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Don't look now, but e-travel is booming -- and strangely, its successes are coming only after the dot-bomb and September 11, events that decimated related industries. Matthew Clark spoke with Dinesh Dhamija, CEO of highflying European e-travel firms Ebookers, as the company considers acquisitions, market share and the future.
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::BUSINESS

Judge grants access to Windows source
Monday, February 18 2002
by The Register

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The Microsoft antitrust case took a new turn last week when a US judge granted the nine US States still fighting the company access to Windows source code.

They'd asked for this earlier in the week, but it's still faintly surprising that they're going to get it, John Lettice reports.

Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly played it deadpan: ""It seems to me that if your side has access to it, then the other side, frankly, should have access to it," she said in a conference call. Presumably she means 'access for the purpose of the case,' as otherwise the reasoning would apply equally to, say, access to Steve Ballmer's stock options.

The States want access to the code in order to confirm that Windows can be customised, and can operate without the presence of IE. Microsoft has contended throughout the trial that this is not the case, and that removing IE would break it. The courts however concluded that the company did illegally commingle (that is, arbitrarily mix up for commercial gain) code in Windows, and some technical input on how it could be ripped apart again would be helpful. We should also at this point stress that we are aware of 98lite, even if the US legal system isn't, so stop telling us about it, OK?

One interesting aspect of the judge's order is that the States are specifically being given access to Windows XP embedded code, as they are of the view that this particular class of Windows can be used to show that Windows can be customised. The Register's view is that embedded versions of Windows are considerably less customised and embedded than Microsoft actually lets on, but we'll see.

Or perhaps we'll see. Microsoft is so sensitive about access to its source code that it will surely now go into a legal frenzy fighting the order, so it could take a while.

The Register and its contents are copyright 2002 Situation Publishing. Reprinted with permission.

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