Microsoft will attempt to whip up enthusiasm among its nation of developers next week when it shows off many of the pieces
that will serve as the foundation of its technology vision of the future for corporate users.
At its 10th annual Professional Developers Conference in Los Angeles, the company hopes to stoke that enthusiasm among 7,000
developers by delivering to them early versions of its long-awaited next generation operating system, development suite of
tools, database, and Web services framework.
The show figures to be the first of many come-to-Jesus gatherings as a way to entice developers to start working on development
and to win early mindshare. Given that some of the finished versions of the products such as Longhorn, the Windows XP successor,
will not be available until 2006, it figures to be a long religious crusade.
The company will finally release early code of Longhorn to developers, which will include a SDK, which should allow them to
begin working with some of the new features of the upcoming operating system. Company officials cautioned, however, that it
is merely a preview version.
"Developers should be able to start working with all the cool fundamental things that will be in Longhorn. I think they will
like the breadth and depth of what they see. But if you were to pop this onto your home PC you would not be super happy with
the experience," said Adam Sohn, product manager at Microsoft's Platform Strategy group.
Microsoft will show off the latest work it has done on Longhorn's graphical interface, saying that developers should walk
away with a deeper understanding of what the company is trying to help developers accomplish within the new presentation layer.
He said they will show off some interface prototypes and lay out their thinking on what "user interface experiences" should
be.
A key ingredient in the early version of Longhorn is its new Windows Future Storage (WinFS) file system that promises to take
a new approach to the way data is stored on hard drives and other physical media and make it easier to find and visualize
data.
"The story [with WinFS] is, what is in there is pretty solid, and developers will be able to start programming against it,"
Sohn said.
Microsoft will also release early code of the next version of its Visual Studio development platform, code-named Whidbey,
which should give a good feel for what will be in the finished version. Sohn cautions again that it is still early days for
the product and it has a ways to go before all the pieces are polished and put in place.
"I think they will get a sense for the innovations we are trying to push into the platform technology, but it is not production-level
stuff. It is for developers to get a first peek at what we are up to. We want to get their feedback and their creative juices
flowing, and maybe to start some very early work," Sohn said.
Another early version of a long-awaited program to be released is Yukon, the company's next-generation version of its SQL
Server database that will include a Services Broker that makes use of asynchronous queuing and reportedly has guaranteed messaging.
The product also has built-in support for Web services.
"In terms of Yukon there will be a hard focus on what developers should be doing to utilize the full power of the data-driven
section of the platform. You will hear more about our storage vision and how data needs to be managed at different levels
inside an organization," Sohn said.
Microsoft will show off Indigo, its upcoming framework for building Web services and creating applications that can be inherently
connected across environments and that can flexibly scale to meet whatever computing requirements individual corporate users
have. Company officials will talk about their ongoing commitment to compatibility with existing applications and platforms
relative to Indigo and will make it clear they intend to leave no existing investment behind.
"We see the value of getting folks onto the next wave, but we also know the platform rises and falls on the success of other
developers. You can't leave people behind. You must have compatibility," Sohn said.
The combination of Whidbey and Indigo are intended to make it easier to build Web services.
Although Sohn said he was unaware of specific show references to accommodating Java applications in Microsoft's development
scheme, he said the company does intend to keep supporting multiple programming languages.
"I think you'll hear us continue to [have] support for multiple languages inside not only the framework but more broadly in
the tool set," he said. Microsoft acknowledges heterogeneity of user environments, said Sohn.
Sohn acknowledged there is a session planned on migrating Java applications to Microsoft's development framework
There will not be much new to report on Microsoft's Office System 2003 suite of desktop applications, formally launched on
Tuesday in New York, nor on its Jupiter suite of server-based applications, according to Sohn. The company, however, will
address how those suites of applications have been designed so developers can build solutions on top of them and how both
the applications and solutions can work together via Web services.
"We will be more focused on enabling developers to be successful, and a big chunk of that is how Office takes advantage of
the different platforms. We will be talking more about underlying plumbing and what that means for developers writing enterprise
applications," Sohn said.