Internet World: Microsoft says Britain doesn't want it split

NEWS The British IT industry does not want Microsoft to be broken up as punishment for anti-competitive practices, says Microsoft's UK managing director Neil Holloway, at the Internet World conference in London Tuesday. According to Holloway, the software company has such a crucial role in the "third stage" of the Internet's development that breaking it up would be unthinkable. "Microsoft is providing the software that are the building blocks of the Internet," says Holloway during his keynote speech at the conference. "We see our role as pivotal in providing the building blocks for the industry to take advantage of opportunities in the next five to 10 years." Holloway says Microsoft is so important to the future of the industry in the UK that it does not want the company to be broken up or to have its source code opened up. "If you talk to IT managers, they want a single OS. They also think that having different flavours of Windows would be a headache," he says. Sales Manager with British company LinuxIT Peter Dawes disagrees, claiming that the industry doesn't hang on Microsoft's every move. "It think it would be best to make sure that Microsoft doesn't maintain its restrictive practises," he comments. "The size of Microsoft has made it arrogant and enabled it to abuse its position." Holloway repeats the familiar company position that Microsoft will overturn the ruling of the Department of Justice, despite the current legal wrangling. "We will not get broken, there is absolutely nothing to justify it. We're confident that through the appeal system justice will prevail for Microsoft and for consumers," he says. IDC analyst Toni Picardo, however, says that these words should be take with a pinch of salt. "Microsoft is trying to put fear, uncertainty and doubt into peoples heads," he says. "and that, if anyone touches Microsoft it will cause a recession." Picardo adds that, contrary to Holloway's suggestion, the technology industry is probably keen to see Microsoft clean up its act. "They want to see Microsoft competing on a fair footing and producing better products. Not ones with a lot of bugs and holes in them," he says. What do you think? Tell the Mailroom. And read what others have said.

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John Molloy

Apple are currently pushing to get tv content on the iPad by April 3rd. This could possibly be seen as a spoiler for that announcement I suppose....

10 hours ago by John Molloy
Andrew Donoghue

Hey - presume you mean something that builds on Apple's existing TV device? Apple have already had a couple of runs at building Apple TV and it's...

16 hours ago by Andrew Donoghue on Google's TV timing may reveal more to come
BVE2011

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ator1940

70,0000 to 90,0000 computers? A very small number considering some of these botnets are in the millions, and there are so many of them operating,...

17 hours ago by ator1940 on Microsoft says it decimated Waledac botnet
ator1940

I agree Roger, and why can't they write secure code? What will happen when they find stolen code in windows? They have a track record of...

17 hours ago by ator1940 on Microsoft lashing out at Linux, open source
ator1940

Do you think it will really take days?

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neilfab

@evilmanic have you seen the new hp on zdnetuk

Xwindowsjunkie

Wonder how many days it will take before somebody codes an exploitive hack for IE9?

1 day ago by Xwindowsjunkie on Microsoft previews Internet Explorer 9 with HTML 5 support
roger andre

There are some really good people in Microsoft and I wonder, how embarassing it must be for them to see how the organisation behaves from it's...

1 day ago by roger andre on Microsoft lashing out at Linux, open source
ajclarke

Great new look for ZDNET UK web-site http://bit.ly/9R5eAA to check it out @ZDNetUK #zdnet

feedfrog

Microsoft previews Internet Explorer 9 with HTML 5 support - zdnet.co.uk http://bit.ly/9FSh23

kencogold

We were just pondering on when IE will get HTML5 and CSS3 onboard! this is excellent

2 days ago by kencogold on Microsoft previews Internet Explorer 9 with HTML 5 support
riptari

RT @suziedaniels: relaunched www.zdnet.co.uk raises the bar yet again! its so fast it makes my eyes bleed.

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http://www.zdnet.co.uk/news/networking/2010/03/11/european-parliament-votes-down-acta-treaty-40085614/ (Where does this leave #Debill?)

suziedaniels

relaunched www.zdnet.co.uk raises the bar yet again! its so fast it makes my eyes bleed.

eparody

Redesign complet pour ZDNet UK et AU, Twitter au centre http://www.zdnet.co.uk/ http://www.zdnet.com.au/

cdutheil

RT @eparody: Redesign complet pour ZDNet UK et AU, Twitter au centre http://www.zdnet.co.uk/ http://www.zdnet.com.au/

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