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Possible Delays for Vista in Europe

Posted by Zonk on Fri Sep 08, 2006 10:16 AM
from the wow-total-coincidence dept.
tttonyyy writes "After Microsoft was hit with fines for anti-competitive behaviour in 2004 and 2006, it seems that the launch of Vista may be delayed in Europe. Microsoft is blaming this delay on a lack of guidelines from the European Commission. The Commission denies causing any delay, declaring that the impetus is not on them but on Microsoft to produce a product that conforms to the EU competition rules." Further, The New York Times reports "Delaying the introduction in Europe, [members of the European Parliament] said in a letter made public by Microsoft on Thursday, 'would put European companies at a competitive disadvantage with every other company around the world who does have access to these new technologies.'"

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday September 08 2006, @10:22AM (#16066498)
    Lucky bastards!
  • competitive disadvantage (Score:5, Funny)

    by dretay (583646) <(drew) (at) (cs.umd.edu)> on Friday September 08 2006, @10:22AM (#16066503) Homepage
    without Aero how will we visualize/optimize our corporate paradigms?
    • Re:competitive disadvantage (Score:4, Funny)

      by ifrag (984323) on Friday September 08 2006, @10:29AM (#16066551)
      You won't even be able to compete at all! I'd estimate a 230% increase in productivity with the transparent window feature. It's like working with superman x-ray vision. Wait, nevermind, typical corporate workstation doesn't meet the specs for Aero mode.
      [ Parent ]
    • Re:competitive disadvantage (Score:5, Funny)

      by Anonymous Coward on Friday September 08 2006, @11:18AM (#16066985)
      Simple. You just need to proactively synergize and globalize your corporate structures by empowering them with client-focused tools that Vista enables. With a little team building training in adaptive schedule compressing and knowledge base, you won't need Aero to envision strategically fit scenarios to really push the envelope of the quality vector in the company morale, mindset and credibility, not to mention revenue.
      [ Parent ]
  • Emphasis? (Score:2)

    I think you mean impetus [reference.com]. Editors?
    • Re:Emphasis? (Score:4, Informative)

      by LearnToSpell (694184) on Friday September 08 2006, @10:32AM (#16066575) Homepage
      Editors?

      [crickets chirping]

      [ Parent ]
    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      Who knows, maybe he meant onus [reference.com]. They all end in a similar "iss" sound after all, what kind of genius could possibly tell them apart?
    • Re: (Score:2)

      I think he meant onus [reference.com] (literally, "burden"), that is: the ball is not on the EU's court, but on Microsoft.

      How working on last year's Office suite can curtail Europe's productivity escapes me completely.
    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      I actually think that it is neither emphasis nor impetus, but burden, or onus [reference.com], that is intended here.
  • Circuitous logic? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Red Flayer (890720) on Friday September 08 2006, @10:24AM (#16066516) Journal
    "Delaying the introduction in Europe, [members of the European Parliament] said in a letter made public by Microsoft on Thursday, 'would put European companies at a competitive disadvantage with every other company around the world who does have access to these new technologies.'"

    Nice business ya got there... would be a shame if anything 'happened' to it...

    Is it me, or is this just yet another example of MS abusing their monopoly? I see the logic, but can't understand the justification for this argument -- MS shouldn't have to comply with anti-monopoly regulations because any delay will hurt European businesses due to MS's monopoly?
    • More loudmout advertising from M$. (Score:5, Insightful)

      by twitter (104583) on Friday September 08 2006, @10:49AM (#16066717) Homepage Journal

      Is it me, or is this just yet another example of MS abusing their monopoly? I see the logic, but can't understand the justification for this argument -- MS shouldn't have to comply with anti-monopoly regulations because any delay will hurt European businesses due to MS's monopoly?

      Yes, the ultimate harm of monopoly is exclusion. Competitors are not allowed to offer better goods and services and the monopolist is able to deny service to any they please.

      This time, it's pure bullshit and won't work. No business that waits for Vista will be at a competitive disavantage. It's the businesses that adopt yet another secret format for communications that will have problems. It is incredible that M$ tries to spin abuse of formats into some kind of advantage. It took years for XP to gain any significant business presence and to this day, many if not most businesses use w2k. Sensible companies store their publications in PDF that can come from any source. We've all been through this song and dance before and most are sick of it. The massive inefficiency of the M$ upgrade train is the motivator for mass migration. Vista is going to flop when people see that it's only feature is buggy access to ancient non free music and movies. Superior alternatives exist and have been adopted by many, such as Lowes, IBM, Chrysler and countless small businesses and individuals. The Microsoft monopoly is cracked and will soon shatter.

      [ Parent ]
      • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

        The Microsoft monopoly is cracked...

        Don't worry; they'll release a patch in a few days.
            • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

              I used to have 2 GB of RAM, but am temporarily forced to only use 512 MB, and I've noticed a huge difference in responsiveness. With 2 GB I could run tens of programs, some light games and compile simultaneously with no loss of responsiveness, now with 51

      • Re:Circuitous logic? (Score:5, Insightful)

        by tomstdenis (446163) <`moc.liamg' `ta' `sinedtsmot'> on Friday September 08 2006, @10:34AM (#16066587) Homepage
        I know you're trolling but for the benefit of others...

        The argument against MSFT isn't that they have technologies others don't have.

        The argument is that they purposefully swindle their customers into using software that is designed to lock them into using a sole vendor [without otherwise good justification]. That they are abusing their POSITION as a large market share holder to FURTHER their lock in.

        Arguing for MSFT is akin to saying "Yes MFST, release another product that I can't use as I choose, on the platform of my choosing with the tools of my choosing. I like being forced to use your tools, through out security and inefficiency problems because choice is bad."

        There are no technical reasons why [for instance] the Office file formats are not well documented in the public. The *value* of Office is the connectivity and interface of the software. Not the file format. [hint: that's a big reason why people hate OpenOffice]. Releasing the file formats means that you can use third party tools to do things to your documents that you can't with Office [like edit them in GNU/Linux].

        Similarly, their stance on DX and the Win32API is not founded in a technological superiority. It's just "different."

        Tom
        [ Parent ]
        • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

          Microsoft themselves say that Office documents are not appropriate for sharing. Office documents are for printing or saving to PDF for e-mailing. In my experience they're right.
            • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

              I haven't read Microsoft's statement that Word docs aren't for sharing, but I do know they put a lot of effort into creating and marketing their collaboration features. I think that Word docs are absolutely meant for sharing and collaboration within an or
        • Re:Circuitous logic? (Score:5, Insightful)

          by Red Flayer (890720) on Friday September 08 2006, @11:43AM (#16067172) Journal
          I wasn't trolling at all. I was just commenting on the absurdity of the logic used by MS to persuade the EU courts that any delay in release (due to compliance with anti-monopoly laws) will harm the EU economically. This is especially absurd because the only reason it could harm the EU economically is because of MS's monopoly status. Let's examine this in a little more detail:

          Assumption 1 (FTA/S): Having to wait for Vista will harm EU businesses. This may be true for businesses that develop for Vista, since their market will be delayed even further. This may also be true for businesses that depend on newly implemented technology to be included in Vista (like the DRM).

          Assumption 2 (mine): If there were real competition to MS, EU businesses would not be dependent on Vista for new tech deployment for them to take advantage of. For example, a competitive media player could also have the requisite DRM necessary to the media companies desire for profits based on restricting media access.

          Assumption 3 (the EU courts): MS has abused its monopoly status to maintain that status and to limit competition in products other than OS.

          It seems clear to me is that what MS is arguing is that since they have a monopoly, hurting them hurts the consumer of their product. It's my contention (and I'm not the only one) that this is a perfect example to show that monopolies are bad -- lack of an alternative means that some businesses will lose out should there be any interruption of supply by the monopoly. There are other reasons why monopolies are bad, IMO, but MS is using a downside of monopoly existence to justify not having to comply with measures intended to prevent abuse of a monopoly.

          Your explanation of how they are violating the anti-monopoly laws is useful, but has nothing at all to do with my point. Are you just hopping onto an early post since those threads get more attention (regrettably)?
          [ Parent ]
          • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

            "help out other developers" ...

            Um, how about doing the customers a service?

            And I think you're forgetting how engrained MSFT truly is. Yeah, sure it's nice to say "just stop using it." that's something I bring up often with my fellow co-workers. Doesn't
      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        . So now M$ will want to know *very* clearly where the line is so they do not even get near it.

        Thay knew very clearly where the line was. They were told over and opver. They thought they could ignore it, as they did in the US.

  • Now that's what i call.. (Score:4, Funny)

    by rizole (666389) <rizole&gmail,com> on Friday September 08 2006, @10:24AM (#16066520) Homepage
    Windows Genuine Advantage.
  • EU delay on Vista (Score:3, Funny)

    by Anonymous Monkey (795756) on Friday September 08 2006, @10:25AM (#16066527) Journal
    ...So they won't see it until 2025? But the rest of the world will see it in 2023?
  • One of many (Score:3, Insightful)

    by andrewman327 (635952) on Friday September 08 2006, @10:26AM (#16066531) Homepage Journal
    It seems that Microsoft is at least making a superficial attempt to get things right this time around. A quick Google search [google.com] shows how many delays there have already been. I doubt that having to wait a little longer will negatively impact anyone. After all, how many companies rush out and buy the latest OS in the month that it is released? I see potential problems for OEMs, but the average company waits for patches and better stability before adoption.
  • Delay of Windows is good (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Theovon (109752) on Friday September 08 2006, @10:26AM (#16066532)
    Personally, I think companies that rely exclusively on Windows are shooting themselves in the foot. These days, there are numerous technologies people can use to make portable applications, including Java, C# (yes), Python, Perl, Tcl/Tk, WxWidgets, Qt, GTK, PHP and other web technologies, etc.

    Portability isn't everything, but relying on a single, unreliable vendor is lunacy.

    It's amazing how many IT people I've met who have "heard" or Linux. All they've ever known is Windows. Perhaps Microsoft's failures will encourage developers to investigate alternative platforms. Windows is important, and you should support that platform, but when Windows fails you, you really need to have a backup plan.
    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      Anyone who has had to support applications written in Java would probably disagree with you. I had to support a java based server application. Getting it to run on the app server (jboss, websphere, etc) for clients often meant doing it for them either remo
  • After so many delays... (Score:3, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday September 08 2006, @10:26AM (#16066533)
    ... Microsoft is considering renaming Windows Vista to Windows Atlantis.
  • competitive disadvantage?? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by malsdavis (542216) * on Friday September 08 2006, @10:26AM (#16066535)
    "would put European companies at a competitive disadvantage with every other company around the world who does have access to these new technologies."

    What Dribble. Does that mean all those companies still using Windows 2000 / NT are at a competitive disadvantage with companies who got conned into upgrading to the virtually identical Windows XP?

    I fail to see what competitive advantage Vista will give businesses who upgrade to it immediatly. Maybe companies could run into problems in 5 years time when compatability issues arise, but not in the short/medium term.

    • Re: (Score:2)

      Well, seeing as it takes a good long time to get these things installed, if you don't start immediately, after 5 years you'd be only at 50% completed instead of 80 or 90% like your competitors?
      • It seems your idea of competition... (Score:4, Insightful)

        by WebCowboy (196209) on Friday September 08 2006, @11:11AM (#16066930)
        ...is the same as Microsofts:

        if you don't start immediately, after 5 years you'd be only at 50% completed instead of 80 or 90% like your competitors?

        And your point is...? I know of no busines in existence in the world today that states in its mission statement that "we shall strive to complete a softweare upgrade rollout faster than any of our competitors"--there is no point to have a goal of getting all employees upgraded to the latest OS before everyone else. Businesses strive to offer the best quality of product or service, or to be the lowest-cost supplier, or be among the best employers, or be first to market with a new invention. These goals have little to do with what OS a company runs on their computers.

        I know, it certainly could put a company at a disadvantage if it was still running ancient VAX machinesand had DEC VT green-screen termials and '386 PCs running Windows 3.1 for Workgroups on people's desks. However there has to be a balance--a company that hastily rolls out a new release of software just so it can get there first is at an equal disadvantage as the company that limps alog on ancient unsupported software and hardware. In fact, upgrading too quickly can be MORE costly to a business than waiting too long. This is especially the case with closed, commercial software because of added licensing costs.

        Here is what I found was the case with nearly ALL the companies who upgraded their Windows boxes to XP before SP1, or 2003 before it was ready: the licensing costs were at their highest at initial release, proper drivers were not available for all their hardware resulting in unanticipated hardware upgrade costs, they got smacked by extra vulnerabilities or bugs not present in older software, and important applications broke upon upgrade (in particular, custom applications, ERP/EAM/other enterprise apps, industrial software like HMIs PLC programming software and communications drivers and so on).

        I'd have to say MS has it backwards--the EU is helping enforce responsible behavior on its industries by delaying early adoption of unproven software, so it has the ADVANTAGE over the rest of the world. The best way to upgrade is to phase in new software gradually, for example as hardware is replaced, and periodically evaluate the benefits of upgrading. Quite often, there are no compelling benefits at all until the vendor starts dropping support. For example, only within the last year has it been justifiable to upgrade Win2k machines to XP just for the sake of upgrading--reason being is that some important new software and hardware support will not be available (things like Blu-Ray and HD-DVD media, and IE7, and limited support for SQL 2005 on win2k servers). For most companies I've dealt with, XP was not at all considered until SP1 was released, and even then the upgrade strategy was to phase it in as new machines came online.

        I think MS is just showing a bit of desperation in trying to get the Windows upgrade cycle back on track, as well as frustration at being reigned in by anti-trust regulations. I don't even think members of EU parliament are stupid enough to swallow such tripe.
        [ Parent ]
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      There would be a disadvantage to PC OEMs. Should a European actually want Vista (God knows why, though) he could buy one as an American export. Thus isadvantaging European companies

      Overall though, I think you are right. There is hardly going to be a t
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      I fail to see what competitive advantage Vista will give businesses who upgrade to it immediatly
      Any business that depends upon it customers having Vista. Like, say, media companies who want to take advantage of the DRM in Vista. Or, say, software develop
  • Oh please (Score:3, Insightful)

    by alvinrod (889928) on Friday September 08 2006, @10:29AM (#16066553)
    I can understand wanting to spin the situation to make it appear as though it's not their fault that there will be a delay, but are they really so naive as to believe the crap they're spouting about how not having Vista "would put European companies at a competitive disadvantage with every other company around the world who does have access to these new technologies"?

    I'm sure that there are a few businesses out there that still run Windows 2000 on their machines, and that even after Vista comes out, some companies will take several years before migrating away from XP. About the only way I could consider Microsoft's statement valid is if you consider the new technologies found in the new boxes that will be needed to run Vista, because the current hardware used might not be up to snuff.
  • Sounds familiar (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Uukrul (835197) on Friday September 08 2006, @10:32AM (#16066574)
    Sounds familiar to European PS3 Launch Delayed to 2007 [slashdot.org]

    Microsoft really seem to be shooting themselves in the foot lately, even if this isn't their fault.

    Consequently, the European Vista will be be bundled with Microsoft's new killer app, Duke Nukem Forever.

    One of Microsoft's biggest problems (along with their seemingly insane devotion to their own proprietary formats and obsession with control) is something they've always done: early overhype. The same thing happened with the Windows XP. They put out so much overblown hype early on in their product announcements (making ridiculous claims like "this will be more powerful than a supercomputer" and other such bunk) that later, inevitably, when they have to pull back and announce REAL specs and features, it comes off as a disappointment.
    They are nothing less than the victims of their own unrealistic promises.
    -Eric

    Sony for Microsoft
    Vista for PS3
    And so on...
  • the play by plays (Score:4, Funny)

    by Ozwald (83516) on Friday September 08 2006, @10:52AM (#16066738)
    Slashdot sounds like those hockey commentary people...

    "Ballmer's got the CD and he's headed for the RTM... he shoots, OHH! A bug shuts him down!!! Oh that crowd is really upset"

    "Well Tim, that was a close one, he's oh for 10 now, he really needs a break"

    "Now Gentoo has control, passes it to Fedora, passes it to SuSE, passes it to Ubuntu, passes it back to SuSE... they seem to have their passing game working really well"

    "Well Tim, they have heart but only a small group of the audience seems to be cheering for them"

    Sorry.

    Oz
  • Quick...sell, sell! :-) (Score:3, Insightful)

    by duden (990404) on Friday September 08 2006, @10:55AM (#16066775)
    Oh boy, these guys in Redmond...do they actually believe their flagship product is providing competitive advantages? Someone needs a reality check. Clearly no version of Windows since, shall we say, 2k have given companies any form for cost savings, productivity improvements or the like. The only European companies in competitive disadvantage is the IT implementors, who might have to wait a bit in getting hold of their upgrade service fees. But then again, show me a successful corporation who installs OS'es imediately after releases. Way too big a risk! At least for the banks it's a cycle of easily 1-2 years delay before they are going to install it company wide. And who knows, by then we might even be able to install OS X on non-Apple boxes. As a European, I feel rather relieved!
  • disadvantage? (Score:3, Insightful)

    by pe1chl (90186) on Friday September 08 2006, @10:59AM (#16066818)
    put European companies at a competitive disadvantage with every other company around the world who does have access to these new technologies.

    It could also put them at a competitive advantage by using stable technologies while their foreign competitors play with new thingies.
    By the time it gets introduced in Europe, the others have already found the first bugs and Microsoft may have fixed some of them.
  • by Kenja (541830) on Friday September 08 2006, @11:09AM (#16066914)
    But I sure cant find em...

    MS: I eventually had to go down to the cellar to find them.
    EU: Thats the Display Department.
    MS: With a torch.
    EU: The lights had probably gone.
    MS: So had the stairs.
    EU: But you found the plans, didnt you?
    MS: Oh yes, they were on display in the bottom of a locked filing cabinet stuck in a disused lavatory with a sign on the door saying Beware of the leopard.
  • Pure lies by Microsoft (Score:4, Informative)

    by Alphager (957739) <florianhaasNO@SPAMfsfe.org> on Friday September 08 2006, @11:30AM (#16067080) Homepage Journal
    These are pure lies by Microsoft to gain some PR-advantage against the European Union. The EU has issued a statement that the release-date of Vista is 100% in the hands of Microsoft and that it does not intend to interfere(see http://www.heise.de/newsticker/meldung/77945 [heise.de] for a german news-post about it). The EU had issued in january a questionaire to MS about the conformity of Vista to the several sentences MS got because of it's monopoly. MS answered LAST WEEK. This is not different to the US-market: MS has to conform to certain rules because of several past lawsuits. MS knew this from the start. If it does not conform, it is 100% MS's fault.
  • Trying ... (Score:4, Funny)

    by lorg (578246) on Friday September 08 2006, @12:08PM (#16067364)
    Trying to care, trying to care, trying to care ... Sorry it ain't happenin'. Come back when there is something that actually matters.
  • Two thoughts on this... (Score:3, Insightful)

    by CrazedWalrus (901897) on Friday September 08 2006, @01:15PM (#16067885) Journal
    First:

    "Delaying the introduction in Europe [...] would put European companies at a competitive disadvantage with every other company around the world who does have access to these new technologies.'"

    Awww. Cry, Baby, Cryyyy! Look, whether it was justified or not, the fact remains that they did everything possible to make life difficult for MS. I know some will say that it was a slap on the wrist, others will say that what the EU commission did was unjustified. The fact remains that MS was singled out and (very) publicly sanctioned. I think this is MS's way of poking back, and reminding the EU that they aren't, in fact, required to sell their software in Europe. Maybe now the EU understands that MS can bite back, too.

    Second, maybe the EU will recognize the importance of shifting away from MS software, and possibly even offer incentives of some sort. If a single foreign company can put every EU company at a competitive disadvantage, willfully or otherwise, maybe it's time to seriously re-evaluate your dependencies. Linux may be behind in some specific areas, but if the EU were to fund serious development to bring it up to speed, that gap would close in a hurry, and soon those using MS products would be the ones at a "competitive disadvantage" for every checkbox on the scorecard.

    So, I repeat: Cry, Baby, Cryyyy! When you're done, get off your asses and fund development of a viable alternative. Solve your own problems, and stop your frikkin whining. It's not like you're strapped for cash on the scale of a moderate corporate IT development project.

    /American
    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      So I say go ahead, Microsoft, take your ball and go home (or at least don't let them play with it a little while) so that these power-tripping politicians can understand the consquences on their actions.

      And what exactly would those consequences be, other t
        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          And I'm sure if the US did that, the EU would respond tit-for-tat. Do you really think the US will go to the mat for one company's IP rights given the potential loss of all American IP rights in the EU? Do you think that the EU would lose more from the l
    • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

      The EU commission has the attitude of an angry girlfriend/wife - "if you don't know why I'm mad at you, I'm not going to tell you". Damn.. I HATE it when I get that line. Sure MS does too..
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      levy arbitrary fines

      Bullshit. There's nothing arbitraty about a fine that can (and should) be given to any compagny that violates a specific law. Other compagnies got this fine for violating the law, Microsoft violated the same law and should therefore p

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      I can see Microsoft wanting guidance before releasing a new product.

      Those guidelines already exist. They are the guidelines that every other manufacturer of software has to obey when they sell software in the EU. All the EU is saying is that MS aren't a s