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Technology Stocks : MSFT Internet Explorer vs. NSCP Navigator

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To: RTev who wrote (23581)11/17/1999 4:18:00 PM
From: Reginald Middleton  Read Replies (3) of 24154
 
Ease of use does matter. The judge has (erroneously) found that the existence of applications leads to the primary appeal of an OS to the consumer. If this were the case, then Windows should not be in the forefront since MSFT's first and most important hurdle was to deal with the dearth of applications for Windows in the first place. One cannot ignore this fact.

<Exactly. And that is at the heart of this case. Microsoft used contracts and partnerships to prevent competition in the market for these very "middleware" applications. As the judge points out, Microsoft introduced changes in Java that make it more difficult to port a Java app written in Microsoft's J using default setting settings. The box-maker restrictions and ISP agreements sought to bar from the market client-level tools that allow others to set standards for how the server-side application interacts with the client side.>

That's not true. MSFT introduced no changes to Java. They made changes to their own proprietary implementation. If programmers did not want to use Viz J++, they did not have to. There are no contracts in place to force programmers to use MSFT development tools. There are no contracts that force enterprise consumers to buy "middleware" that won't run other JVMs. MSFT simply made better tools than most of the competition, hence the attraction. Java also runs better on NT, even more so than Sun's own Solaris OS.

Show me evidence an example of a contract that prevents standard Java VM's from running on a Windows box. I doubt if you can.
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