Author Topic: Office Software/Phone Software  (Read 932 times)

Mr Smith

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Office Software/Phone Software
« on: 23 October 2002, 01:06 »
Here is interesting news:

http://reuters.com/news_article.jhtml?type=technologynews&StoryID=1613503

Microsoft Starts Testing New Version of Office

SEATTLE (Reuters) - Microsoft Corp. said on Tuesday it started preliminary testing of the next version of its Office productivity software, as the world's largest software maker prepares its products for Web-enabled services.

The next version of Office, code-named "Office 11" and due out in mid-2003 after user testing, will include many of the building blocks of Microsoft's broad .NET initiative that aims to provide software and services that will work across platforms and devices, Microsoft said.

Office 11 will broadly support XML, or extensible markup language, which allows data to be shared and exchanged between different types of programs, Microsoft said, making it more suitable for business users.

"It's about being connected and connecting business processes," said David Jaffe, lead product manager for Office.

Office, which includes the Word application for documents, Excel for spreadsheet analysis and Powerpoint for presentations, will also be more closely integrated with a feature called SharePoint, which allows groups of people to work on the same document and collaborate without having to exchange files and e-mail repeatedly, said Jaffe.

Office, which nearly equals and sometimes exceeds Windows as Microsoft's largest franchise, is beginning to see a slowdown. In Microsoft's latest business year, ended June 30, the "Information Worker" segment, which includes Office, dipped 2.5 percent.


I use OpenOffice and it works great.

http://news.com.com/2100-1033-962923.html

Microsoft's phone software ready to talk

Microsoft on Tuesday announced that its long-awaited Smartphone 2002 software is complete and said the first phones with the software will debut in Europe later this month.
Wireless carrier Orange plans to sell the device in the United Kingdom for 179 pounds ($277), including a digital camera add-on. The phone, known as SPV (Sound, Pictures, Video), is built by Taiwan-based High Tech Computer (HTC), the contract manufacturer for Hewlett-Packard's original iPaq handheld device as well as British wireless carrier mm02's XDA handheld.

"Orange is really setting the bar for a mass-market smart phone," said Microsoft Product Manager Ed Suwanjindar. Orange had announced plans to launch such a device.

 The U.S. is unlikely to see such devices until next year. U.S. carriers Verizon Wireless, Cingular Wireless and AT&T Wireless are all committed to releasing devices running Microsoft's operating system, with only AT&T publicly committing to a time frame. AT&T will have a device available some time before the middle of next year.

Microsoft has two operating systems for wireless devices. Already on the market are wireless handhelds running Microsoft's Pocket PC Phone Edition. Those products can make phone calls but have a large screen and lack a number pad. By contrast, devices running Smartphone 2002 look like slightly bulkier cell phones, with a jog dial for one-handed dialing and browsing of contacts and other information.

Suwanjindar said Microsoft believes the ultimate market for the kinds of devices that will run Smartphone 2002 is much larger than that of wireless handhelds.

"The goal of this product is not a niche market," he said.

So far four companies have committed to making the phones that will run Smartphone 2002. These include Samsung, which is developing a CDMA phone with the operating system and which announced plans Tuesday to develop a CDMA device built around Pocket PC Phone Edition. Samsung has already received U.S. regulatory approval for its Smartphone 2002-based product.

However, the largest cell phone makers, such as Nokia and Motorola, have balked at publicly supporting Microsoft's efforts. All five of the world's top cell phone makers--Nokia, Motorola, Ericsson, Samsung and Siemens--are planning to make phones using a rival operating system called Symbian. Samsung is the lone licensee of Microsoft's Smartphone software among the top five handset makers.

AT&T Wireless sells a Siemens Pocket PC Phone edition device for $550.

"We want to give the likes of Nokia and Ericsson a wake-up call," Richard Brennan, an executive vice president at Orange, told Reuters. "At the moment, we feel Nokia and Sony Ericsson are not innovating fast enough. We need to make a clear statement that we are not going to wait around."

Will I get the classic BSOD or an Illegal Operation
Message? I mean, it just wouldn't be the same without them. But really, this is just another example of Micro$haft trying to monopolize on yet another area of business.
War is an ugly thing, but not the ugliest of things. The decayed and degraded state of moral and patriotic feeling which thinks that nothing is worth war is much worse. The person who has nothing for which he is willing to fight, nothing which is more important than his own personal safety, is a miserable creature and has no chance of being free unless made and kept so by the exertions of better men than himself.
John Stuart Mill