Data Driver

Blog archive

Changing of The Guard on Microsoft's SQL Server Team

When I spoke last week with Fausto Ibarra, Microsoft's new director of product management for SQL Server, I asked why move his predecessor Francois Ajenstat (who is now working on Microsoft's green initiatives) off the team before the official RTM of SQL Server 2008? Ibarra explained that the product was officially kicked off in February during the Heroes Happen Hear Launch and the timing was right for the transition.

For Ibarra's part, it's onward and upward to the next release of SQL Server, where, if history should be our guide, will come out somewhere around 2011 -- though to be clear, that's what observers suspect. That didn't come from Ibarra or anyone else at Microsoft. All he would offer up on that front is Microsoft's goal of making it easier to manage all content across multiple tiers ranging from mobile devices to the cloud.

Key to that, he offered, will be Project "Velocity" and SQL Server Data Services. You can read more about Ibarra's plans in his new role here.

Data quality apparently is another key area of focus for SQL Server. The company's announcement this week that it will acquire Israel-based Zoomix gives it entrée into that space. The little-known startup offers what it calls Data Accelerator, server-based software that it says provides a scalable and fast approach to synchronization of critical data.

Data quality is an important aspect for numerous business operations, among them identity management, but it remains to be seen how much of a focus Redmond and its other key rivals will place on this area.

"If any of their customers have a need for a powerful matching engine, Zoomix has a pretty interesting product," says Forrester Research analyst Rob Karel. "It's relatively new; they have some customers but for the most part it's really an early stage technology that Microsoft acquired."

It remains to be seen whether Microsoft's key goal was to acquire the product or the team and presence in Israel, adds Gartner analyst Donald Feinstein. "Instead of buying a major vendor of data quality, they bought a development team in Israel," Feinstein says. "It will pay off in that they get the product that they got to date, but they also get the developers out of it."

Posted by Jeffrey Schwartz on 07/17/2008


comments powered by Disqus

Featured

  • Cloud-Focused .NET Aspire 9.1 Released

    Along with .NET 10 Preview 1, Microsoft released.NET Aspire 9.1, the latest update to its opinionated, cloud-ready stack for building resilient, observable, and configurable cloud-native applications with .NET.

  • Microsoft Ships First .NET 10 Preview

    Microsoft shipped .NET 10 Preview 1, introducing a raft of improvements and fixes across performance, libraries, and the developer experience.

  • C# Dev Kit Previews .NET Aspire Orchestration

    Microsoft's dev team has been busy updating the C# Dev Kit, a Visual Studio Code extension that enhances the C# development experience by providing tools for managing, debugging, and editing C# projects.

  • Hands On: New VS Code Insiders Build Creates Web Page from Image in Seconds

    New Vision support with GitHub Copilot in the latest Visual Studio Code Insiders build takes a user-supplied mockup image and creates a web page from it in seconds, handling all the HTML and CSS.

  • Naive Bayes Regression Using C#

    Dr. James McCaffrey from Microsoft Research presents a complete end-to-end demonstration of the naive Bayes regression technique, where the goal is to predict a single numeric value. Compared to other machine learning regression techniques, naive Bayes regression is usually less accurate, but is simple, easy to implement and customize, works on both large and small datasets, is highly interpretable, and doesn't require tuning any hyperparameters.

Subscribe on YouTube

Upcoming Training Events