Just when Valleywag has proclaimed that use of the Internet two.0 cliche is on the downswing, Microsoft publishes a whitepaper explaining how Workplace 2007 certainly can be a Internet two.0 suite at heart.A variety of business watchers think it's only a matter of time until Microsoft throws in the towel and turns Office into a Web-based suite. Microsoft officials have been adamant that such a move isn't likely in the foreseeable future — although there's a distinct possibility that Microsoft could take its consumer Workplace suite, Microsoft Works, to the Internet, in the not-so-distant future. In spite of Microsoft execs' continued belief that the shrink-wrapped Workplace suite is not dead,
Office 2010 Home And Student Serial Key, Microsoft isn't immune from wanting to cash in about the Web 2.0 hype.Microsoft published the new whitepaper,
Microsoft Office Pro, entitled "Bringing Internet 2.0 to the Enterprise using the 2007 Workplace System," in mid-December. Microsoft's definition of Internet two.0, predictably, isn't rather the same as others'. Here's how Microsoft is positioning Office 2007 to fit in: "Properly understood and deployed, Web two.0 technologies, methods,
Microsoft Office 2010 Serial Key, and patterns will be adopted by the enterprise to great effect. They can boost overall organizational productivity and create a much stronger customer and partner connection. To capitalize on this opportunity, enterprises require an agile infrastructure together with the tools and out-of-the-box solutions that allow users to interact with content, applications, and people in powerful new ways." Workplace 2007 "enables rich online business solutions that embody the following set of Web two.0 characteristics," the whitepaper continues: • Rich user experience • Data-driven architecture • User-driven home business applications • User participation • Collective intelligence • Low cost deployment and management What's Workplace 2007 got that qualifies? XML support; Ajax-based components (Excel Services and InfoPath Forms Services,
Office 2010 Activation, Outlook Internet Access, and Communicator Internet Access); the ability to expose RSS feeds for data; enterprise search capabilities; metadata services; collaborative workspaces; and integrated workflow functionality — something Microsoft admits isn't usually thought of as a Internet 2.0 technology, but which is a Internet 2.0 enabler,
Office 2010 Pro Serial cl��, in Microsoft's view. Meanwhile, I'm starting to hear some rumors about new features in "Office 14," the next version of Office, that sound more traditionally Internet two.0-like. Anyone else hearing any rumblings on that front?