Jon von Tetzchner, CEO of Opera, believes that Microsoft either preinstalls all mainstream browsers in the Winodws 7 operating system or does not install one. Von Tetzchner once complained to the European Union about Microsoft's bundling of IE in Windows, believing that Microsoft lacks the spirit of fee. In a recent TechRadar interview, Von Tetzchner said that Microsoft has been taking advantage of the game for 10 years because it has not followed the rules.
Freely select your browser
If everyone is standing at the same starting line, you will know whether people will really choose IE. von Tetzchner ridiculed TechRadar after reading an interview with Microsoft's John Curran. Now it is difficult for us to find a fair place, and a fair one is that people have equal opportunities to choose which browser to use when using Windows. People can uninstall IE and download and install other browsers.
The best way is to include multiple browsers. People want to have a choice to select the browser that best suits them. There are differences between browsers.
OEM and Microsoft wear a pair of trousers
When it was said that OEMs could pre-Install multiple browsers on their machines, Von Tetzcnher said that OEMs and Microsoft had always been wearing a pair of trousers. Historically, at the beginning, there was an agreement between Microsoft and OEMs to prohibit OEMs from installing Microsoft's competitor products. Later, after a lawsuit, this situation was improved, however, no OEMs have pre-installed other browsers.
They wear a pair of trousers.
Competition in Opera
Von Tetzcnher believes that if Microsoft does not bind IE to Windows, Opera will be the biggest beneficiary. We welcome competition, he said. The more competition, the larger the user choice.
Before Firefox's rise, IE had a market share of nearly 100%, which was so horrible.
- Mozilla cannot be without Google
- Microsoft boast that IE8 is faster than Firefox and Chrome