TidBITS#456/23-Nov-98
=====================

  So how does the Microsoft antitrust suit affect Apple and the
  industry? Matt Deatherage wraps up his analysis of the case this
  week, and we also offer news of a possible merger between AOL and
  Netscape, plus Sun winning a preliminary injunction against
  Microsoft in its Java licensing lawsuit. In news that's unrelated
  to Microsoft, we report on the releases of Speed Doubler 8.1.2 and
  WebSTAR 3.0.2, and offer more details about Apple's iMac financing
  deal.

Topics:
    MailBITS/23-Nov-98
    More About iMac Financing
    Who Do You Antitrust? Part 2

<http://www.tidbits.com/tb-issues/TidBITS-456.html>
<ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/pub/tidbits/issues/1998/TidBITS#456_23-Nov-98.etx>

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MailBITS/23-Nov-98
------------------

**AOL & Netscape?** America Online and Netscape Communications
  have confirmed that they're considering a deal where America
  Online would acquire Netscape for $4 billion in AOL stock, and Sun
  Microsystems would either acquire or license Netscape's high-end
  business and enterprise server products. If the deal goes through,
  AOL would take over Netscape's Web browser software (which
  represents about half the browser market) and Netscape's heavily
  used NetCenter Web site. Microsoft is using rumors of the deal to
  press its side in the Microsoft antitrust trial, saying that it
  shows that Microsoft does face the possibility of robust
  competition without government intervention. Microsoft's opponents
  will likely argue that the deal is further evidence that even
  large companies like Netscape can't stand against Microsoft. [GD].


**Speed Doubler 8.1.2 Update Nabs Bugs** -- Connectix has released
  Speed Doubler 8.1.2, which fixes bugs and improves compatibility.
  The Faster File Copying feature now works from a locked startup
  volume, cleans up spring-loaded folders properly, and doesn't
  crash if a copy window is placed off-screen, among other changes.
  The update also fixes a problem under Mac OS 8.5 that caused a
  crash when clicking OK or Cancel in the Copy Agent schedule
  configuration dialog. Connectix recommends that all Speed Doubler
  8 users upgrade to 8.1.2, which is available as a free 516K
  download. [JLC]

<http://www.connectix.com/html/speed_doubler_updates.html>


**Sun Wins Preliminary Injunction Against Microsoft Java** -- In
  Sun Microsystems' year-old Java licensing lawsuit against
  Microsoft, U.S. District Court Judge Ronald Whyte has approved
  Sun's request for a preliminary injunction against Microsoft's
  Java implementations for Windows, giving Microsoft 90 days to
  bring Java-related products into compliance with its licensing
  agreement with Sun. Essentially, this means Microsoft's Java
  products must support Sun's Java Native Interface (JNI) to the
  Java runtime environment, pass Sun's Java compatibility tests, and
  disable by default non-standard compiler directives and keywords
  in Java development tools. Microsoft must also notify its
  customers it has been preliminarily found in violation of Sun's
  license agreement and warn developers when they attempt to compile
  code that will not be compatible with Sun's Java technology.
  Microsoft says it will comply with the ruling, and although the
  court found that Sun is likely to prevail in the actual trial, it
  required Sun to post a $15 million bond in case Microsoft wins in
  the end. Fallout from the decision may already be coming, with
  reports that Microsoft is dropping its Java virtual machines (VMs)
  for Macintosh and Unix, in part to comply with the court order.
  [GD]

<http://java.sun.com/lawsuit/>
<http://www.microsoft.com/presspass/features/11-17sun.htm>
<http://www.zdnet.com/zdnn/stories/news/0,4586,373263,00.html>


**WebSTAR 3.0.2 Update Released** -- StarNine Technologies has
  released WebSTAR 3.0.2, a new version of the widely used Web
  server. WebSTAR 3.0.2 offers a host of under-the-hood fixes and
  enhancements, including significantly improved FTP and MacBinary
  compatibility, data cache improvements, numerous bug fixes, and
  workarounds for Open Transport memory leaks on PowerPC systems.
  WebSTAR 3.0.2 is free to WebSTAR 3.x customers, and a 12.6 MB
  updater will upgrade any version of WebSTAR 3.0 or 3.0.1
  (including background and SSL versions) to version 3.0.2. Because
  updating Web server software can be complicated, be sure you have
  a complete backup of your current configuration and read
  StarNine's detailed instructions before updating. [GD]

<http://www.starnine.com/webstar/webstarupdates.html>


More About iMac Financing
-------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>

  A few people wrote in with comments about my article on financing
  an iMac for $30 per month (see "iMac Equals Three Pizzas Per
  Month" in TidBITS-454_).

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05167>


**Old Macs Rock** -- Some people took exception to my feeling that
  five and a half years was too long to pay for a computer, given
  how out-of-date it would be by the time you finished. We strongly
  support using old Macs as long as they can still push the
  electrons around. Our SE/30, upgraded from an SE around 1990, is
  one of our most heavily used machines. It manages thousands of
  subscribers on over 20 mailing lists in Fog City's excellent
  LetterRip Pro, runs Now Contact and Now Up-to-Date servers,
  monitors our other servers via Maxum's PageSentry, and runs
  LaserWriter Bridge so we can print to our LocalTalk LaserWriter.
  Although we keep the Lazarus crash-detection device from Kernel
  Productions installed, the machine often goes weeks at a time
  without a hitch. My point was merely that I wouldn't want to be
  still paying it off, useful as it is, given the amount that prices
  on newer and more powerful machines drop every year.

<http://www.fogcity.com/>
<http://www.maxum.com/PageSentry/>
<http://www.kernel.com/lazarus.html>


**Prepay Without Penalty** -- One important detail that I missed
  in the fine print was the fact that Apple's iMac financing deal
  has no prepayment penalty. So, if you don't have the money for an
  iMac up front, you can finance it through Apple for $30 per month,
  but pay extra whenever you like. Those extra payments
  significantly reduce the total amount you'll pay, and represent a
  good financial decision unless you can reliably invest your money
  at 15 percent or more.


**Internet Service Bundled** -- Finally, it turns out that
  building Internet service into the price of a computer isn't a new
  idea. Magnus Dahl <magnus.dahl@radio.ausys.se> writes: "Here in
  Sweden you see two prices for the iMac and almost all other
  computers. One 'normal' price, and one lower price. The lower
  price applies if you at the same time sign up for a one year
  connection to an ISP. That connection is then paid by a monthly
  fixed fee and fees depending on your connected time."


Who Do You Antitrust? Part 2
----------------------------
  by Matt Deatherage

  Last week, I looked at how Microsoft wound up facing monopoly and
  antitrust complaints from friends and enemies alike. Now it's time
  to see if the charges are relevant or leftovers from a different
  economic time - and why only Microsoft seems to be facing such
  scrutiny.

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05175>


**Could Microsoft Learn From Apple?** Why doesn't Apple get
  complaints like those against Microsoft? A former Mac OS clone
  vendor has filed suit against Apple, claiming that Apple abused a
  monopoly position in Mac OS hardware to kill clones in 1997 - but
  no one has filed a similar suit claiming Apple has abused a
  software monopoly. It's surprising, because software firms love to
  file lawsuits. It's a status thing.

  Apple generally avoids such difficulties by building systems that
  invite third-party participation and not tightly integrated
  components that can't be separated. Think about your Internet
  software. You can't rip the email functionality out of Netscape
  Communicator and put Eudora or Mailsmith into your browser, but
  you _can_ use Eudora or Mailsmith _instead_ of the built-in email
  capability. That's the difference.

  Look at AppleScript. It's based on Apple events - an inter-
  application communication mechanism useful in many ways other than
  scripting. Apple events in turn are based on other Mac OS
  components like low-level events and AppleTalk. None of these
  technologies is restricted to AppleScript - developers are free to
  use any of them without including AppleScript support, or even if
  AppleScript isn't installed.

  But Apple didn't limit the Mac OS to a single scripting
  implementation. UserLand Frontier was available before AppleScript
  hit the market, and programs from CE Software's QuicKeys to
  MacPerl to WestCode's OneClick all provide some level of system-
  wide automation. Anticipating third-party interest, Apple
  constructed a layer called the Open Scripting Architecture, or
  OSA. (In fact, the technical name of a scripting addition is "Open
  Scripting Architecture Extension," or OSAX.) The mechanisms for
  scripting, but not the actual AppleScript language, were made
  available in the system to any scripting language. Through this
  layer, all Macintosh scripting languages can work together if they
  want. That's why the Script Editor lets you edit and compile
  scripts in any OSA-compliant language you have installed (clicking
  the word AppleScript in the lower-left corner of a Script Editor
  window activates a pop-up menu for selecting languages).

  AppleScript comes free with the Mac OS, but other scripting
  languages do a better job of meeting other needs. This kind of
  open-ended support is typical of the Mac OS. You may not know it,
  but even fonts are now handled this way. QuickDraw GX introduced
  the Open Font Architecture, which lets developers insert their own
  code to draw fonts in their own formats. When OFA is available,
  Adobe Type Manager works as an OFA font scaler, as does the built-
  in TrueType scaler. OFA is available without QuickDraw GX in Mac
  OS 8.5 and later, though documentation is still not available to
  mortals.

  If Microsoft had created some kind of "Open HTML Rendering
  Architecture" and supplied Internet Explorer's engines as one
  implementation, there wouldn't be much problem. Netscape could
  write their own components to replace Microsoft's components, and
  customers would have their choice of code to use underneath the
  application level. For instance, Eudora Pro 4 for Windows would
  ask the operating system to provide HTML functionality, and users
  could choose whether that functionality came from Microsoft,
  Netscape, Spyglass, or from any other developer of HTML renderers.

  If Microsoft had done this, it's unlikely the Justice Department
  would have had a complaint concerning bundling. If the government
  were more engineering-savvy, this might be the kind of remedy they
  want a court to impose if they win their suit. Such a solution
  addresses problems of Microsoft stifling competitiveness without
  swinging the pendulum too far the other way - forcing Microsoft to
  bundle Netscape's code when the two have legitimate competitive
  issues about middleware layers.

  Yet it's the absence of this solution that, to me, shows more of
  Microsoft's probable intent. Microsoft hasn't been shy about
  appropriating Apple ideas in the past, and they're currently in
  the process of lifting the scripting architecture for use in
  Windows. Microsoft knows how to do the third-party expandability
  drill, as they've shown in areas like ActiveX. By deliberately
  ignoring these well-known and successful ways of allowing third-
  party integration - and bundling Internet Explorer and _only_
  Internet Explorer with Windows 98 - Microsoft has inadvertently
  shown just how intent they are on controlling the middleware layer
  and not just providing the new features they're constantly crowing
  about.

  I see little doubt that Microsoft broke at least the spirit and
  probably the letter of the antitrust laws. Internal Microsoft
  memos released by the U.S. government have shown Microsoft trying
  to drive Netscape out of business, using Windows as a club
  wherever they believe it will work. If the Justice Department
  establishes these allegations as fact in Judge Jackson's eyes, the
  government will have made its case. Using Windows to muscle other
  software into everyone's hands is exactly the kind of behavior the
  antitrust laws were designed to prevent, or at least to punish.


**Does Microsoft's Behavior Matter?** Are these alleged violations
  of U.S. law something that means Microsoft should change, or
  something that means the laws should change? After all, these laws
  were written in the days of an industrial economy. When a company
  in 1912 included something "free" with another product, the free
  item had a definite cost. It's fair to guess that none of those
  legislative authors ever conceived that the entire cost of a
  product could one day be tied up in research and development, with
  virtually no cost for each individual unit. Once Microsoft creates
  Internet Explorer and makes it available for download, the "cost"
  of each new user is only the barely measurable cost of the
  bandwidth for the download. Even the classic information
  distribution methods of newspapers and books have production
  costs. How do - and should - the government and citizens respond
  to monopolistic behavior in the information age?

  Microsoft argues that their behavior is competitive, not anti-
  competitive. In a 1998 Wall Street Journal op-ed piece, Bill Gates
  says the main reason Microsoft is a target of government
  investigators is that they innovate too well.

  "The government's proposals for how software products should be
  designed would hurt Microsoft, but they would hurt others more.
  They would deny independent software developers the ability to
  make use of the latest operating system technology in their own
  products. And they would deny consumers the ability to buy
  innovative software that allows them, say, to download data from
  the Internet while they are using Microsoft Word or Intuit's
  Quicken. Some of our competitors don't think consumers should be
  allowed to benefit from such innovations. They don't want to
  compete in the marketplace; they want to compete in court."

<http://www.microsoft.com/corpinfo/doj/5-20wsjoped.htm>

  As usual, Gates is twisting the truth in his desire to win.
  Nothing stops anyone from downloading material from the Internet
  while using Word or Quicken today; browser functionality doesn't
  have to be built into the operating system for Windows's vaunted
  preemptive multitasking to work. But the real battle here, as an
  article in Information Week points out, is more about bundling and
  architecture than anything else.

<http://www.techweb.com/se/directlink.cgi?IWK19980525S0016>

  Whenever Microsoft releases a new product, part of the feature
  list includes new code added to address customer concerns (or
  Microsoft's strategic concerns), and qualifies as "new features"
  by anyone's definition. But part of the feature list almost always
  includes formerly separate products that Microsoft tosses in for
  free. If a particular expensive stand-alone server isn't doing
  well, Microsoft may decide to make it free with another, more
  popular server, in the name of adding functionality to the more
  popular product.

  The trouble here, of course, is that Microsoft is essentially
  giving away certain products to build market share - the same
  products _can't_ win in the free marketplace. Information Week
  talks about a new Microsoft Online Analytical Processing (OLAP)
  server bundled with the latest release of Microsoft's SQL Server
  (version 7.0). Existing OLAP servers, reports IW, sell for up to
  $3,500 per user, but Microsoft's will be free with their popular
  SQL Server. If Gates's mantra about "choice for consumers" were
  more than an empty marketing slogan, his company wouldn't
  routinely undertake moves like this to eliminate those pesky
  competitors.

  He could be the world's most self-absorbed person, but Oracle CEO
  Larry Ellison may have been on target about Microsoft. Ellison may
  have studied Microsoft more closely than anyone else in the world,
  since his overwhelming drive in life is to be Bill Gates Except
  With Style. Ellison thinks Gates's mantra of "choice" via bundling
  is, to no one's surprise, total crap. The Oracle chairman has told
  interviewers that Gates's logic sounds good, except that what he
  sees as "innovation" is whatever his major competitor's main
  product is. What if Oracle becomes Microsoft's next strategic
  threat? Will SQL Server become a free part of Windows NT - or
  Windows 98? Will Gates then argue that he can't "innovate" without
  the ability to take any piece of application software and build it
  into the operating system?

<http://www.news.com/News/Item/0,4,22475,00.html>

  Microsoft's strength as a combined application and OS vendor has
  always been integration, like the simultaneous release of Office
  95 and Windows 95. If Microsoft's servers are the most integrated
  with Microsoft's operating system features, it follows that
  Microsoft's servers already enjoy a serious competitive advantage.
  Tight integration, as with Internet Explorer, makes it impossible
  for competitors to replace functionality. If Microsoft then uses
  that position to destroy competition by bundling inferior servers,
  giving away a mediocre but free built-in product in a high-quality
  but high-price market, then in the end they're using the monopoly
  OS position in more than just the Internet market.


**What's the Result?** Most roads lead to the same conclusion:
  Microsoft's behavior is bad for the industry and thus bad for
  consumers. It's not about giving people more choice; it's about
  giving them the choice of Microsoft for free or other products for
  way more money. Once the choice to use Microsoft products would be
  too expensive to change, Microsoft can then start raising fees and
  moving their servers towards working well only with their
  applications, locking in more Microsoft choices. Think about how
  many offices today have already standardized on Microsoft Windows
  and Microsoft Office. Will any situation be helped by those same
  offices locking into Microsoft Internet software, Microsoft server
  software, and who knows what else?

  When a company obtains a market share as large as Microsoft's, the
  rules simply are _different_. A small company can use a strong
  product to wedge its way into new markets, just like BMW has done
  by using its niche in luxury cars to enter the upscale sport
  utility vehicle market in the U.S. A large company can't use this
  sort of tactic, because the lack of competition in one market
  gives them an unfair advantage over the others. Even if other
  makers of OLAP servers did decide to give away their products (and
  their revenue), they couldn't reach all the customers of
  Microsoft's SQL Server. In short, anti-competitive actions may be
  unpleasant and even unethical when practiced by small companies,
  but they don't violate antitrust law, as they do when they're
  practiced by monopolies.

  If Microsoft hadn't shown signs of anti-competitive behavior in
  the past, maybe its critics could cut the company some slack. If
  Microsoft's version of "innovation" wasn't so often just buying or
  copying a product and giving it away at lower prices, the
  arguments might not ring hollow. If Microsoft's examples of
  competition were companies that had thrived instead of barely
  hanging on, they might sway detractors. But they have, it has, and
  they are, and it all adds up to trouble. Messy though it is, and
  unsympathetic though U.S. courts sometimes are to antitrust
  claims, the Department of Justice is moving wisely to at least
  keep Microsoft in check.

  The recent past has shown U.S. citizens that ignoring antitrust
  laws doesn't lead to more choice - it leads to larger companies
  with fewer options. It's become apparent with banks, cable TV
  providers, regional phone companies, and others too obscure to
  mention. It may not be the government's business to regulate Adam
  Smith's Invisible Hand, but the government does serve the people
  by preventing too much power from being vested in non-elected
  bodies. The strange part is that Adam Smith agreed - he was
  strongly opposed to monopolies and corporations.

<http://iisd1.iisd.ca/pcdf/corprule/betrayal.htm>

  The U.S. Great Depression of the 1930s showed us how dangerous
  large and unrestricted banks can become - not because they don't
  operate well, but because the consequences of failure are too much
  to bear. The 1970s and 1980s showed that when large companies
  would seriously damage the U.S. economy by their failure
  (Continental Illinois Bank, Chrysler, and recently Long-Term
  Capital Management), those companies are bailed out instead of
  letting the Invisible Hand run them through. The result could
  easily be a Microsoft that has freedom to forget everything it
  knows about innovation and competition and _still_ remain the
  strongest software company in the world - at taxpayer expense.

  Microsoft seems beyond failure now, but if their products become
  so good that upgrade sales evaporate, the story could change. No
  company is crash-proof, and no interest other than Microsoft's is
  served by so much power residing in one company's hands. If it
  really was about innovation and choice, no one would care.


**Implications for Apple** -- Had things gone differently for
  Apple, this might be a battle fought in Cupertino instead of in
  Redmond. Pundits love to speculate that Apple would be in
  Microsoft's position had the company licensed the Mac OS in 1985
  like Bill Gates wanted. Unfortunately for revisionists, there
  remains no evidence to support this conclusion, making it
  speculative at best, sensationalistic at worst.

  But Apple has already seen a taste of this, as noted earlier, with
  frustrated cloners claiming Apple is in the same position as
  Microsoft, just over the smaller Mac OS market as opposed to the
  entire PC market. (Microsoft is trying to avoid prosecution using
  a similar tactic, claiming they don't have a monopoly on all
  _computer_ operating systems, especially if Unix is added to the
  mix.) If the claims against Microsoft succeed, Apple could find
  itself in similar straits by those who want to force the company
  to restart a cloning policy. If done under court order, cloners
  would be sure Apple wouldn't suddenly decide to end all the
  contracts again, and Apple could once again be in financial
  trouble.

  While breaking Microsoft's stranglehold on competition bodes well
  for the PC industry, the major effect these specific lawsuits
  would have on Apple is the strengthening of Netscape. Microsoft
  argues this is the only reason they're being persecuted, but
  Netscape is simply the strongest competitor in the market
  Microsoft is trying to corner. The strongest second-place company
  will always benefit when a monopoly is broken; this one just
  happens to be Netscape. A stronger Netscape could help the
  Macintosh browser market, although the Mac OS hasn't been
  Netscape's platform of choice for some time. And Netscape isn't
  above this kind of behavior, either - they announced an OpenDoc
  part for their browser in 1996 and never followed through, largely
  to prevent investment in Spyglass's set of OpenDoc Internet parts.
  It's good to remember that hypocrisy is typical in business
  allegations.

  If the Justice Department succeeds in making Microsoft create a
  more open operating system, Apple may reap benefits. When
  developers and users aren't so locked into Microsoft technology,
  the Macintosh becomes a more viable platform. Such folks wouldn't
  depend on Microsoft largesse in implementing Microsoft
  technologies for the Mac OS just to render it suitable for their
  use, and that won't hurt a bit.

  There are also the obvious benefits - testimony in the trial so
  far has alleged that Microsoft tried to make QuickTime for Windows
  look buggy and threatened to discontinue Microsoft Office for
  Macintosh unless Apple chose Microsoft Internet Explorer as the
  default Web browser. However, the plaintiffs are not alleging that
  Microsoft has a monopoly in _application_ software. The
  plaintiffs' introduction of these claims - which are not directly
  related to the Windows monopoly - is risky. If they prevail, the
  judge may grant them broad remedies; if they fail, Microsoft will
  have been "cleared" to proceed with these business practices. And
  that's the rub.

  Remember what Microsoft did after Apple's interface lawsuit of
  1988? Microsoft prevailed in the infringement battle, largely
  because Apple unwisely and unwittingly licensed Microsoft to use
  interface elements. Once the U.S. Supreme Court turned down
  Apple's final appeal, Microsoft wasted no time in appropriating
  more Macintosh user interface elements for Windows 95, and even
  more in Windows 98. If Microsoft wins this battle with the Justice
  Department, the kind of behavior we saw from them before the
  investigations started could pale in comparison to the ensuing
  bundling, integrating, and wholesale elimination of competing
  products. The stated goal of Microsoft is to see a computer on
  every desk on the planet, and Microsoft software running on _all_
  of them. That's not a goal you achieve by being either shy or
  scared of lawsuits you've lost.

  You may disagree, and that's great. Your ideas may be better, and
  only through discussion and debate will those come to light and
  implementation. But no matter how Microsoft tries to reassure
  people, I still think it's a problem. A monopoly position almost
  always is, because power still corrupts. Unlimited economic power
  in the hands of the richest man in the world can spell real
  trouble for anyone who decides to compete with him, as lots of
  companies have already seen. The Invisible Hand has difficulty
  controlling a market where individual responsibility is divorced
  from corporate interests. Even Adam Smith knew this, and what the
  world has seen of such experiments so far isn't encouraging. Given
  Microsoft's stated goals, keeping the powers in check remains a
  good idea.

  [Matt Deatherage is the publisher of MWJ, an acclaimed
  subscription-only newsletter for serious Macintosh users. Those
  who sign up before 01-Dec-98 for a free three-issue trial
  subscription can still receive MWJ's Mac OS 8.5 special edition,
  the most comprehensive coverage of Mac OS 8.5 available anywhere.]

<http://www.gcsf.com/>


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