Microsoft has a pending motion in Novell v. Microsoft, asking the judge to dismiss Novell's entire case as a matter of law without going to a second jury trial. Microsoft lawyers list many reasons why, in Microsoft's view, it did not violate antitrust law when Bill Gates decided [PDF] not to publish certain APIs in 1994 even though it was "late in the day" to make such changes, because: "I have decided that we should not publish these extensions. We should wait until we have a way to do a high level of integration that will be harder for the likes of Notes, Wordperfect to achieve, and which will give Office a real advantage."
That's what the trial, which ended in a mistrial, was largely about, and we're waiting for Novell's response to Microsoft's motion.
Microsoft’s Hyper-V virtualization and the OpenStack open source cloud platform apparently aren’t seeing eye to eye — at least for the moment. In fact, an upcoming OpenStack release called Essex will not support Hyper-V because the OpenStack folks saw lagging Microsoft development activity on OpenStack.
[...]
Both Microsoft and OpenStack have stated that steps are underway to ensure Hyper-V re-emerges in OpenStack. In the meantime, this temporary setback is a wakeup call to Microsoft, which will need to make sure it has adequate developer resources assigned to the effort.
--Paul Maritz, Vice President, Microsoft (now VMWare CEO)