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No future in proprietary software (ZDNet)

No future in proprietary software (ZDNet)

Posted Dec 5, 2002 10:44 UTC (Thu) by mnummeli (guest, #8374)
In reply to: No future in proprietary software (ZDNet) by proski
Parent article: No future in proprietary software (ZDNet)

Does Microsoft Internet Explorer have parts which have
been copyrighted by third parties? Never heard of such
before.


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RTFH (read the friendly Help screen)

Posted Dec 5, 2002 17:54 UTC (Thu) by Medievalist (guest, #8395) [Link]

In Internet Explorer, select the "Help" menu from the top menu bar, then select "About", then look at all the pretty licensing information.

For even more, move the binary to a more capable OS such as ancient, doddering Unix or fresh, half-baked linux :^) and do a "strings" command on it.

Windows itself contains code from IBM, Shiva, Symantec, and many others... as well as some BSD code and implementations of reverse-engineered algorithms derived from Apple and Stac products.

Microsoft pays other companies to provide things like antivirii, disk defragmentation, remote access services, etc. that they are unable to create themselves (within their artifical time constraints for release, that is). Some of these things (like the disk defragger) could easily be "unbundled", others (like Shiva's RAS) have become pretty deeply entangled in the windows code-base.

--Charlie

No future in proprietary software (ZDNet)

Posted Dec 6, 2002 14:36 UTC (Fri) by robot101 (subscriber, #3479) [Link]

Did you ever hear of a company called Spry and their browser called Mosaic? Microsoft "Give us your browser and make it do what we want and we'll give you a cut of all the sales from it." Spry "Great!"... except MS didn't sell it... they gave it away. Sucks to be Spry... =)

Like most good Microsoft software, possibly excepting Word, they didn't write it, they just bought or stole it. DOS, NT, IE, Visio and FrontPage come to mind, and I'm sure they've done the same while trying to enter the 3D graphics software market.

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