TWiT Windows WeeklyOn Windows Weekly 116Paul Thurrott talked about Microsoft Office 2010 for the web and the plan to make it run on Internet Explorer, Firefox, Chrome, Safari, etc. which is a great strategy for Microsoft and he said that Microsoft always did that: putting business first, with no agenda. I think that’s not true: Look at Microsoft Passport.

If I understand correctly, Microsoft Passport only worked on Internet Explorer (or worked very bad on other browsers). They had the agenda of pushing Internet Explorer and Microsoft Passport failed (thank god! OpenID is much better!). And I think that’s big news. Microsoft seems to be changing: ASP.NET MVC is released as open source among other things, they contribute free software to the Linux kernel, and now Office Web.

They even dared do something I would’ve never expected them to do: sell Office Web Server. I think that’s the way to go. Businesses want control, businesses want to have the information safely secured in their own basement, not on the cloud, not on every employee’s laptops, on the basement, and they want the easiness of only one machine with the software, constantly patched, upgraded and secure, and everybody just firing up a web browser.

Of course they are doing it because it’s in their own interest, as Google made Chrome because it’s in their own interest. Microsoft is a business, not a charity, it’s driven by their own interest (like any other company). I think the point is that Microsoft dropping their agenda makes them much more dangerous, maybe they’ll manage not to turn into the next IBM. For me it’s very hard not to have an agenda, I have to learn to do that.

Oh, another thing on Windows Weekly 116. I like the world Paul describes. Very Star Trekish in the sense that we won’t be carrying around laptops or netbooks, we’ll just use any terminal. I’ve been thinking about the pictures problem: what do you do with your digital camera. Paul’s solution is simple and although not practical today, it will mostly like be practical: the camera will have wifi or cellular network and will upload everything automatically to Picasa web or that f-site (they denied my username, I’m not mentioning them, I still have an agenda).

Currently it’s too much data, but I believe it is very likely we’ll reach a point where quality is good enough for us and network speeds will continue to increase. I think that happened with movies. Both network speed and video quality (and size) increase over time, but today it’s much more plausible to download a movie than 10 years ago. We already surpassed the tipping point for music.

The future looks bright!

Reviewed by Daniel Magliola. Thank you!

You may also like:

If you want to work with me or hire me? Contact me

You can follow me or connect with me:

Or get new content delivered directly to your inbox.

Join 5,047 other subscribers

I wrote a book:

Stack of copies of How to Hire and Manage Remote Teams

How to Hire and Manage Remote Teams, where I distill all the techniques I’ve been using to build and manage distributed teams for the past 10 years.

I write about:

announcement blogging book book review book reviews books building Sano Business C# Clojure ClojureScript Common Lisp database Debian Esperanto Git ham radio history idea Java Kubuntu Lisp management Non-Fiction OpenID programming Python Radio Society of Great Britain Rails rant re-frame release Ruby Ruby on Rails Sano science science fiction security self-help Star Trek technology Ubuntu web Windows WordPress

I’ve been writing for a while:

Mastodon