Skip to main content

Microsoft: Our Mission is Search

Microsoft's Bill Gates will detail today how the company is adding search capabilities in its enterprise software, emphasizing how employees waste time trying to find information.

Gates is scheduled to speak at a conference for corporate executives in Redmond, Washington. Among his company's pending offerings is a new search tool in Office SharePoint Server 2007 that will peer deep into workers' computers, building profiles of what it finds so other employees can find out what those employees know.

Microsoft's emphasis on the search capabilities comes in response to strong competition from Google, which has become the market leader for search on the Internet. Google is increasingly courting enterprise customers, offering hardware and software search products tailored to their needs.

Product Plans

Microsoft Office SharePoint Server 2007, an upgrade of software used to build Web portals and share documents, will be released later this year to corporate users with Microsoft's next office suite, Office 2007. Microsoft says the search feature can automatically discover undocumented knowledge and relationships but also safeguard personal information.

SharePoint will also have a searchable "business data catalog" with information from business applications produced by vendors such as SAP AG and Siebel Systems, Microsoft said.

Google already offers enterprises that functionality in its Google Search Appliance, which with the addition of appropriate software modules can search data in back-office systems from Cisco Systems, Cognos, Oracle, and others, and presenting it in a readable format.

Another new Microsoft product, called Office SharePoint Server for Search 2007, can search Web sites, SharePoint sites, Exchange Server, and IBM's collaboration software and Lotus Notes. Microsoft said the search software can be upgraded to the full SharePoint Server product.

Later this year, Microsoft said it will release a test version of Windows Live Search, another feature that will be able to scan the Internet, desktops and corporate networks.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

US says world safer, despite 11,000 attacks in '05

The U.S. war on terrorism has made the world safer, the State Department's counterterrorism chief said on Friday, despite more than 11,000 terrorist attacks worldwide last year that killed 14,600 people. The U.S. State Department said the numbers, listed in its annual Country Reports on Terrorism released on Friday, were based on a broader definition of terrorism and could not be compared to the 3,129 international attacks listed the previous year. But the new 2005 figures, which showed attacks in Iraq jumped and accounted for about a third of the world's total, may fuel criticism of the Bush administration's assertion that it is winning the fight against terrorism. Asked if the world was safer than the previous year, U.S. State Department Counterterrorism Coordinator Henry Crumpton told a news conference, "I think so. But I think that (if) you look at the ups and downs of this battle, it's going to take us a long time to win this. You can't measure this month ...

Al-Qaeda number two in new video

Al-Qaeda's number two Ayman al-Zawahiri has appeared in a video saying that Iraqi insurgents have "broken the back" of the US military. He praised "martyrdom operations" carried out by al-Qaeda in Iraq in the video, posted on an Islamist website. And he called on the people and army of Pakistan to fight against President Musharraf's administration. This is the third message from prominent al-Qaeda leaders to emerge within a week. A tape from Osama Bin Laden was broadcast on 23 April, followed two days later by a message from Iraqi insurgent Abu Musab al-Zarqawi. Pakistan focus Zawahiri, who wore a black turban and a white robe in the video, described the leaders of Egypt, Jordan, Saudi Arabia and Iraq as traitors, and urged Muslims to "confront them". He praised Iraqi militants, saying that the US, Britain and allies had "achieved nothing but losses, disasters and misfortunes" in Iraq. "Al-Qaeda in Iraq alone has carried out 800 ma...

Does light have mass?

The short answer is "no", but it is a qualified "no" because there are odd ways of interpreting the question which could justify the answer "yes". Light is composed of photons so we could ask if the photon has mass. The answer is then definitely "no": The photon is a massless particle. According to theory it has energy and momentum but no mass and this is confirmed by experiment to within strict limits. Even before it was known that light is composed of photons it was known that light carries momentum and will exert a pressure on a surface. This is not evidence that it has mass since momentum can exist without mass. [ For details see the Physics FAQ article What is the mass of the photon? ]. Sometimes people like to say that the photon does have mass because a photon has energy E = hf where h is Planck's constant and f is the frequency of the photon. Energy, they say, is equivalent to mass according to Einstein's famous formula E = m...