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To: EPS who wrote (23622)8/26/1998 6:57:00 AM
From: EPS  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 42771
 
Bottom Line: Organizations should not consider deployment of NT v.5.0 prior to 2001. We believe organizations are
better-served in the interim by evaluating the costs and benefits of using alternative products and not waiting on NT v.5.0 to
emerge from "vaporware" status. Organizations looking for alternative functionality to that promised with NT Server v.5 will
find many options that are viable and safely deployable, including OS/400, the major variants of Unix, NetWare and NT v.4
through year-end 2003 and NT v.3.51 through the end of 2001. At the desktop, Windows 98 remains the smoothest transition
for 16-bit DOS/Windows clients and the preferred OS for mobile users. Desktop or server decisions to deploy NT v.4 should
be based on NT v.4's capabilities and limitations - not NT v.5's promises.

gartner12.gartnerweb.com



To: EPS who wrote (23622)8/26/1998 5:38:00 PM
From: EPS  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 42771
 
well well well..

Wednesday August 26 9:15 AM EDT

Gingrich: Leave Microsoft Alone

SEATTLE (AP) - House Speaker Newt Gingrich has suggested that the Justice Department should focus on more important
priorities than its antitrust probe of Microsoft Corp.

Gingrich made his comments Tuesday at a fund-raiser for Rep. Rick White, R-Wash., just a few miles from Microsoft's
headquarters in suburban Redmond.

''The Justice Department could do a variety of things,'' Gingrich said in a speech. ''They could be looking more effectively into
bringing drugs into the country illegally; they could be looking more effectively at illegal foreign campaign contributions.

''There are a range of opportunities for the Justice Department other than trying to destroy jobs at one of America's leading
companies and trying to weaken America's role in the world market.''

A lawsuit filed by the Justice Department and 20 states accuses Microsoft of using unfair business practices to protect its
domination of computer operating systems and other software.

Gingrich also chastised Justice officials for going international with their concerns about Microsoft.

''When the Justice Department began to raise questions about Microsoft the way they did, all over the world, other countries
also began to raise questions,'' he said. ''There's some very real questions whether or not there was in fact collusion by the
American Justice Department encouraging foreign governments to file a lawsuit against an American company.''

''The purpose of the American government is to strengthen American companies in the world market and increase American
exports in the world market, not to undermine American companies,'' he said.

A Justice Department spokeswoman defended the agency's conduct.

''The charge that the department colluded with, solicited or encouraged foreign governments to take legal action is completely
false,'' spokeswoman Gina Talamona said.

She said it was proper for the department to press its case against Microsoft in order to protect consumers and enforce the
law.