Peter T. Breuer wrote: > In comp.os.linux.misc David Schwartz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> Microsoft was not going to let a business >> parasitically use Windows to build a business that touted the >> advantages of competing products. > Well, it should have, because that's what manufacturers of operating > systems, washing machines, and so on, are supposed to do. And so says > the legal system. Attempting to subvert market economics like that is > illegal. Actually, there are washing machines that are only available in particular stores. I believe Kenmore washing machines, for example, are only available wholesale as part of a franchise deal. I don't know why you think that's an attempt to subvert market economics, it's actually just a normal part of the way the market works. >> (Just as Burger King corporate will not you sell Big >> Macs in the same store in which you sell Whoppers.) > They're not obliged to. There is no comparison. Not even the same kind > of business in the abstract. Try :- Cow Meat Inc. will see that no > supplier will ever sell you cow meat again if you also sell vegetables > in your totally independent restaurant. So you are saying Microsoft wouldn't sell Windows wholesale to business A if totally independent business B wouldn't pay them a per-system-sold royalty? That makes no sense. The comparison is perfect. Microsoft made Windows available wholesale for resale only as part of a franchise-style agreement. This is a completely typical thing to do. (Though I don't think it's typical for operating systems, I'd be very surprised if it hadn't been done with an operating system before. Sun seems to have similar restrictions now, in fact.) DS -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list