepad.

    The problem is when they use their monopoly of the operating system to pretty much require you to use their version of the software or when they use the monopoly to make their product inheirently better.

    For example in windows if you go into the control panel and open up internet options will it configure your Mozilla browser? Can you setup your help file system to use a different default renderer for it's html files? Or my favorite your pretty much required to keep IE installed so you can use Windows Update to get the almost daily CRITICAL updates for their buggy software.

    The media player isn't going to be quite the versatile system component that an HTML renderer is but there are still going to be a lot of applications that end up using it and they won't have much choice thanks to tie-ins like properitary windows media formats.

    The sad thing is that Gates isn't lying when he says he's making this stuff a central part of the operating system. Clearly linux is following suit with it's own html renderers. The problem is that with Microsoft they never give the user any options to say "hey thanks for making html such an intergal part of my computing expierence now let me use X product instead of your sucky component please".
  • Pfft (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Trejkaz ( 615352 ) on Wednesday February 25, 2004 @01:27AM (#8383194) Homepage

    Yeah, I'd trust anything written by a site which says this in its other articles:
    "Microsoft - Get the facts on Microsoft(R) Windows(R) and Linux. Click here. Why pay more for Linux than Microsoft(R) Windows(R)? Through a variety of tests and comparisons, major third-party research and analysis firms found Windows to be less expensive than Linux in the long run. Read all the studies and see for yourself. Click here to get the facts."

  • by Araxen ( 561411 ) on Wednesday February 25, 2004 @01:33AM (#8383242)
    Unlike the US who just gives M$ a slap on the wrist.

    Yes, I'm from the US.
  • Stripped Down? (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Lord Kano ( 13027 ) on Wednesday February 25, 2004 @01:52AM (#8383327) Homepage Journal
    That's a bit of a loaded term in my opinion. We can take it the other direction and say a "Less bloated OS".

  • by EdgeOfEpsilon ( 756307 ) on Wednesday February 25, 2004 @02:02AM (#8383382)
    Not to mention how "Search... on the Internet" doesn't launch my default browser, and doesn't recognize Mozilla's search sidebar, nor my Search Engine selection, nor... etc. With Windows, it's never about the user's decisions, it's about Microsoft's decisions. Just looking through my start menu I can see a wealth of things I never checked when I installed XP... such wonderfully useful and undoubtably well-designed programs as: Windows Movie Maker MSN Passport Service MSN Messenger Outlook Express Address Book Few people realize this, but Windows isn't really an operating system. It doesn't allow software to communicate efficiently with hardware - it simply replaces software! It should be called a Computer Substitute.
  • by Tarwn ( 458323 ) on Wednesday February 25, 2004 @02:08AM (#8383403) Homepage
    Ok, way to many anti-MS people are getting way to happy about MS showing source code for Media Player. Think about it. Other companies will have the source, leads to other companies being able to take advantage of media Player, leads to more companies relying on Media Player.

    The idea here is to allow Quicktime, Real (ugh), etc to compete fairly.

    I think the only real solution here is to make Media Player an optional install (it's not yet required by the OS, even if it is tied in firmly) and to not allow MS to force OEMs to install it/not install others. At this point other companies will be able to get their media players installed at the OEM level, ensuring them the same level of competition.

    Although, for the record, my new Dell laptop came with MediaPlayer, Real, Quicktime, and some Dell Media thing. So I don't see the issue here, other than being unable to remove MediaPlayer. If I could remove MediaPlayer I don't think there would be an issue.

    And I would like to thank everyone who made it possible for me to have a bunch of additional media player software packages to block on my firewall. grr.
  • by Killswitch1968 ( 735908 ) on Wednesday February 25, 2004 @02:09AM (#8383410)
    Notice how the consumers never entered this equation at all? Isn't it feasible that Joe User LIKES having an operating system that doesn't require him to go hunting all over the internet for simple things like media players and Instant messaging? My God, if they took out the browser the average computer illiterate wouldn't know what to do. Use an FTP client to get one? This is just a government mandate to protect competetitors that can't compete for various number of reasons.

    You can argue all you want that it's because they have a monopoly but you'd be conveniently ignoring facts. Why do people use Windows XP? It's not relatively stable, but its stable enough for the average user and more importantly: It's user friendly. No Linux distro can compete with that level ease, and Apple is too expensive.

    If you take out these components you're not only just pissing off Microsoft (which may be a laudable goal) but the millions of users who LOVE having everything in one nice package. But hey, at least that tiny minority of competetitors will get make some nice profit, right?

    Make a significantly better product and communicate this to your target market. Do this, and you'll win. It happened with A & P Grocers (80% of the market was theirs, and they eventually went bankrupt for not responding to market trends) and it can happen with Microsoft. Don't hide behind litigation
    • by Jugalator ( 259273 ) on Wednesday February 25, 2004 @03:35AM (#8383773) Journal
      My God, if they took out the browser the average computer illiterate wouldn't know what to do.

      Bah, they solved the equation of download Kazaa and leech mp3 files. Kazaa isn't included with Windows. At least enough users did to make it an international problem.

      What are you saying -- that users are sitting with IE, having no clue on what to do else with their computers than typing in Wordpad and playing Minesweeper?

      But hey, at least that tiny minority of competetitors will get make some nice profit, right?

      Did you consider why they're a tiny minority today? If they'd be able to compete, did you consider how much better the software would be today? Monopoly is never a good thing for technology advancement.

      Make a significantly better product and communicate this to your target market. Do this, and you'll win.

      Nope, and that's the problem! Opera is surely a more feature rich product (and still simple to use), still it's in extreme minority. Mozilla has what, 3% of the browser market? Does this go in line with how powerful the software is? No. It doesn't even help that Mozilla is also offered for free.
      • Getting Kazaa and using an FTP client to get a web browser are entirely different. Kazaa is pitifully easy to setup. If a browser isn't included on their browser they SHOULD be pissed off. Let them start with IE and if a competetitor presents them with a better product.

        "Tiny minority" was in relatively terms. There may be thousands of people working for competetitors, but millions of people will be hurt by this judgement. Microsofts fictitious monopoly isn't powerful at all. Why is Winamp so prevalent? Wh
    • by _Sprocket_ ( 42527 ) on Wednesday February 25, 2004 @04:05AM (#8383875)


      You can argue all you want that it's because they have a monopoly but you'd be conveniently ignoring facts.


      This statement boggles the mind. You yourself are conveniently brushing aside a very important fact. We're dealing with the abuse of a monopoly here.

      The point that Windows works well enough for a majority of people in the market is a good one. But that's just one of the issues here. It's not just about an OS - this isn't all about Windows. It's about leveraging Windows to push other technical components (and to some extent, visa-versa).


      Make a significantly better product and communicate this to your target market. Do this, and you'll win. It happened with A & P Grocers (80% of the market was theirs, and they eventually went bankrupt for not responding to market trends) and it can happen with Microsoft. Don't hide behind litigation


      Welcome to the real world. You'll find here that the better product doesn't always win. In fact, within the technology sector, you'll find a whole graveyard of superior technology that failed.

      Here in the real world you've got to deal with business issues such as marketing, bundling, partnerships, etc. Then there's that whole monopoly thing. You remember that? The little detail you were eager to brush aside earlier?

      Its hard to do anything in a market already dominated by a monopoly willing to abuse their position. That "hide behind litigation" action you mentioned is what happens when the law has to step in and attempt to rememdy the situation created by this abuse.

      I like the overall theme of the post: competition. However, you're holding up the wrong end of the scale. Microsoft is no champion for competition.
  • by use_compress ( 627082 ) on Wednesday February 25, 2004 @02:10AM (#8383411) Journal
    The biggest problem in implementation is that you make life more difficult for the consumer by removing Media Player from Windows. Whether it's anti completive or not, I think it's safe to say that consumers prefer products with more features. Neither Media Player nor IE have stalled innovation in their respective markets, and overall, consumers have benefited from their stability/standardization.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday February 25, 2004 @02:31AM (#8383506)
    Doesn't anyone in this EU agency have a sense of the techonological issues involved? Requiring Microsoft to create two OSs, one with and one without WMA code is merely petty and vindicative. It won't do anything to create a competitive environment.

    Consider a rather odd but apt example that illustrates why. Suppose one company, Microcar, manufactured 90% of the cars in the world. Suppose that they were trying to dominate radio broadcasting by including in each of their cars a free radio that would only receive broadcasts that used their technology. Would it make any difference if the EU required them to sell cars with and without this free radio?

    Of course it wouldn't. The radio is free, so customers would say, "Well, I might as well get the version with it." And Microcar would help that process along by hinting, using their usual FUD tactics, that the radio-free car wouldn't be quite as reliable. It could leave you stranded on some lonely mountain road.

    There's only one solution that makes sense. Require Microsoft to work with competing technologies (Real and QuickTime) and ship with Windows versions of those technologies that are as stable and well-integrated as WMA.

    If the EU isn't willing to do that, justifying it by Microsoft's monopoly position, then they should drop this issue and look the other way when Microsoft uses its OS dominance to crush their competition in this and other areas.

    --Mike Perry

    http://www.InklingBooks.com/

  • by Tablizer ( 95088 ) on Wednesday February 25, 2004 @02:35AM (#8383520) Journal
    What? No Clippey? Damn!
  • by Crypto Gnome ( 651401 ) on Wednesday February 25, 2004 @02:46AM (#8383580) Homepage Journal
    I for one look forward to seeing if Microsoft is forced to sell the "stripped down OS" that Bill Gates and other "expert witnesses" in Microsoft swore blind could not be produced/delivered without fatally destroying the entire OS.

    If you have such a short memory that you don't remember what I'm referring to, google for articles describing the shennanigans at the most Microsoft AntiTrust hearings.

    EU to Microsoft: We hereby require you to prove once and for all that you undeniably committed perjury when you claimed in court at the recent US anti-trust hearings that a stripped down Microsoft OS could not be produced.
  • by barfy ( 256323 ) on Wednesday February 25, 2004 @04:15AM (#8383902)
    Any manufacturer should be able to differentiate their products by providing whatever add-ons and user experience they like on top of the Windows operating system... Meaning they can add or remove whatever programs they like, whether from microsoft or others.

    There needs to be pricing protection, (Unusual, and illegal unless you have been found to be a monopoly), for the competitors so there needs to be some fee for the microsoft add-on pack. And there cannot be discounting below some floor, and no tie-ins to any sort of percentage of sales for shared marketing dollars.

    The retail pack (upgrade and new) can include whatever microsoft wants to include.

    Just removing it is penalizing the customer by insisting he go through extra steps what he needs. And where does it stop? Browser? IM client? FTP client? File Explorer? Notepad? Calculator? GDI???? Direct X?

    Let the manufacturers create demand for competitive software, by allowing them to customize the user experience. This will be good for the consumer, and create competition for all parts of the system. Including keeping Microsoft on its toes. Instead of a worse experience for the consumer, create a better one the old fashioned way, competition. Make Dell compete with IBM and HP and Gateway not mearly over distribution and manufacturing, but on the actual experience the user gets. Each trying to outdo the other. Some incredibly simple systems for kids, some business oriented models, the media model, the scientific model, etc... There may be the microsoft branded stuff, a sony suite, The IBM suite, the cow machine... This is what was broken by the microsoft monopoly, it seems this is the way to fix it.
  • by vp0ng ( 751157 ) on Wednesday February 25, 2004 @04:51AM (#8384017)
    Why not, instead of making MS strip everything out of it's operatings system, things we've all come to expect and demand. Imagine buying an operating system, in todays day and age, without a web browser. In order to get online, you would need to go to a retailer, buy some softaware package, bring it home, install it, then update it to the most recent version. Next you have to find a decent media player, but you don't know much about computers so you're not sure where to look. There 'computer machines' are also supposed to be good for email, but that's not bundled either. It's not practical to suggest stripping anything from any OS. But rather, to stop the monopoly, legislate that it must distribute with 2 or 3 alternatives to each program in question, all equally as visible as the next. Then, the consumer can chose which default browser, media player and other free products they would like to use as their defaults. This seems a much more practical solution, that would even give much more exposure to the smaller companies in competition with Microsoft.
  • by jonwil ( 467024 ) on Wednesday February 25, 2004 @07:02AM (#8384412)
    1.Remove any references to MSN (so they cant push their MSN internet service or e.g. MSN search
    2.Make MSN messenger something that you can choose to install or choose not to install (i.e. if you dont want it, you can choose not to install it and install another messenger or no messenger at all)
    3.Completly open up the Windows Media Player codec layer such that anyone can write WMP codecs and anyone can use those codecs in their app (making it so that e.g. games can use the codecs for displaying full-screen video clips or playing game audio would be a nice thing also, I dont know if its already possible or not)
    4.Detatch the Windows Media Player UI from windows and from the codecs and make it an optional install.
    5.Force microsoft to have one OEM price and one OEM contract. Anyone that wants windows OEM can buy at the same price (as long as they are bundling with a PC, they qualify for OEM price).
    6.MS not able to dictate what OEMs can/cant do.
    For example, let OEMs install whatever they want alongside windows (i.e. Linux, Mozilla or whatever else)
    7.Publish all the communications protocols used by anything that comes on the windows CD under a clear "anyone can use this with no restrictions" licence. Also, publish all of their various data storage formats under the same sort of licence (e.g. NTFS filesystem specs, MS office document formats, MS media files, regular and HTML help document files, .NET binaries etc etc). Ditto for all their "secret" APIs (such as apis in MSHTML.DLL, SHELL32.DLL, SHLWAPI.DLL, SHDOCVW.DLL, SHFOLDER.DLL, WININET.DLL, COMCTL32.DLL, ADVAPI32.DLL, JSCRIPT.DLL, VBSCRIPT.DLL, .NET runtime, .NET libraries, DirectX, Media Player libs and whatever else)
    That way, anyone can talk to/use their HTML renderer, internet DLLs and whatever else.
    Also, it would (presumably) allow one to write a new HTML renderer (e.g. based on gecko) that could replace the MS one.
    8.Force MS to unbundle Outlook Express, publish all the data formats that OE uses to store stuff, etc etc etc. (so that other mail programs can be used instead if you want to)
    8.Force MS to completly implement the current W3C standards for HTML, XML and such. This includes complete support for ALL parts of formats like PNG
    9.MS not allowed to use patents to protect their monopoly in the OS space (for example, cant use patents on .NET to attack mono)
    and 10.MS not allowed to use influence to try and spread products inside EU (e.g. applying pressure to governments/corps who are trying to decide between windows and linux)

    These are all important but the most important IMO is point 7 (i.e. the "open all their secrets" thing) since that will level the playingfield as far as competitors go.
    For example, Mozilla will be able to talk MS server authentication on all platforms, with no licence conditions or strings attatched.
    And things like Linux and ReactOS will have full information to be able to read NTFS file systems.
    And so on.

I tell them to turn to the study of mathematics, for it is only there that they might escape the lusts of the flesh. -- Thomas Mann, "The Magic Mountain"

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