Benjamin Scherrey wrote:
>
> Extracted out of a bunch of other messages that demonstrate a complete
> loss of the point...
>
> Pete Hardie wrote:
> > Monopolies never lower prices - there is no incentive to.
>
> You people are confusing government created/enforced monopolies and
> natural monopolies. When laws are in place prohibiting competition, as
> was the case with AT&T before the split and the U.S. Post Office
> presently, then monopolies are bad and prices never come down (unless
> services are more drastically reduced, or forcibly subsidized by other
> "well off" customers). A natural monopoly is almost impossible to
> achieve or maintain and requires the the company remain extremely
> competitive to prevent its market share from being eroded.
You are forgetting the barrier to entry that a 94% MS OS world created - if
I wanted to write and sell software and profit, I'd need to write it primarily
for Windows - and if I started to show a real chance at a profit, MS could (did,
in some cases) easily create their own version, entwine it with the OS so that
they could claim it a required part ot the OS, and sell it at a loss until I
went
out of business. MS had a *real* monopoly.
>
> To demonstrate the stupidity of our Justice Department and their
> inability to understand what they're playing with, look at their
> split-up proposal. Two companies, one doing OS' and one doing
> applications. Well, has anybody noticed that Microsoft is a major
> player in a lot of other businesses? They are one of the world's
> largest ISPs, they own a major part of MSNBC, they're in the satellite
> communication business, they sell mice and strangely shaped keyboards.
And in none of those businesses are they controlling 94+% of the business.
ANd they don't require I buy a TV preloaded with MS-produced software to tune to
MSNBC, or that prevents me from tuning to WTBS.
--
Pete Hardie | Goalie, DVSG Dart Team
Scientific Atlanta |
Digital Video Services Group |
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