Microsoft Monday introduced a Web conferencing service - and although it features minor integration with the company’s enterprise products, the service falls quite short of the company’s plan to offer its collection of collaboration software as an integrated package.
Microsoft’s Live Meeting is a re-branding of the former PlaceWare hosted Web-conferencing service that Microsoft acquired earlier this year for $200 million. Microsoft says it has added 30 features to the service, highlighted by support for a native Windows client that runs on Windows 98 and above. Also new is integration with Outlook to schedule meetings and support for clustering and load balancing.
In the next six months, Microsoft plans to integrate the service with Windows Messenger, its instant-messaging client, and in the next 12 months with Live Communications Server, its IM and presence server set to ship next month along with Office 2003.
What’s missing, however, is server software that corporations can run within their firewalls as part of the lineup of Microsoft’s server and desktop collaboration software.
The company’s collaboration strategy revolves around corporate customers and the deployment of Windows and the tactically renamed Office System of products that include IM and conferencing, and collaboration software such as Exchange, Windows SharePoint Services and SharePoint Portal Server.
“Microsoft’s strategy is to sell server software,” says Joe Noel, an analyst with Pacific Growth Equities, who follows the Web conferencing market. “It is a software company, not a services company.”
The PlaceWare technology is not Windows-based, so Microsoft will have to transform the software for its platform. PlaceWare includes software called On-Site Solution for deployment on corporate networks, application-programming interfaces, and patented security protocols.
“We have no timetable to bring on premise-based software, but the vision is to have a server and a service,” says Jennifer Callison, director of product management for Live Meeting. “There is work to be done on things like the tools to administer and monitor Live Meeting as a server.”
That work will have to get done, because Microsoft’s strategy is to bring all its enterprise collaboration software together: Windows, Office, Exchange, SharePoint Portal Server, Live Communications Server and Live Meeting.
The strategy is focused on the concept of contextual collaboration, which means the real-time features are a built-in component of an application and users don’t have to leave that application and open up another to do Web conferencing. For example, a user can start a conferencing session within a Word interface to collaborate on a document with other users.
Microsoft rival IBM/Lotus is building a similar platform using its WebSphere, Domino, instant messaging and QuickPlace technologies. IBM offers both a hosted and enterprise version of its conferencing software, and the company will release this month contextual collaboration features in the Notes 6.5 client, which includes integrated IM features from its Instant Messaging and Conferencing server.