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Author Topic: What's behind Microsoft's fall from dominance?  (Read 38643 times)

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Offline smerf

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Re: What's behind Microsoft's fall from dominance?
« on: September 10, 2013, 11:41:38 PM »
Hi,
Just going to say to all you apple fanboys, government employees own more PC's than apple will ever think of using or selling, and that isn't counting the gamers or the casual user. The only ones who use apple products are the ones that know absolutely nothing about computers. They have to call apple to find out where the on switch is at.
I have no idea what your talking about, so here is a doggy with a small pancake on his head.

MorphOS is a MAC done a little better
 

Offline smerf

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Re: What's behind Microsoft's fall from dominance?
« Reply #1 on: September 13, 2013, 12:19:43 AM »
Quote from: Iggy;747610
Having used computers since the '70's and having previously worked for a company that built 68K computer AND owning more Apples than PCs, I find this opinion uninformed and rather stupid.
Yeah, Apple makes some curious decisions.
But as pointed out (repeatedly), those of us running MorphOS on older Apples aren't particularly interested in Apple's intent.

But I will agree with Smerf on one point, Microsoft isn't going away.



@Iggy,

Having used computers since 1972, and having worked for a company that was one of the first to bring computers into existance, I find this opinion rather uninformed and filled with ignorance about the history of computers.

Yeah, apple at the start made a lot of curious decisions, and as I have always said MorphOS is a rather expensive emulation of the Amiga computer system.

BUT

I will agree with Iggy on one point, Micro shaft isn't going away.

best regards Iggy, glad to see your up to your old self.

smerf
I have no idea what your talking about, so here is a doggy with a small pancake on his head.

MorphOS is a MAC done a little better
 

Offline smerf

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Re: What's behind Microsoft's fall from dominance?
« Reply #2 on: September 13, 2013, 12:31:55 AM »
Quote from: ferrellsl;747611
You guys are more delusional than you think if you really believe that Microsoft has lost dominance or is "doomed".  You clowns are the same people who believe that the Amiga will rise from the ashes like some sort of Phoenix to storm the world of computing once again.  Keep drinking that Kool-Aid and hiding out under bridges with your Billy goats.


Hi,

You never know, maybe some billionaire will see the enthusiastic crowd for the Amiga computer, and donate a billion or two, to get it going again, but then again not to many billionaire's will want to buy Amiga, after all it carries the Amiga curse, that who ever owns the rights to said Amiga computer will go bankrupt. There isn't any billionaires that would take a challenge like this.

And besides if Amiga did come back out, Micro soft will surely go out of business, and so would rotten core Apple.
I have no idea what your talking about, so here is a doggy with a small pancake on his head.

MorphOS is a MAC done a little better
 

Offline smerf

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Re: What's behind Microsoft's fall from dominance?
« Reply #3 on: September 14, 2013, 02:02:19 PM »
Quote from: Iggy;747897
Thus sayeth the Devil Chicken and verily it is most true.

Two hours if you are lucky.
And people wonder why I still use a regular cell phone.
My battery stays charge for about a week.

I really like the Galaxy S4, but its not that practical as a phone.
I use my phone to call people, not run applications.
Those, I'll run on a small notebook or tablet.


Yeah Man,

Iggy finally something you and I agree upon, a phone is used for yakking, and a computer or tablet is used for hacking. Alright I like it.
I have no idea what your talking about, so here is a doggy with a small pancake on his head.

MorphOS is a MAC done a little better
 

Offline smerf

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Re: What's behind Microsoft's fall from dominance?
« Reply #4 on: September 14, 2013, 02:09:34 PM »
@Oldsmobile Mike,

[someone who doesn't know a whole lot about computers (unlike everyone on this forum obviously, yadda yadda)]

LOL, you really are a comic, where do you come up with lines like this.
Are you talking about Apple Users, knowing a lot about computers, they are still looking for the on/off switch.

Oh God, I am laughing so hard I can't breathe, cut me some slack. I think I am having a heart attack, does not compute. Oh man I just puked.

smerf
I have no idea what your talking about, so here is a doggy with a small pancake on his head.

MorphOS is a MAC done a little better
 

Offline smerf

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Re: What's behind Microsoft's fall from dominance?
« Reply #5 on: September 14, 2013, 02:46:09 PM »
Quote from: Oldsmobile_Mike;747767
It's just following the same pattern.  Office XP - terrible.  Office 2003 - great.  Office 2007 - terrible.  Office 2010 - great.  Office 2013... you get the idea.

For laughs read some of the reviews on amazon.com.  Office 2013 has close to 90% 1-star reviews, and Office 365 is even worse.  :p  If they don't shape up it'll be LibreOffice or Google apps after this!

PS - with your license for Office 2013 you receive downgrade rights to Office 2010, so you can run either.


@Oldsmobile Mike,

Have been using Open Office for the past 6 months very heavy, used base to make a home inventory database with pictures, found out that once you add pictures, base becomes very unstable. At least that is what I am getting on three different computers using 3 different OS's,
first OS is windlows 7 seems to drop lines of data randomly,
Linux Mint same here,
Windows 8 same here

therefore I can come to the conclusion that Open Office base has a few bugs in it.

Have 55 Items installed in base, have to compare line numbers with now get this, see if you can remember this program.

Amiga Softwood File IIsg.

Have to take the high quality pictures down to 320 x 200 GIF using gimp, then I transfer the pictures by a rewritable CD to my Amiga 4000 where I use Image Studio to transfer the GIF image to iff - ilbm ham6 mode. I retype the info off my Windows 8 machine since it sits side by side with my Amiga and then reinstall the picture, there probably is a way to transfer the data to, but I am repairing several Amiga's right now and haven't had any time to really play (1 A4000, 2 A3000, 2 A500's, 5 CD32 motherboards, and 1 SX-1 which lost its hard drive capability repairing the 5 CD32 cards, Hey sheet happens. Oh yeah and let me not forget, what I am really torqued about, my A1200 that has some bent pins in the pcmcia port when I got in a hurry trying to transfer Softwood File II sg to it.)  :-(

Now one thing I have done was put a copy of Amiga Forever and one Flash Drive out in the garage to keep a backup of my Home Inventory data on it. This flash drive has a copy of Open Office on it, and a copy of my data on it, so if the house burns down, the data is safe in my separate garage. I also have one copy in my truck which never gets parked in the garage but rather in front of the house.
Why Amiga Forever, because MorphOS won't run Softwood File II sg, (oh I can see all the MorphOS fanboys start working on this one), no but really, PC's are used in 98% of the Insurance companies today which will run Open Office or Amiga Forever which runs Softwood File II sg.

Why do a Home Inventory data base, to put it simply all insurance companies are nothing but legal crooks, they take your money then give you a hassle when it is time for you to put in a claim. When I was moving I rented a storage shed to put my stuff in while looking for a house, someone broke in and stole my stuff, when we totaled everything up, it came close to $22,000 worth of stuff. All my Ham radio equipment, my electronic repair equipment, computers, stereo equipment, camera's, video equipment ( I used to tape weddings, parties etc. using a video toaster) and all my good furniture. Luckily a lot of my stuff was in the apartment we were renting while looking for a house.

so for the long winded boring junk, but read and heed, the legal crooks gave us more of a hassle then the real crooks, the insurance company was going to take us to court on charges for falsifying an insurance claim, luckily the Police caught him and returned 70% of my stuff, about 30% gone and missing, you know the stuff they could pawn off real quick.

take if for what it is.

smerf
I have no idea what your talking about, so here is a doggy with a small pancake on his head.

MorphOS is a MAC done a little better
 

Offline smerf

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Re: What's behind Microsoft's fall from dominance?
« Reply #6 on: September 14, 2013, 02:52:58 PM »
Quote from: Fats;747957
I, as with probably a lot of other open source proponents, find it an abomination of the patent system that if you own a legal DVD drive and a legally bought DVD it is still illegal to program an open source DVD player.
Important difference.


@Fats,

It isn't the DVD player, it is the copyright on the program that Micro Soft got the computing world to accept and use. It seems that they all bought certain lines of code that Micro Soft has patents on, that is why you can't watch legally bought movies on your DVD player, but if you record a home movie you will have no problem playing it on any open sourced system.

If you want to watch your store bought movie you will just have to buy a DVD player that has Micro Soft codecs installed in them, if you search the Net you can buy the code legally for your needs, or if your like me, you can search the internet and watch your movies using your Micro Soft tainted DVD player that you just purchased from Amazon.

smerf
I have no idea what your talking about, so here is a doggy with a small pancake on his head.

MorphOS is a MAC done a little better
 

Offline smerf

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Re: What's behind Microsoft's fall from dominance?
« Reply #7 on: September 14, 2013, 05:50:37 PM »
Quote from: Duce;747970
Smerf - MS isn't the one omitting their own patented technology, if they owned the tech behind it it wouldn't cost them a dime to provide it.  They don't own it.  They have to pay to include it just like any other company.  They left it out of Windows 8 (the dvd play ability) so they would not have to license the tech and pass the costs onto the consumer.

It's patented and not by MS, and no one is stopping you from installing a third party codec or app to play them - many of which say "to hell with the license fees!" and essentially break the law.  MS doesn't have that luxury.
Again, VLC works a treat.

Not sure where you are getting the idea it's MS screwing the customer or community - they simply don't own the patents for the technology, and therefore would have to license them and pass on the costs.  It's simply not worth doing when watching DVD's on a PC is going the way of the dodo in this age of Netflix and Hulu.

I haven't bought nor built a PC in like 5 years that even had an optical drive, so I certainly don't miss it, but YMMV.  The last optical media I purchased for sole computer use was Simply Accounting - in 2006 or so.


@duce,

Hmmm I always thought that the evil empire had control, but according to this article from ZDnet they don't, Amazing and not Amiga either.


Microsoft announced this week that Windows 8 will not support playback of DVD movies unless you explicitly add software that supports that feature.

The economic reasons for doing so are compelling (see Microsoft's follow-up FAQ for details), but it’s also a potentially disruptive move for some Windows enthusiasts. So it’s not surprising that some of the initial reactions have been heated and even angry.

I look at the big numbers and walk through the math in a follow-up post; How much do DVD and digital media playback features really cost?  

But I wanted to interrupt the discussion here to answer a question that several people have asked.

“Microsoft says the cost of DVD playback adds up to several dollars,” the argument goes. “But I can download the VLC player for Windows and get DVD playback for free. How come VLC can do it and Microsoft can’t?”

Welcome to the wonderful world of software licensing, where today we get to see a real-world example of the differences between commercial software and free software published under an open source license.

Any commercial product—hardware or software—that plays back DVDs has to have a license to a handful of software components that are protected by patents. In particular, you need access to the following:
•An MPEG-2 decoder. The licensing rights for the MPEG-2 standard are made up of a pool of patents contributed by their inventors. The pool itself is managed by MPEG LA, which collects and distributes royalties on behalf of the patent owners, under a master license agreement. Those rights cost $2 per device. The maker of a cheap DVD player sold at Costco pays $2 per unit for the MPEG-2 rights. Microsoft pays An OEM PC maker who licenses Windows from Microsoft must pay $2 in MPEG-2 licensing fees to enable DVD playback in every copy of Windows 7 Home Premium, Professional, and Ultimate. [Edited to clarify payment requirements]
•Dolby Digital audio support. This decoder, which is required for DVD movie playback, has to be licensed from Dolby Laboratories, Inc. The licensing schedule isn’t public, but in its annual report for 2011 Dolby revealed that it collected $124 million in licensing fees from Microsoft for the year, with most of that revenue generated from Windows 7. My back-of-the-envelope calculations suggest that Dolby gets at least 50 cents and as much as a dollar for every Windows PC sold.

Microsoft, Apple, Panasonic, Sony, Samsung, and other companies that make DVD players (hardware and software) have to pay those license fees for every unit they deliver to a customer, which is why you don’t see very many free DVD players.

The noteworthy exception is the VLC media player, which proudly bills itself as “a free and open source cross-platform multimedia player and framework.” It explicitly lists DVD as a supported format.

How can that be?

Well, on its “Legal concerns” page the makers of VLC open with a proud declaration: “VideoLAN is an organization based in France,” and “French law … is the only one to be applicable.”

If you skip to the bottom of the English portion of the page, you see why that matters. This is VideoLAN's argument:


Patents and codec licenses Neither French law nor European conventions recognize software as patentable (see French section below).

Therefore, software patents licenses do not apply on VideoLAN software.

The two software libraries that enable DVD and Blu-ray playback in VLC are libdvdcss and libaacs, both of which get their own legal justifications (the bold-faced words are in the original):


libdvdcss is a library that can find and guess keys from a DVD in order to decrypt it.

This method is authorized by a French law decision CE 10e et 9e sous*?#@*sect., 16 juillet 2008, n° 301843 on interoperability.

NB: In the USA, you should check out the US Copyright Office decision that allows circumvention in some cases.

VideoLAN is NOT a US-based organization and is therefore outside US juridiction. [sic]




[…]

libaacs is a research project and has an interoperability purpose (see above point).

Moreover, libaacs DOES NOT provide any decryption key. It is based on the official public AACS specification only.

Update: Via Twitter, VideoLAN notes that "libaacs is not yet shipped with VLC. We are waiting for remarks from the French DRM authority."  Their comments include a link to this article (English translation).

I’m sure if one were to ask a lawyer for one of the patent holders in the MPEG-2 or AACS pools, one would get a very spirited argument about the validity of those arguments. That argument would probably invoke the anti-circumvention provisions of the United States' Digital Millennium Copyright Act. But VLC can get away with it primarily because it is a nonprofit organization based outside the reach of the United States legal system and not worth pursuing.

A maker of commercial DVD playback hardware or software would be sued in a heartbeat if they tried to distribute products based on those freeware projects. They’d also run afoul of the General Public License if they tried to include the code in their closed-source, commercial products.

But the VLC project is hardly a rogue player. In fact, as I noted in a 2010 post, Microsoft has provided financial support for VLC:


Anyone can write a media player for Windows and can build in support for whatever media formats they want. No one is “required” to use Windows Media Player—exactly the opposite....

One alternative is VLC, which I have praised before.... In an e-mail to me, one of the core developers of VLC specifically praised Microsoft last year for its assistance, noting that “Microsoft … funded our Windows 7 compatibility program participation.”

Any OEM that includes a DVD player in a new Windows 8 PC will undoubtedly include a licensed DVD Player, such as the Metro version of PowerDVD that CyberLink announced at CES earlier this year. (If PowerDVD is smart, they'll include both the Metro and desktop versions with Windows 8.) You’ll also have an assortment of commercial programs to choose from.

The good news is that as a consumer you can count on the continued availability of VLC as a free DVD (and Blu-ray) playback alternative if you don’t want to pay for the Media Center Pack. And the project continues to evolve. Earlier this week, VideoLAN boasted via its official Twitter account: "by the time Windows 8 is out, we will have even better Blu-Ray support!"

So now I see says the blind smerf

by the way "This article was taken from ZDnet, it explains it all, if it isn't legal, then erase this post.

smerf
I have no idea what your talking about, so here is a doggy with a small pancake on his head.

MorphOS is a MAC done a little better