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Technology Stocks : How high will Microsoft fly? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: PMS Witch who wrote (12561)11/24/1998 11:10:00 AM
From: ToySoldier  Respond to of 74651
 
Speak of the trial...

DOJ: An AOL/Netscape merger could affect Microsoft trial

By Lisa M. Bowman, ZDNN
November 23, 1998 3:18 PM ET

WASHINGTON -- The specter of a
possible merger between America Online
Inc. and Netscape Communications Corp.
reared its head both inside the courtroom
and on the courthouse steps during
Microsoft Corp.'s antitrust trial here
Monday morning.

During the cross-examination of Frederick
Warren-Boulton, Microsoft
(Nasdaq:MSFT) attorneys tried to get the
economist to acknowledge that the possible
deal reflected a dynamic marketplace,
where leaders in the browser and Internet
service spaces could band together to
compete with Microsoft. Instead,
Warren-Boulton launched into a soliloquy
lamenting the pending demise of Netscape.

"To the extent that this potential merger is
the result of Microsoft's actions -- in these
exclusive contracts and other actions -- it is
unfortunate to see the disappearance of a
firm like Netscape, the brightest newest
star," Warren-Boulton said.

Attorney Michael Lacovara did get
Warren-Boulton to acknowledge that
AOL's choice of a browser would materially
affect the browser market. AOL
(NYSE:AOL) -- which is used by about 22
percent of all Internet users -- has a deal
with Microsoft to use the company's Internet
Explorer browser in exchange for a spot on its channel bar. The deal
expires in about six weeks.

Warren-Boulton said he doubted that AOL would actually switch to
Netscape's Navigator because the position on Microsoft's real estate
was too valuable.

Merger may have outcome on case

Outside on the courtroom steps after the testimony, DOJ attorney David
Boies said that the merger, and its outcome, may have a bearing on the
current case.

"If AOL believes that Microsoft's desktop monopoly is so powerful and
so essential that it has to use Microsoft's browser software even after it
owns Netscape, that is pretty strong evidence of the power of the
monopoly," Boies said.

When asked whether it bothered him that two of the government
witnesses were probably in negotiations to merge at the time of their
testimony, Boies said he was not particularly troubled.

He also downplayed earlier comments by Microsoft attorney William
Neukom that the possible merger pulled the rug out from under the
government case.

"I think that if the rug had been pulled out of our case as many times as
Microsoft said during the trial, we'd all be on the floor by now," Boies
said.


'Change in competitive marketplace'

For its part, Microsoft painted the potential merger of Netscape and
AOL -- along with a possible partnership with Sun Microsystems Inc.
(Nasdaq:SUNW) -- as evidence of a dynamic and competitive
marketplace.

"What we are witnessing is apparently a wholesale change in the
competitive landscape," Neukom said on the steps of the courthouse
during the midday break. "It does seem particularly strange to us that the
government feels the need to put a finger on the scales of justice."

In other happenings inside the courtroom, Microsoft attorney Lacovara
said that industry analysts' numbers show that Microsoft will only have
about 62 percent of the U.S. browser market by 2001, a number he
said does not indicate a monopoly. He said "a third of everyone in the
whole world" will be using a browser other than Microsoft's.

Lacovara also pointed to recent trade press articles about Be Inc.
getting Hitachi to ship its alternative OS with some of its machines,
another of several attempts to show that other operating systems are
gaining momentum in the market.

Warren-Boulton disputed that testimony. "The existence of fringe
competitors who are in the OS market doesn't in any way mean that
Microsoft doesn't have monopoly power," the economist said.

It did not come out during the testimony that Hitachi is shipping
Windows along with Be, nor that Be founder Jean-Louis Gassee has
said he has no intention of competing against Microsoft.


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