Microsoft's 50,000-Page Summer Thriller
Your editor is writing this entry from his childhood home outside of Dallas,
a place that always brings back memories of, well, childhood. Now that we're
stretching into the third or fourth inning of summer, a lot of those memories
are of playing baseball and soccer in the backyard and then weaving into the
house completely dehydrated (hey, it gets hot in Texas) and gulping gallons
of water. But one piece of news this week stirred our recollection of another
summer standard: the summer reading list.
At the end of every school year, some well-intentioned teacher would give her
students a list of books to read over the summer -- without the power of actually
being able to "assign" them. The more intellectual kids probably read
them, but your editor never did, preferring instead to devour Sports Illustrated
and the Dallas Morning News (yes, even as a kid) and then participate
in the aforementioned outdoor sporting activities.
Well, this summer, Microsoft has its own suggested reading, which should prove
more popular among certain audiences than the old summer reading list did in
this house: Redmond has released
"Version 1.0" of documentation on some of the protocols in its
most important products.
This is the stuff that Bill Gates -- you
might remember him as Microsoft's former CEO -- never wanted to publish.
But antitrust suits forced Microsoft's hand, and now the company's all
about interoperability and openness. This week's dump includes information
on protocols used in Exchange Server 2007, SharePoint Server 2007 and Office
2007, among other big-name Microsoft offerings.
So, who's hauling this tome to the beach or skipping a pick-up soccer game
to stay inside and read? Well, the European Union's competition cranks, for
sure, given that the existence of this documentation is as much their doing
as anybody else's, and given that they're
still not convinced that Microsoft is interested in interoperability. (Ha!
Just try to take the whole month of August off and still finish reading this
stuff by fall, Eurocrats.) But other audiences of immediate interest to Microsoft
will be turning pages, as well.
Specifically, the Office stuff will appeal to the nations
and organizations
that contend that Office Open XML, currently
an industry standard with a big asterisk on it (as in *pending
appeal), shouldn't be a standard at all. Plus, we imagine that some
Microsoft competitors might be a little bit curious about the new documentation.
Will Microsoft's summer reader be enough to assuage those hostile audiences?
We doubt it -- after all, this is really just an update of documentation released
in April -- but for Redmond, it's another step on the path to working more readily
with other vendors and with the industry as a whole.
And while we've defended here Microsoft's right to keep proprietary things
private, we also can't see all that much of a downside in Microsoft explaining
how its stuff works and making it easier for other vendors to work with it.
In other words, we have a feeling that divulging these precious trade secrets
won't put Microsoft out of business.
As for us, though, we'll be skipping Microsoft's summer page-turner. Next week's
Worldwide
Partner Conference and other events (along with a complete lack of skill
in both sports) will probably cut down severely on the baseball- and soccer-playing,
but we're pretty confident that we can still find better things to do this summer
than read 50,000 pages of protocol documentation -- like, for instance, anything.
What's your take on Microsoft's new "openness"? Will you be reading
all 50,000 pages this summer? Sound off at [email protected].
Posted by Lee Pender on 07/01/2008 at 1:22 PM