lol they should just make IE take you to a website when the OS starts, with a list of the most popular browsers and chat programs
It already does that for default search provider. They have a feature to create your own search too satisfy the need for the current and future unknowns. Moreover, it is completely webbased so they can update the list server-side.
Intergrating IE so tight that the OS breaks with it's removal was not reasonable. Thus it was forced changed. The EU was not happy with the results of the required actions, and thus is requiring more.
Sure it is. Windows needs Internet access in order to activate and update. In Windows 98-Windows XP, that capability was built into Explorer (not Internet Explorer). Internet Explorer was a GUI that hooked into the underlying Explorer code that facilitated intranet, local, and internet traffic. Everything involving the Internet, therefore, revolved around that core codebase on Windows 98-XP.
As such, its removal was very unreasonable as it created a lot of problems for Microsoft and more knowledgable users. Instead of Explorer/Internet Explorer practically being the same, they now had to send all internet requests to Internet Explorer and all other traffic requests from Internet Explorer to Explorer. As proof of this, open up Explorer (aka My Computer) and type in
http://www.cnn.com. It will open a new instance of Internet Explorer 7/8 or create a new tab in an already exisiting Internet Explorer and open the site. Likewise, if you type C:\ in Internet Explorer, it will open Explorer and point it to C:\. In IE5 and IE6, both would do everything--they were practically one in the same.
In this sense, Internet Explorer was just a marketing name because most users wouldn't think to type "http://" in My Computer to get web access. They gave it that name and the pretty picture to assist users in the usability department (I want Internet -> "Internet Explorer" might satisfy that want).
To respond directly to your statement: The OS breaks when you remove Internet Explorer because you are also removing Explorer (the kernel). No operating system works without a kernel so it should "break."
Even with IE7/IE8 not installed, you still have Explorer with 99% of the features of Internet Explorer. Explorer still needs Internet access to activate and update. Effectively, the previous ruling and this ruling changes nothing except handoffs between Internet Explorer and Explorer for different types of requests. The only thing the "E" version doesn't have is the Internet Explorer GUI.
Google is going to try to do the same thing with Chrome OS except, instead of starting with Explorer and adding Internet capability to it, they are going to start with Chrome and add Linux kernel capabilities to it. Chrome OS, in every way, should be in the same ball of wax Microsoft is currently in.
Not really that hard. If it was fair game to begin with, it wouldn't get this far.
It wasn't fair game to begin with. It wasn't then, it still isn't now. Consumers are getting screwed by this because now you need more apps to do the same tasks that could have been done with one previously.