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To: John Donahoe who wrote (14662)12/5/1997 3:47:00 PM
From: Daniel Schuh  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 24154
 
Yeah, well, I don't know if I count as rabid this days or not, but I've never said I expected anything like a Microsoft breakup, unless it's something Microsoft sees in its best interests. As to your quote and the article it came from, it makes about as much sense to me as your WSJ article and how antitrust action against Microsoft was going to threaten my right to call Bill a hairball. Not that I would want to do such a thing, Bill's my hero you know.

On the particular issue of "what is an OS", there is one clear dividing line in most modern systems. Processors have a privileged pr system mode which allows excecution of instructions not allowed in normal user/application programs. Most of what us dotty CS types would call the OS proper, as opposed to applications or utilities packaged with the OS, runs in this privileged mode; to manage virtual memory and to do I/O to real devices, you have to be running in that mode. Things can get more complicated than that, with various levels of security, and of course that little distinction falls apart totally in DOS, but DOS wasn't much of an OS in modern terms either. But the particular point of view in the Mercury article was pretty naive too.

Cheers, Dan.



To: John Donahoe who wrote (14662)12/5/1997 3:53:00 PM
From: John Donahoe  Respond to of 24154
 
MSFT is a company of millionaire employees.

Millionaires aren't exactly rare in high-tech land. But this has to be the first time employees have averaged $1 million-plus in option profits at a company the size of Microsoft, which has about 24,000 staffers, about 21,000 of whom have options.

search.washingtonpost.com

"Becoming a millionaire is glorious." Quote from a high level Chinese communist.

JD



To: John Donahoe who wrote (14662)12/5/1997 3:58:00 PM
From: miraje  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 24154
 
JD,

Ya gotta laugh at the prospect of judges and bureaucrats who have never written a line of code in their lives and probably barely know how to check their email, passing laws defining what is and is not an OS and/or application. Would be just desserts for those now whining to Uncle Sugar.

Regards, JB