Sunday, June 24th 2007
Hector says: Intel is a monopoly, Microsoft isn't
In a keynote address this morning to the American Antitrust Institute in Washington, AMD CEO Hector Ruiz gave attendees what he described as "an idea of what it's like to do business day in and day out when you are competing against an abusive monopolist." Although he also invoked the phrase "illegal monopoly," he left a convenient 846-word buffer zone between that phrase and his first invocation of the term "Intel."
Source:
BetaNews
26 Comments on Hector says: Intel is a monopoly, Microsoft isn't
For once its not me.
Although I do have to say microsoft is quickly losing their death grip on the market.
The whole marketing lawsuit is cool and all, but AMD's slacking...
and they're getting a beating for it..
www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=define%3A+monopoly&btnG=Google+Search A monopoly is caused when one is able to stamp out competition.
While market share is a "value" to how much competition is there, theres much more to it.
If you were to have 100% of the furby market, it is not technicly a monopoly.
Now, if you were to sell furbys in every store and disallow every store to sell a competitor, that is then in turn a monopoly.
I've been around so long that I can remember when Microsoft operating systems didn't dominate the market. The closest thing to a non-proprietary standard operating system was CP/M from Digital Research. The biggest selling computers -Apple, TRS-80,ect.-all used their own proprietary systems. Nothing for one computer would run on anything else. It sucked! What everybody wanted was a de facto standard, so that you could buy or write software that would run on anycomputer. The application software people were dying for it. Now we have it because of Microsoft's market dominance, starting with MS-DOS. When I remember the way that things were, the last thing that I want to do is go back to competing systems. I just wish Microsoft didn't write such huge systems. I wish that they would hire some good Assembly language programmers.
:shadedshu
Just because they make an operating system in NO WAY delegates one must make it work on everything.
If thats true, then why doesn't windows work on my POWERBOOK?
Thats not even close to what a monopoly is...
Apples tight control is about controlling their product, not their market.
Now, if apple had as much market share as microsoft and dominated things with an Intel CPU and never used AMD, that would maybe fit the bill.
Rockefeller was accused of monopolistic practices by setting prices so low that it was impossible for his competition to stay in business without losing money. It was claimed that Rockefeller could do this because he controlled such a large portion of the market and had so much money to work with that he could accept temporary losses (that's right, they said he was losing money to make this work) until his competition was forced to sell their company to him. This, in fact, is logically impossible and untrue, but that was the claim.
Now, AMD controls something like less than 5% of the processor market and has been in 2nd position for.... well, ever. Arguably, ATI was never controlling GPU market sales either. Merging the two companies actually seemed like a good idea: share resources to cut costs and so on. Now, IF Intel chose to enter the GPU market because of this merger, with the intent on forcing AMD out of one or both markets, then they are most likely (if not undoubtedly) acting in a monopolistic way that would violate anti-trust laws. Keep in mind, I still haven't read this speech, and I'm no lawyer. But that's the logic I see. Hopefully this clarifies what this guy from AMD is claiming.
At this point I disagree with the Intel monopoly acusation. AMD needs to work on their products, at this point I won't have anything made by them in my next system :(
The entire issue is reflected onto the iPod/iTunes/iTMS DRM lock-in. So you bought all your music on iTMS and it's DRM-addled? Now you can only ever use an iPod or other apple-branded device.
How is that not monopolistic? It's exactly what the massive trusts of old did, controlling every aspect of production from raw materials to finished goods, though from a consumer's angle.
It doesn't fit under any of the defining terms of monopoly.
Apple is not paying walmart to not sell zunes.
Apple is not paying napster to keep a USELESS drm on their products.
Apple is NOT paying dell to provide handfuls of useless software on top.
Apple is winning market share because their product is BETTER.
That is what capitalism is BASED AROUND.
This is how other companys are SUPPOSED to be hurt.
And in turn should create a BETTER product than apple to SELL it.
learn how capitalism is supposed to work, then learn what a monopoly means.
Its no different from the GAME monopoly.
You own everything. But thats half the game.
The other half of the game is making everyone else run out of money.
You can only do this by FORCING them out of the game.
This is where the similaritys end, though.
In the US, you are perfectly able to control an entire market as long as you don't FORCE people out of the market. If they just can't make a dent in the market because your product is multitudes better, then bummer. Not your loss.
Thats how it works, and thats what they enforce.
Now if apple were to pay dell to sell -only- os x on their machines, to keep windows OUT... that would be a monopoly.
(do note, this is what microsoft does, and this is what AMD is accusing Intel of doing.)
It is not the old model of the monopoly to be sure, but it's still monopolistic.
On a side note: apple is winning because their marketing is better; it has nothing to do with the product they're selling.
All of my itunes library that I purchased are MP3's.
Wheres the anti-competition?
Its locked down, because thats the only possible way for it to actually remain a DRM. I think that argument could hold a very strong case in court.
And theres always CD's. Napster. What about napsters DRM? prevents me from using it on my ipod. WAAAH.
Apples business model for selling music is the only successful one.
Additionally, i think all current online music buying systems are completely atrocious. CDs FTW.