DaveSimmons
Elite Member
- Aug 12, 2001
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Actually I experienced some of it firsthand. I was an CS undergrad (BS CS '91) at the time MS put a false error message into the Win3.1 beta to imply there was a reason it wouldn't run with DR DOS and have been a full-time DOS and Windows software developer (C++ / MFC) since '93 so I lived through the games with forced IE installs and forced IE distribution to use the common controls.Originally posted by: XZeroII
Originally posted by: DaveSimmons
Gates decided to make IE free simply to "cut off their oxygen" -- that is to drive Netscape out of business by giving them no way to make money. This is also why Internet Information Server was made free and bundled in with Windows NT. It worked very well: Netscape instantly lost over $30 million a year in revenue.
Microsoft forced software developers to install IE in order to access online help for tools, and forced developers to install IE on customer machines in order to use features of Windows that had nothing to do with web browsing (the common controls DLL).
I see you read LOTS of newspapers. Unfortunatly, you get a very biased interpretation. You are not wrong about most of it, but you are also way off on some stuff. Integrating the browser into the OS was the next logical step in the evolution of the the webbroswer and OS. Yes, MS was convicted and everything was true about what they did. But Netscape didn't put up much of a fight. Netscape basically just fell over and died w/o throwing a single punch. Competition is the key to innovation and capitalism. Netscape had many options available to it to fight back, but it chose not to do any of them. It just sat there and let IE win. THAT is what I hate about netscape. MS innovated many features into IE and made IE lots better than Netscape. It was Netscape's job to innovate and win back their customers, or at least try. But it didn't. It didn't even try. Now, it complains. Netscape got what it deserved. It deserved to die. It sucked. AOL doesn't deserve all that money. They bought Netscape and sat on it and got what they deserved, the death of Netscape.
As to Netscape not trying to compete: MS spent half a billion dollars of Windows monopoly revenue on IE development during the same period they destroyed Netscape's revenue stream (and R&D budget) by giving away IIS and IE and forcing their bundling on new PCs and servers.
