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.
Member since:
2006-12-05
I have a hard time believing that x86-64 is much more than a 64-bit extension (or update) of x86 before it. Okay, it was designed by AMD instead of Intel, but so what? It's still basically just an extension to the same old architecture. And there's plenty of other architectures besides x86/x86-64 and IA64.
Edited 2008-11-20 02:07 UTC