No I'm usually here to bask in the heightened sense of self righteousness and reverse fanboyism of my Engadget peers.
If it was Microsoft I'd be saying the same thing, in fact MS did exactly the same with Exchange and Outlook just as an example. What should be common sense by now is that if you want to break dominance in the market you don't do it through lawsuits, you compete. This is what MS is doing with the Zune, what Sansa is doing and so many others are starting to do.
Just because you are the dominant market force does not automatically make you a monopoly, last time I checked there were alternatives to the iPod and iTunes, so it hardly looks like a monopoly to me.
Now that we've thrown 'em off the trail, use the form below to get in touch with the people at Engadget. Please fill in all of the required fields because they're required.
No I'm usually here to bask in the heightened sense of self righteousness and reverse fanboyism of my Engadget peers.
If it was Microsoft I'd be saying the same thing, in fact MS did exactly the same with Exchange and Outlook just as an example. What should be common sense by now is that if you want to break dominance in the market you don't do it through lawsuits, you compete. This is what MS is doing with the Zune, what Sansa is doing and so many others are starting to do.
Just because you are the dominant market force does not automatically make you a monopoly, last time I checked there were alternatives to the iPod and iTunes, so it hardly looks like a monopoly to me.