Government Market Drags Microsoft Deeper into the Cloud - 0 views
www.readwriteweb.com/...soft-deeper-into-the-cloud.php
Cloud-Productivity-Platform Microsoft Great-Transition desktop-productivity
shared by Gary Edwards on 02 Jun 12
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Gary Edwards on 02 Jun 12Nice article from Scott M. Fulton describing Microsoft's iron fisted lock on government desktop productivity systems and the great transition to a Cloud Productivity Platform. Keep in mind that in 2005, Massachusetts tried to do the same thing with their SOA effort. Then Governor Romney put over $1 M into a beta test that produced the now infamous 300 page report written by Sam Hiser. The details of this test resulted in the even more infamous da Vinci ODF plug-in for Microsoft Office desktops. The lessons of Massachusetts are simple enough; it's not the formats or office suite applications. It's the business process! Conversion of documents not only breaks the document. It also breaks the embedded "business process". The mystery here is that Microsoft owns the client side of client/server computing. Compound documents, loaded with intertwined OLE, ODBC, ActiveX, and other embedded protocols and interface dependencies connecting data sources with work flow, are the fuel of these client/server business productivity systems. Break a compound document and you break the business process. Even though Massachusetts workers were wonderfully enthusiastic and supportive of an SOA based infrastructure that would include Linux servers and desktops as well as OSS productivity applications, at the end of the day it's all about getting the work done. Breaking the business process turned out to be a show stopper. Cloud Computing changes all that. The reason is that the Cloud is rapidly replacing client/server as the target architecture for new productivity developments; including data centers and transaction processing systems. There are many reasons for the great transition, but IMHO the most important is that the Web combines communications with content, data, and collaborative computing. Anyone who ever worked with the Microsoft desktop productivity environment knows that the desktop sucks as a communication device. There was