Author Topic: Go Eu! Go! ;)  (Read 4033 times)

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Offline Zeronet

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Meh, i like Windows Media player, beats all the other rubbish programs, like realplayer, which sucks immensely.
Got Ether?

 

Offline Thorn

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I think this is moronic..
They're bundling their own software, with THEIR OWN BLOODY SOFTWARE

 

Offline Flipside

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Yes, that's how they killed Netscape as well, by providing Explorer with every copy of Windows ;)

 

Offline vyper

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Ah but Mozilla's success came of that if we're being perfectly honest. ;)
"But you live, you learn.  Unless you die.  Then you're ****ed." - aldo14

 

Offline Flipside

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This is certainly true, mainly because good ol Bill managed to wangle his way out of the law suit ;)

I don't have any problems with Media player, but I see the point, in a way, Microsoft can actually make more money by offering Media Player for money, or a free download, but then it would have to compete, and that is something Microsoft isn't very used to doing.

 
Huh, that's rich, the corrupt and backward EU making a judgement on the business practices of Microsoft.

And I don't see what's wrong with MS bundling IE, WMP et al with their software. If people want there are many (better) alternatives they can use. Put it this way - should hoover manufacturers not be allowed to bundle hoover bags with their appliances in order 'to give the competition a chance'?
« Last Edit: March 17, 2004, 06:25:08 pm by 443 »

 

Offline Rictor

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"Corrupt and backward."

Que pas?

 

Offline Flipside

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Well Sid, you need to talk to Dyson about that one ;)

 
Corrupt, in that its internal workings are open to its operators who can siphon funds (gathered from taxpayers of member states) for themselves, and nepotistic EU bodies can determine who gets are where financial aid is directed.

Quote
But today, the Commission is again faced with scandal and allegations of financial mismanagement and serious fraud, centred on this nondescript office in a bleak, modern suburb of Luxembourg. It's the headquarters of Eurostat, the EU statistics agency. On the face of it, Eurostat is a department as dry and tedious as its name. It publishes economic and financial data and statistics across Europe. But it's very powerful. The figures that it publishes can determine who gets regional aid. And it's now the centre of a fraud enquiry that threatens to negate all those promises of a new clean European Commission. The allegations, which are being investigated by the EU's anti- fraud office OLAF and by authorities in Luxembourg and France, centre on Eurostat's dealings with a series of other companies to whom they subcontracted work. One of them, Planistat, based in France, sold on Eurostat data quite legally. But it's alleged by EU investigators that some 920,000 euros ended up in an account outside EU financial scrutiny. Commissioner Pedro Solbes, the monetary affairs commissioner who is responsible for Eurostat, told a committee of MEPs last week, on the record, that OLAF, the EU anti- fraud agency, had given him this information. Another company, Eurogramme, based in Luxembourg was said to have falsified its financial history to win contracts with Eurostat. Commissioner Solbes told the same committee of MEPs that he had received this from Eurostat itself. This man, who still works at Eurostat, first tipped-off the authorities about the problems there, two years ago. At his request, we have concealed his identity. In an exclusive interview with Newsnight, he told us how money has been wasted.


Backward, in that it uses mountains of regulation and reels of red tape to suppress business and limit freedom in its member states. Take, for example, the man who was locked up for selling fruit in pounds and ounces instead of metric measurements. And then there's the enduring Common Agricultural Policy that distorts the agricultural market and forces farmers out of business, the Euro, a mickey mouse currency that has reduced the value of money workers take home, and that ghastly constitution that is the first step towards a United States of Europe.

Flip: ;)

 

Offline mikhael

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So they're just like American government, Sid?
[I am not really here. This post is entirely a figment of your imagination.]

 

Offline aldo_14

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I like the EU, actually........... mainly because I'd rather live on the mainland than in this country :nervous:

 

Offline Flipside

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LOL There are actually still parts of Britain you can go that will take your breath away (The North Circular on a Monday morning, for example), it's a lovely island, shame about the government :(

 

Offline Rictor

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Ever thought of having yourselves and old fashioned revolution? Get pissed, burn down Parliment and have a few public executions. Guaranteed to get rid of all your social ills.

Done and over with in a few days, with enough time to send an invasionary force over the Atlantic. Teach that bastard little colony who's boss.

Ah, good stuff.

 

Offline Grey Wolf

If you were to invade the US, this would actually be the easiest time in recent history, considering a good deal of the armed forces are abroad. Still wouldn't be successful, and I wouldn't like it if they did. Rampant anarchy and all tends to cause problems in your life.
You see things; and you say "Why?" But I dream things that never were; and I say "Why not?" -George Bernard Shaw

  

Offline Flipside

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hehehehehe Ah the good old days, when the only roadworks you saw was where they were putting up more gallows ;)

 

Offline redsniper

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Quote
Originally posted by Grey Wolf 2009
If you were to invade the US, this would actually be the easiest time in recent history, considering a good deal of the armed forces are abroad.


*cough* we got the nuke *cough*
"Think about nice things not unhappy things.
The future makes happy, if you make it yourself.
No war; think about happy things."   -WouterSmitssm

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Offline Mr. Vega

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In the form of 18 Ohio submarines:blah:
Words ought to be a little wild, for they are the assaults of thoughts on the unthinking.
-John Maynard Keynes

 
Umm...redsniper?  Everyone has 'the nuke'.  The only reason nobody's used one in war-time since Hiroshima and Nagasaki is because a dominoe effect similar to the one that started WWI would occur and royally f**k everyone.


On Topic:  I have no idea how the EU is about things, but it does sound very familiar.
« Last Edit: March 17, 2004, 10:50:37 pm by 577 »
Can the reason that we fear the unknown be that we know ourselves too well?       -The Outer Limits

<*)}}}><  HAPPY FISHIE!!

 

Offline Bobboau

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something good comes out of Europe... finaly
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