[citation][nom]waylander[/nom]Let's keep in mind though that "ideal" of capitalism. I can understand the whole "fair trade" issue but really sometimes we take it too far. If a company cannot compete as a healthy business on the basis of their products then should someone else interfere? The fact that intel wants to give a discount for bundling in other products of theirs is sound business practice and happens everywhere you look. The fact that these are both large companies and can afford the lawyers should not mean they get special treatment.[/citation]
Here's the problem, too many of the products each company makes are very interdependent on each other. And with margins so tight, it would make a contortionist sweat, these kind of pricing strategies basically price some companies out of the picture.
Its a tricky business, but the alternative is NOT having many companies with new ideas driving the advance of technology. Lets suppose that Nvidia and AMD lost their court cases and allowed this kind of behavior, boom, both companies either close their doors or are relegated to tiny parts of the industry so that you ONLY get a choice of Intel. How soon would a price drop or new model of CPU come if only one chip company made CPUs, Chipsets, and video chips?
Without a competitive drive, innovation slows to a standstill. And unfortunately, the requirements to start a new CPU company able to compete on the desktop market are pretty damn high. Someone has to bet a few billion to roll those dice.