Linked by Thom Holwerda on Wed 19th Nov 2008 21:40 UTC
Law and Order Strike one for Apple. Curling is a better sport anyway - the first end goes to Apple. The Cupertino company sued clone maker PsyStar for licensing and trademark violations and copyright infringement, only to be greeted by a counter lawsuit from PsyStar, who claimed Apple was a monopolist. U.S. District Judge William Alsup sided with Apple on the counter lawsuit Tuesday. In his 16-page decision Tuesday, Alsup ruled Apple's products don't constitute a market to dominate. As a consequence, Apple then can't be considered a monopolist, Alsup wrote. An Apple spokesman had no comment. A representative for Psystar couldn't be reached for comment. The original lawsuit is still running, so PsyStar can, for now, continue selling its clones.
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RE[2]: Uhhh
by Delgarde on Wed 19th Nov 2008 23:18 UTC in reply to "RE: Uhhh"
Delgarde
Member since:
2008-08-19

Well, yes. In their own way, Apple really are a lot like Microsoft, just smaller and with more style.

Reply Parent Bookmark Score: 2

RE[3]: Uhhh
by jessta on Wed 19th Nov 2008 23:21 in reply to "RE[2]: Uhhh"
jessta Member since:
2005-08-17

Apple is fair worse than Microsoft. Microsoft doesn't tie you to only buying their hardware.

Reply Parent Bookmark Score: 1

RE[4]: Uhhh
by UZ64 on Wed 19th Nov 2008 23:52 in reply to "RE[3]: Uhhh"
UZ64 Member since:
2006-12-05

Apple is fair worse than Microsoft. Microsoft doesn't tie you to only buying their hardware.

Yeah, but they do quite a good job at anchoring the world to the Intel architecture.

I'd like to see SPARC and ARM take off. At the current rate I doubt SPARC will go anywhere fast, but with Ubuntu's new commitment toward ARM-powered netbooks/laptops, at least ARM has a chance of rising. Either one, though, I'll believe it when I see it.

Edited 2008-11-20 00:08 UTC

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RE[4]: Uhhh
by mxcl on Thu 20th Nov 2008 17:42 in reply to "RE[3]: Uhhh"
mxcl Member since:
2008-05-22

Apple don't either. They just won't let you sell their software on other hardware. You're free to install it on whatever you want, if you can.

Anyway, Apple use open stuff all over their stack. Not everywhere, much to our annoyance, but far more so than Microsoft. I can't understand your opinion at all.

Edited 2008-11-20 17:43 UTC

Reply Parent Bookmark Score: 1