Microsoft To Change Desktop Search After Google Complaint 286
Raver32 writes to tell us that Microsoft will be making changes to their desktop search tool in Vista after a 49-page antitrust complaint was filed by Google. "Microsoft initially dismissed the allegations, saying regulators had reviewed the program before Vista launched. However, Brad Smith, Microsoft's general counsel, said in an interview last week that the company was willing to make changes if necessary."
Wow! (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Wow! (Score:4, Insightful)
why dont people sue apple for Spotlight?
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well do you really expect anyone to integrate a third party search into their OS?
If they want to conduct business in a country where I'm a voter....well, yes, I indeed expect them to do whatever the hell I want them to do. If they choose to do things that don't benefit me, I have the right to elect leaders that make and prosecute laws that prevent them from continuing it. Luckily, many of those laws are already in place since the days when Standard Oil, AT&T and others tried to abuse their respective monopolies.
why dont people sue apple for Spotlight?
Apple hasn't been been convicted as a monopolist. Also Google searc
Re:Wow! (Score:4, Informative)
If you don't like the way a company does business, just don't buy their product.
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Re:Wow! (Score:5, Funny)
Newswire - 21st June, 2017
Microsoft (Nasdaq:MSFT) has announced they will be bundling the Linux kernel with Windows as an alternative to their own, after a 490-page antitrust complaint was filed by the Linux foundation. "We are extremely pleased with this development", Linux kernel BDFL Linus Torvalds was quoted as saying. "For too long have Microsoft been able to get away with forcefully bundling the NT kernel with their OS, forcing other products out of the market in clear violation of antitrust law as it applies to convicted monopolists. No longer!"
This development is not without precedent. After the original case in 2007 forced Microsoft to offer alternative hard drive search tools with the OS, a ruling in 2009 following an antitrust complaint by Stephen Oberholtzer had them bundling an an alternative [worsethanfailure.com] to the Windows calculator. By 2014, after the famous Litestep case had Windows presenting the user with a choice of window managers on first boot, some have said this step was inevitable.
Asked whether there was any truth in the rumours that Richard Stallman was secretly preparing a dossier to set out the case that Microsoft had failed to offer enough choice to the consumer with regard to product names that feature recursive acronyms and references to Flanders and Swann, he declined to comment.
Re:Wow! (Score:5, Interesting)
Part of the problem is that the lines are being blurred between file explorer and internet explorer, and search and OS search. As terms and concepts we all took for granted when the agreements were written get redefined to mean something entirely different -- previous legal settlements that were based on those concepts may also get called into question and redefined as well.
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The world is better with competition whereever competition isn't grossly inefficient. I see no good reason there shouldn't be competi
Re:Wow! (Score:5, Informative)
They actually had a powerful search capability since NT4. It was not well exposed in GUI and was not running by default. It was called Indexing Service. Current Vista Search is modified Indexing Service + GUI. It was even done by the same team.
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Of course, it depends on your definition of OS to an extent, but personally mine is a little wider than "kernel and HAL".
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I suppose it is a step up form find, since it appears to maintain an index file.
But find is not a service constantly running as a service as I suppose locate would be. And DOS and windows also (have) come with a close equivalent of find, though not as flexible. The dir command works wonders in that respect.
No the desktop search is something completely different. It is not just a command line utiltiy. I
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Re:I think the problem is WHY they're doing things (Score:5, Insightful)
Well, that's not ALL we're talking about. Remember, this was an MS-made replacement for Google's desktop search and Microsoft only made it AFTER seeing Google's product, at which point they merged it into Windows at a fairly deep level.
Rubbish. Microsoft first said Vista (Longhorn at the time) would have "Desktop Search" a year before before Google's first GD beta (and two years before Apple released Spotlight). Further, they'd been talking about the broad concept since at least the mid 90s.
In other words, I don't really care what they put into their OS, but WHY they put it in there: to kill off competitors (Google) and their products.
The idea that it was a "response" to Google's product (and hence some deliberate, targeted attack), doesn't even pass the laugh test.
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Because Apple is not a monopoly. A lot of normally legal things become illegal, when you gain over 90% of market share...
That said, I wonder, if Microsoft's fixing their own bugs is Ok... In particular, when the bug-fixing drives someone out of business... Their introduction of IE (which killed Netscape) was a feature-addition. Well, one's missing feature is another's bug...
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I guess having so many developers making third party software for your OS is a double edged sword. At some point Microsoft got so many people augmenting the OS that they could barely make an improvement or add a feature without putting someone out of business (ok, Google isn't going to go out of business over this, but the point is still valid).
One of the many things I don't like about
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Sounds like a monopoly control to me, just a REALLY TINY one.
Re:Wow!..Not so much (Score:5, Informative)
Here Microsoft is using their Desktop monopoly to boost their online search business and (this is the illegal part) restricting their monopoly product from using someone else's online search business.
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do u think saying fuck a few times will prove u correct?
MS bashing is fun, but do realize, that the line between added application and OS feature, is really not that clear cut. i could take things to their logical extreme and argue that everything other than the kernel is not part of the OS.. of course i would be wrong, but the point is, "this is an OS feature, not an application" can sometimes be a very valid argument..
my point about spotlight was this: spotlight and the vista search ar
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It is clear cut in this case.
MS didn't provide this feature in their OS.
Admittedly, they should have done so decades ago, but they didn't need to because they have a monopoly, and developing features for customers costs money. Instead, third parties, including Google, invested time and effort to provide the feature to Microsoft vict\\\\ customers, and by doing so added value to the W
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MS didn't provide this feature in their OS.
Microsoft have been providing some form of search in their OS since at least Windows 95. Since DOS 1.0, if you consider dir [/s] *file* a "search" (and given how many people seem to consider find / -name "*file" a "search", that's not unreasonable).
The indexing searching of Vista is a clear and predictable evolution of functionality that's been present in Windows since before Google even existed.
Admittedly, they should have done so decades ago, but they didn'
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Let me guess... (Score:4, Insightful)
( "what? We did it because we were told to! Not our fault your desktop is all broke now!" )
Okay, so prolly not like that. But seriously; they could've avoided the bad PR by just responding to a quiet request in the first place, instead of being pushed into it... as usual.
I realize there's prolly some sort of 'we only do it when we have to' mentality prevalent in Redmond, but when is someone there going to realize that maybe, you know, they can take a chance and do The Right Thing - when the asking is being done quietly and politely, and not finally and grudgingly do it later when there's a big fat lawsuit or four hanging over their heads?
I know, I know... but I still have some small bit of dreamer left in me.
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Talk about being given the red carpet treatment. This company is given a PASS at every tur
Re:Let me guess... (Score:4, Insightful)
This is one I'm disappointed MS caved on. Google is doing little more than using the court to proactively hurt competitors, something most people here are usually against.
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LoB
Re:Let me guess... (Score:5, Insightful)
Any application installer can disable the builtin search. This was discussed extensively previously - "GDS has noted that Indexing Service is on, and this will hamper performance. Would you like to disable?" Seems pretty straightforward. After all, the hooks to disable Indexing Service are publicly available and work.
Or should the WDS facility seek out other Desktop Search apps and disable itself if it finds something running? No. If you mean "Search" on the Start Menu, that's fairly encroaching. What next? Should the entirety of the OS be extensible? (Well, it should, but you know what I mean) Should there be an integral API allowing anyone to hook anything into anything? Filesystem? Maybe a competitor could release a new kernel for Vista, should that be allowed to hook into the UI?
Show me how GDS is prevented from running? Oh, it's impeded from running at full performance? Guess what, so is Indexing Service. GDS is a user's choice to install? Guess what, the user can also uninstall Indexing Service. That Google have chosen to seek (questionable) legal redress for what is clearly a simple issue to resolve (and one that DEFINITELY would have come up in any usability testing) speaks volumes.
FUD. For one, it doesn't slow down the OS per se. It slows down the indexing system of two separate applications. GDS and Indexing Service. MS isn't spinning it to say "GDS is slowing down your OS, get rid of it". It's simple resourcing.
Off the market? Pardon me while I cry with laughter. Harming competition? I guess you mean by putting in an unremovable, un-disable-able indexing service that slows down a competitors desktop search app. Except, what's that, oh, yes, it IS removable, by USER or by EXPOSED API. And it is disable-able, by USER or by EXPOSED API. Remind me again how you think this should be dealt with.
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If IE had not become the dominant browser, nobody would have used ActiveX. If nobody used ActiveX, few people would have used Developer Studio, fewer people would have used ASP and, if few people used ASP, fewer would have used IIS and Windows servers.
If Microsoft had not put Java adoption back 5 years, nobody would have wanted
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It's interesting to see what they'll do. There's numerous things to do just the thing Google asked. There's at least 4 different ways to stop Vista's search, all accessible by installer software. There's at least 2 different ways to make queries to Vista's search and a way to plugin 3rd party search agents (I don't think this was requested by Google but some were asking this in the previous Slashdot article).
So unless they remove Vista search alltogether, what's there to do? Tell Google's developers how to
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Microsoft release an OS. There's nothing particularly secret or magical about that; it's fundamental to their business. An OS provides a platform on which to run software, and offers a number of features - because Microsoft's OS is aimed squarely at desktop PCs, it follows the features it provides are aimed squarely at desktop PCs.
Now, what generally happens is that Microsoft release an OS, and over the course of time some companies within the software industry spots what things a
Something fishy (Score:4, Interesting)
Also I am reminded of the fights between AOL and MSFT about allowing the PC makers to install additional icons in the desktop touting services that competed with MSN etc back in the Win95/98 time frame. AOL won, but it became irrelevant eventually. Will the scenario repeat? Has google jumped the shark?
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It doesn't really affect MS one way or the other, but I could see it eventually causing problems for some users. Anybody remember trying to help out a friend who let a third party product take over their operating system? Norton. AOL. You get the picture.
49-page? (Score:5, Funny)
1. WHY such an odd (pardon the pun) number of pages?
2. What does it matter? Does anyone think that more pages = better? Did MS' lawyers see the brief and go "Shit guys, it's over 47 pages long. We better settle!"?
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Seven chipmunks, twirling on a branch
Eating lots of sunflowers on my uncle's ranch.
You know. That old children's tale. From. The sea?
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Ok, mod me down.
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Re:49-page? (Score:5, Funny)
So (Score:5, Interesting)
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Are there any counter examples that I should be aware of?
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Right, by paying firefox (and others) to default to google search. The end users don't choose based on merits, companies who take their money make the choices.
Lets not pretend google isnt the same as any big company. They are.
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I'm more worried about Google abusing my personal information than M$. Google has a proven track record in this area.
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I'm more concerned about getting an OS that is more functional out of the box. It is about time MS got a useful, fast, and simple desktop search like Spotlight on OS X. Not that I would actually USE Windows even if it had good search, but still... I expect my OS of choice to keep up with modern f
Sadly this so far means nothing... (Score:5, Insightful)
Contrary to the title of the article...
...MS hasnt agreed to do anything...
(Micorsoft,) Please define "if necessary"... is it:
Until such a definition is announced by MS, this statement doesnt mean much of anything - except perhaps as an attempt to make the general public think they are addressing the issue of choice on the public's behalf (as most of the general public will probably read into their statement in the same way that happened when the article title was created).
Just my thoughts on the matter...
-Robert
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That's an awfully big assumption to make, that someone actually read the article.
Digging into the article (Score:5, Interesting)
From TFA:
The bit most interesting to me was this. Does this mean that Microsoft have done again what they were penalised for in 2000 [dwightsilverman.com]? Two of the restrictions placed upon it then were:
So, I imagine they're back to using the secret API for the Microsoft search, while slowing down the 'official' APIs third parties must use. Although the press item only has one sentence on it, this 'optimisation' issue is as important as Microsoft providing a competing product to Google Desktop Search in my opinion.
I assume the technical information handed over to Google will be details of how to access key parts of Microsoft's hidden-hook goodies?
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There's a world of difference between windows adding secret features for office, and an OS feature using functionality thats not exposed.
And, as the other commentor noted, the only slowdown is due to both searches running at once.
Sheep (Score:2, Insightful)
Look. MS wrote the OS. MS owns the OS. MS can do whatever they want with it. If that means integrate whatever the **** they want, then piss off. If you don't like it, don't use it. It is not drinking water. Yes, you can live with MS. I don't use Windows, but I will do whatever it takes to make sure MS does not loose this fundamental freedom.
I find it quite unbelievable some people's feelings of entitlement. No, you are not entitled that somebody provide an OS that does wh
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Well..er.. they have that fundamental freedom. But, they happen to be a convicted monopolist too. See, if you are in a position, which derives from you being a monopoly,
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Again. If you are discontent with their "world", simply leave. Until it involves drinking water, I will disagree.
Post made from Linux.
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The fact is, they can try to take over the browser market, and if fact they did. Fact also is, abusing a monopoly is not only "not playing nice", but against the law. Governments are somehow supposed to have their citizens (both persons and companies) play by rules, have
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First, IANAL.
Second: two things:
a) This link migth help : http://www.aaxnet.com/editor/edit019.html [aaxnet.com]
Read for example the portion of:
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There are loads of things on the market that are proprietary and no one balks at all. Try sticking a Square D circuit breake
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Kwikset has no monopoly in locks.
Chevy has no monopoly in cars.
None of your analogies apply.
Microsoft has a monopoly on the desktop. Microsoft competes with Google in a different arena - search. Microsoft cannot use their monopoly on the desktop to gain an advantage over Google in search. To allow this would seriously reduce competition in the marketplace.
A better analogy would be when AT&T ruled phone service, and they would not let you purchase a non-AT&T te
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I readily admit that I do use Microsoft Windows because frankly, there is not a viable option that I am willing to compromise and use as an
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Your argument is like saying that AT&T was not a monopoly because you could still use shortwave radio, the telegram, CB radios, etc. instead of the telephone, but you begrudgingly made a choice
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AT&T: Granted a government contract over the phone lines in your home. The government is then free to adjust the terms of said contract to suit it's needs.
Standard Oil: Walk. Lazy slob.
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Monopoly does not mean that they put a gun to your head, it means that you have no other good choice but to buy from the monopolist.
No, it doesn't mean that. It doesn't mean that you have no other good choice. A monopoly means that you have absolutely no other choice. See references in this comment [slashdot.org].
Look, I'm not saying Microsoft isn't playing hardball here, I agree, they are definitely the 800lb gorilla here. But for people to cry foul as though they're taking unfair advantage over their presence in the marketplace as though it were just magically handed to them is petty. Like it or not, Microsoft did a f**king great job
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MS has no such contract.
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Microsoft has two monopolies - they are the de-facto standard for desktop computers and f
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Once again, I disagree it is the governments job to make sure you can run your business... except for maybe in the case of a hurricane or flood. Office documents? Bah.
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Re:Sheep (Score:5, Insightful)
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WDS slows down *everything* (Score:3, Interesting)
It creates so much IO load that so far every machine I used it on got down to a crawl once it indexed a couple 100,000 files. I guess that's why they turn it off automatically once any user interaction is noticed. But by then it has consumed so much virtual memory that every other app has to be paged back in slowly. That gets better with 2 GB of memory but not much. Oh well, I guess I need 64bit and 4GB.
It helps to put the index on a different disk than your OS and your page file, but not a lot.
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huh? Last I checked it had the lowest priority and consumed only a max amount of memory, about 30megs worth, it would continue at that pace as long as there was no user activity for five minutes. It doesn't move other apps out of memory or even move them into virtual memory, if the app in question is actually doing something then the indexing service won't run. If the app is question is sitting idle then it has already been moved to virtual memory.
If you install it on an existing machine with lots and lots
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I guess it depends a lot on how much you're indexing. My Indexing Status shows "Items indexed so far: 2,135,782."
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The WDS reads every file on the system. It may immediately discard the data it reads, but the disk pages do get read into the cache, and evict the oldest. If it runs through 16 GB of files, and
Wimpy Google Cries to Lawyers (Score:2, Insightful)
I like an OS to come with more stuff out of the box with every release. It's just less complicated to put in one CD and get everything - that's why I like Linux and OS/X. People have a right to make their products, however they want them. It sucks to bolt rear views on a car after the fact, and it sucks to go and download
Way to go Google. (Score:2)
No but seriously, they'd just steamroller anyone else.
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Well, no, not exactly.
Though I just love locate, this is a wee bit different. For one, these programs index the content of your documents as well, not just their names. As practical as locate is, it only matches your search to the list of names in the database; I cannot search for a document containing some word.
Of course, that's where grep comes in, but then, grep's database is the fscking filesystem, so it may take a while.
Besides, I can teach my father how to use Beagle. I cannot teach him how to grep
KDE Find. (Score:3, Informative)
As practical as locate is, it only matches your search to the list of names in the database; I cannot search for a document containing some word. ... I can teach my father how to use Beagle. I cannot teach him how to grep.
There are dozens of GUI front ends to grep that deliver most of the functionality. One of the easiest to use is the KDE find utility, which can search by content, file dates and all of that. Used in conjunction with a reasonable directory structure, you can get most of the benefits of
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b) locate ain't exactly instant, it doesn't pull metadata, etc...
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Comment removed (Score:5, Informative)
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Use the API? Are you certain that the API provided by MS to third-party developers is the same as the one used my MS's search? As other posters have pointed out, this has been a problem in the past with MS.
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I think you misunderstand the whole concept of abusing a monopoly -- most users will take the path of least resistance, and having to jump through even just two hoops is too much.
How hard was it for users to use netscape instead of IE for browsing? Pretty easy, yet the antitrust suit still stuck.
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Re:Why don't they file against Apple? (Score:5, Informative)
Who the hell modded this "insightful?" First, Apple is not a monopoly, so they cannot illegally leverage that monopoly via bundling, hence there is no legal action that makes sense. Second, Google was not even complaining about the bundling (although they have every right to). They complained about two things:
Apple fits into neither of those categories. Google has an indexed search on OS X and it uses the same API and hooks as Spotlight, resulting in no slowdowns for Google's tool and no disadvantage given to them.
Are those enough reasons? If not, please RTFA before posting again.
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Ok who the hell modded this "informative"... Of course, you do realize that Apple has a complete monopoly on software, bundling AND hardware in its own niche, never mind of the law is shortsighted enough to miss that.
Apple users use anything Steve feeds them and Apple's solution is far more locked down than Windows ever was.
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Apple works tightly with Google, so that's given. I want to know: how I set Live.com as the search engine in Safari?