Microsoft-Led Campaign Against Unix
Uses Web Site Running on the Software

By LEE GOMES
Staff Reporter of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL


A Web site funded by Microsoft Corp. urging businesses to avoid the Unix
operating system is itself running on Unix, the latest example of Microsoft
benefiting from the competitive software even while criticizing it.

The site is connected with a new advertising campaign called "We Have The Way
Out" that is co-sponsored by Unisys Corp. and Microsoft. The purpose of the
campaign is to persuade corporate computing customers to use computers running
Microsoft's Windows operating system instead of Unix, a rival operating system.
Ads associated with the campaign say Unix "makes you feel boxed in. It ties you
to an inflexible system. It requires you to pay for expensive experts."

But the Web site that is part of the campaign doesn't use Windows for its
operations. Instead, it uses a free "open source" version of Unix called
FreeBSD, along with another piece of free software called the "Apache" Web
server. Both products compete with Microsoft offerings, and both are extremely
popular on Internet sites.

A Microsoft spokesman declined to comment. A spokesman for Unisys, which is
taking the lead in the campaign, said the Web site had been set up outside of
the company by a third-party Internet-service provider.

The fact that a Web site used by a key Microsoft partner would itself be relying
on Unix highlights the predicament Microsoft is in as it tries to expand the
dominion of its Windows products.

Unix, especially the free open-source versions such as Linux and FreeBSD, are
the biggest obstacles to Microsoft's expansion plans, and the company mounts
periodic campaigns against the software.

Last year, for example, Microsoft embarked on a public-relations campaign trying
to convince businesses that open-source software could jeopardize their
intellectual property, because of the licensing requirements associated with the
software. But that campaign was undercut by the disclosure that Microsoft itself
has been a user of various forms of open-source software, including inside its
huge Hotmail messaging service.

There are a number of standard Internet tools that can be used to determine what
operating system a Web site is running; the site www.netcraft.com also provides
the information for many sites.

The fact that the Microsoft-Unisys site is running on Unix was discovered by
Mark Fromm, a Unix system administrator at a Kirkland, Wash., medical-device
company. Mr. Fromm, an ardent fan of Unix, said he was bothered by the
statements being made in the anti-Unix campaign, and out of curiosity decided to
check on the Web site.

"I was very surprised by what I found," he said. "I thought it was interesting
that Microsoft was saying that people should go to Windows, but that they were
using Unix to say it."

Guy Esnouf, a spokesman for Unisys, said the campaign is intended to highlight a
high-end Unisys machine called the ES7000 Enterprise Server, an expensive system
running sophisticated corporate-computing applications, such as very large data
bases.

"We are talking about using Windows for those kinds of problems; we are not
talking about hosting a simple Web site," he said.

Write to Lee Gomes at [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Updated April 1, 2002

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