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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