• Home
  • Research
  • What We Offer
  • Who We Are
  • Blog
  • Your cart is empty.
  • Log in
  • Subscribe
  • Contact Us
  • Recent Entries
  • Get Custom Feeds
Team Blog
Free Research Sample
Thomas

Microsoft's new game plan: Target the dorm room

Added By Kas Thomas at 19-Feb-2008 | Twitter: @KasThomas |

Microsoft is attempting what may amount to a brilliant and daring preemptive strike against Adobe, Linux, Java, and open source, all in one, with its DreamSpark program.

In case you haven't heard, DreamSpark is Microsoft's new plan to make full, working copies of Visual Studio, Expression Studio, Windows 2003 Server, and XNA Game Studio available free to college students in the United States, the United Kingdom, Canada, China, Germany, France, Finland, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, and Belgium. The plan requires annual verification of student status but otherwise comes without restrictions.

Microsoft's explanation to students is: "It is our hope that the DreamSpark program will spark your creativity and help you harness software's transformative magic to turn your good ideas into reality, by equipping you with the tools you need to succeed and excel during your academic experience and skills you will need after graduation."

A better wording might be: "It is our hope that if you begin your programming career using Microsoft products, developing for Microsoft targets, you will soon be addicted to the crystal-meth-like allure of our products and not be enticed by open source. You will find it easy to resist such evils as Adobe AIR, Flash, and Flex in favor of Vista and SilverLight. And the only Java you will encounter will be in the form of a hot brown liquid."

If DreamSpark has the desired (by Redmond) effect of getting young minds accustomed to doing .Net, SilverLight, and Xbox programming using Microsoft tools and platforms, it could very well short-circuit Adobe's somewhat laborious effort to get AIR off the ground while keeping the focus squarely on .Net as a development target (rather than, say, Java). Redmond might hope that it will steer dorm room programmers away from Linux (where Visual Studio doesn't run, of course) -- although somehow I think it will take more than a free IDE to do that.

Indeed, at least one blogger (Alfresco's Matt Asay) has pooh-poohed DreamSpark as doomed to fail, based on the availability of free IDEs like Eclipse, free OS Platforms (e.g., Linux and KDE desktop), and open-source tools galore. But that misses the point. A bag of bolts isn't the same as a shrinkwrapped Erector Set. The Microsoft tools are (by comparison to open-source components, at least) integrated with each other as well as with the Microsoft runtime platforms. They benefit from certain synergies. Whatever the efforts of RedHat and others, Eclipse plus Java plus Linux does not add up to the same thing.

Who knows? If DreamSpark is a wild success, perhaps it could ultimately induce Ballmer and Company to do the unthinkable: Give away Microsoft development tools to everybody.

 

Categories: Kas Thomas, Evaluating SharePoint, Web Content Management, , Implementation

  • Tweet This Entry

Online Education

Check out our classes and Register Today.

Evaluation Research

Get the real story about vendors and products.

My Research

Remember MeForgot password?

Not a subscriber? Learn about our subscriptions

Categories

Channel

  • Collaboration & Community Software (123)
  • Web Analytics (148)
  • Web Content Management (798)

Analyst

  • Adriaan Bloem (44)
  • Tony Byrne (660)
  • Apoorv Durga (8)
  • Jarrod Gingras (30)
  • Alan Pelz-Sharpe (59)
  • Theresa Regli (36)
  • Kas Thomas (77)

Topics

  • Asia-Pacific Marketplace (3)
  • Building Business Case (139)
  • Cloud Computing (5)
  • E-Discovery (1)
  • European Marketplace (15)
  • Governance (10)
  • Implementation (211)
  • Industry Events (1)
  • Industry Standards (110)
  • Information Architecture (84)
  • Intranets (6)
  • Marketplace at Large (504)
  • Open Source (93)
  • Selecting Technology (543)
  • Services Oriented Architecture (4)
  • Software-as-a-Service (17)
  • Usability (3)
  • Vendor Viability & Financials (128)
  • XML (28)

Industries

  • Finance (1)
  • Government (17)
  • Health Care (1)
  • Higher Ed (7)
  • Manufacturing (2)
  • Publishing-Media (4)
  • Retail (4)

Dates

  • 2010 (57)
  • 2009 (200)
  • 2008 (223)
  • 2007 (166)
  • 2006 (99)
  • 2005 (104)
  • 2004 (58)
  • 2003 (67)
  • 2002 (67)
  • 2001 (28)

Have Questions?

Sales & Customer Support

+1 800 325 6190 (USA)+44 (0) 20 3318 1911 (UK)+1 617 340 6464 (Int'l)sales@realstorygroup.com support@realstorygroup.com

All other inquiries: info@realstorygroup.com

Copyright, 2001 - 2010, Real Story Group. All rights reserved.

  • Contact Us
  • Copyright Policy
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use

The Real Story Group

  • CMS Watch
  • Enterprise Information
       Watch
  • SharePoint Watch
  • The Real Story Group

Research

  • Vendor Evaluations
  • Webinars & Advisory Papers
  • Online Education
  • Vendor Lists
  • Free Research Sample
  • Purchase Now

What We Offer

  • Research & Advisory
       Services
  • Frequently Asked Questions
  • Consulting Services
  • Customer Support
  • Contact Sales Team

Who We Are

  • We're Different
  • Our Team
  • Media
  • Customer List
  • Events
  • Contact Us

Get the real story via our bi-weekly newsletter.

Follow us on: RSS twitter

Log In

Remember MeForgot password?