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Comment Re:Only relevant line (Score 1) 629

I would more say that it's a case of MS complaining that it cannot do whatever they want, like they used to be able to...

Look at what MS have been doing with their previous versions of the application... I would myself start to be extremely strict on the TOS for any company that have blatantly ignored it from the beginning.

Comment Re:Only relevant line (Score 1) 629

According to a "angry letter" posted on technet... If you do a simple search for this and read a few of the articles you can see a behavior from MS that is not ok... I can understand Google for forcing MS to follow the TOS to the letter after the crap they have tried to pull.

Even if Google is slow on providing MS with what they must comply with and how they can do this does not make it ok for MS to publish an application that still fails to meet the terms.

If MS is having issues then they can pay for some youtube experienced developer to come over and assist them with the stuff..... Can be from Google or other places...

Comment Re:Only relevant line (Score 1) 629

Yes, i read the article and also a few more related articles about this... The link was to what Microsoft wrote on technet, ie their opinion of what is happening.. If you actually check a few more sources you can actually find a bit of history of how Microsoft have behaved since the start of this.
If a company blatantly ignores terms and continues to say that "we fixed it" without actually fixing the opposite party might become more and more strict on the terms specified for the service.

https://developers.google.com/youtube/terms
There you go.. It's for the publicly available API, not for the ad-enabled API but to get access to that you have to agree to a similar terms, and you have about the same level of documentation for that.

And just because they have not yet received the information does not make it ok for them to publish the application that fails to follow the terms. If they have problems to fulfill all the terms maybe they should pay google for a single person to do a simple "do we fulfill the terms now" test before they go public with the app.

Comment Re:There's a big difference between (Score 1) 385

Slowing down for turns would break that model and could create congestion. Hence me question.

Nope, not if you place them at a optimal distance between each other. Since all carts will have to pass the bend they will all slow down. So as long as the distance between each cart is at least the difference in distance a cart will go at the slower speed compared to full speed, and that is probably not that much and should probably fit the time it takes to unload/load passengers on each end.

Comment Re:Only relevant line (Score 2) 629

They can not leverage a de-facto monopoly in one area to block competition in another. That is what Google is doing now.

They can as long Microsoft fails to comply with the requirements-list.

Why should Google be forced to allow a platform with 3.3% smartphone market-share to bypass the rules they have set for other platforms?

Comment Re:Only relevant line (Score 2, Insightful) 629

Google are not being assholes, they are protecting their revenue from the ad's playing together with the videos..

They had 2 requirements that microsoft listed in the article.
- Not an HTML5 app. (requirement from Google maybe?)
- Google claims that the application does not show the AD's as it should in all instances.

Only time Microsoft can complain is if they fulfill all the listed requirements and Google still refuses them access.

Comment Re:Only relevant line (Score 2) 629

From the article:

Google claims that one problem with our new app is that it doesn’t always serve ads based on conditions imposed by content creators.

Why should Google allow any other company to develop their own application without following the requirements specified for the service?

If Google says "you gonna have to write it in Amiga E and then emulate a 68000 cpu on the phone to run it" that will be the terms of using the service... It's only google than can decide what the rules are and they are free to set them to any level they want and they can be as hard and as soft as they want towards anyone implementing it... Microsoft have a reputation of not playing nicely so then Google might just be a bit more string on the rules.

And if comparing this to how Microsoft behaved back in the day this is nothing..

Comment Re:Too Many Adverts? (Score 1) 443

Well...... Look it up how much ad-revenue the different channels make on a popular show on prime-time ....

It's that the companies wants to make more money... And the channels and the cable-companies are usually separate partners where the cable-operator has to license the channel, even for ad-driven ones... Then you have crap where a studio would license that only this channel is allowed to air this series in this country during this time-period, and then that channel then makes plans to make allot of money on the show during this time...

It's all economics, and the old channels/cable-operators are still clinging on to the old ways since the current distribution model will hopefully be gone in 5-10 years allowing new service-providers to offer this content in more specialiced ways and cutting out the middle-man (the channel) and just leaving the production-company and the service-provider.

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