Linked by Thom Holwerda on Wed 11th Aug 2010 14:27 UTC
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I never said I'd deactivate current licenses. I would just release a statement that said I was no longer interested in supporting platforms that were hostile to our products. Users would still be able to use future versions on Windows via BootCamp anyway.
I know my reaction is a knee-jerk reaction, but if a company wants to play hardball, then let's play! But that's probably one of many reasons I'm not an exec. 
I know my reaction is a knee-jerk reaction, but if a company wants to play hardball, then let's play!
Speaking of hardball, pre-antitrust era Microsoft would have been able to kill Apple many times over.
E.g. by sponsoring Adobe to make Apple versions of their software much more expensive than Windows equivalents.
Ah, the good old days ;-).
Edit: and I of course mean "if Microsoft was now what it used to be". Microsoft of today is pretty much a neutered shadow of its powerful days.
Edited 2010-08-11 19:12 UTC
I never said I'd deactivate current licenses. I would just release a statement that said I was no longer interested in supporting platforms that were hostile to our products. Users would still be able to use future versions on Windows via BootCamp anyway.
*cough* Logic *cough*
Edited 2010-08-12 12:03 UTC





Member since:
2009-04-02
Yeah, All our customers who paid big cash for the mac versions of our products... screw'm !!