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DOJ asks change for simpler defaults to rival programs.
Grant Gross, IDG News Service Friday, April 04, 2003 Microsoft has agreed to reposition a program in the Windows XP Start menu so users can more easily set non-Microsoft programs as their default choices, as part of the company's antitrust settlement with the U.S. Department of Justice. Advertisement Microsoft has agreed to make the Set Program Access and Defaults icon more prominent in the Windows XP Start menu, said Jim Desler, a Microsoft spokesperson. The program allows users to change their default software, including switches to browsers and media players not made by Microsoft. Microsoft believed the old positioning of Set Program Access and Defaults in the Start menu complied with an antitrust consent degree, approved in November by U.S. District Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly, Desler said. But the company agreed to change the positioning in a "spirit of cooperation" with the DOJ. Opponents Unimpressed Windows XP users could always move icons in the Start menu, but now Microsoft "wants credit for that," said Mike Pettit, president of the anti-Microsoft trade group ProComp (the Project to Promote Competition and Innovation in the Digital Age). "It's a big charade," Pettit said of the change. "It's competitively meaningless." Set Program Access was included in the Windows XP Service Pack 1 released last September, but ProComp and some Microsoft competitors complained that it wasn't prominent enough in the Windows XP Start menu. Timetable Unclear Desler said he wasn't sure when the change would happen. The change "gives the user more efficiency in terms of choice," he added. With the change, Set Program Access and Defaults will appear in the main Start menu, instead of one level down under the Programs menu. Some PC vendors have also included Set Program Access and Defaults in the Start menu's "most frequently used" section, but it could disappear from there if it wasn't one of the user's most frequently used programs, Desler said. The DOJ wouldn't comment on this specific change, instead releasing a statement saying it "works constructively with Microsoft to address issues that arise in this process." Source: http://www.pcworld.com/news/article/0,aid,110146,00.asp |
interesting thanks
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