> There is a very important point for people to realize. There really
> isn't any good reason why Microsoft would want to win this case. For
> them, it would be much better to not support plug-ins, so their
> competitors plug-ins are screwed e.g. Real Player, QuickTime, Flash,
> Java, etc. Since Microsoft has IE there is no reason why Windows Media
> Player has to be a plug-in; it could just be integrated directly into
> IE itself.
>

That being said, would I be amiss if I made the observation that this sounds
like a golden opportunity for the other browser vendors (Mozilla, Opera) to
strike licensing deals with Eolas should Microsoft be forced to cripple IE?
Granted, I don't think people would switch overnight, but Mozilla/Opera et
al become much more appealing to a broader audience than to techies who
measure loading times in milliseconds and care about full browser support
for CSS.

Am I off on that?

Regards,
Dave.
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