Skip to main content

Google Complains About Vista Desktop Search

Google Complains About Vista Desktop Search

Reports in the Wall Street Journal and the New York Times indicate that Google has filed formal complaints with the Department of Justice and several states’ attorneys general alleging that Vista Desktop Search violates Microsoft’s existing antitrust settlement, limits consumer choices, and is yet another example of Microsoft leveraging its operating systems monopoly to engage in anticompetitive behavior.

At dispute is Vista Desktop Search, which offers system-wide integrated search capabilities which can not only locate files and documents by name, but also peer inside them to match specific terms and queries. Google, of course, makes a competing product, Google Desktop, but alleges that Microsoft has engineered its own search capability in such a way that it is difficult to impossible for a third party search tool to replace the default search capability. As a result, users who install products like Google Desktop will find their machines reduced to a crawl as both software applications attempt to comprehensively index users’ data.

According to the Wall Street Journal Microsoft’s general counsel Brad Smith has indicated the company is willing to address Google’s concern, but that the area of desktop search was never included in the scope of the company’s antitrust settlement. Desktop search capabilities were among the new features in Windows Vista reviewed by antitrust officials during Vista’s development.

Nonetheless, the paper reports states are considering opening their own investigations, and Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly of Washington’s Federal District Court will hear Google’s complains at a hearing later this month. Kollar-Kotelly oversees the administration and enforcement of Microsoft’s antitrust settlement.

Geoff Duncan
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Geoff Duncan writes, programs, edits, plays music, and delights in making software misbehave. He's probably the only member…
How to delete a file from Google Drive on desktop and mobile
Google Drive in Chrome on a MacBook.

Google Drive is an excellent cloud storage solution that can be accessed from numerous devices. Whether you do most of your Google Drive uploading or downloading from a PC, Chromebook, or mobile device, there’s going to come a time when you’ll need to delete a file (or two). Fortunately, the deletion process couldn’t be more straightforward. We’ve also put together this helpful guide to show you how to trash your Drive content a couple of different ways.

Read more
Save $300 on this HP desktop PC with an RTX 3060, 1TB SSD
hp envy desktop pc deal april 2024 te02 1075t

HP has a great discount one the HP Envy TE02-1075t desktop computer for anyone seeking a permanent inclusion in their home office or living room. Usually costing $1,600, it’s down to $1,300 so you save $300. One of the better desktop computer deals around, you can even play games on it making it great value for all kinds of reasons. Here’s what else you need to know before you hit the buy button.

Why you should buy the HP Envy TE02-1075t desktop computer
The HP Envy TE02-1075t has some great hardware contained within a sleek-looking shell which will look great in your home office. It has a 13th-generation Intel Core i7-13700 processor along with 16GB of memory. It also has 1TB of M.2 SSD storage so there’s plenty of storage here plus it’s super speedy. There’s also room for a great graphics card with the Nvidia GeForce RTX 3060 with 12GB of dedicated VRAM ensuring that the HP Envy TE02-1075t is capable of playing plenty of games without any issue.

Read more