http://www.microsoft.com/presspass/press/2008/feb08/02-21ExpandInteroperabilityPR.mspx

Microsoft Makes Strategic Changes in Technology and Business Practices to
Expand InteroperabilityNew interoperability principles and actions will
increase openness of key products.*REDMOND, Wash. — Feb. 21, 2008 — *Microsoft
Corp. today announced a set of broad-reaching changes to its technology and
business practices to increase the openness of its products and drive
greater interoperability, opportunity and choice for developers, partners,
customers and competitors.

Specifically, Microsoft is implementing four new interoperability principles
and corresponding actions across its high-volume business products: (1)
ensuring open connections; (2) promoting data portability; (3) enhancing
support for industry standards; and (4) fostering more open engagement with
customers and the industry, including open source communities.

"These steps represent an important step and significant change in how we
share information about our products and technologies," said Microsoft chief
executive officer Steve Ballmer. "For the past 33 years, we have shared a
lot of information with hundreds of thousands of partners around the world
and helped build the industry, but today's announcement represents a
significant expansion toward even greater transparency. Our goal is to
promote greater interoperability, opportunity and choice for customers and
developers throughout the industry by making our products more open and by
sharing even more information about our technologies."

According to Ray Ozzie, Microsoft chief software architect, the company's
announcement reflects the significance that individuals and businesses place
upon the ease of information-sharing. As heterogeneity is the norm within
enterprise architectures, interoperability across applications and services
has become a key requirement.

"Customers need all their vendors, including and especially Microsoft, to
deliver software and services that are flexible enough such that any
developer can use their open interfaces and data to effectively integrate
applications or to compose entirely new solutions," said Ozzie. "By
increasing the openness of our products, we will provide developers
additional opportunity to innovate and deliver value for customers."

"The principles and actions announced today by Microsoft are a very
significant expansion of its efforts to promote interoperability," said
Manfred Wangler, vice president, Corporate Research and Technology, Software
and Engineering, Siemens. "While Microsoft has made considerable progress on
interoperability over the past several years, including working with us on
the Interoperability Executive Customer Council, today's news take
Microsoft's interoperability commitment to a whole new level."

"The interoperability principles and actions announced today by Microsoft
will benefit the broader IT community," said Thomas Vogel, head, Information
Management, Novartis Pharma. "Ensuring open connections to Microsoft's
high-volume products presents significant opportunities for the vast
majority of software developers, which will help foster greater
interoperability, opportunity and choice in the marketplace. We look forward
to a constructive, structured, and multilateral dialogue to ensure
stakeholder-driven evolution of these principles and actions."

The interoperability principles and actions announced today apply to the
following high-volume Microsoft products: Windows Vista (including the .NET
Framework), Windows Server 2008, SQL Server 2008, Office 2007, Exchange
Server 2007, and Office SharePoint Server 2007, and future versions of all
these products. Highlights of the specific actions Microsoft is taking to
implement its new interoperability principles are described below.
•

*Ensuring open connections to Microsoft's high-volume products*. To enhance
connections with third-party products, Microsoft will publish on its Web
site documentation for all application programming interfaces (APIs) and
communications protocols in its high-volume products that are used by other
Microsoft products. Developers do not need to take a license or pay a
royalty or other fee to access this information. Open access to this
documentation will ensure that third-party developers can connect to
Microsoft's high-volume products just as Microsoft's other products do.
•

As an immediate next step, starting today Microsoft will openly publish on
MSDN over 30,000 pages of documentation for Windows client and server
protocols that were previously available only under a trade secret license
through the Microsoft Work Group Server Protocol Program (WSPP) and the
Microsoft Communication Protocol Program (MCPP). Protocol documentation for
additional products, such as Office 2007 and all of the other high-volume
products covered by these principles, will be published in the upcoming
months.
•

Microsoft will indicate on its Web site which protocols are covered by
Microsoft patents and will license all of these patents on reasonable and
non-discriminatory terms, at low royalty rates. To assist those interested
in considering a patent license, Microsoft will make available a list of
specific Microsoft patents and patent applications that cover each protocol.

•

Microsoft is providing a covenant not to sue open source developers for
development or non-commercial distribution of implementations of these
protocols. These developers will be able to use the documentation for free
to develop products. Companies that engage in commercial distribution of
these protocol implementations will be able to obtain a patent license from
Microsoft, as will enterprises that obtain these implementations from a
distributor that does not have such a patent license.
•

*Documenting how Microsoft supports industry standards and extensions*. To
increase transparency and promote interoperability, when Microsoft supports
a standard in a high-volume product, it will work with other major
implementers of the standard toward achieving robust, consistent and
interoperable implementations across a broad range of widely deployed
products.
•

Microsoft will document for the development community how it supports such
standards, including those Microsoft extensions that affect interoperability
with other implementations of these standards. This documentation will be
published on Microsoft's Web site and it will be accessible without a
license, royalty or other fee. These actions will allow third-party
developers implementing standards to understand how a standard is used in a
Microsoft product and foster improved interoperability for customers.
Microsoft will make available a list of any of its patents that cover any of
these extensions, and will make available patent licenses on reasonable and
non-discriminatory terms.
•

*Enhancing Office 2007 to provide greater flexibility of document formats*.
To promote user choice among document formats, Microsoft will design new
APIs for the Word, Excel and PowerPoint applications in Office 2007 to
enable developers to plug in additional document formats and to enable users
to set these formats as their default for saving documents.
•

*Launching the Open Source Interoperability Initiative*. To promote and
enable more interoperability between commercial and community-based open
source technologies and Microsoft products, this initiative will provide
resources, facilities and events, including labs, plug fests, technical
content and opportunities for ongoing cooperative development.
•

*Expanding industry outreach and dialogue*. An ongoing dialogue with
customers, developers and open source communities will be created through an
online Interoperability Forum. In addition, a Document Interoperability
Initiative will be launched to address data exchange between widely deployed
formats.

The Interoperability Executive Customer (IEC) Council, an advisory
organization established in 2006 and consisting mainly of chief information
and technology officers from more than 40 companies and government bodies
around the world, will help guide Microsoft in its work under these
principles and actions. The full text of Microsoft's new Interoperability
Principles, and a full list of the actions Microsoft is taking, can be found
on Microsoft's Interoperability site <http://www.microsoft.com/interop>.

The interoperability principles and actions announced today reflect the
changed legal landscape for Microsoft and the IT industry. They are an
important step forward for the company in its ongoing efforts to fulfill the
responsibilities and obligations outlined in the September 2007 judgment of
the European Court of First Instance (CFI).

"As we said immediately after the CFI decision last September, Microsoft is
committed to taking all necessary steps to ensure we are in full compliance
with European law," said Brad Smith, Microsoft general counsel. "Through the
initiatives we are announcing, we are taking responsibility for implementing
the principles in the interoperability portion of the CFI decision across
all of Microsoft's high-volume products. We will take additional steps in
the coming weeks to address the remaining portion of the CFI decision, and
we are committed to providing full information to the European Commission so
it can evaluate all of these steps."


-- 
Regards
mak
-----------------------
Hacking is good
Hackers  human


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