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By David Becker
Posted on ZDNet News: Oct 21, 2003 6:09:00 PM

NEW YORK--Microsoft on Tuesday released what its executives touted as one of the most significant product updates in the company's history: a fresh version of Office with extensive new hooks into corporate computing systems.

During a speech at the main Office System launch event here, Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates said the new software line--which combines familiar Office productivity programs with new business applications--ushers in a broad new role for Office as the common interface for creating and interacting with corporate data.

News.context

What's new:
Microsoft's new version of its Office software package, Office System, combines familiar Office productivity features with new business applications.

Bottom line:
For the most part, companies have waited for bug fixes and the like before widely implementing new versions of Office. Still, the sophisticated server-related and XML functions in Office System could extend such delays, potentially limiting the moneymaking clout of Microsoft's software package.

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"We're introducing more software products in a single day than any day in our history," Gates said. "Every one of these products is about sharing information and collaborating."

The most significant part of Office System is Office 2003, the productivity package widely used to create documents, spreadsheets and other business materials. While previous Office upgrades have focused on new tools and services, the most significant updates in Office 2003 are under the hood, such as dramatically enhanced support for Extensible Markup Language (XML), the fast-spreading standard for exchanging data between disparate computing systems.

Broad XML support will allow Office applications to serve as a general container for exchanging data with corporate databases and other back-end systems, and for tapping Web services and other tasks that normally would require separate client software.

"Office, which has always been extremely important to personal productivity...now becomes a work space for team and organizational productivity," said Jeff Raikes, a Microsoft group vice president.

"I think these advances would not have been possible without the industry's commitment to XML and Web services," Gates added. "This is definitely becoming the common way that all the software on the Internet connects together."

XML support has attracted broad interest from other technology companies, with more than 700 partners introducing Office-related products and services at the launch, and hundreds more in development. Backers range from small specialty software makers to computing giants such as Hewlett-Packard, which built several new solutions and services packages around Office System products, particularly SharePoint collaboration tools.

Bill Carlisle, director of HP's Microsoft solutions group, said Office 2003 has created numerous opportunities for HP as a systems integrator, creating the connections between Office applications and server resources.

"You can take the technology and package it in a lot of different ways to address specific customer needs," he said.

As a hardware seller, HP sees Office 2003's efficient use of back-end resources as a good argument to get business to update their server installations, Carlisle said. "If you look just at messaging systems, there's huge potential for server consolidation."

Office 2003 also introduces digital rights management to the software, with support for server-based tools that let office workers restrict access to documents. The technology has provoked controversy because it requires compatible Microsoft server technology and prevents competing productivity software, such as the open-source OpenOffice, from reading protected files. But Microsoft expects the technology to be a quick hit with businesses that deal extensively in sensitive documents, such as legal and financial offices.

An array of applications
Besides Office 2003, Office System includes several new applications. InfoPath is Microsoft's entry in the emerging market for electronic forms, online documents that automatically route data entered to relevant back-end computing systems. InfoPath is expected to have a slow start, mainly attracting companies looking to automate internal business processes.


News.commentary
An enterprise push
for Office
Microsoft's upgrade is designed
to help wire employees together
and link them into enterprise
data and processes.


Gates said InfoPath addresses a growing need Microsoft identified several years ago for an application focused on presenting highly structured information and delivering it to corporate computing systems. "We realized there was a missing piece in Microsoft Office," he said.

OneNote is Microsoft's new application for taking notes and organizing them with research data from other sources. Target markets for the application include college students and the slowly growing audience of Tablet PC users.

Several existing products also have been folded into Office System, including SharePoint, Microsoft's line of server products for collaboration and information sharing, and Live Meeting, the company's stab at videoconferencing.

"Collaboration is the theme of this release," Gates said. "How do you share information?"

Tuesday also marked the release of several products affiliated with, but not actually part of, Office System, most notably Exchange 2003, the new version of Microsoft's e-mail server software. Changes in Exchange 2003 include numerous filtering and organizing tools that work in conjunction with Outlook, the e-mail client included in Office 2003, to reduce exposure to junk e-mail and make it easier to find relevant messages, Gates said.

Specific enhancements include a revamped version of Outlook Web Access, the set of Exchange features used to allow e-mail access via the Web. "People want e-mail on every device, everywhere they go," Gates said. "Historically, if you did e-mail through the browser, it was a very limited experience. You essentially had to learn a different user interface than Outlook. The basic interface (in Outlook Web Access) now is exactly the same as Outlook."

Caching enhancements in Outlook and Exchange also store e-mail much more efficiently, allowing geographically diverse companies to cut back their e-mail infrastructure, Gates said. "Microsoft has gone from 56 places with Exchange servers down to seven," he said.

Exchange 2003 also offers enhancements intended to warm the hearts of IT administrators, including direct support for remote connections, eliminating the need for virtual private networking (VPN) support, said Melissa Stern, a Microsoft product manager. "If a company is providing VPN access purely for messaging, this eliminates the need for that," she said. "That cuts a lot of cost and support calls right there."

Security and privacy have been enhanced in Exchange, through increased support for third-party antivirus and antispam products. "We've provided a lot more hooks for third-party vendors to plug into," Stern said.

Exchange 2003 also comes with a full set of integration and migration tools for businesses upgrading from Exchange 5.5, the 5-year-old version of the software that still accounts for the majority of Exchange installations.

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A different view!
Michael Robertson, ceo of Lindows.com says:


Michael's Minute:
The World's Most Dangerous Virus


Imagine if a computer virus emerged that secretly attached itself to one of t... (Read the rest)
Posted by: Hans Schmitt Posted on: 10/26/03 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
what a joke  Arrg | 10/21/03
What?  pschroeder@... | 10/21/03
Ok, try this  Arrg | 10/21/03
Go here  JoeMama_z | 10/21/03
thanks  Arrg | 10/21/03
weird  JoeMama_z | 10/21/03
ok, but...  pschroeder@... | 10/21/03
I get what you are saying but  Arrg | 10/22/03
follow up  Arrg | 10/22/03
brrr...  stephen732@... | 10/22/03
Issues  pschroeder@... | 10/22/03
...but...  pschroeder@... | 10/22/03
hhmm they have a post limit here now  Arrg | 10/22/03
RE: Ok, try this  Iain_Peters | 10/22/03
or try this...  stephen732@... | 10/22/03
All about collaboration/sharing ?  NT Admin | 10/21/03
Of course, you have no clue about the actual product  marksashton | 10/21/03
Ah ha, I see your problem.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 10/21/03
Been there, done that !  NT Admin | 10/21/03
You're right, it's not for home users.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 10/21/03
Ofcourse that isn't really new, or useful  nucrash | 10/21/03
Please explain how you tested it.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 10/21/03
What kind of question is that?  neopleonasm | 10/21/03
Lotus was damn good when i used to use it  JoeMama_z | 10/21/03
honest answers  Fanatical Desperado | 10/21/03
Lotus Domino Answers  nucrash | 10/21/03
Very Simple One Word Answer  nucrash | 10/21/03
RE: Please explain how you tested it  Iain_Peters | 10/22/03
You're missing the point  marksashton | 10/21/03
Actually, no, I haven't.  nucrash | 10/21/03
The Good, Bad, & Stupid  msdead | 10/22/03
Can you spell lock-in?  DonnieBoy | 10/21/03
About Open Office  voska | 10/21/03
No lock-in  Loverock Davidson | 10/21/03
But, but, but, no fair using facts!  No_Ax_to_Grind | 10/21/03
The first fact you should check...  frgough@... | 10/21/03
Huh?  No_Ax_to_Grind | 10/21/03
One man's lock-in is...  marksashton | 10/21/03
You're fooling nobody  zd-spam | 10/21/03
I really hate these new talkbacks  Patrick Jones | 10/21/03
I agree, the new format BITES!  No_Ax_to_Grind | 10/21/03
Re: No lock-in  Fanatical Desperado | 10/21/03
Then why buy it?  zd-spam | 10/21/03
ms envy  lmaxwell | 10/21/03
RE: MS Envy  Iain_Peters | 10/22/03
RE: No Lock in  Iain_Peters | 10/22/03
Loverock, you've been locked-in and you can't find way out  stephen732@... | 10/22/03
Ever used access?  Arrg | 10/22/03
More likely that...  rbethell | 10/21/03
One man's lock-in is...  marksashton | 10/21/03
Totally useless analogy  zd-spam | 10/21/03
Yes and no  marksashton | 10/22/03
Still marching to the same tune  Michael Kelly | 10/21/03
Security  Bill4 | 10/21/03
read the article?  JoeMama_z | 10/21/03
Question  Michael Kelly | 10/21/03
No I don't belive so.  JoeMama_z | 10/21/03
And the MILLIONS of businesses without MS Server  j.m.galvin | 10/21/03
don't put word in my mouth...  JoeMama_z | 10/21/03
Sam's words: "no server 2003, no office 2003"  j.m.galvin | 10/21/03
New Talkback sucks!  JoeMama_z | 10/21/03
Disenfranchised Open Source Posters  No_Ax_to_Grind | 10/21/03
No_Ax_to_Grind dosent sem to bright!!!  Blue Wolf_z | 10/21/03
a correcting to your correction  JoeMama_z | 10/21/03
a correction to the correction of the correction  dpayne@... | 10/21/03
and they let you click the OK box  NT Admin | 10/21/03
maybe yours does  JoeMama_z | 10/21/03
Who cares who's fault it is?  mds_z | 10/22/03
Re: Disenfranchised Open Source Posters  Michael Kelly | 10/21/03
Thanks Bit  tic swayback | 10/21/03
RE: Thanks Bit  Iain_Peters | 10/22/03
Disenfranchised M$ Posters  zd-spam | 10/21/03
GEE, IT ONLY TOOK A WEEK FOR THE MS SHILLS TO RETURN AGAIN.. BOO.. HISS...  Plain Logic | 10/21/03
shills  pschroeder@... | 10/22/03
You must be new here  rapson | 10/22/03
Not new, just annoyed enough at it today  pschroeder@... | 10/22/03
Why would I buy another MS Product....  Blue Wolf_z | 10/21/03
I think the MS bashing is about security...  Spoon Jabber | 10/21/03
Valid points  pschroeder@... | 10/22/03
Another copy of windows.  Spoon Jabber | 10/22/03
Copies  pschroeder@... | 10/22/03
Probably good for some  issthatso | 10/21/03
Group orriented as opposed to a single user.  JoeMama_z | 10/21/03
Committees  tic swayback | 10/21/03
lol, good old story  JoeMama_z | 10/21/03
groups  tic swayback | 10/21/03
I agree...  JoeMama_z | 10/21/03
Efficiency  tic swayback | 10/21/03
...  JoeMama_z | 10/21/03
Group Oriented?  Harry Bardal | 10/21/03
hmmm  JoeMama_z | 10/21/03
Rethinking the Problem  Harry Bardal | 10/21/03
actually i misunderstood your origional post  JoeMama_z | 10/21/03
Letting the cat out of the bag...  No_Ax_to_Grind | 10/21/03
Plenty of years of use  tic swayback | 10/21/03
Good for a Start  Harry Bardal | 10/21/03
Message has been deleted.  hal9000mx | 10/21/03
Dang!  tic swayback | 10/21/03
Re: Group orriented as opposed to a single user.  issthatso | 10/21/03
Not enough features (even if you count bugs)  Eggs Ackley_z | 10/21/03
A New Office - Great. Now for the REAL world  j.m.galvin | 10/21/03
"New" Office OLD tricks  michael-t | 10/21/03
what is up with this new talkback  lmaxwell | 10/21/03
A real upgrade would include....  ardenlb@... | 10/22/03
Well I was going to buy Office....  zacwork@... | 10/22/03
Two words: too expensive  bsvee | 10/22/03
IT managers must be going crazy  realgomer | 10/22/03
A different view!  Hans Schmitt | 10/26/03

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