Sun-Google Announce ... Not Much
If you hold a press conference but don’t say anything, is
it really a press conference?
In the case of Sun and Google, apparently the answer is “yes,”
as many in the press are fawning over the news of a collaboration
between the two companies, even though in terms of substance, it
comes down to this: Sun will distribute the Google toolbar as an
option with downloads of its Java Runtime Environment. This is a
big coup for Google, because there must be a solid dozen or so folks
who want but still don’t have the Google toolbar. Maybe two
dozen!
But wait, the potentially bigger news is that the agreement between
Sun and Google, “kicks off further collaboration between the
companies on projects like OpenOffice.org,” or what Sun sees
as the open source Office killer. Precious few details emerged as
to what that collaboration might produce, but that doesn’t
stop many from speculating that it’s a broadside from Google
against Microsoft Office. I could see consumers, perhaps, turning
to an office productivity suite that they could get from Google
for free, or close to it. But businesses? I just don’t picture
it. OpenOffice (and Sun’s StarOffice, potentially) is a legitimate
threat to Office in some circles, such as the state of Massachusetts,
which is concerned about adhering to open document formats. But
do you really see Massachusetts turning to Google as its provider?
I don’t.
Thankfully, we have technology journalists like Stuart Johnston
who have been around long enough to see through the blather and
provide some much needed perspective on stories like this. See his
piece here.
Compare that to the story
from Bloomberg, which positions the deal as a direct affront to
Office.
One gem from Bloomberg’s piece: “Google has added e-mail,
a product officials have touted as a possible alternative to word
processing functions.” Yes, in the same way that PowerPoint
is an alternative to Word.
Microsoft Softens Open Source Stance
Meanwhile, Microsoft appears to be softening up on Linux and open
source in general, or at least on its rhetoric, according to a story
posted Tuesday by The Register. It’s an interesting read,
quoting Microsoft’s Martin Taylor, global head of platform
strategy, on the company’s current approach to Linux. One
tidbit: “We'd rather embrace open source, because we'd rather
see open source applications running on Windows than running on
Linux," he explains. Good call.
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PDF Is Coming To Office
With all the talk about OpenOffice, partners can use some ammo to
sell customers on the benefits of Microsoft Office. There’s
certainly no shortage of them, starting with the ever-increasing
integration with various Microsoft applications. This week, Microsoft
announced
one more: support for the Portable Document Format, better known
as PDF. Beginning with Office 12, users will have a “save
as PDF” option when working in Word, PowerPoint, Excel, Access,
InfoPath, Publisher and Visio. That will be one handy feature, and
should help quell fears that Microsoft is trying to quash PDF with
its own “Metro” document format, announced earlier this
year.
In Case Of Emergency, Team with Motorola
Partners that serve the law enforcement, criminal justice and emergency
response communities should find some opportunity in the announcement
this week that Microsoft is teaming up with Motorola on a line
of communication and incident management applications for those
audiences, to be built on .NET.
EMC Helps SMBs Deal with Exchange
EMC announced
this week it will soon ship a tool to help small-to-medium businesses
get a better handle on e-mail storage and availability. The company’s
Storage Administrator for Exchange 2.1, based on technology EMC
acquired late last year when it bought Allocity, works with EMC
CLARiiON AX and CX storage systems.
For more tips on dealing with Exchange storage, check out our feature,
“Exchange
Storage Rules: 15 Ways to Simplify, Solidify and Save.”
Posted by Paul Desmond on October 05, 2005