quote:Hello and thank you for contacting us at Microsoft.com regarding your feedback. We're sorry that your experience with our products and services was less than acceptable. We will be forwarding your comments to the appropriate Microsoft group, which will use your feedback when planning and evaluating future enhancements. If you have additional suggestions for improvements, please send us mail again. Sincerely, Tyrone Microsoft.com Customer Support --- Original Message --- From: (...) To: [email protected] Sent: Sat May 25 03:08:41 PDT 2002 Subject: Microsoft.Com ContactUS URL:http:2F2Fwww2Emicrosoft.co=/mscorp2F LANG:English (United States) LOC:NL BR: windows nt 5.1/netscape6/6.2.2/ en-gb Just wait until Lindows OS comes out and your evil schemes will come to an end... it's throwing off Windows time for me in September this year... Many of us don't want crappy products... we want quality... we want OpenSource solutions... we want Linux! I hope everyone at Microsoft will burn in hell.
quote:X11: According to nmap scans and other checks M$ look like they are running Linux. MSN is susposedly running a .net server. But that hasn't enough source code. Obviously Microsoft have gotten the Apache source, and raped it so it reports a Microsoft .net server.
quote:Hotmailsux.com: At one point a long time ago, Hotmail was an independent site. It was a nice, reliable email provider. The reliability stemmed from the fact that Hotmail ran on FreeBSD. As soon as Billy G. gobbled it up, he demanded that Microsoft move the whole thing over to Microsoft's own IIS system (their NT web-server). God forbid Billy G. had anything to do with one of his competitors. Unfortunately, all of Microsoft's systems and products suck, and their attempt at moving Hotmail over to their server failed. Hotmail is down quite frequently, and even when it is running, many people still have problems logging into their accounts. Hotmail is now using FreeBSD, so it seems like they have given up on themselves.Hotmail is a great example of what Microsoft is all about. If they can't get their own products to work on their own systems in their own labs, how can we as consumers expect to be able to use Microsoft products ourselves in our own homes?