My $.02 Did Microsoft use strongarm tactics? Yes. Should they be punished? Yes, significantly. Should the company be broken up? Maybe, but I'd rather they found something else. This is where I get concerned. Breaking it up along product lines (OS, Office apps, etc...) would probably be OK. But, breaking it into three different OS companies who are not allowed to work together? This would be devastatingly bad. Consider if Debian, RedHat and SuSe all forked the Linux kernel, and were forbid by law to include anything that one of the others did. Very shortly, a program written for Debian would not be runnable on any other distribution. While this would very definitely set Microsoft back, it would also dramatically affect a very large number of programmers. Right now, a programmer who writes for Windows can be assured that their program will run on nearly any version of Windows, and thus will reach a large segment of the market. Fragmenting the OS will only increase cost of development, which will increase the cost of software from the software companies, and may irrevocably harm the independent programmers, who cannot afford the additional cost and/or time for development. Michael J. Sheldon Internet Applications Developer Phone: 480.699.1084 http://www.desertraven.com/ PGP Key Available on Request