Last time I checked, this was supposed to be a free country. If Microsoft wants to make IE an integral part of the OS, that should be their choice. It doesn't prevent Navigator or Opera from functioning. Many of the battles won by Microsoft were through the incompetence of their competition. Lotus OWNED the office productivity application market (90%) at one time, and then BLEW it. IBM was a bigger company than Microsoft, and didn't have the marketing prowess to put OS/2 on top. They blew it. Netscape started the giveaway game, despite the rhetoric of it being "shareware". They knew that no idividual users were paying for it. They blew it by not innovating enough and letting Microsoft pass them up. AOL owns them now, and has tremendous financial resources. When the users in the marketplace make a choice, and most choose one product, it's not the proper role of government to decide that this is a problem. If someone comes up with something that is, to the majority of the market, a better product than Microsoft's, it will prevail. That hasn't happened. The OS competition is good, but the majority of home consumers are not technologically adept and don't perceive any value in switching to Linux or BeOS. Those who do switch see some specific need that is addressed that Microsoft didn't address for them. If that happens to be only 5% of the market, so be it. That's the way the market works. Leave it alone and let it regulate itself.