Let the hive mind of Engadget get that for you.
"We need a digital camera that can be switched on and fire off that first shot fast. It's not a commonly tracked statistic on any review site, and nobody seems to have this information for every camera. We were hoping other readers could inform us as to what small digital cameras can fire off their first pics in under a second (ideally under half a second). It needs to be small, but mostly, just really quick in operation. Thanks!"
This is a lot of noise for nothing.
What has happened to MS since the whole Department of Justice shows?
Nothing. MS still behaves and conducts its business in the same fashion it did before all these politicians gather up to "show" their constituents that they were actually "doing" something to earn their pay. It's all fluff.
However, maybe the EU will actually get something done and remind these corporations how to behave more properly. Apple, you're next.
Rank me low. But, that's the price you pay for being honest.
That is because somehow MS flex it's money muscle and got "lucky" that the market drop right around those Department of Justice rulings, so the whole goverment over look it, because no one wanted to know what the fall out of that would look like.
Will EU do the same? Don't know, we'll see what the market does first, but I think the EU is not pressured by there corporate peers as much as the US is.
And of course Apple is next, but sadly it not Apple really, but iTunes, and what we call Music vs the world.