You’ve heard the hype about the .Net vision. Here’s how Microsoft’s strategy effects you.
.NET: Platform of the Future
You’ve heard the hype about the .Net vision. Here’s how Microsoft’s strategy effects you.
- By Michael Risse
- 10/01/2000
The Microsoft .NET platform is the company’s vision for
its next generation of software and services. Microsoft’s
plan for .NET is that it will enable every developer,
business, and consumer to benefit from a powerful combination
of new devices and programmable Web services that characterize
the next generation of the Internet. The .NET vision will
shape the broad range of applications, tools, services,
and operating systems products that we’ll release over
the next three to five years.
How will the .NET vision affect you? As a Microsoft Certified
Professional or Microsoft Certified Solutions Provider
(MCSP) partner, how can you benefit from Microsoft .NET—and
at what cost? These are the sorts of questions that many
MCPs have been asking since we unveiled this vision last
June. Let me clear up some misconceptions and explain
the possibilities.
First, the .NET platform isn’t a change in direction
for Microsoft. Although .NET represents a revolution in
Internet possibilities, it’s an evolution in Microsoft
product development. We’ve been working on this direction
for quite a while—in the case of our tool strategy, for
a couple of years. Many of our current tools and products
reflect elements of the .NET strategy, such as deep XML
support. New versions of .NET that emerge over the next
few years will reflect that strategy more clearly.
The .NET strategy will leverage much of your current
knowledge, expertise and investment—that is, it will be
easier to adopt than you may have thought. But whether
you work as a consultant, for an MCSP, or in an in-house
IT department— what are the benefits of adopting a .NET
strategy?
First, you’ll gain flexibility—including the ability
to unite various Web sites, databases, and applications
on the back end, and to present integrated data views
not just to browsers, but to a broad range of palm-based
PCs, smart phones, set-top boxes, and dedicated devices.
Second, these solutions now will be easier, faster, and
more cost-effective for you to create than ever before—and
they’ll leverage existing data and solutions.
With the .NET platform, our Solution Provider partners
will be fully equipped to offer the customized products,
solutions, and services that customers want in order to
take advantage of the third generation of the Internet.
IT departments, meanwhile, will become even more important
strategic assets in furthering the corporate mission.
To get ready for the .NET platform, you might want to
check out news about our new server-based products and
about XML, which provides much of the functionality for
third-generation Web solutions. Visit www.microsoft.com/msdn/xml;
to get current on our .NET strategy, go to www.microsoft.com/net/.
About the Author
Michael Risse is General Manager of the .NET Developer Solutions Program at Microsoft.