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Microsoft Shares Rise After Court Ruling by CNET Microsoft investors cheered Thursday after a long-awaited federal appeals court ruling that reversed a judge's decision to split the software giant into two pieces.

appeals court on Thursday put aside a ruling that could have blocked Microsoft's bid to tie together products, analysts said.Īntitrust Case's Big Loser: The Judge by CNET As both sides declared victory after Thursday's appellate court ruling, one clear loser emerged in the landmark antitrust case against Microsoft: Judge Thomas Penfield Jackson.
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Gates' Reaction: Let's Settle by Associated Press Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates said Thursday that a federal appeals court decision in the government's antitrust case "lifts the cloud of breakup over the company" and may open the way for a settlement.Īnalysts: MS Can Bundle Up Now by Reuters Microsoft is free to cram more features into its upcoming software after a U.S. But it will be hard for the company that controls the digital printing press to do this in a way that doesn't seem self-serving. Microsoft Will Abandon Controversial Smart Tags by Wall Street Journal I don't doubt that there is some role for user annotation of Web sites. Microsoft Wins - Or Does It? by Salon Experts and observers analyze the appeals court's ruling in the antitrust case.

But the company is still a long way from losing the biggest antitrust case in a generation. Game Not Over by Salon Microsoft broke the law, says the appellate court. Microsoft Bad, Judge Jackson Worse by Slate Microsoft today won the skirmish, the battle, and - in light of the leanings of a Bush/Ashcroft Justice Department - probably the war, in its fight against the pesky antitrust suit that's been nipping at its heels.

Microsoft Core Illegalities by New York Times Microsoft's partial victory should not be allowed to minimize the underlying triumph for federal prosecutors and American consumers. Judging A Moving Target by New York Times The appeals court ruling yesterday in the antitrust case against Microsoft left unanswered one of the most pressing questions facing the computer industry: Will Microsoft have to change how it acts? MS And DoJ: Hap-hap-happy As Pigs In Filth by The Register Somebody's lying
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Gone from the front door of most Microsoft-powered devices.įor Microsoft, A Window Of Uncertainty by Washington Post Microsoft's ambitious plans for extending its Windows operating system face several hurdles as a result of the court ruling. Real MS Verdict: Jackson Blew It by Wired News Microsoft's adversaries were left fuming on Thursday, insisting that if Jackson had held his tongue, the breakup order would have remained intact.Ī Future According To Microsoft by Washington Post Poof, there goes AOL, I thought, as Ballmer droned on.
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Microsoft Fails To Renew Its Digital Certificate by The Register Microsoft isn't alone in having trouble keeping to date with the administration of its secure sites.īundle Of Questions Remain For XP by Reuters Microsoft still faces questions about what products it can legally integrate into its Windows operating system despite an appeals court ruling on Thursday that spared it from being split in two for antitrust violations, legal experts said.ĭell Quizzes Customers On AMD-Based PC by ZDNet Is longtime Intel champion Dell Computer testing the waters for home PCs based on Advanced Micro Devices processors?Īppeals Court Victory Fleeting For Microsoft by CNET Microsoft's antitrust triumph may be short-lived. Microsoft Banks On XP Launch by InfoWorld The jury is still out, however, on whether XP's rollout will spark a surge in IT spending as users and analysts weigh the merits of upgrading to the new OS. Some Feds Push To Settle Microsoft Case by Associated Press Members of Congress are pressing the Bush administration to settle the 4-year-old antitrust case against Microsoft, following Thursday's federal appeals court decision reversing the breakup of the software titan. It's Not Over Till It's Over by Gartner Viewpoint Microsoft: Structural Change Unacceptable by Associated Press Freed at least temporarily from a court-ordered breakup, Microsoft declared Friday it would not accept any settlement with the government that made changes to the company's structure. Gateway Server Promotion Backfires by CNET A promotion this month helped Gateway win some new server customers, but the effort backfired when the company couldn't keep up with demand.
