But Microsoft was not considered a monopoly at the time they started to oust Sun in the workstation and server markets. They were literally laughed at at that time. In spite of Microsoft's supposed monopoly, Palm still (currently) enjoys a greater share of the PDA market. There are numerous other markets in which MS competes where the success of their products was attained before they were considered a monopoly,or where their monopoly status had little to do with the products' success or mediocrety. There continue to be markets where MS maintains a minority share despite the supposed advantages of their position. The mistakes of competitors are repeated numerously. The competitors never regard MS as a credible threat, so MS provides features users want while being disregarded by the competition. Before the competition realizes it, they have, or are on the verge of losing their market dominance. Because they waited so long to respond, they often just relegate themselves to whining about being beaten for other reasons that what actually transpired.
In regards to Japan, I wasn't referring to the Japanese market, but to Japanese products in the US market. Sony, Honda, Mitsubishi, etc. can make everything from automobiles to DVD players, yet many have no problem with everything they own being made by Sony, etc., yet when MS does the same thing, there is always an uproar from some entity. There is even a double-standard among MS and other large American companies. AOL is a far worse company than MS, yet they have a lot more freedom to expand almost unrestricted. Meanwhile MS is continually persecuted largely based upon alleged acts of which AOL and others are actually guilty. One of the few successful American companies out there, and people would rather spend their time persuing every rumor or piece of speculation on then rather than taking a closer look at other companies filing for bankruptcy and leaving their employees in dire straits. This is leading elswhere, so I'll end here.
This post was edited by n4cer on Thursday, July 18, 2002 at 15:49.
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