Office in the Cloud, Avoiding Demo Hell

Nicholas Carr has a post on Microsoft’s Office in the Cloud.

Microsoft to offer Office-in-the-cloud

October 28, 2008

Microsoft's long awaited push into cloud computing continues today, as the company announces plans to offer fully functional, if "lightweight," versions of its popular Office applications as web services that will run in people's browsers. The move signals Microsoft's intention to defend its massive Office business against incursions from Google Apps, Zoho, and other online competitors. Versions of the apps will be available in both ad-supported and subscription models, according to Microsoft's Chris Capossela:

We will deliver Office Web applications to consumers through Office Live, which is a consumer service with both ad-funded and subscription offerings. For business customers, we will offer Office Web applications as a hosted subscription service and through existing volume licensing agreements. We will show a private technology preview of the Office Web applications later this year.

I’ve worked with Chris Caposella, and Chris is infamous for a demo with Bill Gates when he was Bill’s speech writer.

 

Chris has passed on the demo duties for Office in the Cloud to Takeshi Numoto.  The good thing is Takeshi’s demo didn’t have the blue screen of death.  Which maybe is the good thing about cloud computing demos with built in redundancy.  Here is a post on his demo.

Microsoft Office 14 To Include Web Apps

The software maker has yet to set a release date, but industry watchers say the online suite could be available next year.

By Paul McDougall
InformationWeek
October 29, 2008 12:59 PM

Microsoft (NSDQ: MSFT)'s plan to offer a Web-based version of its Office productivity suite will debut with the release of Office 14, the successor to Microsoft Office 2007, a company executive said Tuesday.

Office Web, as the online version is called, is part of Microsoft's "vision for delivering great user experiences across the PC, phone, and the Web in Office 14," said Microsoft Office general manager Takeshi Numoto, speaking Tuesday at the company's Professional Developers Conference in Los Angeles.

Numoto did not specify a release date for Office 14. Bloggers at some tech sites, however, have said the suite is likely due out in 2009. Office 2007 debuted in January 2007.

Numoto said that the Web-based versions of Office applications like Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and OneNote would allow users to collaborate with others and across multiple devices more efficiently. "This is a great example of Office enabling dynamic collaboration across the PC, phone, and the Web," said Numoto.

Numoto did not offer insight into pricing details, such as whether users who purchase the boxed version of Office 14 will get free access to the Web version.

In launching the suite, Microsoft is looking to protect its flank from Google -- which last year launched a host of free and low-cost office productivity applications under a brand called Google Apps. For a single monthly fee per user, enterprises can roll out Google Apps to as many employees as they like.

Takeshi is a great guy, and I watched his demo at http://channel9.msdn.com/pdc2008/KYN02/ minute 134.

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Takeshi doesn’t look a day older than when I met him his first day on the job which is over 10 years ago. It is a small world. I also used to work with Takeshi’s wife when she was at Sony.  

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BBC Tours Inside Microsoft’s Quincy Data Center

Here is a BBC Video inside Microsoft’s Quincy Data Center.

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The online article is here.

The town in the cloud...
  • Rory Cellan-Jones
  • 27 Oct 08, 09:15 GMT

I'm in the United States to report on several stories, including the whole phenomenon of cloud computing. More on that on the television and radio on Tuesday, but in the meantime, let me take you to one of the places we've filmed, the town with its head in the cloud.

Ariel view of data centre, QuincyWe've been to Quincy, a remote farming town of 5,000 inhabitants in the middle of the state of Washington, where just about the only activities until recently were either planting potatoes or turning them into chips - or rather French fries. Now it's home to three giant data centres.

The biggest belongs to Microsoft, which completed its brutally ugly building on a former bean-field last year, to be followed swiftly by Yahoo and now the financial software firm Intuit. We were allowed access to Microsoft's centre - the first TV crew to get inside - and after passing through several layers of security found ourselves in one of the server rooms.

There are 10 of them, with up to 30,000 servers in each, an almost unimaginable amount of computing power. Walking around, deafened by the roar from the cooling systems needed to keep the computers chilled, you feel you're right in the belly of the modern internet.

Oh yeh thanks to Steve Clayton’s: geek in disguise blog I found this post.

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Dell Powers Microsoft Windows Azure

Dell has a blog post on its Cloud Computing Blog.

Dell Powers Microsoft Azure

Mon. Oct. 27, 2008

Today marks the start of an important chapter in the unfolding story of cloud computing. Microsoft has entered the ranks of cloud platform service providers with the launch of Windows® Azure™ and the Azure Services Platform.  Microsoft selected cloud-optimized Dell servers to power the Azure platform.  

Forrest Norrod, Vice President and General Manager of Dell's Data Center Solutions Division, took a moment to share his thoughts about the announcement in this video:

Here is the Dell HW used in ask.com /2008/05/more-details-on.html

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Microsoft Projects Big Investments for Windows Azure

ComputerWorld’s Eric Lai reports on a PDC session by Ben Ravani.

Microsoft to support Windows Azure with massive data center investments

Company is building out a cloud computing infrastructure to top rivals Amazon.com, Google and Salesforce.com

By Eric Lai

October 27, 2008 (Computerworld) Despite the economic downturn,Microsoft Corp. intends to ramp up the number of servers running in its data centers worldwide by 15 times over the next 5 years.

The growth, outlined in a presentation on Monday at its Professional Developers Conference, is designed to handle increased hosted computing demand from enterprise software running on its new Windows Azure platform, also announced today, as well as third-party services Microsoft hopes to attract.

Microsoft expects to boost the number of data centers it operates by three times, its power usage by 15 times, and the Internet traffic going out of its data centers by nine-fold, said Benjamin Ravani, general manager of Microsoft's Global Foundation Services, during a technical session.

There have been reports of cutbacks in a financial review.

Microsoft had announced similar growth projections earlier this year. But Ravani's reiteration of those comments come a week after Redmond announced plans to tighten its fiscal belt, including cutting $500 million in spending this fiscal year by slowing hiring and cutting travel and marketing expenses.

But, Microsoft is still focused on its battle with Google and Amazon.

Despite its belated arrival to so-calledcloud computing services, Microsoft appears to be sparing no dime on building out a back-end infrastructure that tops competitors such as Amazon.com Inc., Google Inc. andSalesforce.com Inc.

Microsoft has announced five data centers in the past 12 months, including in San Antonio, Tx., Chicago, Il. and Des Moines, Ia. Both its Chicago and Des Moines data centers will be massive, $500 million facilities that will have many of its servers pre-configured and installed in shipping containers.

Investing in a big way now, Microsoft has argued, will save money later.

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