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5/8/2008
A Microsoft executive involved with the company's Windows Live efforts outlined some of the company's ideas about cloud-based computing and social networking technologies Tuesday. The talk was presented by Brian Hall, general manager of the Windows Live Business Group, at the 2008 Merrill Lynch Technology Conference May 6.
Hall predicted that applications will be moving to a world that combines the "best of the PC" with "the best of the Web."
He depicted a software past in which social networking was once typically enabled by just a few "siloed applications," such as e-mail and instant messaging. Microsoft entered this space early on with its Hotmail and Windows Live Messenger offerings.
In contrast to this siloed approach, the future of social networking will bring more of a "people-centered platform," Hall said, "where stuff moves wherever I go, and that doesn't mean it's all in the same place."
The categories between social networking apps and e-mail/instant messaging apps are "very similar" and "it's really one category," Hall explained. He estimated that 448 million people are using Microsoft's Hotmail and Messenger applications.
"During the last 10, 12, 13 years, we've got 448 million active users," Hall said. "These are people that have logged-in in the last 30 days, meaning that they are actively involved with the service -- it's not just that they have an account that they haven't checked in a while."
Live Mesh, which Microsoft unveiled about two weeks ago at the Web 2.0 conference, is Microsoft's planned approach for bringing together communications, applications and files.
"We see a fantastic opportunity to take the best of the PC, the Web and the phone and to create a mesh of files that is accessible from all of these places but is ultimately provisioned at your site," Hall said.
One example of such aggregation is Windows Live Mail, which Microsoft released last summer in beta form. The application can pull together all of a person's various e-mail accounts, Hall said. It solves the problem of dealing with multiple accumulated e-mail accounts.
Another way that Microsoft has been working to interconnect is with social networking partnerships. Hall said that Microsoft has established partnerships with "most of the leading social networks" to have address book synchronization and roaming. Users can provide their Windows Live or Hotmail credentials at those social networking sites, he said. It moves people closer to using "a single address book approach."
Hall answered an audience question about Microsoft's "software plus services" strategy.
"We see a future where the rich client and other kinds of software interact very closely with the services that are hosted," he said. He pointed to Live Mesh as an important component in that strategy by creating a file system for those interactions.
University IT groups will recognize the challenge of combining disparate data from more than one department in order to create meaningful reports for various users. At the University of Virginia Department of Medicine, which is overseen by UVA's School of Medicine, data was coming from two very different accounting systems, which meant problems for faculty members whenever they needed to run reports.
The Graduate School, USDA has standardized on Acrobat Connect Pro, a Web conferencing and e-learning platform from Adobe Systems. The school is a self-sustaining government entity created 87 years ago by the United States Department of Agriculture to provide adult continuing education.
Texas A&M University has signed a license agreement with BreakAway Ltd., a developer of game-based technology, for the worldwide rights to Pulse!! The Virtual Clinical Learning Lab. Pulse is a federally funded project in development at the Corpus Christi campus that allows medical professionals to practice decision-making protocol and experiential skills on PCs in a virtual hospital setting. The agreement grants BreakAway the rights to develop, market and distribute Pulse.
Ed tech developer Tegrity reported this week that usage of its Campus 2.0 classroom capture system hit record levels last year, including, among other things, capturing 325,000 hours of faculty lectures on Tegrity servers in a 12-month period.
Rock legend Neil Young joined Sun Microsystems' Executive Vice President of Software Rich Green on stage during the opening keynote of the 13th annual JavaOne conference, underway this week in San Francisco.
"We get wheelbarrows of paper documents in the mail every day," according to Michael Cook, senior associate director of admissions at Michigan State University. "Our goal is to become paperless here in the admissions world," he added, "but that's not as easy as it seems."