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: Microsoft now all about cooperation? Yes, thanks to patents
Microsoft now all about cooperation? Yes, thanks to patents
May 20, 2009, 04 :33 UTC (3 Talkback[s]) (3777 reads)

(Other stories by Nate Anderson)

"When Hernan Cortes landed in Mexico in 1519, he was no less ambitious than Microsoft, but differences between the man and the monopolist were immediately apparent. Cortes, for instance, burned his ships so that no retreat was possible, then marched through the interior of the country on an imperialistic orgy, massacred people in the marketplaces, overthrew an empire, and set himself up as the ruler. And Microsoft.... well, depending on who you ask, Microsoft did basically the same thing.

"But in Burning the Ships, Microsoft's Marshall Phelps and writer David Kline argue that all the imperialistic stuff--the massacres, the hangings, the occupations and conquests--was a hallmark of the Old Microsoft. In the early 2000s, the company had an epiphany: technological progress was simply moving too fast and going on in too many places to control it all in-house."

Complete Story

Related Stories:
Novell boss in semi-apology over Microsoft pact(Mar 25, 2009)
Citrix, Microsoft, and Red Hat or Novell gang up on VMware(Feb 19, 2009)
Standards, Open Standards and Double Standards(Oct 03, 2008)
Interop: Novell Chief Uses Linux Desktop(Sep 18, 2008)
IBM Says 99.8% of Mainframe Market Not Enough, We Want it All(Aug 13, 2008)
MuleSource calls out IBM's double standard on open source(Jul 15, 2008)
If a Linux Interoperability Deal is Done in a Forest...(May 13, 2008)


Index Mode   |   Flat Mode   |   Thread Mode   |   Thread Flat  
  Talkback(s) Name  and Date
[As such, it's a worthwhile read for ...   Oxymoron (oxus=sharp + mōros=stupid)   
xxx
May 20, 2009, 14:35:48
 
And I have a bridge in Brooklyn I'd  ...   Sure, they are...   
Padma
May 20, 2009, 16:39:19
 
They are still drinking the corporate Ko ...   MS Kool-aid   
philc
May 20, 2009, 20:50:41
 
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