From: bkliewer@dkmicro.com Subject: OS/2 Pro Calls for Breakup of Microsoft Date: 1995/04/11 Message-ID: <3mefbe$k2k@cedar.mr.net>#1/1 organization: Minnesota Regional Network reply-to: bkliewer@dkmicro.com newsgroups: comp.os.os2.advocacy,comp.os.os2.misc Magazine calls for Microsoft to be Broken Up, Windows De-Installed from Nation's Computers An independent OS/2 publication has called upon the Justice Department to break up the Microsoft empire and actually de-install Windows from the nation's desktops. In its April cover story, OS/2 Professional, which hits the stands this week, asserts that a move similar to the Justice Department's break-up and de-installation of AT&T and its telephone service in 1982 is the only way to remedy the entrenched monopolistic practices of Microsoft. The company has garnered some 80 percent of the operating system market and consequently maintains life or death control over many of the computer world's applications. It has also stifled the growth of IBM's advanced operating system, OS/2. Microsoft's future is now the subject of a contested antitrust decree that Federal Judge Stanley Sporkin insists is too ineffectual to approve. The article, The De-Installation of Windows, suggests Microsoft be broken up into three entities: Microsoft Operating System Co., to develop and market DOS, Windows, NT, and certain related products, such as Lan Manager; Microsoft Applications Co., to develop and market such applications as Word, Excel, and Access; and a third company, to develop and market such consumer services as the Microsoft Network. The article suggests that employment and communication between the companies be limited as well. OS/2 Professional's article suggests that Windows could be de-installed from the nation's computers--much as AT&T's long distance service was de-installed--by sending diskettes to every 386 or better desktop owner, offering a choice of DOS, Windows, OS/2, NT, UNIX, or another leading operating system. The magazine says that while many people have paid for Windows because of OEM preloading agreements, they never use the system. These people would be entitled to a refund. All new computers would be required to offer any of a number of operating systems via CD-ROM. CD-ROM players would become standard on new computers. Consumers could choose and switch operating systems, just as they do now for long distance companies. The magazine acknowledges that the de-installation process would be intensely disruptive, just as the AT&T break-up was. But when the process is over, the nation would be free from the manipulation and inter-company warfare that now threatens the economic well-being of an increasingly computerized society. OS/2 Professional says the only way to remedy the anti-competitive world Microsoft has created is for the Justice Department to stop fighting Judge Sporkin and recreate the type of cooperation Federal Judge Harold Greene and the Justice Department enjoyed when Judge Greene dismantled AT&T. The article was written by award-winning Publisher and Editor-in-Chief Edwin Black, along with Editor Bradley Kliewer. Last year, OS/2 Professional won the Computer Press Association Award for the best new magazine of the year. It is the oldest and largest independent OS/2 magazine in the country.