Judge Jackson

  • Game not over

    Microsoft broke the law, says the appellate court. But the company is still a long way from losing the biggest antitrust case in a generation.
  • Did Judge Jackson goof?

    By forcing Microsoft to comply with conduct remedies in 90 days, Jackson may have put the case exactly where he doesn't want it -- in the Court of Appeals.
  • Its own worst enemy

    The judge says you just can't trust Microsoft. It's the company's own fault.
  • Will a Microsoft appeal go straight to the Supremes?

    Judge Jackson's attempt to expedite a final resolution to the antitrust trial could backfire.
  • Court to Microsoft: This is for real!

    Judge Jackson doesn't just order Microsoft broken up -- he blasts the company for not taking his ruling seriously.
  • Microsplit

    Justice outlines its plan for two post-Microsoft companies: Office with no Windows, Windows with no Office -- and only one of them gets Gates.
  • Break up? Make up? Appeal?

    Microsoft watchers, company leaders and critics weigh the software giant's future in the wake of the antitrust ruling.
  • Software outlaw roams the streets!

    So Microsoft broke the law. But while the judges argue among themselves, the company remains free to stalk new markets.
  • Microsoft, Mahir and money, money, money

    A software superpower is declared a monopoly, free software rakes in billions and money makes the world go round: The year in tech.
  • Microsoft besieged by civil suits

    Will the five class-action suits -- and more undoubtedly to come -- cause the software giant any pain?
  • How the Web was almost won

    Just how close did we come to a Net ruled by Microsoft? The "server wars" show a grim counterpart to the browser wars.
  • Do the paranoid survive?

    Judge Jackson's opus on the browser wars portrays a Microsoft terrified by middleware.
  • "It reads like a novel"

    Judge Jackson's findings are music to prosecutors' ears -- but Microsoft says it's guilty of nothing more than embodying "the most basic American values."

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