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Microsoft shifts to utility computing model

Microsoft shifts to utility computing model

By:  Dan McLean  On: 05 Mar 2008 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

Microsoft says over the next five years, it will develop code according to a utility computing model. Find out about the software company’s Web-based unified application management product

There was nothing particularly revolutionary when Microsoft Corp.’s Chief Software Architect, Ray Ozzie, revealed that the Internet will transform Microsoft products and services. But this familiar bark may have a lot more bite in 2008.

During his keynote speech Wednesday at Microsoft’s MIX 08 Web strategy and development conference in Las Vegas, Ozzie outlined three core guiding principles that he says will drive the “re-conceptualization” of Microsoft’s software business.

“We need to think of the Web as the hub of social and technology experience,” he told attendees. “The interpersonal nature of the Web will impact everything we do, including the personal aspects of the PC.”

Ozzie explained that today’s business and personal computing world is characterized by a multitude of different types of devices in use – phones, PCs, handhelds – that are both business and personal productivity tools. Their computing function demands applications and software that can work equally effectively on the diverse and disparate computing interfaces.

Ozzie said that software needs to focus on what he described as“service/service” symmetry, an approach that utilizes the Internet “cloud” and enterprise data centres as platforms of application function delivery. He described it as the “utility” computing model that moves computing function to a massively expanded distributed computing domain. It requires a different way to build applications.

Developers, working to build applications leveraged through this expanded computing platform need to embrace the world of small pieces loosely joined, Ozzie said.

“Transparency, standards and interoperability are keys. Applications need to take advantage of the unique strengths of each platform,” he said. “Over the next five years, the way we write code will be fundamentally transformed by a progressive shift to a utility computing model.”

And how will Microsoft products be impacted by these principles?

Ozzie discussed the need for enabling connected devices, saying that most are Internet connected and/or Internet aware at birth. There’s a need for unified device management that provides the ability to report into a common monitoring service for status and control, and a management function that transparently synchronizes files and media across all devices, Ozzie said. To that end, Ozzie revealed that Microsoft is currently in development of a unified application management product that’s Web-based.

“A team at Microsoft is working on this…bringing together all PCs into a seamless mesh and using the Web as a hub,” he said. Ozzie discussed connected entertainment saying Microsoft’s aspiration is to simplify things like media product registration through an online media centre that allows users to register once for many products and allows the ability to customize “interests and affinities,” for products. He cited the Xbox as being among the first line of products that will leverage this type of function.


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Dan McLean Dan McLean is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

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Comments (1)

RE: Microsoft shifts to utility computing model
by Bernard Hodson 3/6/2008 12:00:00 AMMuch of what Ray Ozzie promises is already available as can be seen in Euro-Asia Semiconductor July 2006, Computer Sweden, Oct 16 2006, and a very long description of the technology in the MicroNano Systems issue of October 2007. It will likely be funded with some support from Sweden, whose IT groups seem to have grasped these concepts wholeheartedly. I have also enhanced these concepts by creating a computer that gets rid of obsolete machine code, using logic elements that do not use machine code
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