Will Microsoft .NET bring about an "open" Windows?
Component Connection
Will Microsoft .NET bring about an "open" Windows?
- By Linda Briggs
- 09/01/2000
Unless you’ve been vacationing on another planet, you’ve
surely heard plenty about XML and about Microsoft’s .NET
initiative. On one hand, I see XML and .NET as largely
developer initiatives. But I’ve begun to realize that
all of this also has huge systems implications for you.
Let me explain.
As XML gains acceptance in the corporate market, organizations
face a challenge in creating applications that can quickly
be modified to take advantage of new data sources. One
approach is to use components. What better way to ramp
up a new solution than to buy something already available
and plug it into your existing infrastructure? With its
loud and insistent .NET platform announcements, Microsoft
has proclaimed itself a major player in XML integration.
That’s why the company has also joined the likes of IBM
and Sun Microsystems in pushing the business of components.
Microsoft recently launched an initiative through its
MSDN Online Web site at http://msdn.microsoft.com/componentresources
to act as a clearinghouse for component developers, publishers
and customers. Think components still consist of little
objects used to add graphing to Visual Basic programs?
A $1,499 package called the EDS Investment Calculations
Suite helps financial institutions determine values or
rates related to CDs, IRAs, and other investment products.
So why am I bringing up components to a mostly networking
crowd?
Consider the dilemma of a Microsoft break-up. As analyst
David Sprott writes in a recent editorial for Interact
(“the journal of component-based development & integration,”
www.cbdiforum.com),
it appears that “every solution under consideration includes
the requirement to ‘open the Windows source code.’” Third
parties want to access that code to better develop products
that extend Windows. Sprott’s interesting proposal: to
have Microsoft “document and stabilize the APIs” making
up its OSs, and then, with the help of a cross-industry
group, agree on an interface architecture that can be
touched by third-parties—in other words, to “componentize”
the core services of Windows. By extension, that could
apply to all of Microsoft’s major offerings.
This sort of move would also enable Microsoft to hasten
its move into the application services business. As an
enterprise customer, we’re probably not ready yet to have
our OS delivered by a provider, but I could envision
our IT group offering, say, OLAP services to my workgroup
without having to license and maintain SQL 2000 or employ
a full-time DBA. Windows piecemeal, BackOffice on demand.
About the Author
Linda Briggs is the founding editor of MCP Magazine and the former senior editorial director of 101communications. In between world travels, she's a freelance technology writer based in San Diego, Calif.