Despite hype, some say Microsoft lacks Web 2.0 savvy
IDG News Service -
Though the powers that be at Microsoft Corp. seem to have finally grasped the impact of the Internet on the future of packaged software, industry observers and a key rival said the company still must prove that its plan to compete in the Web 2.0 marketplace is more than just hype.
Web 2.0 is a name given to the Web's transition from a collection of static Web sites to a computing platform providing Internet-based applications, or services, to end users. Richard MacManus, a freelance Web analyst and writer, acknowledged that Microsoft may always lag behind in its move to embrace this new era of the Internet. But now, with its Live Software plan and executive memos that herald the adoption of a new services model to combat Google Inc., the company at least is talking the talk when it comes to the new wave of Internet-based services, he said (see "Gates memo puts online services at heart of Microsoft").
Still, Microsoft has a long way to go to make its services strategy successful, he said. "I think they are making the right noises about Web 2.0 technologies, but there's a difference between what they announced and what they've actually developed," said MacManus, who writes the popular Read/Write Web log, in an e-mail Thursday.
He used a new service announced at Microsoft's Live Software launch last week as an example. Live Software is Microsoft's plan to offer a set of Web-based services, built on Microsoft software, that users can access no matter what Internet-enabled device they use. One of the first services is Office Live, which Microsoft said will integrate collaborative services such as document sharing with CRM and business analytics for consumers and small businesses. But the service "is simply vaporware at the moment," MacManus said.
Though Microsoft plans to release Office Live in beta in early 2006, a company memo by Microsoft Chief Technical Officer Ray Ozzie, made public in various news outlets Tuesday, implies Microsoft still does not know what final shape Office Live will take, MacManus said. "Ray Ozzie's memo indicates that Microsoft is still internally questioning the approach for Office Live," he said.
The way Microsoft made public Ozzie's memo outlining the company's comprehensive software-to-services shift also shows that Microsoft is behind the times on Web 2.0, said software guru and blogger Dave Winer.
Winer, who writes the Scripting News blog, hinted that the way Microsoft provided Ozzie's memo to the print media first rather than to bloggers shows it still may not fully understand the
Reprinted with permission from
Story copyright 2009 International Data Group. All rights reserved.
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