Final MS oversight committee member named
Industry veteran Edward Stritter completes three-person committee
Follow @infoworldThe third and final person to serve on a technical committee that will enforce Microsoft's compliance with the antitrust settlement approved last year has been selected.
The two members proposed in November last year by Microsoft and the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), although not yet appointed by the court, have selected Edward Stritter to complete the three-person committee, according to a filing by the DOJ with the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia on Monday.
Microsoft, the DOJ, and the nine
Stritter joins Harry Saal, selected by the DOJ and the settling states, and Franklin Fite, selected by Microsoft, on the committee.
Each member of the three-person oversight committee is appointed for 30 months. The committee is to work from Microsoft headquarters in
Stritter started his career in technology in 1968 as a programmer for Bell Laboratories. He then worked as chief architect for the 68000 processor at Motorola and later founded MIPS Computer., where the first commercial RISC (reduced instruction set computer) microprocessor was developed. MIPS was acquired by Silicon Graphics in 1992.
Since 2000, Stritter has been working as an angel investor in startups in the wireless Internet field, after leaving a job as director of business development for Cisco Systems' wireless access business. He holds a bachelor's degree in mathematics from









