News
        
        Microsoft To Converge Its Windows Live Efforts
        
        
        
			- By Barbara Darrow
 - July 06, 2007
 
		
        Microsoft continues to tweak its "Live" services effort, converging 
  its current Windows Live Platform and Windows Live Core efforts, a company spokeswoman 
  confirmed Thursday afternoon.
Company veteran and corporate vice president David Treadwell will lead the 
  combined "Live Platform Services" effort which comprises identity, 
  directory, presence, and internal and external applications that will make use 
  of them. Future planned services will include such entries as client/server/service 
  file synchronization and transport.
In a related personnel move, corporate vice president Amitabh Srivastava will 
  lead Cloud Infrastructure Services, the spokeswoman also confirmed. These services 
  include what she called the "lowest level of the platform, including an 
  efficient, virtualized computational substrate, a fully automated service management 
  system, and a comprehensive set of highly scalable storage services." The 
  changes were effective July 1, the start of Microsoft's fiscal 2008.
  
  Srivastava joined 
  Microsoft in 1997 and was a Microsoft fellow in 2001. Treadwell joined Microsoft 
  in 1989.
Treadwell has filled several large roles at Microsoft including general 
  manager of .NET platform development.
Both executives will continue to report to Chief Software Architect Ray Ozzie, 
  whose job it is to make sure Microsoft is a major player in what it calls "Software 
  Plus Services."
Microsoft has talked a lot, but very generically, about its "services 
  in the cloud" roadmap, and some watchers say the company had better get 
  more specific, fast. In this arena, Microsoft faces prodigious competition from 
  Google, the Mountain View, Calif. search giant that is trying to morph into 
  a platform and apps provider, as well.
It also faces a bevy of Software as a Service business applications players, including Salesforce.com and NetSuite, most of which rely on distinctly non-Microsoft 
  foundations including Linux and Oracle databases.
While pundits don't sell Microsoft, or Ozzie, short, many think the time has 
  come to talk turkey.
"We know very little about this group, about whatever Microsoft is calling 
  its services platform, what they intend to provide," says Paul Degroot, 
  analyst at Directions on Microsoft, a Kirkland, Wash.-based researcher. "In 
  a platform you want to have a coherent set of APIs, you want them to be accessible 
  via familiar development tools, and you want a reason for someone to sue them 
  or to develop for them."
Microsoft has proven in the PC realm, and increasingly also in servers, that 
  it knows how to do platforms, he added, citing Windows Server takeout of Novell's 
  NetWare, which at one point had more than 80 percent server market share.
Still, the move of consumers and increasingly of businesses to a rental or subscription 
  model has threatened Microsoft's legacy Office and even Windows power base. 
  Ozzie is spearheading a drive to permeate the Net with an array of free and 
  some for-fee services for small businesses and consumers.
Degroot, however, says Microsoft still needs to demonstrate a cohesive business 
  model. "Microsoft has better than 90 percent market share with Internet 
  Explorer but gets zero dollars [from it]." 
Degroot and most of the world presumes Microsoft wants or needs to make dollars 
  off its Software Plus Services strategy but has done little to explicitly illustrate 
  its plan to get there.    
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Barbara Darrow is Industry Editor for Redmond Developer News, Redmond magazine and Redmond Channel Partner. She has covered technology and business issues for 20 years.