When Microsoft releases the first beta of its Longhorn version of Windows, it will include a nearly complete version of the
product's Web services-based communication framework, code-named Indigo, a Microsoft product manager confirmed this week.
A Microsoft partner familiar with Indigo's product development cycle told the IDG News Service at the recent Microsoft Worldwide
Partner Conference (WPC) that engineers working on Indigo, which Microsoft promises will simplify the creation of Web services,
had nearly finished their work.
"They're not doing a lot of work with new features at this point," said Andrew Brust, chief of new technology at Citigate
Cunningham, a New York-based consulting company and Microsoft partner.
This week Ari Bixhorn, director of Web services strategy for Microsoft's platform strategy group, said that the version of
Indigo included in beta 1 of Longhorn will closely resemble what Microsoft will release to manufacturing with Longhorn, giving
developers an opportunity to start building applications using the Indigo programming model. Longhorn is expected to ship
at the end of next year.
The availability of beta 1 of Longhorn has been the subject of much speculation, however. While Microsoft continues to maintain
the beta will become available during the United States summer, by which it means before Sept. 21, some published reports
have nailed down August as the release date based on public comments made by Bob Muglia, Microsoft's senior vice president
of Windows Server. Simon Hughes, group manager of mid-market solutions for Microsoft in the United Kingdom, told the IDG News
Service at the WPC that beta 1 of Longhorn would not be available until September.
Even if Longhorn beta 1 makes it into the hands of developers before Microsoft's Professional Developers Conference (PDC),
which will be held Sept. 13 to Sept. 16 in Los Angeles, it's not likely it will be anything they will want to start working
with, said Michael Cherry, lead analyst for Windows at Kirkland, Washington-based research group Directions on Microsoft.
"We have been advising customers that we don’t expect they'll see a build of Longhorn that’s worth their time until the PDC,"
Cherry said.
Microsoft first introduced Indigo at its last PDC in 2003. Indigo extends the .NET framework in Windows and allows developers
not only to build Web services, but also to add reliability and security attributes to them, Bixhorn said.
The framework also promises to simplify the actual coding it takes to develop services, he said. By using Indigo, developers
can reduce tasks that previously took thousands of lines of code down to two or three lines. In addition, Indigo lets developers
use whatever Visual Studio 2005 code is familiar to them, including C#, Visual Basic or C++, Bixhorn said.
Although Microsoft has a good chance of making the development of Web services more digestible for the average developer with
Indigo, it may take some time before applications developed with the technology actually appear, Cherry said.
"One of the things Microsoft has always tried to do is lower the barrier to entry so that programmers who are newer to it
can use the technologies sooner," he said. "We don't know who is going to jump on Indigo first -- who's going to use it or
when we'll see an application that uses it."