The M$NBC article claims, "Today, four years into the five-year partnership, 
the protests are over and Microsoft technology is firmly entrenched at MIT."  
Irony?  Looks like an outright lie to me and an implicit endorsement I doubt 
any University, especially MIT, would make or will be happy about.  It 
misrepresents the original 1999 initiative, the extent of penetration and M$ 
influence.  

MIT has it's own private computer system, Athena:

http://web.mit.edu/olh/

What else would you expect from the people who developed X, kerbos and many 
other awesome packages while M$ was putzing around with Windoze 3.1? Athena 
finished in 1991, where did M$ want to go at that time?  MIT is more likely to 
take credit for being an early haven for RMS. 

Here is an informative PDF about Athena and kerbos usage at MIT:

http://www.engg.upd.edu.ph/~susan/cs293/cs293Jul17.pdf

Here is an old list of software available to Athena users:

http://216.239.37.104/search?q=cache:hMqs_JPJSqIJ:sfr.nms.lcs.mit.edu/175fb59a68597dc17aae1e0624692b53d9a61ea3+MIT+athena+Microsoft&hl=en&ie=UTF-8
  

with 96% of the students using Athena, I'd say that M$ hardly has a toe in the 
door.  Indeed, it's hard to imagine serious scientific computing with 
Microsoft, though there are some interesting and expensive toys available on 
that platform, Athena seems to have them all and their betters.

"The university?s educational computer network is being overhauled to use 
Microsoft?s .Net architecture." Is a particularly rich lie considering the 
Company's ambition of 1999, expressed in this NYT article, to be set the tone 
for MIT and 36 other companies and thereby pervert everyone's standards and 
lock up all publishing in M$ DRM:

http://www.nytimes.com/library/tech/99/10/biztech/articles/05soft.html

The above article also claimed that M$ had become the  "de facto standard" at 
Universities.  It seems strange that M$ feels the need to restate the case four 
years later.  Slashdot covered that move and the student comments are cutting:

http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1740&cid=0&pid=0&startat=&threshold=1&mode=flat&commentsort=3&op=Change

Some things remain the same, however.  The few M$ boxes seem to be the same 
headache at MIT as they are everywhere:

750 boxes infected with sobig and blaster, presumably student owned, remedy is 
rebuild.

http://www-tech.mit.edu/V123/N34/34virus.34n.html

Problems with mail directories:

http://web.mit.edu/pismere/ldap.html

Problems with different versions of M$ office (another old page):

http://216.239.37.104/search?q=cache:UyPlDoMgwtcJ:gis.mit.edu/lab/webmail.shtml+MIT+athena+Microsoft&hl=en&ie=UTF-8

I can hardly believe that I read half of that nauseating piece of BS.  
Microsoft has tried to make policy at Universities and they have bought a few 
whores at some of them.  This article is typical Microsoft, "we've already won" 
when the battle is far from over, "smart people use us" when the truth is far 
from it and "look how generous we are to be giving away Millions of dollars 
worth of binaries" as if an M$ CD was worth any more than an AOL CD.   NBC 
should be ashamed to publish such rubbish, someone is asleep at the wheel.  

Punching holes in this article for the last 30 minutes has been fun.  Microsoft 
polute a LUG mailing list?  No way.  Come here, pig, I'm going to eat you 
alive.  Bang, pow, bite, squeel, squeel, smash crash thud.   /* - Big Grin full 
of exposed teeth - */

On 2003.08.26 21:02 Shannon Roddy wrote:
> Hrmmm... I know most companies do this (Apple, Sun, etc) but it just 
> irritates the hell out of me that universities are choosing operating 
> systems because of perks and not merit/quality.  I say the best tool for 
> the job, which for me is almost never Microsoft.
> 
> http://www.msnbc.com/news/956800.asp?0cv=TB10&cp1=1
> 
> Oh yeah.... the irony of the article being on MSNBC's website!
> 
> Shannon

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