8 Results for Microsoft

Microsoft, Powerset and Open Source Searching

Last week, following a report in VentureBeat, we wrote about the rumor that Microsoft was set to acquire natural language search company Powerset for $100 million. Turns out the rumor was true, although the terms of the deal are not disclosed. Powerset gets its semantic search muscle from the open source, cluster-based technology Hadoop. As we've discussed before, Hadoop also powers much of Yahoo's search. It looks like Microsoft's LiveSearch is going to be embracing powerful open source clustered search. This could represent a new chapter in natural language search. Find more analysis on GigaOm.


OStatic Buffer Overflow.....

Firefox 3 gets four percent market share--in just one week...

InfoWorld's top ten Firefox extensions, plus some of our favorites...

On his last day, Bill Gates says Microsoft/Yahoo deal is unlikely...

As Gates exits Microsoft, will the company become friendlier to open source?...

Does Yahoo's reorg signal a cloud computing move?...



Facebook Opens Up "a Significant Part" of its Platform

As we wrote last week (after initial reports came out on TechCrunch), Facebook is open sourcing what it calls a significant part of its Facebook Platform. What does a significant part mean? According to the company it means most of the code that runs Facebook Platform plus implementations of many of the most-used methods and tags. Especially for many developers who want to build social applications, this looks like good news, but OStatic readers wrote in last week questioning whether Facebook is really going open source (see the comments in the link above). Is it?


SourceForge Embraces OpenID in a Broad Implementation

SourceForge, which is behind several media properties including Slashdot, SourceForge.net, Linux.com and Freshmeat.net, is announcing today that it is including OpenID functionality in its SourceForge.net website. OpenID, of course, is an open, decentralized framework for handling digital identities and authentication. It eliminates the need for multiple usernames online. Many big companies, including Google, Yahoo, IBM, and Microsoft (OpenID can be used with Windows CardSpace) employ OpenID. SourceForge's move, and the extent to which it's embracing OpenID, makes it one of the largest implementers yet.

 



Microsoft: Au Revoir to Yahoo--See You Again, That Means

It's hard to believe, sometimes, how little faith the press has in the financial prowess of Microsoft. The company produced the person who became, for a long time, the richest person in the world? Accidental--nothing more, says the press. In the wake of today's news, the press is unanimous in saying that the move culminated a whirlwind, three-month courtship that it initiated on Jan. 31 Game over, in other words. Give me a break. As Om has pointed out, the game has just begun, and there are important things hanging in the balance for open source.



Yahoo Tries to Become the Cool Kid -- By Being More Open

Earlier this year, Microsoft announced its intention to purchase Yahoo for $44 billion in cash and stock. Now, Yahoo has announced its intention to become a fully open, platformizable company, letting developers mix and match its services and data in new and different ways. How much of this is designed to make Yahoo more profitable, and how much is simply a reaction to Microsoft's acquisition attempt? Will openness bring Yahoo more revenues, or simply make it a cooler company in developers' eyes?


Microsoft-Yahoo News Roundup

Original Post authored by Mike Gunderloy on 2/3/2008 on WebWorkerDaily

Many online news sources continue to be completely dominated by discussion of Microsoft's hostile bid to acquire Yahoo! And no wonder: a deal of this magnitude has the potential to touch the lives of pretty much everyone living and working online. It's a rare web worker indeed who doesn't use something from one or another of those two companies in their daily lives.



MicroHoo: Welcome to Open Source, Microsoft

Original Post authored by Samuel Dean on 02/02/08 on WebWorkerDaily

While nearly all of the analysis of Microsoft's offer to acquire Yahoo! for close to $45 billion has centered on the Redmond giant's intent to compete with Google for online advertising dollars, swallowing Yahoo! would also plant Microsoft squarely in the middle of the open source software arena. Yahoo! is so firmly entrenched in open source software-from the server farms that its own site runs on, to its Zimbra division delivering open source apps, to the APIs that it offers to application developers-that Microsoft, as corporate parent, would have no choice but to shed much of its long-standing antipathy toward open source.