Skip Links

Network World

  • Social Web 
  • Email 
  • Close

(Comma separation for multiple addresses)
Your Message:

Software firm takes Passport outside Windows

By Matt Berger , IDG News Service , 10/15/2002
  • Share/Email
  • Tweet This
  • Comment
  • Print

A small software development company this week disclosed that it will soon offer prebuilt versions of Microsoft's Passport Internet-based authentication technology for the Unix and Linux operating systems.

The news follows an announcement Thursday from Microsoft that it would share some of the source code for its single sign-on service. The Redmond, Washington, software maker said that it would make available in November the code to the Passport Manager - software that links a Web site or a software application to Microsoft's Passport service, which allows users to log on to multiple Web-applications using a single password.

As it was originally designed, Passport Manager could only be installed on Microsoft server software. However, prompted by requests from large Passport customers that manage user authentication on Unix or Linux servers, Microsoft has worked with a company called Ready-to-Run Software in order to port the software to non-Windows systems.

Now that Microsoft has opened the code for the critical piece of software that enables Web site operators and software makers to link to the Passport service, Ready-to-Run said it has been given the nod to sell the software it created as a packaged product, according to Bill Saltys, vice president of the Chelmsford, Massachusetts, company.

"They're really in an interesting position because they've done some of this before and they've had access to the source code," said Adam Sohn, product manager with Microsoft's .Net platforms group.

Ready-to-Run has licensed the Passport Manager source code from Microsoft for nearly two years, during which time it was responsible for porting Passport Manager to Unix systems in use by Weather Channel Enterprises and the digital music download service PressPlay, run by Vivendi Universal and Sony Music Entertainment.

"For any customer that has a non-Windows implementation of Passport, they would have gotten our [software] from Microsoft," Saltys said.

Though it does not have a precise product release timetable, the company plans to deliver Passport "kits" for a variety of operating systems, which could include Sun Solaris, Red Hat Linux, as well as Unix OSes from IBM and Hewlett-Packard. The company has already developed versions of the software for each of those operating systems for individual customers, but has not determined which will be generally available as commercial products. It will continue to work with customers to develop custom implementations of Passport, Saltys said.

Microsoft said Ready-to-Run is likely to be the first in a series of independent software vendors that will come out with Passport software for non-Windows systems using the shared source code. "We think it's really about building an ISV ecosystem around this," Sohn said.

  • Share/Email
  • Tweet This
  • Comment
  • Print

Partner Content

Blue Stripe Software

www.bluestripe.com/

Improving Application Performance Troubleshooting

Diagnosing why an application is slow is hard, at times taking days or weeks to isolate and resolve. This paper explains the challenges involved using current management tools, provides a 'wish list' for application management and analysis, and explains the need for an application system-wide approach that monitors entire applications, not components.

Download Whitepaper

Virtual Vigilance: Managing Application Performance in Virtual Environments

This paper highlights the impact of virtualization on application performance.  "Managing Application Performance in Virtual Environments" states: "Best-in-Class organizations are predominately taking actions around improving visibility across both physical and virtual systems, assessing the business impact of application performance and understanding interdependencies of applications in virtualized environments."

Download Whitepaper

Application Service Requests: The Missing Link for Pragmatic ITSM

Forrester Research analyst Glenn O'Donnell and BlueStripe co-founder Vic Nyman discuss a breakthrough approach to application problem management. Learn the new approach for ITSM problem management, which provides: Rapid isolation of application slow-downs to specific components for quick problem resolution, 24/7 monitoring for proactive notification of potential issues before end users are impacted and much more.

Register for Webcast

Comment
Login
Forgot your account info?
Add comment
Anonymous comments subject to approval. Register here for member benefits.
Have a NetworkWorld account? Log in here. Register now for a free account.

Videos

rssRss Feed