4 Results for Microsoft

Penguins in Tel Aviv? It Must Be the Annual Open-Source Convention

The seventh August Penguin conference, for open-source programmers, managers, and users in Israel, took place in Tel Aviv earlier today. The August Penguin was sponsored by the Israeli open-source advocacy group, HaMakor ( the source ), and co-sponsored by a number of other organizations, ranging from the Israeli branch of the Internet Society, to small companies servicing the open-source sector, to Microsoft. About 300 open-source advocates gathered for half a day of technical and general lectures, as well as socializing, around the common theme of open source.



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Microsoft Starts To Make Good On Its ?Openness? Pledge

On Tuesday Microsoft released over 14,000 pages of documentation concerning Sharepoint Server 2007, Exchange 2007, and MS Outlook 2007 as well as the communications protocols used these products. The documentation was released on the company?s MSDN site as part of the openness pledge it made following the recent EU court judgment against the company.


The good news is that open source developers can use the published protocol information to develop clients that interact with Microsoft servers using the same feature sets available to Microsoft software clients. We may finally see open source email and calendaring applications that can natively integrate with corporate MS Exchange servers. Outlook?s stranglehold on the enterprise IT email client market may soon come to an end.



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Microsoft Chants Open, Interoperability Mantra

Original Post authored by Om Malik on 2/21/2008 on GigaOm

msft_open.jpegMicrosoft is changing the way it does business and is opening up, according to a long elaborate press release the company issued this morning. I am reading through it and will try and make sense of it all.



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Dell Thinks Small Biz is Big Biz for VoIP

Original Post authored by Carleen Hawn on 1/23/2008 on GigaOm

Dell begins bundling FonalityοΎ’s open-source software with its enterprise servers today, its latest gambit to compete in the already-crowded VoIP market οΎ— this time targeting companies with 125 employees or fewer.



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