By
Martin LaMonica
Tuesday, June 13 2006 11:15 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/software/0,39044164,39367239,00.htm
BOSTON--Microsoft's message to developers: Online services aren't just for consumers.
Microsoft Chief Technical Officer Ray Ozzie on Sunday said the company is
creating Internet-delivered services for corporate customers to complement its
on-premise software.
Ozzie, speaking at Microsoft's TechEd 2006 conference for business technology
users, described some of the online
services Microsoft intends to offer to businesses, including single sign-on and network management.
While Microsoft has launched consumer-oriented online services, such as Windows
Live, until now, it hadn't fully explained how it sees the trend affecting
companies.
Ozzie said that Microsoft's strategy is to offer a full line of services as
an extension
to existing client and server software, much in keeping with a notion first
described by Chairman Bill Gates last fall.
For example, corporate customers could connect a Windows network to a hosted
management or security service. Or a sales person could do a single search
across her desktop PC, corporate network and the Web at once, Ozzie said.
"Microsoft is taking a very pragmatic approach, a seamless, blended
client-server-services approach...where services complement and extend Windows
and Office applications to the Internet," he said.
Ozzie, who was the driving force behind Lotus Notes and other software,
joined Microsoft last year and has emerged as the driving
force behind the company's online services push.
He said that services represent the next major disruption in the IT industry,
much like the PC revolution and the Web.
Right now, hosted Web services, such as Web e-mail and instant messaging, are
having a bigger impact with consumers than businesses. But Ozzie predicted that
corporations will be able to take advantage of the service infrastructure now
being built by companies like Microsoft, Google and Yahoo.
"Like the PC and the cell phone and e-mail before, this (computing)
infrastructure will benefit every segment--individuals, small businesses, to
enterprises, to governments," he said. "These investments portend a fundamental
change in computing and communications."
He said Microsoft intends to create services that IT professionals and
developers can access with their existing Windows skills.
To promote the creation of mash-up applications using Microsoft Live-branded
services, the company launched the beta of a new informational Web site called
Windows Live Dev last week.
Revamped security tools
Later on Sunday, Bob Muglia, the senior
vice president of Microsoft's Server and Tools business, described the design
goals of Microsoft infrastructure software and tools.
He said the priorities that Microsoft has set for its products are: flexible
management systems; information security; and more productive Office end-user applications.
Muglia said that Microsoft's security products will be rebranded under the
Forefront name, which the company will use for security-related products going
forward.
The existing product, Microsoft Client Protection, which removes malware from
PCs on business networks, has been renamed Forefront Client Security. A beta
version will be available in the fourth quarter of this year.
Microsoft also announced the early release of several products, including the
beta version of Microsoft
Operations Manager 2007 and community technology previews of SQL
Server Everywhere and Visual
Studio Team Edition for Database Professionals.
Also, Microsoft said that Exchange Server 2007 beta 2 will be available by
the end of July. General availability is targeted for the end of the year or early next year.
In addition, Microsoft will distribute Windows Server "Longhorn" Beta 2. The
final version of the server complement to Windows Vista will be available around
the middle of next year, said Bob Kelly, general manager of infrastructure marketing.