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Technology Stocks : RealNetworks (NASDAQ:RNWK) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Brad Rogers who wrote (1006)7/28/1998 12:06:00 AM
From: Urlman  Respond to of 5843
 
Shockwave allows users to download Web pages that feature audio clips synchronized with animation..... Shockwave (Macromedia) doesn't appear to be having the same tenions as Real Networks....
Microsoft is embracing Shockwave by encorporating it into Windows '98.....

see the results for yourself

paulisdead.com (announced today partners with Microsoft & Broadcast.com amongst others)

whirlgirl.lycos.com (announced today by Lycos)

shockrave.com



To: Brad Rogers who wrote (1006)7/29/1998 1:40:00 PM
From: C. Niebucc  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 5843
 
RealNetworks loses an ally
By Mary Jo Foley,
Sm@rt Reseller
July 28, 1998 6:07 PM PT

The ongoing scrap between RealNetworks Inc. and Microsoft Corp. took another strange turn today when third-party streaming media vendor Xing Technology Corp. shifted its loyalties from the RealNetworks to the Microsoft camp.

Xing posted a statement of clarification, in which Xing said that its XingMPEG Player and the Windows Media Player exhibited similar behaviors once installed. Xing also had RealNetworks remove a statement of complaint about Microsoft's (Nasdaq:MSFT) streaming media products from the RealNetworks (Nasdaq:REAL) Web site.

"Xing is looking forward to working together with Microsoft to ensure that customers get the best possible user experience playing multimedia on their PCs," the new Xing clarification statement read.

Xing Technology officials declined to comment on the reason for the change in the company's position. A spokeswoman said the company would not comment on Xing's opinion of whose code--Microsoft's or RealNetworks' --breaks compatibility with other vendors' media players.

Separately, the Association for Competitive Technology (ACT), a Washington, D.C., trade association that has backed Microsoft during the ongoing DOJ antitrust investigation, issued a statement supporting Microsoft in the media player controversy.

ACT found that RealNetworks G2 breaks as a result of bugs in RealNetworks' G2 code. ACT posted a fix and called for the withdrawal of last week's testimony by RealNetworks CEO Rob Glaser, in which he blamed Microsoft for intentionally breaking compatibility with RealNetworks' products.

zdnet.com

Whoops.