Microsoft links Data on Phones, PCs in ''Live Mesh''
Posted on Tue, 22 Apr 2008 23:38:12 CDT | by Luigi Lugmayr
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By Daisuke Wakabayashi
SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Microsoft Corp has begun testing technology that
brings together a person's pictures, documents and other data scattered across a
growing number of machines with the goal of allowing people to access their
information from anywhere and at any time.
Microsoft's "Live Mesh" program, which uses the Internet as a data hub,
synchronizes files across computers, phones and other devices so a digital
picture frame at home could show a picture minutes after it was taken by a cell
phone.
Initially the program will be limited to 10,000 U.S. testers and computers
running its Windows operating system, but Microsoft said it plans to extend Live
Mesh over the next few months to mobile phones, computers from Apple Inc and
other devices connected to the Internet.
The project is the brainchild of Ray Ozzie, who replaced Microsoft co-founder
Bill Gates as chief software architect, and underscores the company's carefully
balanced online strategy, which aims to capitalize on the reach of the Internet
without cannibalizing its cash cow software business.
Microsoft, the dominant force in software that runs on a computer's local hard
drive, has seen rivals like Google Inc and Salesforce.com encroach on its turf
with competitive offerings delivered over the Internet.
"As our industry has evolved because of this Web-catalyzed services
transformation, so too has Microsoft," Ozzie wrote in a memo being sent to the
company's employees on Wednesday.
Live Mesh embraces the industry trend toward "cloud computing" in which
information is centrally stored on Web sites rather than on local devices,
giving users easy access from any computer.
Industry analysts said the product may signal a watershed moment within
Microsoft to embrace a technology that the company viewed as a threat in the
past.
"We may be seeing signs of a Microsoft that is newly focused," said Jonathan
Yarmis, a vice president and analyst at AMR Research. "This is exciting because
it has as much to do with who is doing it as what Microsoft is doing."
The software will also let friends and colleagues collaborate and share
documents more easily. For example, if a shared document is changed on a work
computer, those changes will be instantly updated and available on any device or
computer that the user has registered with Live Mesh.
Microsoft plans to release Live Mesh in a widely-available test, or "beta"
version before the end of 2008.
(Editing by Louise Heavens)
© Copyright 2007 Reuters.
Posted on Tue, 22 Apr 2008 23:38:12 CDT | by Luigi Lugmayr
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