| Sun Chief Wants No 'Baby Bills' 
 Wired News Report
 
 7:30 a.m.  1.Feb.99.PST
 DAVOS, Switzerland -- Scott
 McNealy was throwing sticks and
 stones at Microsoft again on
 Monday, comparing it to that
 antithesis of capitalism, the
 "planned economy." But the Sun
 Microsystems chief warned
 against breaking up the world's
 biggest software maker into
 smaller companies.
 
 Appearing at the World Economic
 Forum's annual meeting -- which
 was also attended by Microsoft
 chief executive Bill Gates --
 McNealy said: "Microsoft is a
 planned economy. Left
 unfettered, unscrutinized, [and]
 unchecked, monopoly power can
 be leveraged into other
 businesses."
 
 McNealy warned against breaking
 Microsoft into pieces, however,
 the way the old US telephone
 monopoly was deconstructed to
 form the Baby Bells.
 
 "The structural remedies that
 people are talking about --
 separating applications from
 operating systems -- is like one
 of those horror movies where you
 cut the monster in half, and now
 you have two monsters," he said.
 
 "I have also heard the suggestion
 that we create three Baby Bills....
 [But] all you have done then is
 rewarded the Microsoft
 shareholders for the illegal
 behavior of their management, if
 they are guilty."
 
 At its ongoing antitrust trial in
 Washington, Microsoft has denied
 any monopolistic practices -- and
 has even denied it has monopoly
 power, insisting it faces severe
 competition. McNealy has long
 disputed this view.
 
 He said Monday that Microsoft
 was trying to "leverage" into
 areas like consumer appliances,
 servers, and other sectors.
 
 "If they are allowed to use that
 leverage before the world moves
 to this new network economy,
 they can establish dominant and
 stifling positions in these new
 architectures," he said, referring
 to banking, retailing, travel,
 newspapers, and telephones.
 
 Gates, for his part, sounded a
 familiar refrain at the forum. "I
 think it would be a tragedy if any
 government action held
 companies back in terms of doing
 more advanced products," he
 said.
 
 wired.com
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