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Things you see at a developer conference. #Build2015 #IoT
New Post has been published on Simple Comprehensive Tutorials
New Post has been published on http://www.sctut.com/news/cloud-version-of-windows.html
Cloud version of Windows
With Windows 10 officially announced as a free upgrade for PCs and devices for at least the first year of distribution, the news has left many wondering what the future of Windows will be. Windows enthusiasts, doomsday prophets, skittish investors, and tech journalists are all very eager to weigh in with speculations and rumors.
The predominant theory for the future of Windows has Microsoft turning the company’s traditionally licensed operating system into a Software-As-A-Service (SAAS) model. The idea started floating around on ZDNet as a journalist and Microsoft news insider Mary Jo Foley began noticing patterns of unbundling and rebranding of Microsoft services leading up to the Windows 10 unveiling. With speculation becoming fact regarding a free Windows 10 upgrade, the SAAS theory seems beyond plausible. In fact, the SAAS approach seems to be the only reasonable course Microsoft has after their ‘free upgrade’ announcement.
Russian leaker WZor is offering up his two-cents to the rumor mill today on Twitter. Once translated, the tweet all but confirms Mary Jo Foley’s original theory. WZor believes that Windows will transition into a cloud-based OS by the end of 2020. According to the tweet, there are people inside of Redmond currently working on a Windows cloud client, and when complete, the release will follow the Windows 10 free upgrade president.
Once the ‘free’ floodgates are open, there is no going back. To date, developers, content creators, businesses, and services are struggling to find ways to garner a sustainable business with free options. Some have sought pay-as-you-go options, others have taken to freemium models and lower cost bundled subscriptions approaches. Eventually, Microsoft will have to decide what works best for the company and its users. Just like us, we’re sure Microsoft is keeping a close eye on the adoption and success of the new free approach. Once the ‘free’ offer becomes a reality for consumers, it’ll be very interesting to see how Microsoft pivots on the enterprise, as well as the next few upgrades for Windows in the future.
Interestingly enough, the rumor of Windows Cloud first appeared back in April of 2014, when Wzor claimed Microsoft was working on a prototype operating system called Windows Cloud. At the time, Windows Cloud was rumored to be an operating system that requires an internet connection for full functionality. While in offline mode, the operating system would be similar to Microsoft’s budget operating system, Windows Starter, offering basic functionality. This obviously smells like something you would see in Chrome OS on a Chromebook. Could Microsoft be experimenting with something similar?
Source : winbeta
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ASP.NET 5 is a lean and composable framework for building web and cloud applications. ASP.NET 5 is fully open source and available on GitHub. In this technical talk The Lesser Scotts will put it all into context. What does that ASP.NET 5 mean for compatibility? What powerful new cloud scenarios does ASP.NET 5 enable? We’ll cover ASP.NET 5 both inside and outside the IDE, on Windows, Mac, and Linux.
This week at //Build/ Microsoft made a number of great announcements (my unfiltered opinion, obviously), especially around Windows 10, Azure and HoloLens. In the middle of this, we also showed a little bit of what is coming with Office Graph going forward. In his keynote, Satya showed sales opportunities from Salesforce going into the Office Graph and showing up in Delve. And my colleague Jon Meling and I had a roadmap session calledBuilding solutions with Office Graph where we explained and showed some upcoming features that we will take a look at in this posting. The highlight is that the Office Graph will be opened up not just for queries, but for Apps and solutions to create, read, update and delete contents stored in the graph and thus be an integrated part of the Office fabric.
As many of you know, we’ve been working extensively with the Microsoft team across Windows Server, Microsoft Azure, Visual Studio, and overall go-to-market efforts. Our collaboration continues this week at Microsoft’s BUILD conference in San Francisco, where we’re showcasing our work with the Microsoft team on their new Nano Server.