Word: within
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...Microsoft Corporation in the form of a 207-page finding of fact. Jackson concluded that since the early '90s, Microsoft has stifled innovation, reduced competition and hurt consumers. Although not a final verdict in the nearly year-long antitrust case filed by the U.S. government--that will be delivered within a few weeks unless the parties negotiate a settlement--the findings clearly side with the government by declaring Microsoft a monopoly in the operating systems market and rebuking all of Microsoft's claims to the contrary...
Microsoft has undeniably been an innovative force in the technology industry. However, the question posed by this trial was not whether Microsoft fostered innovation within its own company, but whether it deliberately pursued policies that stifled innovation by potential competitors. The answer to the latter question, according to Jackson...
...glimpse of a less profligate future in Kalundborg, Denmark. There, an unusual place called an "eco-industrial park" shows how much can be gained by recycling and resource sharing. Within the park, a power company, a pharmaceuticals firm, a wallboard producer and an oil refinery share in the production and use of steam, gas and cooling water. Excess heat warms nearby homes and agricultural greenhouses. One company's waste becomes another's resource. The power plant, for example, sells the sulfur dioxide it scrubs from its smokestacks to the wallboard company, which uses the compound as a raw material. Dozens...
...been able to know back then that what I had just caught was one of the last stragglers of a vanishing species--that within 35 years a 247-lb. Atlantic broadbill swordfish would be as rare as a tyrannosaur--I would have set it free, administered CPR or, if all attempts at resuscitation had failed, I would at least have had the carcass of the mighty fish gilded and sent to the Smithsonian...
Worst of all, the experts believe, such changes could come on with astonishing speed--perhaps within a decade or less. And while we might have a great deal of trouble adjusting to a climate that gets 2[degrees]C (4[degrees]F) warmer over the next century, an ice age by midcentury would be unimaginably devastating. The lingering uncertainty about whether our relentless production of greenhouse gases will keep heating our planet or ultimately cool it suggests that we should make a better effort to leave the earth's thermostat alone...