"Antoon Pardon" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>> Microsoft had something you need so badly that you could not go into >> business without it. So they demanded from you that you pay them what >> their >> software was actually worth to you. That is not extortion. Everyone who >> sells something tries to get the maximum possible value for it. > If a company wants to be paid for things it didn't deliver, then I think > that is extortion. Microsoft want te be paid a license on windows for > P.C.'s that were sold without windows. I think you need to look up "extortion" in a dictionary. I can walk up to you and say "if you want me to mow your lawn, you must pay me $1 every time you smoke a cigarette". So long as you can say "no" and all that happens is that I don't mow your lawn (which I have no obligation to do anyway), it isn't extortion. The funny thing is that if Microsoft really had a monopoly on x86 operating systems, their deal would have been fair. Since you can't use a computer without an operating system and theirs would have been the only one. DS -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list