By KEVIN J. O’BRIEN, New York Times

BERLIN — European regulators dropped their antitrust case against Microsoft on Wednesday after the software maker agreed to offer consumers a choice of rival Web browsers. The settlement averted a second costly legal battle for the American software giant.

EUphotoThe agreement, announced in Brussels by the European competition commissioner, Neelie Kroes, calls for Microsoft to give Windows users a choice of up to 11 other browsers from competing companies, including Mozilla, Apple and Google.

Users of Microsoft’s ubiquitous Windows operating system in Europe who have chosen its Internet Explorer as their default browser will receive in a software update an option to switch to a rival, starting next year.

“Millions of European consumers will benefit from this decision by having a free choice about which web browser they use,” Ms. Kroes said in a statement.

In a statement, Microsoft said it was “pleased” with the decision. Jesse Verstraete, a Microsoft spokesman in Brussels, said the company has no plans to extend the offer beyond the 27-member European Union, plus Norway, Iceland and Liechtenstein.

Still, the settlement underlines, according to legal experts, the increasingly conciliatory posture being taken by U.S. technology companies to avoid sanctions — and to be able to keep doing business — in Europe.

“These companies recognized that the European Commission is playing a significant role in global antitrust law and must be taken seriously,” Susanne Zuehlke, an antitrust lawyer in Brussels at the U.S. firm of Latham & Watkins, said ahead of the announcement. “Of course, the huge fines recently have also focused everyone’s attention.” (more…)

Tagged with:
 

by Stuart J. Johnston

Windows 7′s official launch is still two months away, but a pair of recent reviews may point to a chink in the new software’s shining armor.

The problem is that its battery life, particularly on low-powered netbook computers, seems to be shorter under Windows 7 than under the venerable Windows XP.

The most recent review, released Monday by Laptop Magazine, found that Windows 7′s battery life was generally better than Windows Vista on full-fledged laptops, but performed dramatically worse than XP on the netbook it tested.

“It looks like most netbooks may be optimized for Windows XP, and without the proper drivers, some netbooks get dramatically worse battery life when running Windows 7,” the magazine concluded. 

The magazine’s blog provided more detail on the matter. “When we ran our standard battery test on the Toshiba NB205 under Windows 7, it lost more than 3 hours. Under XP it got an amazing 9 hours and 24 minutes, but with Windows 7 it only lasted for 6 hours and 15 minutes,” the blog post said.

(more…)

Tagged with:
 
Get Adobe Flash playerPlugin by wpburn.com wordpress themes

SEO Powered by Platinum SEO from Techblissonline