Microsoft Withdraws Linux NTFS Threats 140
An Anonymous Coward writes: "http://boudicca.tux.org/hypermail/linux-kernel/this-week/0084.html
has a post by one of the developers working on NTFS utilities for Linux, stating that Microsoft has dropped legal threats against them and apologized. Therefore, development of these NTFS utilities will continue." Our previous story was here.
I like linux (Score:1)
Re:I like linux (Score:1)
Yes by moving up in market share.
uh.... (Score:1)
someone DROPED legal actions for once? what's going on here?
Someone better check Slashdot.. (Score:2)
Huh? (Score:4)
I think that this, in addition to recent outburst of repeated posts, is a clear indication that the editors of /. have had a *long* week and are getting delirious.
Re:I like linux (Score:2)
offtopic note: my pastor mentioned Bill Gates in his sermon today...he was talking about what a lot of people do on sundays other than going to church and he managed to slip in "sharpening predatory monopolistic business practices" this was right after he made a comment about bill gates being a loser.
Interesting thought... (Score:1)
Does this mean that if M$ does not like one of it's competitor's ideas, that they can go ahead and bully them out of business, therefore acquiring the competition (and their IP) through a buyout?
Re:I like linux (Score:1)
Email. (Score:4)
I just think it's funny that emails are often times a culprit for the media to strike. Lord knows Microsoft has sent a few emails that they did not want to get out to the public... All it takes is one person and the forward button...
Re:Interesting thought... (Score:1)
They would never do that...it would show that they have monpolistic tendencies. I'm being sarcastic if you didn't pick up on that.
Well, strike back! (Score:1)
And also what about them using "sockets"?!?!
Play the same rules your enemy chose!
WHOA! (Score:1)
I'm *shocked*
Re:I like linux (Score:1)
"Tis better to be hacking on the Linux kernel and thinking of being in church, than to be in church and thinking of hacking on the Linux kernel."
What we don't see... (Score:1)
NTFS (Score:4)
MS just realized it a way to get free innovation.
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Looks like hell froze over (Score:1)
Phoenix
Not good (Score:1)
Give the code (Score:1)
It is not like there are companies standing in line to steal NTFS for use in another proprietary OS(or opensource, for that matter).
The truth is out there, I walked passed it getting on the T.
Re:What we don't see... (Score:1)
The Holy wars (Score:2)
There are two side in the war the Unix and the Microsoft site. Even Apple with OS X has moved to the Unix side. Just look. IBM, Dell, Corel, and Others who have been shafted by MS are moving over and preparing for battle. This article is another sign with many others that Microsoft is losing the battle. Just look how they've push up their prices. Could this be because they are suspecting that they will not be making as much in the future?
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In a world with out fences,
who needs gates?
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Re:What we don't see... (Score:2)
I can't remember if the insinuation was interoperability with NDS or discovered the magic solution to some distributed database problem (which is what NDS is).
What I find curious is that any NDS info Merkey has seems to date from NW4.11, which is rather out of date. I can't imagine that Merkey could deliver abstract information about a directory relative to MS' ADS that would necessarily improve it, although I can see where the info might enable MS to better interoperate with it.
Motivation? (Score:1)
Sweet karmic justice, but highly unlikely.
where... (Score:1)
i'm waiting for the big "PSYCHE!" press release to come out of redmond.
and april 1st doesn't roll around till... april..
could it be a typo?
WHAT GIVES? THIS NEWS IS DEFECTIVE!
Re:NTFS (Score:1)
terminated licensing (Score:1)
In other words, did they appear to take licensed information and then mis-appropriate it? If his was the case, then MS could have been justified in their threats, or at least in trying to protect this information.
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Re:Give the code (Score:1)
Enemy (Score:1)
Re:What we don't see... (Score:2)
They don't need to litigate it, just outrun it.
Don't Believe the Conspiracy Theories (Score:5)
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Linux and Windows working together (Score:2)
I think they called Microsoft's bluff (Score:4)
I like to think that the NTFS developers knew this and simply told Microsoft where to stick it. That's certainly what I would have done. Microsoft, seeing that attempts at intimidation had backfired, knew there was nothing they could really do that wouldn't cost them more than it was worth in the long run. So they backed down and "apologized" before the situation turned into a PR disaster.
One of the most effective tools anyone can use against a company like Microsoft is a good publicist. Someone who knows how to attract the attention of the media and therefore the public is every bit as frightening to a corporation like Microsoft as its lawyers are to everyone else.
Microsoft may or may not lose their legal appeal. However they've already been tried and convicted in the court of public opinion. Win or lose in court, business as usual is over for them.
Lee Reynolds
Re:I like linux (Score:1)
It's pronounced new-queue-lurr. Noo Q Lur. Homer.
Re:I like linux (Score:1)
The real value of this (Score:1)
Re:I like linux (Score:1)
Re:NTFS (Score:1)
BTW, "mixed environment" doesn't mean dual-boot. Having two OSes on your hobby machine might be useful, but in a real environment it only happens during migration.
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Mixed blessing (Score:2)
Company A decides to make it easier to port things back and forth between Windows NT and Linux. Company B (Microsoft) originally decides they don't want these tools. They'd rather make the tools themselves, but won't because it would ruin marketshare at the time.
Then Company B decides to be crafty. Sure, other people can make the tools. Symantec makes a defragmenter. Adaptec makes a CD-burner driver. Company A makes some tools to get into Linux and WinNT cross-compatibility easier.
Company B buys Symantec's defragmenter and makes it a critical part of the system. They license the CD-burner driver for a rock-bottom price to use in their new Media Player to burn music easier. They buy Company A's tools to force them out of the market, or they just buy Company A entirely.
I like Microsoft products. I like Windows 2000. I think it's a good example of bucking the trend of bad programming plaguing the entire industry. However, I don't like Microsoft's business practices, and this seems like a devil in disguise.
Re:I like linux (Score:1)
Unlikely.
More likely is that people will use NTFS to access existing filesystems from Linux. Not to create new filesystems in NTFS format.
Just the way people use support for accessing various flavors of FAT filesystems now.
In Linux, better filesystems are both on the way, and already here, in various forms. And some of the latest filesystems for Linux are very promising.
Here's some interesting reading... (Score:1)
Jeff V. Merkey knows something interesting. I think we can all be glad they backed off.
Some thoughts for both sides (Score:2)
For the microsoft developer
Re:Not good (Score:1)
The diffrence here is they caved due to SLASHDOT publicity...
Hay... mark it down.. This is the day the evil empire caved to a bunch of "Unix Zellots". This is a good thing....
All you need to get Slashdot attention is an e-mail address and a threat from Microsoft....
Re:What we don't see... (Score:2)
Merkey now runs a independant company and is under contract from Microsoft to write a number of NetWare migration tools, including a NWFS driver for W2K and perhaps an NDS migration tool. His logic is that there are millions of old NetWare boxes out there running 3.x and 4.x that will never be upgraded, and that anyone with the proper migration tools can get a big chunk of the file+print market, often in large corporations.
(Novell recently announced EOL for NW 3.x and 4.x in a last ditch effort to get shops to NW5. Many aren't going to budge though, because they really don't want to support a specialized OS like NetWare and are planning on moving to something else. NW4.11 compatibility is still very relevant, and the differences in NW5 are probably not that great anyway.)
The irony is that he's using the MS funding for NWFS for Windows to also develop NWFS for Linux. Microsoft didn't seem to have a problem with that. The problem came when he started working on the Linux NTFS driver. Since he has NDAed access to the NT source, Microsoft rightfully worried that he was going to "go over" and break his NDA and start working on Linux. (What actually happened is that he announced work on a NetWare clone called MANOS. Now, who really wants that?)
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Re:uh.... (Score:1)
Well, if you go back to the original Slashdot article [slashdot.org], and then from there follow the link to the Kernel Traffic discussion [linuxcare.com] , you'll see that about four paragraphs down, you see the following.
The last thing they need is for me to take the stand and testify just what kind of deals they offered to get us to leave Novell in 1997 and divide the NetWare markets by using the "Linux IP Laundry-Mat" to launder Novell's NDS for their consumption (Oh! Look what we found on the internet and downloaded today!).
So maybe there is more reason than meets the eye for why they might have apologized and dropped the lawsuit. Could their lawyers have said, "Hey you better not pursue this one."?
Re:terminated licensing (Score:1)
Whether or not they thought this was the case, they must have obviously decided that it wasn't the case if they withdrew their pit bulls and apologized.
Re:What we don't see... (Score:1)
Yes. Linux makes a great server. But if nothing else, this past week has taught me that it's in no way ready for the desktop... (THOUGH I'm incredbily happy to have been pointed towards VMWare... installing NT4 as I type this note...)
How this was won-maybe (Score:4)
This suggests that if "those e-mails" had not been posted, MS would not be backing off. The internet hasn't changed the state of intellectual property (as some might think) where companies are now trying to take away the rights of every independent hacker or developer. They always have. It's just that every piddling lawsuit that large corporations file, every cease-and-desist, every vague threatening letter from their law firms, is now posted far and wide. These things have always been going on, but we never heard about them. Microsoft knows that if every time they threaten anyone, it will be all over the net, they will look even worse than they do now (and maybe they realize more now than before how bad that can be for them).
So keep posting them! If their lawyer tells you not to, it ain't 'cause it's in YOUR best interest.
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Duh (Score:1)
on priciple alone, this should be moderated down.
although, i thought the original thread which this article is based on was a worthwhile read. It made microsoft appear to have a bit of humanity. maybe the bit was flipped by electronic interferance though.
Re:I like linux (Score:1)
Hell, if you were to have tried to find me today at noon, you would have found me at a meeting of the Atheist Community of Austin.
I was sitting there in the atheist meeting, thinking of hacking the Linux kernel, honest!
What is Microsoft up to now???? (Score:1)
I can see it now:
Red Hat, SuSe, Mandrake, Microsoft Windex 2001.
There is a catch somewhere, I trust the minds at Slashdot to find it. There is always something for Microsoft to gain from their moves......
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Re:I like linux (Score:1)
How typical of MS! (Score:1)
Again, as always, will they keep on impeeding on free software. Once more, they'll fsck with us and keep us from interoperating with their screwed up file system and even more screwy legal department by sending us
Never mind.
Note to Pat Christian, news item author: (Score:2)
I don't think the linux-kernel mailing list [insecure.org] is exactly "private e-mail". I wouldn't expect Pat to know what a mailing list is, but come on here. It seems as if Pat didn't even bother digging up the post that started it all. I wonder if Pat even asked Merkey about how the incident flared up.
sheesh, basic story research...
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Re:What we don't see... (Score:1)
Well, if you go back to the original Slashdot article [slashdot.org], and then from there follow the link to the Kernel Traffic discussion [linuxcare.com] , you'll see that about four paragraphs down, you see the following.
The last thing they need is for me to take the stand and testify just what kind of deals they offered to get us to leave Novell in 1997 and divide the NetWare markets by using the "Linux IP Laundry-Mat" to launder Novell's NDS for their consumption (Oh! Look what we found on the internet and downloaded today!).
So maybe there is more reason than meets the eye for why they might have apologized and dropped their threats. Could their lawyers have said, "Hey you better not pursue this one."?
I posted this already, but thought it was relevant again here.
Re:I like linux (Score:1)
Re:Don't Believe the Conspiracy Theories (Score:2)
On another note, don't you find it ... um... fascinating that MS seems to be responding to Slashdot a lot recently? IIRC this must be the 2nd story within the last 7 days that MS responded to Slashdot. Makes you wonder, doesn't it? :-P (OK, this one isn't to slashdot directly, but still, MS seems to be uncharacteristically responsive these days. Effect of being under scrutiny, perhaps?)
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Re:I like linux (Score:1)
Carl Marx
Ayn Rand
George Carlin
Arthur C. Clark
Bill Gates
Jack Nicholson
Arnold Schwarzenegger
Anaxagoras, Greek philosopher (500?-428? BCE).
Voltaire
Frederick the Great
Thomas Paine
Percy Bysshe Shelley
James Madison
Charles Robert Darwin
Abraham Lincoln
Andrew Carnegie
Samuel Clemens "Mark Twain"
Thomas Edison
George Bernard Shaw
"H.G." Wells
Frank Lloyd Wright
Albert Einstein
Joseph Stalin
Virginia Woolf (I guess you would be afraid of her)
Ernest Hemingway
George Orwell
Howard Hughes
Isaac Asimov
Carl Sagan
Charles Schultz
And that is just to name a few.
You can add me to that list to.
Thanks for your time
Will
Re:I like linux (Score:1)
What do you mean. The tooth farry use to always leave me money
Will
Re:What is Microsoft up to now???? (Score:1)
Sure. Somebody realized that if Microsoft lets the Free Software Folks work on NTFS compatibility, they won't have to spend any money later to do it themselves.
Moderate as "redundant" as necessary.
OK ok.... (Score:1)
Re:NTFS (Score:2)
Yeah, I wasn't thinking dual boot so much as migration, and other stuff you would run across in real life. Maybe someone would stick an NT drive into a Linux workstation for data recovery. Maybe removable media/portable drives with NTFS, things like that. More compatibility is never a bad thing.
I think I know what mixed environment means. At work we have Irix, Linux, SCO, MacOS, Windows 95/98/NT4.0, whatever OS a S/36 runs (everything on it is in RPG), Netware, and used to have CLIX about 6 months ago, until we migrated all the data out of the Integraph system. Things are interesting to say the least. Good thing we are a pretty small company.
I am personally pushing them toward migrating the SCO and Netware stuff to Linux servers. We will never be rid of MS or Mac stuff in the forseeable future though.
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Thank you. (Score:1)
Re:I like linux (Score:1)
The Poll Mastah is Back! (Score:1)
Re:I think they called Microsoft's bluff (Score:3)
maybe it's the pessimist in me thinking, but who are you kidding? most of the public doesn't care. they know that microsoft is the company that makes windows, office and ie. ms has worked very hard to maintain their public image as the kind, loving company that gives you windows. and for the most part, it has worked. in the eyes of the public, msft has more credibility than the naysayers who point out it's missteps.
unless, by "public eye", you mean the slashdot readership. and it's not like we need more evidence to believe that msft is in the wrong.
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Re:What we don't see... (Score:1)
But Linux doesn't make such a great server if you have to take it down in order to boot into Windows to run some lame program, and then boot back into Linux.
If you're really running a server on Linux you don't dual boot.
If you dual boot, you don't run a (real) server. More likely, you fall into one of the two categories:
1. Run Windows primarily. Install Linux to brag about it as mentioned by the poster above.
2. Run Linux primarily. But need an occaisional Windows app that doesn't have a free counterpart suitable for your use.
But in either case, you don't run a real server.
Slashdot Poll Suggestion (Score:3)
(Hint: the last option, although it looks like the usual obligatory nonsense choice, isn't actually nonsensical :-P)
Re:What we don't see... (Score:2)
Or is that category just not good enough for you?
Yes, you don't reboot an office server. But if you have just a couple of machines in your home, you can set one up as a server/router for the rest and feel free to take it down whenever you want.
Re:Mixed blessing (Score:1)
I like Windows 2000. I think it's a good example of bucking the trend of bad programming plaguing the entire industry. However, I don't like Microsoft's business practices, and this seems like a devil in disguise.
I'm skeptical. Some of the worst programming I've ever seen came from Microsoft (without having seen the source code). Especially in some of their Mac products, but also on Windows.
Devil in disguise? What disguise?
Wow, I am impressed. (Score:1)
Wow!
Microsoft, I appologize for telling everyone I know that your software is crap.
Windoze sucks!
Ooops, sorry, did it again.
Geoff
Re:What we don't see... (Score:1)
It's good enough for me.
Just embarrased I didn't think of it.
I got a seperate box for learning Linux.
...until you install Lose2K, that is. (Score:2)
Everything I've heard about the Windows 2000 filesharing protocol says that it's proprietary and breaks Samba. So much for networking.
I personally use NT as a very nice X-terminal for my *nix boxes. The window manager actually works with my mouse's funky features, and it frees me up from having to configure the fsck out of the Linux window managers. (I'll probably end up switching anyhow. One more flavor of *nix can't hurt.)
Re:Don't Believe the Conspiracy Theories (Score:1)
I'm sure it's because Sun is a big company, the SunOS and Java disvisions are completely separate, and the echelons of upper management can't be worried by things a minor as synchronized release schedules. In a companies as large as SMI, IBM, Microsoft, et cetera, the separate divisions really are just like different companies.
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All generalizations are false.
Re:Don't Believe the Conspiracy Theories (Score:1)
Bob
Why Microsoft, Why? (Score:1)
Re:Don't Believe the Conspiracy Theories (Score:1)
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Re:How this was won-maybe (Score:2)
:-)
Jeff
Re:Note to Pat Christian, news item author: (Score:1)
Some of the posting I made were to the list, but some of my replies to Andre were not, but they ended up there anyway. Could have been my fault -- might have been theirs.
:-)
Jeff
ntfsdos (Score:1)
Re:I like linux (Score:1)
So I am little minded because I dont follow the "status quo" of today started 2000 years ago? I am little minded because I don't automatically inherit my elders beliefs? I am little minded because I take a scientific look at life and the universe? If anything, that would make a person more open minded.
You blew it. There's this thing called 'faith' and if you're incapable of 'faith' no amount of rationalism can save you.
faith? .. Ok, maybe I should ask you a question: Do you have any evidence to back your post up? Basically, what you are saying is that people should have faith just because. You think your way is the correct one and people should follow because you cant explain things? There is no point
to try to make up beliefs just because people cant comprehend what the "meaning of life" (if there is one, that is).
Anyway, wait until you're a little older. It's common for snot-nosed kids to carry on about their lack of faith. It's a sign of immaturity, and we have patience that you'll grow out of it.
So, in a nutshell, your point is that people get more ignorant when they age. Well, age doesn't discriminate. What this "lack of faith" deal you were talking about is just human evolution. Putting old ways and methods behind us is how we evolve.
I am all for people believing what they want to believe, as long as they dont try to push it on others. I hope you can face the fact that everyone doesn't believe in a god, and you shouldn't try to denounce them everytime they open their mouth.
Re:I like linux (Score:1)
I do believe in God (God is everything), but I don't see any reason to go to church. Religion is for people who want to be part of God, but can't really get their minds around that concept.
calm before the storm (Score:2)
They'd take you over to meet "Bud", a really friendly dog. Bud was in on it, too.
They'd say "Look at Bud! He's a friendly irish setter. Go pet him.
Bud sat near the porch, tail wagging, with this friendly, eager look on his face.
Of course, as soon as you got close, he would suddenly growl and leap at you, chasing you down the hill til his chain ran out, biting and snarling the whole way.
The kids would roar with laughter. During my introduction, my pants were torn a bit, but no broken skin, forutnately!
Anyway, welcome to Microsoft "Bud".
Beyond the rhetoric (Score:2)
Perhaps the Redmond boys _have_ finally seen the light. After all, they employ geeks. Geeks who are exposed to other geeks, who have not been assimilated. They are, I'm sure like you and I - interested in all the latest cool stuff, including Open Source, open standards and new and fresh ideas. This stuff can't be filtered out by any firewall I know of. (Except MS Proxy, maybe, but that's because it tends to filter THE WHOLE FSCKING NET! GA....oops, sorry, lost meself for a sec. Back to Karma Whoring...)
One's IQ does not necessarily drop 40 points once you walk into the M$ campus, does it? Is it posssible that they do some sort of black magic ceremony that instantly turns you from a moral person into one of Bill's evil minions? I think not. I think that we are indeed affecting the Microsoft mind set - for the better. This wonderful movement called Open Source has spread to the Campus, and started to change things for the better. How could it not? Yes, Hugh is alive and well in the collective [startrek.com]. Bet on it.
Besides, there are (or were, anyway) a few M$ employees here on
Re:uh.... (Score:2)
There was a historical referrence, in the beginning, that implies that I was accussing Microsoft of using Linux code. The reality was that I offered to help them with the solution I was working on because of the huge mess that the great taskfile debate brought out. People were pointing out that because I was exposing how to abuse it in the kernel and that a policy of preventing harmfal combinations was not acceptable. Since this information could/would/did spill over to the script kiddies, I thought it was the better part of valor (sp) to inform an aquaintance at Microsoft of the potential problem that they could see.
Re:NTFS (Score:1)
Anyway, I'm not arguing that good NTFS support wouldn't be useful. (Right now it eats filesystems which is what Merkey's Windows-based tools were designed to solve.) Microsoft probably thinks otherwise --make it easy to migrate to, make it hard to migrate off, as you are probably discovering while converting systems. Ironically, this all revolves around Merkey's NWFS drivers for Microsoft and Linux.
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Re:Beyond the rhetoric (Score:1)
-Nev
Re:What we don't see... (Score:1)
Running any any kind of boot manager where the configuration file is just a normal text file on a file system of one of the operating systems it boots seems a bit dangerous to me.
Want have your linux stuff somewhere greater than 1024 cylinders?
Ever forgot to run "lilo" after a kernel build and couldn't boot after?
Ever had that annoying "LI" and bugger all else on bootup (I've made mistakes in my lilo.conf like everybody else who actually uses it)
Just last week, installed SuSe 7 and didn't install the correct kernel *BANG*. Oh well, 'cause I'm using loadlin I'll just boot the kernel from the previous install and change the root device. *BINGO*
loadlin never ever ever ever breaks. Lilo does.
Regards
Re:I think they called Microsoft's bluff (Score:1)
Re:The Poll Mastah is Back! (Score:1)
Re:Slashdot Poll Suggestion (Score:1)
MS-fans who get upset about Slashdot bias.
Really, if you don't like it, I'm sure there's plenty of MS-brown-nose sites, go there, and bask in the glory of the Gates God-being.
Re:I think they called Microsoft's bluff (Score:1)
Re:I like linux (Score:1)
OT question on GPL (Score:1)
Wouldn't the Linux community and the DOJ have had a massive bear trap for Mr. gates and company? shit we should have let them do it just so we could get them by the short and curlies
You don't have to conspire to be evil (Score:2)
This piece of responsiveness was forced by the position being too obviously wrong. Judging from all of the MicroTurd responses around here, I'd say that there are lots of MS programers with nothing better to do than read Slashdot.
My left nut for moderator points right now! (Score:2)
Code commentary is like sex.
If it's good, it's VERY good.
Re:You don't have to conspire to be evil (Score:2)
Thats as biased as the people who claim anything pro-Linux is false and just a farce by Microsoft's competitors.
Both ideas are false. In computers, and even life, things are usually never black and white. Microsoft is not the evil empire, and Linux is not a white knight that will solve all our problems. If only we could actually reduce all arguments to simple child-like A or B answers, but the real world likes to present us with A, B, C, D, E, F, G
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Not surprising. (Score:2)
Okay, it would've been nice if they had given them some specs to NTFS 5. But it's widely known that in the corporate paradigm, you never guide your foe's knife to your own heart. Still, it would've been a nice olive branch gesture on Gates' part.
You don't have to lie to be wrong. (Score:2)
A contribute to a monopoly.
B contribute to a free code.
Oh yeah, you need to eat. Seek and you will find.
Free software will not solve all of our problems, but it will eliminate the problems of comercial software. Microsoft is evil.
Re:Slashdot Poll Suggestion (Score:2)
(number of servers shipped with linux / total number of servers) * 100. If I was making figures up surely I would have said that Linux has more market share than NT, which it doesn't, NT has 35%. These are the facts, as confirmed by Dell, IBM, Compaq when they release their sales information.
Re:...until you install Lose2K, that is. (Score:2)
Re:I like linux (Score:2)