Maybe MS should just start pre-bundling alternative options alongside their Windows OS; pick between Edge, Chrome, FF, Opera, and Brave for browsers, then Office 365, LibreOffice, OpenOffice, or Corel for Office suite options. Sort of like how one of the other big tech companies had to now offer alternatives at first boot for their preferred defaults (I forget if it's Android or Apple). To avoid bias of laziness, the choices are randomized, so that Edge is never the first option, nor is Office 365 the first option.
Really though, I just want their OS division separated and turned into a proper OS-making division again, producing something that is a proper successor to Win7 or 10, rather than 11 (which is the equivalent of Vista and 8).
>>...Maybe MS should just start pre-bundling alternative options alongside their Windows OS; pick between Edge,
>>...Chrome, FF, Opera, and Brave for browsers, then Office 365, LibreOffice, OpenOffice, or Corel for Office suite options...
The problem with monopolies in IT is more complex.
There are deals between Intel, AMD, Microsoft, Dell, HP, ASUS, Acer, NVIDIA, etc. When a US corporation ABC purchases some number of laptops for employees these computers will be pre-installed with a latest set of Microsoft software, like OS and Microsoft Office 365 ( including Teams for video meetings ). An employee of the ABC corporation has some freedom of selecting a browser, a search engine, etc. It is up to the employee if Google or Bing are used to search on the Internet.
In order to break Microsoft monopoly US Department of Justice must ban a delivery of computers to big corporations with pre-installed Microsoft software. This is absolutely unlikely.
Microsoft will Win All the Cases in a Court claiming something like "...For example, a customer can buy a Dell Precision Mobile Workstation with Windows 11, or with Ubuntu 22.04 LTS. The customer has a complete freedom here. Where is monopoly?"