This no longer hold water. Star Office 5.1 is free, and it opens office 97 documents. I even used it to open a powerpoint 97 presentation and save it down to office 95 so windows could use it. Joe > -----Original Message----- > From: plug-discuss-admin@lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us > [mailto:plug-discuss-admin@lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us]On Behalf Of Austin > Godber > Sent: Thursday, March 30, 2000 10:21 PM > To: plug-discuss@lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us > Subject: Re: What shell we do with the Microsoft..... > > > On Thu, Mar 30, 2000 at 09:02:05PM -0700, Mark R. Myers wrote: > > My vote is to do nothing and leave Microsoft alone. > > No one put a gun to anyone's head and said that they had to purchase a > > Microsoft product. > > When you use a Microsoft product why do you do so? My answer is: Because > someone else used some specific MS product which I can't get for my OS > and I need to share information with that person. For example (Word/Excel > documents) other Office suite manufacturers try their best to keep up with > MS "improvements" in their document format and provide filters so you can > read MS documents. But they are always a step or two behind so I am > forced to use an MS product to share. The gun HAS been placed to my head. > I did not choose to buy a MS product I simply chose to work with someone > else who chose to buy an MS product. > As for microsoft's business practices ... they are intended to > ensure that this gun is placed on as many temples as possible. MS is much > like a one way hash function. If someone uses an MS product anyone who > wants to share with them must also use an MS product ... examples: > document formats (word, excel) > Windows media files (ever find a way to convert back to an MPEG?) > kerberos (we'll see about that one) > MS is in a particularly good position to apply "leverage." With their > desktop OS and Office suite market share no one has a chance of competing > since there is little ability for sharing. "Nobody gets fired for buying > IBM^H^H^H Microsoft)." I know some people have been sucessful switching > to StarOffice or maybe someday back to WordPerfect Office ... but try > going to your Boss and saying: "We're shifting over to StarOffice but > we'll be unable to open those powerpoint presentations from XXX Marketing > and unfortunatly we will have to use ASCII text for all of our contracts > with our customers." > Maybe I am exaggerating a bit here, but there IS a gun to my head. > And this is one area which could use some working on. It would be nice if > every time MS (or anyone else for that matter) came out with some new > screwy "standard" format we (the non MS world, free software whatever) > could quickly reverse engineer that so that the free software world could > have access to all content which has gone through the MS hash function. > They screwed up kerberos so that you need an MS client and MS server? > Well figure out how and work around it ... uhhh ambitious I know ... not > to mention NEVER make undisclosed changes to proven cryptographic > protocols ... actually don't make any changes, unless you don't care if > they work or not. > > KERBEROS REF: http://www.counterpane.com/crypto-gram-0003.html > > > No tobacco company got someone addicted to nicotine against their will. > > Including addatives which make them more addictive was admitted to by > tobacco companies they settled out of court for BILLIONS. Oh, you who > smoke ... Did you start smoking with the intention of getting addicted to > nicotine? (This > > > With the AOL/Time Warner merger, it will make them a much larger company > > than Microsoft and should provide some formidable competition. > > > > > I like free software, but more importantly, I love free enterprise. > > I say, let the buying public decide, not a judge. > > I simply dont think that the public is in a position to decide. > > > There were no lawsuits by Sony when the VHS format (invented by > JVC) beat > > out Betamax, even though Betamax was a better product. > > But did VHS win because JVC owned 90% of the TV market and distributed a > free VHS VCR with every TV purchase thus winning the battle? > > I don't think splitting MS up will solve any problems though. I think > we'd end up with 1-4 new .5 Trillion Dollar companies that Bill Gates has > intimate relationships with. The only good thing I have heard of is to > "encourage" MS to publish the standards for some subset of their document > formats thus allowing others to make compatible software. Perhaps the > gov't could require that all gov't offices/activities use programs whose > files have a published defined standard. Maybe it's a large enough entity > to impact the situation. But, what do I know. > > _______________________________________________ > Plug-discuss mailing list - Plug-discuss@lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us > http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss >