In a move that many industry watchers expected would happen just after hell froze over, Microsoft
Corp. on Thursday unveiled a strategy for increasing its support for
industry standards and improving its traditionally frosty relationship
with open source communities.
Microsoft\'s new openness and interoperability plan focuses on high volume products such as Windows Vista (including the .NET
Framework), Windows Server 2008, SQL Server 2008, Office 2007, Exchange
Server 2007, and Office SharePoint Server 2007, as well as future
versions of these products.
In a conference call Thursday, Microsoft executives outlined a four
point plan that will see the vendor focus on ensuring open connections
to its products, promoting data portability, boosting its support for
industry standards, and engaging more closely with open source
communities.
"We\'ve shared lots of information with partners over the years,
enabling developers to write hundreds of thousands of applications for
Windows. Today\'s announcement represents a significant expansion to
greater transparency and interoperability," Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer
said on the conference call.
Microsoft will publish on its Website the APIs and communications
protocols in its high-volume products that are used by other Microsoft
products, and won\'t require third party developers to buy licenses or
pay royalty fees in order to access this information.
Microsoft also plans to develop new APIs for Word, Excel and PowerPoint
in Office 2007 to allow developers to plug in additional document
formats and to let users to set these formats as their default for
saving documents.
Microsoft will clearly delineate protocols that are covered by
Microsoft patents, and will offer licenses at reasonable royalty rates
and on non-discriminatory terms. The main idea, according to Ballmer,
is that Microsoft is opening its intellectual property assets that
pertain to interoperability.
"We have valuable intellectual property in our patents and will
monetize that from all users of our patented technology. We also have
trade secret information that we will continue to protect, expect for
trade secrets in the interoperability realm," Ballmer said.
Starting immediately, Microsoft will post some 30,000 pages of
documentation for Windows client and server protocols on MSDN, and
plans to offer protocol documentation for Office 2007 and other
high-volume products in the coming months. Developers could previously
access this information only after obtaining a trade secret license
through the Microsoft Work Group Server Protocol Program (WSPP) and the
Microsoft Communication Protocol Program (MCPP).
The growing importance of easy information sharing, including
interoperability across applications and services, is one of the main
driving forces behind Microsoft\'s decision to embrace openness and
industry standards, said Ray Ozzie, Microsoft chief software architect.
"Document preservation and portability have become vital concerns for
customers. Virtually every system and prodict has become
interconnected," Ozzie said on the call. "This reflects our commitment
to an open and level playing field in interoperability with these high
volume products. "
Microsoft also announced its Open Source Interoperability
Initiative, which seeks to build better ties between commercial and
community-based open source technologies and Microsoft products. The
program will be driven mainly through the use of facilities and events,
including labs, plug fests, technical content and opportunities for
ongoing cooperative development.
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