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No. Whenever the term is used, it is almost exclusively used for companies who are competing for marketshare, vying for people's money, and doing so feature-for-feature against each other in order to take the other one down and send him home packing.
The only other area in which the term "compete" is used just as much is in sports. You have two soccer/futbol teams who are vying for the World Cup; what, pray tell, does one team think about the game?
They're thinking "OK, we have a chance to send that other team home to get an Italy-like beatdown. Let's do it!"
You compete to win. You compete to take the trophy home. You compete to justify your worth on the world stage. And you might compete just to get revenge on the other team that took your best man out at the last competition.
What is WebKit or Gecko competing for? Is there a prize involved?





Member since:
2005-07-06
The word compete is tained? That's um.. interesting. Did corporations pay off dictionary companies to change the definition or something?