The Hindu News Update Service
 
News Update Service
Saturday, March 7, 2009 : 1055 Hrs       

Sci. & Tech.
Microsoft to let PC users turn off IE Web browser 

SEATTLE (AP): A single check box deep in the guts of the next version of 
Windows is giving Microsoft Corp. watchers a peek at how the software maker 
plans
to keep European antitrust regulators from marring a crucial software launch. 

Windows 7, the successor to the much-maligned Vista, isn't expected to reach 
consumers until next year, but more than a million people are already testing
early versions. A pair of bloggers tinkering with settings stumbled upon one 
they hadn't seen before: The ability to ``turn off'' Microsoft's own Internet
Explorer browser. 

Microsoft lost a long-running battle with EU antitrust regulators in 2007 over 
the way it bundled media player software into the Windows operating system.
The dust had barely settled when a similar claim was filed, this time over 
Internet Explorer's place inside Windows. Opera Software ASA, a Norwegian 
competitor,
claimed the practice gives Microsoft's browser an unfair advantage. 

In a preliminary decision in January, the EU agreed. Since then, makers of the 
open-source browser Firefox and Google Inc., which entered the browser market
six months ago, have offered to provide more evidence that Microsoft is 
stifling competition. 

In the media player dispute, the EU heavily fined Microsoft and forced it to 
sell a version of Windows without the offending program installed. This time,
Microsoft appears to be offering the check-box solution as a way to head off a 
similar ending. 

The company declined to comment Friday on the connection between the check 
boxes and the EU's preliminary decision. But in a recent quarterly filing, it
said the European Commission may order PC makers to install multiple browsers 
on new PCs and force Microsoft to disable parts of its own Internet Explorer
if people chose a competing browser. 

The check boxes, which were described on Microsoft enthusiast blogs 
www.aeroxp.org and www.chris123nt.com, also give Windows 7 users a way to 
disable the
media player and hard-drive search programs, among other components, both of 
which have drawn scrutiny from regulators. 

After Windows Vista landed with a thud, Microsoft needs a hit, said Michael 
Cherry, an analyst for the research group Directions on Microsoft. Beyond 
appeasing
the EU, he said he didn't see much use for the Internet Explorer check box. 

``Windows 7 is becoming more and more important for Microsoft,'' he said in an 
interview. ``You don't want anything that gives anyone even a doubt as to
whether or not they should upgrade.'' 



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