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21st-Century Phi
Microsoft Future

MSN Messenger and Windows Live Messenger Bot Contest

Microsoft is challenging developers worldwide to create conversational robots, or BOTs, for MSN® Messenger and Windows Live Messenger and giving away more than USD $ 40K in prizes. Why not give it a try if you know some good coding.

Robots or “BOTs”, are software programs that you can add to MSN® Messenger and Windows Live™ Messenger. If you add a robot to your contact list, it can chat, give you customer service support, perform searches, make suggestions, play games and more. We’re looking for the best new robot ideas for Messenger. And $40,000 in fantastic prizes go to the top BOTs!

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Microsoft Project Orange is WinFS Killer App ?

On May 16, the WinFS team whetted the appetites of advocates of Microsoft’s next-generation file system by sharing information on plans for a new, Microsoft-developed application for WinFS, code-named “Project Orange.”

WinFS, Microsoft’s next-generation file system, is still churning its way through the beta process. But that isn’t stopping Microsoft from building a new information organizer that rides on top of WinFS storage and the Windows Presentation Framework.

Microsoft has also posted some job postings on this Project Orange. See below and find the post here

If so, Project Orange may be the right fit for you! Project Orange is a brand new team tasked with building a next-generation Information Explorer based on WinFS and WPF (AKA Avalon) to help users finally get organized. This is a soup-to-nuts project focused on defining a breakthrough user experience for users to unify, organize, and explore their data in meaningful new ways. WinFS and WPF offer dramatic new opportunities for information management by merging the traditional world of relational databases with end user data and offering new opportunities for interaction & visualization.

Microsoft Project Orange is WinFS Killer App ? source

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Microsoft CEO Summit 2006

This week, dear old Bill Gates, the richest man in the world and founder of Microsoft will hosts the Microsoft CEO Summit 2006 where he shares the vision of Microsoft 10 years from now and how they are going to transform it. Gates will also showcase the Heartbeat of Information Management ie via their Microsoft Office SharePoint Server 2007.

Read on the full transcript :

This week, more than 100 CEOs representing many of the world’s leading companies are meeting in Redmond, Washington, to discuss technology trends that promise to reshape the corporate landscape. The occasion is the Microsoft CEO Summit, an annual event that we’ve been hosting since 1997.

In the decade since that first CEO Summit, technology has transformed the world of business in profound ways. Back then, e-mail was just emerging as a preferred medium for business communication. E-commerce was in its infancy. Most companies still relied on faxes and phone calls to conduct business.

Today, we communicate and collaborate instantly with colleagues, customers and partners around the world. Global supply chains speed the flow of products from factory floor to store shelf. Cell phones are ubiquitous. Mobile access to e-mail is rapidly becoming the norm.

The impact on the workforce is remarkable. Productivity is higher than it’s ever been. Buyers can shop the entire world without leaving their desk. Sellers have access to markets that were once beyond reach. The amount of information collected about customers, competitors and markets is unprecedented.

But there are times when it feels like all of these changes have overwhelmed the tools we use to do our day-to-day jobs. I wanted to share my thoughts on this important issue with you and other business decision makers and IT professionals.

The problem, really, is twofold. The first is information overload. Faced with the endless deluge of data that is generated every second of every day, how can we hope to keep up? And in the struggle to keep up, how can we stay focused on the tasks that are most important and deliver the greatest value?

The other problem is something I call information underload. We’re flooded with information, but that doesn’t mean we have tools that let us use the information effectively.

Companies pay a high price for information overload and underload. Estimates are that information workers spend as much as 30 percent of their time searching for information, at a cost of $18,000 each year per employee in lost productivity. Meanwhile, the University of California, Berkeley predicts that the volume of digital data we store will nearly double in the next two years.

That makes solving information overload/underload a critical task. Fortunately, a new generation of technology innovations is opening the door to solutions that will make it dramatically easier to find relevant information quickly; to use that information to drive intelligent decision-making; and to instantly share the knowledge that results across the enterprise and beyond. Resolving the information overload and underload problem will take more than just better search tools. What’s required is a comprehensive approach to enterprise information management that spans information creation, collection and use and helps ensure that organizations can unlock the full value of their investments in both information and people.

As these solutions enter the mainstream, we will expect dramatic improvements across the key drivers of business success. Software that streamlines how we find, use and share business information will enable us to strengthen relationships with customers, speed innovation, improve operations and create more flexible connections to partners and suppliers.

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Microsoft and its Adcenter Targeting Advertising

Looks like the internet search advertising wars are heating up. Microsoft is now kicking out Yahoo! ads on Microsoft Search pages in the US, France and SG.

At a conference with ad industry representatives at Microsoft HQ, the company, which has been steadily increasing the proportion of MSN ads supplied by AdCenter and reducing those powered by Yahoo! technology, also sought to woo advertisers by stressing its wider presence which now stretches from the PC and the web to video games consoles and mobile phones.

Microsoft and its Adcenter Targeting Advertising source

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