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Microsoft Future

Ballmer on software services and Facebook

Microsoft CEO, Steve Ballmer, signalled another step towards a dramatic change in the software giant’s business model.

In London on a whistle-stop tour, Ballmer said, “We are a software company, and yet in a sense, the very form of our core capability is changing. We need to change our capabilities so that we are not just good at writing bits that you put out on CD and deliver, but rather writing this thing that is a living, breathing, dynamic, organic thing.

Ballmer says that CTO Ray Ozzie’s vision of software as a service, or software plus services as Microsoft prefers, will eventually overtake shrink-wrapped software sales.

“It’s not in the next two, three, four years, but in the long run it’ll happen. Some of that money will come through subscription revenues, some will come through transaction revenues and some will come through advertising revenues. The average consumer really doesn’t like to pay for things. And anything that can be ad-funded sensibly for the customer and sensibly for the provider will be. Will online publications be largely ad-funded as things move from the physical world to the online world? I think the answer to that is yes.

“I think there will be some subscription businesses, and yet I think the rest of the group will be either ad-funded or essentially not for profit.”

Ballmer also drew attention to the dangers of Google’s dominance in online advertising, “It could be quite an economic problem for anybody who wants to offer an ad-funded experience on the internet, or anybody who wants to buy advertising,” he says. Predictably he put Microsoft forward as “the most sensible, credible alternative to Google”.

On Windows Vista and its critics he said, “The uptake on new computers has been very good amongst consumers. We’ve a little bit more work to do to resolve some issues that are slowing acceptance in smaller businesses and, as always, it takes longer to get things through the approval process of larger businesses.”

Is Microsoft interested in buying a stake in social network site, Facebook? “Sure they are an interesting internet property. They have a lot of growth, a lot of page views, a lot of users and we want to make sure that their stuff runs on our advertising platform, and we are excited to be there. We will make acquisitions where they make sense. Our strategy is to be strong in the areas of communications and social interaction; to be strong in the area of search, portal and information management; to be strong in advertising platforms. And if acquisitions will accelerate that as Aquantive did, we will make more acquisitions.”

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Test drive new Windows Live

Bill Gates Microsoft has announced changes to Windows Live software, which you can see at Get Live.

Windows Live makes it easy to store and manage your communications and information, and share what’s going on in your life with the people who mean the most to you. Many of you have already tried out new versions of our web services – Windows Live Hotmail, Windows Live Spaces, Windows Live SkyDrive beta, and the new Windows Live Home page beta. These have been designed to work together with a common navigation, so it is easy to switch between your e-mail, your space, your files, and your photos—from any browser.

The company is releasing beta versions of “a new generation of Windows Live software designed for your Windows PC that makes it easier than ever to get connected to Windows Live or other services”.

This suite includes Windows Live Mail (Hotmail); Windows Live Photo Gallery, for photo sharing; Windows Live Writer, which allows you to publish to a blog; Windows Live OneCare Family Safety, parental controls; and a new version of Windows Live Messenger (8.5).

The company says, you’ll be able to install the entire suite of these downloadable Windows Live services at one time, from one place, “instead of going through separate installations for each service. Of course, if you don’t want the entire suite, you can still get each application individually”.

Can’t wait.

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Test Drive Windows Live suite

Windows Live is Microsoft’s big new idea for challenging the likes of Google in online software services.

MSN

Microsoft will now allow you to test out the new suite of Windows Live software at http://get.live.com/wl/all.

Windows Live makes it easy to store and manage your communications and information, and share what’s going on in your life with the people who mean the most to you. Many of you have already tried out new versions of our web services – Windows Live Hotmail, Windows Live Spaces, Windows Live SkyDrive beta, and the new Windows Live Home page beta.

[Now] we’re releasing beta versions of a new generation of Windows Live software designed for your Windows PC that makes it easier than ever to get connected to Windows Live or other services. This suite of software includes e-mail (Windows Live Mail), photo sharing (Windows Live Photo Gallery), a great publishing tool that lets you post directly to your blog (Windows Live Writer), parental controls (Windows Live OneCare Family Safety), a new version of Windows Live Messenger (8.5), and more.

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Windows 7 in three years

CNET News.com has learned that Microsoft is aiming to ship its next version of Windows, codenamed version 7, within three years or so.

Microsoft discussed Windows 7 last Thursday at a conference for its field sales force in Orlando, according to sources close to the company.

Windows 7 will be under new orders to establish a more predictable release schedule, as suggested by Ray Ozzie following the multi-problematic Windows Vista rewrite and more than five years of development.

CNET comments, “Like Vista, Windows 7 will ship in consumer and business versions, and in 32-bit and 64-bit versions. The company also confirmed that it is considering a subscription model to complement Windows, but did not provide specifics or a time frame.”

Details were released, a representative said, “as part of our ongoing outreach to enterprise customers and partners, Microsoft has begun sharing plans for how they will continue to deliver value to businesses in the future…Software Assurance customers in particular. Microsoft is scoping Windows 7 development to a three-year time frame, and then the specific release date will ultimately be determined by meeting the quality bar.”

Windows 7 was previously codenamed, Windows Vienna.

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