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- Newsgroups: comp.os.os2.advocacy
- Path: sparky!uunet!gatech!usenet.ins.cwru.edu!agate!dog.ee.lbl.gov!news!manta!discar
- From: discar@nosc.mil (Joe Discar)
- Subject: Re: ftc and ms
- Message-ID: <1992Dec22.060128.26352@nosc.mil>
- Organization: Naval Ocean Systems Center, San Diego
- References: <1992Dec20.3155.5785@dosgate> <1992Dec20.202150.818@noose.ecn.purdue.edu> <1992Dec21.233102.14676@sjsumcs.sjsu.edu>
- Date: Tue, 22 Dec 1992 06:01:28 GMT
- Lines: 113
-
- In article <1992Dec21.233102.14676@sjsumcs.sjsu.edu> rick@sjsumcs.sjsu.edu (Richard Warner) writes:
- >
- >>First of all Microsoft doesn't have a monopoly on OS's. If you want to
- >>run DOS programs and you don't want to go to Microsoft you can buy
- >>DR DOS from digital research. And windows is facing very stiff competition
- >>from OS/2 now, and when Solaris from Sun, NeXTSTEP from NeXT, Taligent from
- >>Apple and IBM come out next year, nobody can say that the end user
- >>faces a lack of options in the marketplace.
- >
- >The problem is that you pay for MS-DOS, whether you want it or not!
- >One of the major complaints being investigated is that MS has virtually
- >forced every PC-compatible vendor to pay a license fee for every system
- >they ship. This is done by refusing to license on any lessor terms.
- >So if Joe's Clone shop ships 1000 boxes a month, they have the choice
- >between shipping them all with MS-DOS, or shipping none with MS-DOS.
- >MS has refused any middle ground.
-
- WRONG! I can't believe that people actually post such inane ideas.
- The agreement is like: if Joe's Clone shop ships 1000 boxes a month, Joe could
- ship 'em with 1000 copies of MS-DOS for $8, or he could choose NOT to
- abide by the agreement and purchase MS-DOS for $24 apiece.
-
- Joe, though he isn't a mathematician, finds that the 75% (or more) of his
- clients desire MS-DOS anyway, so he opts to sign the agreement.
-
- Heck, ANYONE (Joe Clone shop or whatever) can buy MS-DOS without signing
- the Agreement. Even if Microsoft didn't sell it to 'em directly
- (and I want to stress that they do), you could always go through a
- distributor. Merisel, for example, sells DOS in both full package (item number
- 250344 or 250345) and Multiple License Pack. Although I cannot say
- how much these items cost (reseller confidentiality), I can honestly say
- that the price of these packages are significantly more from Merisel than
- if you abide by Microsoft's agreement... but the cost at Merisel
- is significantly less than the SRP.
-
- So, if you think Microsoft is making people sign an "all or nothing" deal,
- you are sadly mistaken. The bundle policy exists because the vendor chooses
- to bundle them.
-
-
- >So, since maybe 50% of Joe's
- >customers want MS-DOS, he pays MS for all of them and stiffs the other
- >50% for the license fee for a program they may never want (and indeed,
- >may never see).
-
- Actually, it is probably more like 75% (or more). And most of the rest
- probably want MS-DOS, but can pirate it from elsewhere (you'd be surprised
- to find out how many pirated copies of DOS are out there!)--and don't
- require the manual.
-
- At a local dealership, I asked a the owner how many copies of OS/2 he
- sold--and the answer was THREE in five months. But he's constantly
- turning over shipments of 100 DOS packages.
-
- >
- >>|> to leverage other companies' apps out of the
- >>|> marketplace by giving its own application programmers the inside
- >>|> track to upcoming changes and undocumented features in the OS.
- >
- >>Would somebody please tell me exactly what is wrong with that? Besides
- >>whining "its not _fair_!!!" Microsoft owns Windows and DOS. What Microsoft
- >>wants to reveal or not reveal isn't anybody's business but Microsofts.
- >
- >BS! MS can sell MS-Windows because they can go to Corporation XYZ and
- >say "look, Lotus, Borland, WP, Claris, and IBM all make Windows apps, so
- >as you can see Windows is a standard that even Apple (Claris) and
- >IBM endorse". Without all these apps, Windows would not sell. So
- >our laws make it so that a company that depends on other companies,
- >but is also a competitor to these companies, make it so that the
- >competitive advantage enjoyed by the competing unit(s) is not that
- >much above the other competitors. To make an analogy, let's say that
- >Chevron was the only manufacturer of automobiles. Exxon, BP, etc.
- >manufacture gasoline, and they need cars in order to sell their gasoline.
- >Chevron also manufactures gasoline. So can Chevron make a change in
- >their engine specs and not tell any of the gasoline manufacturers
- >except their own? Of course not!
-
- I agree with your disdain for MS's business practice of using
- nondocumented calls. Whether or not it is legal, is up to the courts.
- However, I want to point out that Microsoft has always tried to tell
- developers about changes to the documented API (I know, my mail was full
- of 'em prior to the release of 3.1). The developers who program "to spec"
- are readily made aware of changes that affect them. My gripe is that
- Microsoft uses UNDOCUMENTED calls--and in the same breath, tells
- developers not to program out of spec. Several hack shops in my area
- get around this by using the undocumented calls that are
- "blessed" by their use by Microsoft products such as Excel and Winword.
- But it is irritating nonetheless.
-
-
- >
- >>If Lotus, Borland, WP, Novel, et al don't like how Microsoft plays, they
- >>don't have to play with Microsoft. Let them develop for UNIX or the Mac or
- >>OS/2 or VMS or OSF/1 or NeXTSTEP or TOS or AmigaDos DR DOS or the Acorn
- >>instead.
- >
- >Many of them do. But they should not be excluded from any market due
- >to anti-competitive strategies.
- >
- >I am hoping that Sun's new WABI pans out. That will kill NT, severely
- >cut into Windows, and force MS to try to stop Sun in court. (for
- >the uninitiated, WABI is an interface that allows any Windows program
- >to run on any machine [CPU/OS combination] to which WABI has been
- >ported). You could run Ami Pro 3.0 in an X-term session on your
- >HP workstation running HP/UX. Take that Billy :-)
-
-
- Don't let your bias show. Regardless of MS's business practices, their
- software is pretty good... good enough to run a business with.
-
- -> Joe <-
- My opinions.
-
-