Letters she wishes you'd sent.
        
        Fan(tasy) Mail
        Letters she wishes you'd sent.
        
        
			- By Em C. Pea
- August 01, 1999
Ah, summer! Nothing for Auntie and my Fabio to do but 
        lie back and catch the rays beside the Olympic-sized swimming 
        pool at our villa on our own Caribbean isle. Oh, Gilligan! 
        Another pitcher of tuña coladas, please…
      As long as your Em is indulging in some harmless fantasy, 
        she thought she’d take the time to answer those letters 
        you never sent, but wanted to. So slather on the sunblock, 
        throw another CPU on the barbie, and follow along on this 
        amazing journey.
      dear Em:
      I’m a humble entrepreneur, one of those selfless, dedicated 
        businessmen who’ve grown a huge operating system and software 
        empire from my own sweat, toil, and a whole bunch of carefully-worded, 
        no-you-don’t- need-to-read-the-fine-print-there-are-no-surprises-in-there-at-all 
        contracts. Now that we’re at the top of the heap, I don’t 
        understand why our business practices are under suspicion 
        simply because we’ll do anything short of deploying the 
        company’s tactical nuclear arsenal to beat down all competition 
        to an under five percent share of any market we might 
        want to be involved in over the next millenium. Can’t 
        the Feds see I’m just trying to make a living?
        —[email protected] 
       
        Listen, hon: There are livings 
          and then there are livings. The living you want to make 
          seems to involve personally being a factor in the Gross 
          Planetary Product.
        The concept that the Feds seem to be concerned about 
          is that of a level playing field. Your cleverly anonymized 
          company—by providing both OSes and applications—has 
          such an impact on the level of the field that even Mark 
          McGwire couldn’t do better than a slow roller to short. 
          Now you’ll say, “That’s not our fault—it’s the marketplace 
          functioning as it should,” but the whole point of those 
          fun court dates is that your company’s actions, practices, 
          and policies, which put you at the top of the heap, 
          just might have crossed a few of the lines that divide 
          honest competition from, uh, predation on the level 
          of a T.Rex with a bad case of the munchies.
        On a personal level, your depositions leave a tad to 
          be desired vis a vis sincerity and believability. Just 
          because our politicians have made plausible deniability 
          an art form is no reason to think you can get away with 
          it, especially with your reputation for attention to 
          detail. Want equitable treatment from the government? 
          Then don’t tap dance for half an hour on tape. It gets 
          under people’s skin. Oh, and find yourself better demo 
          editors.
      
      Auntie:
      I am so sick of reading your love notes to Mister Bill 
        every month. Microsoft, Microsoft, Microsoft! Is that 
        all your magazine ever writes about? Don’t you know there 
        are other operating systems out there? NT still doesn’t 
        hold a candle to any flavor of Unix, the MacOS is a lot 
        easier to use, and heck, I have customers who are getting 
        plenty of mileage out of their VAXs and 30-year-old mainframes. 
        Redmond is not the center of the universe, you know!
        —A very angry person who knows where you live
       
        Angry, you’re right, it’s 
          not the center of the universe and this gal doesn’t 
          live or die by the pronunciations of Bill Gates. I happen 
          to make my living with Microsoft products. I don’t see 
          how you can call my rants “love letters,” as I don’t 
          believe I’ve been particularly easy on the gentleman 
          recently.
        As for what this magazine writes about, look at the 
          cover. Does it say “Unix Certified Professional” or 
          “NetWare Certified Professional”? We write for MCPs, 
          and when we write about other OSes, it’s often in the 
          context of interoperability with Microsoft products. 
          And if you know where I live, then you also know about 
          the minefield and the Dobermans, right?
      
      Dear so-called Em C. Pea:
      I am so sick of the way you make it a point to kick the 
        stuffing out of Microsoft in your monthly column. How 
        can this magazine continue to publish someone who so blatantly 
        bites the hand that feeds it?
        —Another angry person who knows where you live
       
        Yep, Auntie gets letters from both 
          sides; maybe that means I’m doing something right.
        Sometimes I think of myself as part of a yin-yang balancing 
          in MCP Magazine. You know, the sour to their 
          sweet, the cream to their coffee, the raw shellfish 
          to their green bean casserole.
        Actually, I don’t write to be vindictive or kick anyone’s 
          stuffing from an editorial point of speaking. I’m an 
          MCP who tries to write honestly (and humorously, though 
          I can understand if you want to debate that point) about 
          some of the issues and concerns of being an MCP. I’m 
          no more or less sympathetic to Redmond than I would 
          be to any large corporation in a position of market 
          dominance. I do have a low tolerance for spin, double-talk, 
          and the artful deconstruction of reality for the sake 
          of quarterly earnings, but I’d feel the same way no 
          matter what industry I was writing about.
        By the way, I receive zero feedback, threats, comments, 
          or anything of the like from Microsoft. Darn. Yoo hoo, 
          boys! Over here!
      
      And there you have it, boys and girls, letters I know 
        you’ve wanted to write but couldn’t find the time, the 
        inspiration, or the right crayon. Hasta la vista from 
        La Isla de Tia Em; we’ll get back to the usual rants next 
        month.  
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Em C. Pea, MCP, is a technology consultant, writer and now budding nanotechnologist who you can expect to turn up somewhere writing about technology once again.