• Diplomjodler
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      147 months ago

      They were always about screwing over consumers to make money. The only thing that changed is that they’ve become increasingly unsubtle about it.

      • @[email protected]
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        37 months ago

        Their way to screw customers with W2K was very persuasive. Such a clean UI, everything looking so relaxed and, eh, not commercialized. That startup sound. Those wallpapers.

        Later I learned that that’s also when they released those Unix services for Windows (may have swapped words), with which you really could have something practical with an X server and POSIX-compatible applications and so on.

        And compared to W9x it was very stable.

      • @[email protected]
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        17 months ago

        I feel like they go through cycles of “hey, we just remembered we have de-facto monopolistic power, what are we doing with that? Let’s do stuff with that” And “everyone got mad at us for anticompetitive practices again… Let’s lay low and play nice until governments stop threatening to break us up”

    • @richmondez
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      117 months ago

      Turns out you can make more money by reducing usability and user choice in an entrenched product because hardly anyone will baulk and jump ship to a different product.