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April 8, 2008 9:06 AM PDT

More clues on Microsoft's Live Mesh product

by Martin LaMonica
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Microsoft is planning to detail a new product under development called Live Mesh, which appears to be a way to manage user data in the "cloud" across multiple devices.

Mary Jo Foley at ZDNet spotted the talk, entitled Get Mesh!, which will be put on by Microsoft's Live Mesh general manager Amit Mital at the upcoming Web 2.0 Expo in San Francisco later this month.

Foley said the first beta of the product is due later in April and that it will act as a way to synchronize files across a network, or mesh, of devices:

Right now, the best way to understand where Microsoft is going with mesh is via what it's doing with Windows Live FolderShare. FolderShare, which is based on technology Microsoft acquired when it bought FolderShare from ByteTaxi in 2005, is designed to allow users to keep their files in sync across their computers, share folders with associates and access files from any computer (or, ultimately, device).

We know creating an application platform to manage the "mesh" of devices is one of projects that Microsoft is working on. At the Mix '08 conference in March, chief software architect Ray Ozzie said:

Just imagine the possibilities of unified application management across the device mesh, centralized, Web-based deployment of device-based applications. Imagine an app platform that's cognizant of all of your devices. Now, as it so happens, we've had a team at Microsoft working on this specific scenario for some time, starting with the PC and focused on the question of how we might make life so much easier for individuals if we just brought together all your PCs into a seamless mesh, for users, for developers, using the Web as a hub.

The folks at LiveSide.Net spoke to George Moore, General Manager of Windows Live Platform Service, at Mix to get their take on what Live Mesh is all about.

Utilizing elements of AtomPub, Feedsync, the Microsoft Sync Framework, and SSDS, Live Mesh will sync information across computers and devices, and store information in the cloud, accessible from the Web. It will resolve conflicts with collaborative syncing, and allow for inviting others to collaborate on mesh folders stored in the cloud. A client installed on local devices will produce "Live Mesh folders," wrapping them in a way that they can be easily synchronized. Live Mesh will allow remote access to devices in "the mesh," not only allowing for access to files and folders, but applications as well.

February 28, 2008 8:58 AM PST

Microsoft previews Live Platform development services

by Martin LaMonica
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The head of Microsoft's Windows Live Platform Services group offered late Wednesday an early description of services and tools that Microsoft will release at next week's Mix '08 Web conference.

Dave Treadwell is part of a team assembled by Chief Software Architect Ray Ozzie and chartered with building a development platform for writing Web applications that tap into data on Microsoft services.

Tafiti is an application that combines Silverlight with Windows Search.

(Credit: Microsoft)
Microsoft executives have said that the company's overall goal is to create a common development model that spans its online services, such as Virtual Earth and search, and its Windows and server products.

Last year, Ozzie described the cloud computing infrastructure that Microsoft is constructing to deliver services, which touch everything from user identification to applications like Windows Live Messenger.

Treadwell said Wednesday that Microsoft's updated Live development platform has expanded application programming interfaces (APIs), including an API for getting contact information from a social-networking site.

He also said Microsoft is boosting support for the Atom Publishing Protocol by providing Atom interfaces to some of its hosted services.

Finally, Treadwell said that Silverlight Streaming by Windows Live, a hosted service for delivering video to Web sites launched last year at Mix, is now in beta and includes 10GB of free storage.

For a thorough summary, check out LiveSide.net and Programmable Web.

Originally posted at Webware
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