I competed against Microsoft in the 1980s in the compiler business. Microsoft failed at defeating my tiny (in comparison) company (Zortech). Zortech did quite well against Microsoft C, despite everyone telling me that the next Microsoft release would put Zortech out of business.
Microsoft is one tough competitor. But I knew how to compete with them. I never had much sympathy for Netfix with their crummy (in comparison) browser.
Microsoft could have made their compiler free, and it wouldn't have made the difference. Lots of companies successfully competed with the free utilities Microsoft bundled with their operating system. They did it the old fashioned way - by making a better product, not a worse product.
BTW, did you know that the IBM PC came with a free BASIC compiler? That didn't even slow down competing languages.
And the Gnu stuff. All free. Doesn't that undermine competition? Isn't that so unfair? Why doesn't the DoJ go after Gnu for unfair trade?
Microsoft is one tough competitor. But I knew how to compete with them. I never had much sympathy for Netfix with their crummy (in comparison) browser.
Microsoft could have made their compiler free, and it wouldn't have made the difference. Lots of companies successfully competed with the free utilities Microsoft bundled with their operating system. They did it the old fashioned way - by making a better product, not a worse product.
BTW, did you know that the IBM PC came with a free BASIC compiler? That didn't even slow down competing languages.
And the Gnu stuff. All free. Doesn't that undermine competition? Isn't that so unfair? Why doesn't the DoJ go after Gnu for unfair trade?