SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Technology Stocks : All About Sun Microsystems -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: QwikSand who wrote (21342)10/15/1999 1:39:00 PM
From: JDN  Respond to of 64865
 
Dear QS: I havent seen this but when the Pres. of SUNW was on CNBC at 12:30ish today he was asked about windows/Pc's and competitive threat. He indicated not even relevant or words to that effect talking about Industrial Strength Servers and indicated Windows is not up to that or something. These are not exact words but what I got out of it. JDN



To: QwikSand who wrote (21342)10/15/1999 2:55:00 PM
From: JC Jaros  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 64865
 
That sounds like it might be a little LinuxCare response to Gartner's 'Linux dress down' article.

Here's an interesting item. Where are these guys getting this kind of money to throw around? :)

Microsoft Targets Funding for Antitrust
Office


By Dan Morgan and Juliet Eilperin
Washington Post Staff Writers
Friday, October 15, 1999; Page A1


Microsoft Corp. lobbyists and allies are aggressively
pressing Congress to reduce next year's proposed
funding for the Justice Department's antitrust division,
the giant software company's accuser in a storied court
battle.

Microsoft representatives have urged House and Senate
members to cut President Clinton's proposed funding for
the division by about $9 million this year. And nonprofit
organizations that receive financial support from the
company have also urged key congressional
appropriators to limit spending for the division when
they begin their final negotiations on the Justice
Department budget, possibly as early as Monday.

The nonprofit groups made their request in a letter last
month after an all-expenses-paid trip to Microsoft
headquarters in Redmond, Wash., where they were
entertained and briefed on an array of issues facing the
company.

Microsoft's latest efforts on Capitol Hill will have little
or no impact on the department's antitrust case against
the software giant, and for that reason they seem
somewhat unusual. While companies regularly ask
lawmakers to block federal agencies from implementing
specific policies, it is more uncommon to seek an
across-the-board cut in a department's budget,
especially in the middle of a major court battle.

But company officials said they want to send a strong
message to the antitrust division. "It's no secret we
really have some serious concerns about some of the
Department of Justice's conduct during the course of this
litigation," said Jack Krumholtz, director of federal
government affairs for Microsoft.

Krumholtz cited recent news reports that Justice
officials encouraged foreign governments to file suit
against Microsoft. Assistant Attorney General Joel I.
Klein has declared that those reports are false.

The Clinton administration is seeking $114.3 million to
cover the salaries of 360 attorneys now in the antitrust
division and to fund the hiring of about 18 more legal
staff members. That would be an increase of about 16
percent over the previous budget. While Senate
appropriators have proposed a budget of $112.3
million, the House figure is only $105.2 million -- and
the Senate has come under pressure to give way to the
House.

While the division's Microsoft work is done,
administration officials said the higher figure is urgently
needed to cope with a 30 percent increase in corporate
merger activity in the past year and to investigate
criminal price-fixing.

Support for the antitrust division's work remains strong
in Congress. House Judiciary Committee Chairman
Henry J. Hyde (R-Ill.) called the division "one of the
best-run departments in the government." Wisconsin
Sen. Herb Kohl, the top Democrat on the Judiciary
Committee's antitrust subcommittee, said "it would set
[a] terrible precedent to alter the division's budget
based on one case alone."

But Sen. Slade Gorton (R-Wash.), whose campaign has
received about $51,000 from Microsoft or its
employees since 1997, has been an outspoken supporter
of a cut in the antitrust budget.

Such an action would "express total dissatisfaction with
the way Justice is handling the case against Microsoft,"
said a spokeswoman for Gorton. She added that Gorton,
a senior member of the Senate Appropriations
Committee, is "pretty confident he will be able to get
[the Senate] number lowered closer to the House
number."

Microsoft, a latecomer to the Washington scene, has
been sharply increasing its lobbying, political donations
and support of a network of "think tanks" to counter the
political and lobbying activities of its adversaries.

Last month, a dozen handpicked representatives of
influential Washington-based policy organizations
traveled to Redmond for three days of briefings that
included tickets to a Seattle Mariners game and dinner
and entertainment at Seattle's Teatro ZinZani, according
to an itinerary.

Groups represented included Citizens for a Sound
Economy, the National Taxpayers Union and Americans
for Tax Reform, whose president, Grover G. Norquist,
received $40,000 in lobbying payments from Microsoft
in the last six months of 1998.

Erick R. Gustafson of Citizens for a Sound Economy
said only an hour or so was spent discussing the
government case against Microsoft, and that the antitrust
division's budget did not come up.

But two days after returning from the trip, the three
organizations and three others sent a letter to House
appropriators urging that funding for the division be
held to the lower House level.

The same day, Microsoft lobbyist Kerry Knott, former
chief of staff to House Majority Leader Richard K.
Armey (R-Tex.), met with Rep. Dan Miller (R-Fla.),
urging him to press for the lower funding level in
negotiations with the Senate.

Miller wrote Rep. Harold Rogers (R-Ky.), who chairs
the House Appropriations Commerce, Justice, State and
judiciary subcommittee. "It would be a devastating blow
to the high-tech industry and to our overall economy if
the federal government succeeds in its efforts to regulate
this industry through litigation."

Miller said that while he objects to the funding increase
on fiscal grounds, he had not focused on the issue until
Knott and Citizens for a Sound Economy spokeswoman
Christin Tinsworth, a former Miller staffer, made their
pitch just off the House floor.

¸ 1999 The Washington Post Company