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Opera Sics Swedish Chef on MSN
Browser maker charges Microsoft deliberately blocks Web site access.
Niche browser maker Opera Software is taking a swing at software Goliath Microsoft, releasing a new version of its Opera 7 for Windows browser that operates normally on every Web page but one, that of Microsoft's MSN.
The new browser, dubbed the Opera 7 "Bork" edition, translates the language on the MSN page to that of the famous Swedish Chef Bork from The Muppet Show.
Why the Swedish Chef?
"The Swedish Chef is probably the most famous Scandinavian in this generation, and he's also very hard to understand and therefore has some similarity with the pages MSN sends to Opera users," says Hakon Lie, chief technology officer of the Norwegian company.
Access Battles
The cheeky move, announced Friday, comes in retaliation to the discovery two weeks ago that the MSN portal was targeting Opera users by providing them with a purposely broken page, Opera said.
The maker of Opera has been at odds with Microsoft for quite some time, and claims the leading Internet browser maker has been engaging in not-so-friendly competition.
Opera says its users were completely blocked from the MSN site in October 2001. User complaints prompted Microsoft to change its policy since then. However, Opera charges that Microsoft still singles out Opera by sending its users what appear to be intentionally broken pages.
Lie says MSN pages are now available to users of Opera 7, but users of older versions of the browser still receive distorted MSN pages that are oddly laid out and have content missing. Opera 7 was released in January, and the newest version adds only the Bork feature.
No one from Microsoft was immediately available to comment on the accusations Friday. In October 2001, Microsoft blamed the access problems on a redesign of MSN that had been tested with "the most popular browsers on the market."
Serious Concerns
Although Microsoft clearly dominates the desktop browser market with its Internet Explorer product, Lie said he believes Opera is being singled out because of its growing strength in the mobile devices market, where it represents tougher competition.
Opera recently inked deals with mobile phone makers Nokia and Sony Ericsson Mobile Communications. The company will provide software for their Web-enabled phones.
While Lie admits that Opera is taking a "tongue in cheek" approach to the rivalry with the release of the Bork edition browser, he said that the move highlights a serious matter.
"We want to make people laugh, but we also want to generate a serious response," he said. "It's better to try to solve it this way than through a lawsuit."
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