Microsoft Opens Up APIs, Protocols

Michael Desmond, founding editor of Redmond Developer News and Desmond File blogger, is on vacation. Filling in for him today is Kathleen Richards, senior editor of RDN. You can reach her at [email protected].

Big interop news out of Redmond this morning. As reported by my RDN colleague Jeffrey Schwartz, Microsoft is making a push to be more open:

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Posted on 02/21/20080 comments


Delphi Goes to School in Russia

Michael Desmond, founding editor of Redmond Developer News and Desmond File blogger, is on vacation. Filling in for him today is Kathleen Richards, senior editor of RDN. You can reach her at [email protected].

Microsoft isn't the only company that's trying to get students on board early. In early February, Borland's developer tools subsidiary CodeGear announced a sizable licensing agreement for the Eastern bloc. The company joins Corel and other as yet unannounced vendors in a deal with the Russian Federal Agency of Education to provide technology and other resources to teach programming in primary and secondary schools.

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Posted on 02/21/20081 comments


Two If by Sea

In the course of just over a week starting on Jan. 30, a total of five undersea data cables linking Europe, Africa and the Middle East were damaged or disrupted . The first two cables to be lost link Europe with Egypt and terminate near the Port of Alexandria.

Early speculation placed the blame on ship anchors that might have dragged across the sea floor during heavy weather. But the subsequent loss of cables in the Persian Gulf and the Mediterranean has produced a chilling numbers game. Someone, it seems, may be trying to sabotage the global network.

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Posted by Michael Desmond on 02/19/20085 comments


Driving Toward D

A couple of weeks ago, blogger (and sometime RDN contributor) Mary Jo Foley at All About Microsoft wrote about a new programming language in the works from Redmond codenamed "D."

D is a "textual modeling language" that's integral to Microsoft's ambitious Oslo initiative, which RDN has previously covered. Oslo aims to enable Microsoft's dynamic IT strategy by offering tools and resources to help enterprises better plan, model, develop and deploy applications. Oslo is extremely wide-ranging, with aspects of the program driving new versions of Visual Studio, BizTalk Server and the .NET Framework. It'll be 2009 before Oslo actually arrives.

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Posted by Michael Desmond on 02/14/20080 comments


Redmond's Open Source Binary-to-OOXML Conversion Project

Keep an eye on SourceForge tomorrow for the launch of a Microsoft-led open source software project, which the company hopes will provide powerful conversion tools for existing MS Office binary files. The new project should help Microsoft extend the perceived value of its XML file formats for shops that currently have a large investment in its binary formats.

You can read more about Microsoft's thought process at Brian Jones' blog post, More

Posted by Michael Desmond on 02/14/20080 comments


OOXML Spat Continues

A few weeks back, I wrote about a Burton Group study that took a rather positive view of Microsoft's Office Open XML (OOXML) file format specification, while also casting doubt on the open source OpenDocument Format (ODF). I also published a Q&A with Sun Microsystems Chief Open Source Officer Simon Phipps, offering a bit of a rebuttal to the Burton Group report. More

Posted by Michael Desmond on 02/12/20080 comments


Office Is Back on the Menu

When Microsoft launched its first Microsoft Office System Developers Conference yesterday, it reminded me of old times. In an era of Web services, AJAX-based rich Internet mashups and portable implementations of the .NET Framework, it's nice to know that Microsoft can still trundle out an old-fashioned, monolithic application platform without a hint of shame or irony.

As RDN contributing editor John Waters reports, Microsoft is touting Office as a platform for development, tying the ubiquitous productivity suite into everything from back-end ERP software to public-facing Web services. To that end, Redmond is promoting Office Business Applications (OBA) as a distinct class of Office-aligned applications for businesses.

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Posted by Michael Desmond on 02/12/20080 comments


Oh, and SQL Server 2008 Is Delayed

I want to tip my cap to RDN columnist Peter Varhol who pointed me to a Joel Spolsky blog post expressing profound exasperation at the way Microsoft reveals delays. Spolsky savages the doublespeak found in this TechNet blog post More

Posted by Michael Desmond on 02/07/20080 comments


Developers' Take: Microsoft Buying Yahoo

When Microsoft made a $44.6 billion tender to purchase online giant Yahoo , it did more than make a lot of waves in the IT and financial arenas. It also shook the confidence of a lot of developers.

You need look no further than this Mini-Microsoft blog post, which concludes that while developers at Microsoft expect little to happen any time soon, whatever eventually does happen will probably be bad. This snip pretty much sums it up:

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Posted by Michael Desmond on 02/07/20080 comments


Remembering Jim Gray

It was just over a year ago -- Jan. 28, 2007, to be exact -- that Microsoft research fellow and Turing Award-winner Jim Gray went missing off the coast of California, during what was supposed to be a solo day trip on his 40-foot sailboat Tenacious . Despite an extensive search of the waters off the San Francisco bay, Jim Gray and his boat were never found. More

Posted by Michael Desmond on 02/05/20081 comments


Information as a Service

I don't have to tell anyone about the growing problem of complexity that faces development and IT managers. Enterprises find themselves managing increasing numbers of applications, tied to a diverse array of internal and external data sources, services and people. The end result: The information often is out there, but the applications -- and the people who rely on them -- can't get at it.

Enter the concept of Information as a Service (IaaS). Like Software as a Service (SaaS) before it, IaaS aims to break chokepoints that have developed as the scope, scale and interconnectedness of enterprise systems have grown. Where SaaS enables the flexible delivery of trusted applications to endpoints over public and private networks, IaaS enables a more dynamic, flexible and robust means for information access across evolving and growing infrastructures.

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Posted by Michael Desmond on 01/31/20080 comments


5 Questions with Sun Microsystems' Simon Phipps

Simon Phipps is chief open source officer for Sun Microsystems Inc. As such, he stands at the center of a heated debate over standards-based XML file formats like the OpenDocument Format (ODF) and Microsoft's Office Open XML (OOXML). With OOXML approaching a crucial late-February review by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO), Phipps has been busy. Really busy.

We talked with Simon and got his thoughts on the OOXML tussle as well Sun's efforts in the open source community.

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Posted by Michael Desmond on 01/29/20080 comments


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