Tech Blog.org is all about technology.
Read the latest technology news, events, gossip and what's happening in the world of technology.   Home | Write to us


IT will change the world even more

June 2, 2004

Although budget constraints and security challenges will continue to strain IT departments, change in the coming years will affect society more than the advent of PCs, broadband and cell phones in the past years, Microsoft's CEO Steve Ballmer told an audience of IT developers and professionals at the company's Tech Ed event in San Diego.

Global Business Listing is the fastest-growing paid inclusion search engine there is today. Click here for more information.

There will be more change and innovation in information technology in the next 10 years than in the past decade, Ballmer said Monday.

"I think the next 10 years will bring more positive change and innovation than in the last 10 years," Ballmer said. He listed natural language, artificial intelligence, improved search, mobility and interoperability as main areas of innovation. "We have a chance, all of us in this room, to change the world in a positive way," Ballmer said.

Ballmer told the audience that IT is probably the top transformer of society today, in addition to health care and education. Microsoft announced some advances in its developer tools to help the audience change the world. None of these, however, had been unexpected.

Announced Monday and demonstrated on stage were Visual Studio 2005 Team System, Web Services Enhancements (WSE) 2.0 and a technical preview of the Office Information Bridge Framework.

Visual Studio 2005 Team System is an expansion to Microsoft's developer tools to allow all members of an IT organization to work together. It is due out together with Visual Studio 2005, also known by its Whidbey code name, in the first half of next year.

Available immediately, WSE 2.0 is an add-on to Visual Studio .Net to help developers create and work with Web services that have been secured using the latest Web services protocol specifications.

The Office Information Bridge Framework is a set of tools to help developers bring Web services into Office products such as Word and Outlook.

While Microsoft previously had used similar events to evangelize .Net and Web services, Ballmer's speech on Monday showed that .Net and Web services have now been accepted, said Peter Pawlak, a lead analyst at Directions on Microsoft Inc., an independent research firm in Kirkland, Wash.

"Microsoft's bet on .Net and Web services has been the right bet," he said. Ballmer in his speech said over half of the developers in the U.S. now use its .Net developer tools. He also trumpeted Microsoft's work to create open Web services standards, citing work with IBM Corp. and others as well as standards organizations.

"Our company has made a greater investment in interoperability over the last four, five years than people ever give us credit for," he said.

The demonstrations of the new tools were impressive, but the demonstrators clicked through their screens too fast for attendees to follow, said Chad Layman, a corporate systems integrator at SM&P Utility Resources Inc. in Carmel, Ind. Layman enjoyed Ballmer's overview, but said there wasn't much for him to take home and start working on.

Despite his upbeat talk of IT as a world-changing force over the next decade, Ballmer said IT departments will continue to face budget constraints and security problems. If security is not addressed confidence in IT could be lost, which would be devastating, according to Ballmer.

Microsoft at Tech Ed did not release an anticipated beta of Visual Studio 2005. A company official, however, hinted that the beta might be released at the end of June at Tech Ed Europe in Amsterdam.

Source: IT World Canada

Back to top of page

Bookmark this Tech Blog by clicking here.

         Tech Blog is hosted by Avantex

| Home | Tech news | New technologies | Tech articles | Write to us |

Copyright © Tech Blog.org 2004. All rights reserved.
Tech Blog News Section

New Technologies
Tech Industry News

Home

Search the Web
Drop your email address & receive our free weekly newsletter

Blogs of interest:
Search Engine News
Top S. Engine News
More S.Engine News

SEO Help

e-Commerce News
Hi-Tech Industry News
Web Hosting News
Web Services News

Sales Blog

International News

Tech Blog.org is sponsered by the General Center for Internet Services Inc. (GCIS), Canada's oldest and largest Internet application developer and B2B integrator, in business since 1996. Click here to visit our website.

Tech Blog.org - All About Technology          Tech Blog.org - All About Technology

Advertise on Tech Blog and increase your Web visibility: advertise@techblog.org

Advertisers:
GCIS Inc.
Logo 21
Portrex™
escalate™
Sun Hosting