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mulligan
20th July 2006, 09:52 PM
Its about their scrap with the EU but is interesting for a different reason...

Microsoft 'opens to competition'

Microsoft, the Goliath of the software industry, has announced it will allow computer makers and users to set other firms' applications as defaults. The change is one of a dozen "tenets to promote competition" that senior VP Brad Smith announced on Wednesday.
But the principles are not designed to address all of the European Union's anti-trust concerns, he said.
And they will not delay shipping of Microsoft's new Vista operating system, planned for January 2007, he promised.
"The principles don't affect the launch date or the shipping schedule," he told the BBC.
Vista has already been pushed back from late 2006 to early 2007 - after the crucial Christmas sales period.
Key US lawmakers welcomed the software giant's competition announcement.


EU dispute

But it is not clear that it will satisfy the European Commission, which has been Microsoft's toughest critic when it comes to competition regulations.
The EC has fined Microsoft 280.5m euros ($357m; £194m) and threatened it with new fines of 3m euros a day for failing to comply with an anti-competition ruling.


Microsoft is appealing against the decision and Mr Smith said the Redmond-based firm had met its deadline to submit paperwork related to the case.
"We handed over 2,600 pages of new technical documents yesterday. We have produced over 8,000 pages in the last two months," he said, adding that the EC trustee in the case would give the company feedback on them.
He also pointed out that the EC was concerned about server issues, while Wednesday's announcement was about desktop applications.
The fine dates from a landmark EU ruling in 2004, which ordered the US firm to provide rivals with information about its Windows operating system.
The 12 newly-announced principles may go some way towards satisfying the critics.
They include:

Allowing computer manufacturers to set defaults as they wish, instead of exclusively to Microsoft applications
Giving outside software developers the same access to technical information that Windows developers have, so "competitors will know that they can plug into Windows to get services in the same way that built-in Windows features do"
Promising not to retaliate against computer makers that support non-Microsoft software.The principles might mean that some manufacturers will promote search engines other than Microsoft's own, Mr Smith said - an apparent reference to Google, which has looked to be on a collision course with Microsoft over search engines.
"There are certain steps we can't take that would have been permitted a decade ago," the executive added.
But he said he was confident of the company's ability to compete.
"We've got to offer a great value product, especially to consumers. If we do, I would hope we'll be successful." http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/5196836.stm

burnsinternet
20th July 2006, 10:26 PM
IE7 is still slated for "the second half of 2006" at least.

Does anyone know if the retail version of Vista will be out in January with the OEM version out earlier?

Giant
20th July 2006, 10:35 PM
IE7 is still slated for "the second half of 2006" at least.

Does anyone know if the retail version of Vista will be out in January with the OEM version out earlier?

Base on my past experience, Vista OEM version should be available in November.

Rubber Duck
23rd July 2006, 11:04 AM
There is an impelling logic to releasing the OEM version early. None of these machines start with any data or any mission critical functions. Not only that but the machines are going to be primarily aimed at the domestic market. Between release and use in earnest most machines will sit around idle for a couple of months which give Microsoft ample time to come up with a few critical updates.

If you buy Vista out of the box, however, it could be used to overwrite an operating system that is running mission critical functions and manages large amounts of important data. That is a different cup of tea altogether.

rhys
23rd July 2006, 11:07 AM
IE7 is still slated for "the second half of 2006" at least.

Does anyone know if the retail version of Vista will be out in January with the OEM version out earlier?

I don't know, but as the commercial version is release-to-market in November, and the official reason for a January retail launch is because of difficulties getting the SKU in the retail channel from such a late Holiday RTM, it is entirely possible that Vista be made available to OEMs this holiday. Dell will most certainly be agitating for it, given the direction of their business.