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Strategies & Market Trends : Graham and Doddsville -- Value Investing In The New Era -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Freedom Fighter who wrote (165)4/20/1998 6:33:00 PM
From: porcupine --''''>  Respond to of 1722
 
Computer Crashes on Bill Gates --!!!!:>

By Cliff Edwards
AP Business Writer
Monday, April 20, 1998; 12:40 p.m. EDT

CHICAGO (AP) -- The computer gremlins went after the
big enchalada today: Microsoft chairman Bill Gates.

Gates, the featured speaker at the opening of the
Comdex Spring Computer Show, was demonstrating the
new Windows 98 operating system set to debut in June
when the system crashed.

''I guess we still have some bugs to work out,'' he
noted ruefully. ''That must be why we're not
shipping Windows 98 yet.''

The system collapsed when a Microsoft employee
attempted to plug in a scanner, with his boss
standing alongside. Gates was forced to move to
another computer to complete his demonstration.

Gates did not comment during his hour-long speech
about Tuesday's scheduled U.S. appeals court hearing
in Washington in the Justice Department's antitrust
case against Microsoft.

The government sued Microsoft last year, alleging
that it uses its dominance with the Windows 95
software to unfairly gain market share for its
Internet Explorer over competitor Netscape
Communications Corp.

Antitrust laws forbid monopolies from tying two
products together to force a customer to take one
when buying the other. Microsoft contends this rule
shouldn't apply because its operating system and its
browser are a single product.

Windows 98 will create an even tighter bond between
operating system and browser, making it even more
difficult for competitors.

During his convention speech, Gates demonstrated how
the Windows operating system makes it easier for
private consumers and businesses to use their
computers.

He mentioned advances in the industry that allow
computers to move faster and use a variety of
external devices, for which the Windows system is
key.

''Providing Windows is the platform for all of these
advances to build on,'' he said.

He said Windows 98 will be far simpler to use than
the popular Windows 95 version, which has 150
million copies in use.

c Copyright 1998 The Associated Press