Thursday, November 3, 2005

Windows Live

Microsoft's foray into hosted applications will have an initially minimal impact on the software vendor, but will certainly affect some of its main competitors, industry analysts told vnunet.com.
"This is more a swing of the pendulum," said Rob Helm, director of research at analyst firm Directions on Microsoft.
"In 2000 the pendulum was swinging towards hosted services. Two years later it was swinging back. Now Microsoft is going to make another run at it."
Microsoft unveiled its Live Software initiative on Tuesday at a media event in San Francisco. The strategy will see the launch of the new Office Live and Windows Live products.
Both are mostly free and supported by advertisements, and are offered as an online service through a browser.
Users will be able to access the applications on any device with a browser, ranging from mobile phones to PDAs and desktop PCs.
In the short term, however, the initiative will mostly be a rebranding of existing Microsoft services including Hotmail and MSN Messenger.
The two will be released under the Live Mail (video demonstration) and Live Messenger (video demonstration) brands respectively. Similarly Microsoft's Small Business Centre will become Office Live.
"It's mostly a branding change and an overall statement of direction," said Helm. But by making the services available free of charge and supported by advertisements, Microsoft is stepping up the competition with Google and Yahoo.
However, unlike Google and Yahoo, Microsoft does not rely solely on advertising revenues to stay in business. This not only makes it a low risk best for the software provider, but offers a shot at ruining Google's and Yahoo's business.
"Even if Microsoft doesn't win, it's possible for others to lose," said Helm.
Microsoft launched a big push towards hosted applications in 2000, but the doomed Hailstorm project faced many obstacles.
Users did not trust Microsoft, and the low adoption rate of broadband connections limited the appeal of software that required users to be constantly online. As the internet bubble burst, Microsoft quietly folded the initiative.
Trust will be a major hurdle for Microsoft once again, according to Charlene Li, principal analyst for devices, media and marketing at Forrester Research.

Friday, October 28, 2005

Microsoft's Another Tactic

US software colossus Microsoft announced plans on Wednesday to launch an online library of books and other written works.
A "beta" version of MSN Book Search will go into service online next year, Microsoft said in a written release.
"We are excited to be working with libraries worldwide to digitize and index information from the world's printed materials," said Christopher Payne, corporate vice president of MSN Search.
"We believe people will benefit from the ability to not just view a page, but to easily act on that data in contextually relevant ways, both online in the search experience and in the applications they are using," he said.
Microsoft will start its library with books in the public domain then expand it to include other works, according to the company.
Microsoft's digital text compilation will consist primarily of material that is not copyrighted and it will strive to work out deals with the owners of written works before including them in the online library, the company said.
Microsoft was evidently trying to avoid the kind of criticism and contention its Internet rival Google provoked with a plan to amass all the world's books in an online archive.
Google unveiled its project, "Google Print," in October last year.
Google suspended the plan in August after being lambasted internationally by authors, traditional libraries and publishing houses that claimed copyrights were being threatened.
Google's print production manager Adam Smith said at the time that Google would not scan any more copyrighted books until next month, to give publishers a chance to figure out what books they want kept from the planned online library.
In April, 19 European national libraries announced a multi-million euro counter-offensive aimed at blocking Google's quest to create a global virtual library.
The alliance, organized by France's national library, formed after Michigan University and four other top libraries -- Harvard, Stanford, New York Public Library and the Bodleian in Oxford -- made a deal with Google to digitize millions of their books and make them freely available online.
Google has consulted with publishers, authors and trade organizations to assuage concerns about copyrights, according to Smith.
Google invited publishers to provide lists of copyrighted works they want logged in the online library so the search engine can refer potential readers their way to buy the books in one form or another.
Google also offered to keep publishers and authors updated on interest in their books and share revenue from "contextual advertising."
The Google Print project rattled the cultural establishment in Paris, raising fears that French language and ideas could be just sidelined on the World Wide Web, already dominated by English.
French President Jacques Chirac, at one point, asked Culture Minister Renaud Donnedieu de Vabres and France's National Library president Jean-Noel Jeanneney to study how collections in libraries in France and Europe could be more widely and more rapidly distributed via Internet.
Jeanneney said at the time that Google's plan confirmed "the risk of a crushing American domination in the definition of how future generations conceive the world."
The alliance opposing Google's plan included national libraries in Austria, Belgium, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Italy, Lithuania, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Poland, Slovenia, Slovakia, Spain and Sweden. This story has been viewed 129 times.