Posts Tagged ‘microsoft’

Microsoft’s Office 365 vs Google Docs War

Monday, June 27th, 2011

Both Microsoft and Google are boasting about large customers they’ve won. Last week, Google said that McClatchy, which owns The Sacramento Bee and other newspapers, is switching 8,500 workers to Google Apps. Microsoft held news conferences with San Francisco and New York officials when those cities chose Microsoft reports the Seattle Times.

While word processing on the Web may seem mundane, the competition between Google and Microsoft over Web-based applications is the stuff of high drama. Google protested in federal court when a U.S. cabinet department favored Microsoft. Steve Ballmer has personally visited department officials to court its business. Google’s marketing slogan is that companies have “gone Google.” Microsoft’s retort, “Google gone.”

The competition is hot because email services on Google Apps and Office 365 are a gateway to cloud computing. Instead of getting installed on desktop PCs or corporate servers, software and data in cloud computing will be stored on servers run by a cloud company and accessed via the Internet with smartphones, tablets, laptops, PCs and televisions.

The cloud hosting world for apps is becoming a huge factor in who will be leading the global market for these types of things.  I wonder who will win.  Who do you think controls the global app market for cloud computing?  I’m talking specifically about companies that host the apps in the cloud.

 

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Microsoft Small Business Server 7 Beta Due by September’s End

Wednesday, September 8th, 2010

http://blogs.technet.com/blogfiles/nmercer/WindowsLiveWriter/SBSBestPracticeAnalyserisnowavailable_14880/SBS_2.jpg

Microsoft Small Business will release a public beta of its Small Business Server 7 by the end of September, as it works toward a more cloud-centric server portfolio. Cloud server “7” will likely receive a more formal name ahead before it’s official release. Microsoft claims the platform will support up to 75 Client Access Licenses, perform automatic server backups, allow IT administrators to organize and access files from off-premises, and deploy advanced e-mail and document-sharing capabilities.

“We can confirm that SBS 7 will reach public beta by the end of September,” a Microsoft spokesperson e-mailed to eWEEK Sept. 7. More information about the platform can be found here.

“We are going to lead with the cloud,” Microsoft COO Kevin Turner said during a speech at the company’s Financial Analyst Meeting July 29. “Leading with the cloud actually helps better position Microsoft to sell more on-premises products than we ever have before … very strategically it signals a very clear commitment to our customers and to our partners.”

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