“Ultimately, [the case against Micrsoft was] about whether one company should or will have the power to dominate, control and suffocate any technology market it enters. Yesterday and today, Microsoft has had that power. The court’s decision means the company will have it tomorrow, too. If that’s in the public interest, then I guess Microsoft ‘R’ Us,” writes Scott Rosenberg for Salon.com in his article entitled, “Money talks, Microsoft walks.” Read about why Microsoft is free to do whatever it damn well pleases here.
Previous Post
New Mac news aggregator site debutsWill incoming CEO John Ternus help realize Apple’s smart home potential?
Incoming Apple CEO John Ternus could kick off his tenure with an ambitious push into smart home hardware. All signs point to a robust lineup…
How John Ternus could finally fulfill Steve Jobs’ original vision for the iPad as a true primary computing device
Steve Jobs introduced the iPad in 2010 not as a bigger iPhone or a sidekick to the Mac, but as a revolutionary “third category” of device…
Apple’s long-awaited next-gen Apple TV 4K: A performance leap delayed by next-gen Siri, poised for 2026 launch
The current third-generation Apple TV 4K, released in late 2022 with the A15 Bionic chip, continues to deliver strong 4K streaming…
Apple’s iPhone is killing it in China, shipments surge 20% in first quarter
Apple’s iPhone shipments in China surged 20% year-over-year in the first quarter, delivering the strongest growth among major vendors…
Apple preps custom ‘micro-curved’ OLED display on Twentieth Anniversary iPhone, eyeing bezel-less quad-curved design
For the iPhone’s twentieth anniversary, Apple is turning to Samsung to develop a custom micro-curved OLED panel that promises to be both…