Executive Summary:
Microsoft Live Mesh is Microsoft's entry into cloud computing, combining desktop and server software with Web-based services. Three basic services come with the current beta: a Web-based desktop you can use to remotely connect to your linked PCs, and remote PC access that requires no configuration. |
With Microsoft Live Mesh, Microsoft enters the socalled
cloud computing market and announces
its intent to firmly embrace this emerging computing
trend. The announcement is important
for several reasons, most obviously because it’s
the first time the company has ever shipped a
product that will compete head-to-head with its traditional and lucrative
desktop-based offerings. But Live Mesh, like cloud computing
itself, is still widely misunderstood, and it’s unclear at this time how
Microsoft’s new “service in the cloud” will affect its bread-and-butter
corporate customers. Here’s what you need to know about Microsoft
Live Mesh.
Understanding Cloud Computing
Although traditional software makers such as Microsoft have been
plying PC-based desktop software for decades now, the emergence
of pervasive broadband access to the Internet has fundamentally
changed our expectations. Now, software applications and updates—
even OSs—are deployed and installed from the Internet or are even
run directly from the Internet, threatening to put an end to traditional
media-based software delivery.
Internet-based software delivery is reminiscent in many ways of the
pre-PC networking environments that mainframe and mini-computer
makers were offering 20 years ago. So it shouldn’t come as a surprise
that cloud computing also encompasses another aspect of that
once-quaint computing model: That is, it too doesn’t rely on the local
processing and rendering power of an individual PC. Instead, cloud
computing solutions actually run in the Internet “cloud” via a Web
browser, such as Microsoft Internet Explorer (IE) or Mozilla Firefox.
Before you assume that a scenario in which we return en-masse
to the shared-computing-resource days of the 1970s is fanciful, consider
that some of today’s most frequently used software solutions
are delivered as cloud computing services. Google’s Gmail, Google
Calendar, and Picasa Web Albums are all Web-hosted services, as are
similar solutions from Microsoft (Hotmail, Windows Live Calendar,
Windows Live Spaces) and Yahoo! (Yahoo! Mail and Calendar). And
let’s not forget social-networking solutions such as Facebook and
MySpace and even enterprise solutions such as Microsoft Exchange
Hosted Services and Salesforce.com’s CRM services.
For many computer users, the notion of installing (let alone managing)
more than a few basic local applications on the PC is becoming
passé. Users can access their data and software solutions from any
PC—and, increasingly, from other devices—anytime they want. In
this sense, cloud computing is as much a revolution as it is a reminder
of days gone by. Unlike the mainframe and mini-computer environments
of the past, cloud computing solutions are hosted on the public
Internet and are thus open to one and all. And thanks to a growing
interest in open-source and advertiser-supported solutions, much of
what makes cloud computing so attractive to people is that it’s free.
Microsoft’s Response: Software Plus Services
As has been the case with so many computing initiatives over the
years, Microsoft has adopted cloud computing slowly and belatedly,
leaving the market wide open for faster competitors such as Google
and smaller startups. For pragmatic reasons—its traditional Windows,
Windows Server, and Office product lines continue to generate billions
of dollars of revenue every quarter—Microsoft has sought over
the years to extend its desktop and server products with online services
capabilities instead of fully embracing cloud computing.
In Windows, this online-services strategy originally meant duplicating
the success Microsoft had merging IE into Windows, an action
that destroyed then-market-leader Netscape: Witness the multiple
instances of so-called middleware—bundled products like Windows
Messenger, IE, and Outlook Express—that Microsoft introduced in
Windows XP. However, with antitrust regulators on three continents
threatening and, in at least two high-profile cases, actually delivering
legal remedies against the company, Microsoft had to change its
strategy.
Microsoft’s new strategy has settled into an arguably logical plan
that Microsoft calls Software Plus Services. S+S makes sense: Microsoft
says it will combine the best of its traditional desktop and server
software with a new generation of Web-based services, providing
customers with a best-of-both-worlds experience that combines
the maturity and richness of Windows and Office with the pervasive
online capabilities of true cloud computing solutions.
So while Google is busy building a replica of Microsoft Word circa
1985 in its Google Docs solution, Microsoft has extended its wellreceived
and widely deployed Office suite with online services such
as Office Live Workspace (online collaboration), Office Live Small
Business (online presence, marketing, and sales), and Windows Live
SkyDrive (Web-based document storage). And while consumers are
free to continue using services such as Hotmail and Windows Live
Calendar, Microsoft is also offering Exchange Hosted Services for
businesses that need the power of Exchange but lack the facilities to host it themselves. Microsoft SQL Server will
join this list as well with the new SQL Server
Data Services.
Microsoft is also investigating methods
of monetizing what will eventually become
cloud-based services. This is typically done
through subscription means, such as the
Software Assurance (SA) volume licensing
program with which many enterprises are
familiar. But Microsoft has also been trying to
get consumers accustomed to subscriptionbased
software services, most frequently
through a series of Office-related schemes.
The most recent, currently code-named
Albany, will combine Office 2007 Home and
Student Edition with the company’s Windows
Live OneCare security service and several
Windows Live and Office Live services
and will ship by the end of 2008.
While it’s in keeping with the company’s
core strengths, Microsoft’s S+S initiative is
obviously a stop-gap measure bridging the
traditional software of the past and the Webbased
services of the future. As time goes
by, Microsoft and competing technology
companies will deliver an ever-increasing
number of products via the cloud and fewer
products locally with even fewer delivered via
traditional retail packaging.
Why Live Mesh is Different
Sensing the industry change, Microsoft has
been working secretly on a cloud computing
platform called Live Mesh. Available now
in beta, Live Mesh is an operating environment
that can run on the Web, offering
Web-based management and synchronization
of Windows-based PCs, Macs, and
various smart phones and other mobile
devices. What makes Live Mesh different
from Microsoft’s previous S+S efforts is that
it’s platform agnostic—the company is supporting
a host of non-Microsoft devices—and
that it will support an application execution
environment that will be common among all
supported devices. Furthermore, Live Mesh–
based applications can take advantage of
outside Web services and vice versa, thanks
to its open programming model.
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