In what could be a major strategy shift for Microsoft, CEO Steve Ballmer suggested during a speech at the University of Washington that, despite his company having made its fortune through desktop-based software platforms, the primary focus going forward will be on the cloud and applications derived from it.
“We shipped Windows 7, which had a lot that’s not cloud-based. Our inspiration now starts with the cloud,” Ballmer said. “Windows Phone, Xbox, Windows Azure and SQL Azure … this is the bet for our company.”
On the screen behind him, a logo of a cloud flashed up, superimposed against the words: “We’re all in.”
Among the Microsoft cloud initiatives that Ballmer discussed: the creation of a cloud-based Office that would allow workers to collaborate and communicate, cloud-ported entertainment via Xbox Live, and the creation of what he termed “smarter devices” that would be capable of rapidly integrating new hardware and software that could interact smoothly with the cloud. He also cited Microsoft’s cloud-based development platform, Windows Azure, noting a University of Washington project called Azure Ocean that apparently collects all of the world’s oceanographic data.
Windows Phone 7 Series
The Windows Phone 7 Series, Microsoft’s latest attempt at a smartphone operating system, was cited as one of those cloud-centric smarter devices. “Earlier [Microsoft] phones were designed for voice and legacy [applications],” Ballmer said, while Windows Phone 7 Series was designed to “put people, places, content, commerce all front and center for the users with a different point of view than some other phones.”
Ballmer also aligned the cloud with search and Bing Maps, citing the reciprocal need of both those services to pull in information from users in order to “learn” and refine their fundamental actions. Bing Maps has begun integrating Flickr images into its Streetside feature, which presents an eye-level view of a particular environment; in an effort to present even more views to users, Microsoft is apparently experimenting with putting Streetside cameras on pedestrians and bikes as opposed to the roofs of cars, which can provide only a limited number of perspectives on a given street.
In a similar way, search engines such as Bing take the history information ported into them by users in order to better gauge ultimate user intent. “The ability of the cloud to learn from all of the data that’s out there, and learn from me about what I’m interested in,” Ballmer suggested, was one of the cloud’s most fundamental dimensions.
Microsoft faces substantial competition in the cloud space from a number of companies, particularly when it comes to consumer applications. Apple’s App Store, which Ballmer admitted was “a very nice job,” has a substantial lead in the cloud-based monetisation of intellectual property such as music and movies. Google, meanwhile, holds a sizable lead in the US search engine market, while its Google Apps cloud-based productivity suite has been making inroads with government and businesses.
Google has announced plans for a dedicated federal cloud computing system sometime this year, a move that likely helped drive Microsoft’s 24 February announcement of Business Productivity Online Suite Federal, an online-services cloud for the US government that comes with rigorous security underpinnings.
Ballmer’s talk seemed to indicate that Microsoft will focus its competitive energies increasingly in these cloudy areas. What that alignment will mean for the development of the traditionally desktop-bound Windows franchise, the company’s flagship product, remains to be seen; in a 31 January blog posting on the Microsoft Developer Network, a project manager suggested that development of Windows 8 was already underway.
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I'm definitely excited to see what kind of advancements Microsoft has in store. Although Google has done an excellent job with Chrome, I believe Microsoft will be the one to take the concept to new levels.