By cutting WinFS from Longhorn and indefinitely delaying the storage system, Microsoft Corp. has also again delayed the Microsoft Business Framework (MBF), a new Windows programming layer that is closely tied to WinFS.
Developers will now have to wait longer for MBF, which promises to make it easier to write business applications for the Windows platform by moving some of the base-level code out of the applications and into the operating system. MBF sits on top of the .Net framework and provides basic functions such as order entry and general ledger for application developers to build on.
This is the second delay for MBF this year. Microsoft had planned to ship the framework next year, together with Visual Studio 2005. Those plans were changed and in May Microsoft said MBF would be aligned with Longhorn and WinFS in particular.
"The current plan remains to ship MBF in the WinFS time frame. The MBF team, as a result of the decision to remove the link between WinFS and Longhorn, is investigating if it is possible to release earlier, but no commitments can be made at this time," a Microsoft spokesman said.
The delay and Microsoft's inability to give a new release target is bad news for developers who are waiting for MBF. Furthermore, it gives the rival Java platform a competitive edge because technology similar to MBF is already available to Java developers, some industry experts said.
"This technology is readily available for Java and has been for years, in different flavors even," said Frans Bouma, a senior software engineer at Solutions Design in The Hague, Netherlands. "That makes .Net developers jealous," said Bouma, who is a .Net developer and has been awarded Microsoft Most Valuable Professional (MVP) status.
Granted, .Net developers can build business applications today, but it takes more time, money and the risk of developer errors, Bouma said. "That just should not be so; the framework should be there for you and developers should only have to focus on the real logic of their application, not the plumbing."
Mike Gilpin, a vice president and research director at Forrester Research Inc. in Cambridge, Massachusetts, said it is a problem for Microsoft that it does not have a consistent development framework for business applications. However, Java is not superior to .Net in that sense, he said. "I have heard Java developers complaining about having to do low-level coding," Gilpin said.
However, it depends on the tools. Users of BEA Systems Inc.'s WebLogic Workshop, for example, don't do much low-level coding, Gilpin said. "But if you're doing straight Enterprise JavaBeans development in a plain Java IDE (integrated development environment) then there is a lot of low-level coding that you have to do," he said.
Bouma suspects Microsoft has not made MBF enough of a priority. "If they don't put enough people on it, it won't advance," he said.
MBF is in trouble, said Greg DeMichillie, a lead analyst at Directions on Microsoft Inc. in Kirkland, Washington. "This sounds to me like a group struggling to figure out what their plan is," he said. "Any confusion on Microsoft's part or changing of plans, certainly gives competitors like Java an opening."
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