...Microsoft's financial sacrifice illustrates what it describes as illegal, predatory behavior toward Netscape. Microsoft's Paul Maritz surprised the government's lead lawyer, David Boies, by offering Tuesday to volunteer "some rough figures." Maritz...
...Microsoft's Windows. McGeady also testified that at a November 1995 meeting with Intel, Microsoft Senior Vice President Paul Maritz said the company planned to "cut off Netscape's air supply" by building its competing Internet software into Windows...
...telling him otherwise. Government attorneys showed Rosen sworn testimony from the company's senior vice president, Paul Maritz, calling Netscape at the time "a significant potential serious competitor." And they showed Rosen e-mail that...
...Communications Corp., which makes a popular rival browser. Back in the courtroom, Microsoft continued its questioning of Paul Maritz, senior executive responsible for the company's most important consumer products. Maritz argued that Microsoft faces...
...interactivemedia group. Muglia, Allchin and Craig Mundie, senior vice president for the consumerplatforms group, will report to Paul Maritz, who oversees the Windowsconsumer and developer divisions as group vice president for platformsand applications.
...million 43. Larry Garlick, Remedy, $140.9 million 44. Stephen Case, America Online, $137.3 million 45. Paul Maritz, Microsoft, $132.5 million 46. Jeff Raikes, Microsoft, $124.6 million 47. Lou Gerstner, IBM, $122.1...
...information. Software developers will get a new division entirely devoted to their needs headed by group Vice President Paul Maritz. Gates said that later this year Microsoft would announce a product called Advanced Visual Studios that allows developers...
...telling him otherwise. Government attorneys showed Rosen sworn testimony from the company's senior vice president, Paul Maritz, calling Netscape at the time "a significant potential serious competitor." And they showed Rosen e-mail that...
...out a concession. "Let me try to use your language," he said last week while cross-examining Microsoft executive Paul Maritz. "You were trying to convince Netscape to use Windows technology in these meetings?" That seemingly innocuous question...
...June 1995. They call Mr. Allchin's claims "revisionist history" not supported by internal company documents. Paul Maritz, Mr. Allchin's boss and the most senior Microsoft executive to testify, will explain the company's reasons why...