- From: Technology/Systems Advisors <tsaltd@panix.com>
- Date: Fri, 01 Sep 1995 02:14:27 -0400
- To: www-rdb@w3.org
www-rdb is my favorite mail group -- Here is my first posting: ================================================ The following is the full text of an article now appearing in the September issue of the New York New Media Association Newsletter: NYNMA Newsletter August/September1995 Contents: · Sizzling Summer Sees Execs Shuffle · Microsoft Interacts with Developers · CD ROM Titles in the Doldrums · Import-Export Trade on the Internet · Microsoft Interacts with Developers by Steve Mintz Over 2,500 corporate technology planners, new media moguls, and an impressive crew of software developers attended the Microsoft Interactive Media Conference in Long Beach, California in mid-July. With the launch of Windows ‘95 and the Microsoft Network (MSN) only weeks away, the conference provided attendees with three full days of keynote speeches and breakout sessions focused on those emerging platforms. Special interest sessions were also on the agenda covering the Microsoft Interactive Television (formerly TIGER) and Broadcast PC initiatives, the CD Plus platform, and the Windows Game SDK. For the Microsoft interactive applications vision to succeed, a hardware base of Pentium-class machines must reach wide acceptance in the home. Any concerns over when that critical mass will materialize were confidently disregarded by Mr. Bill’s evangelists. They easily mesmerized attendees with impressive demonstrations of the 32-bit, feature-rich, multi-tasking/multi-threaded operating system. Gates’ own presentation featured demonstrations of two Win95 dazzlers: Toon-a-rama, a “mid-band” (ISDN-based) juke-box of classic cartoons with a Saturday Morning TV look and feel and 3D-Movie Maker -- a $40 build-your-own-virtual -world desktop authoring system for children. Blinking will be a severe handicap for those of us attempting to keep a sharp focus on this Brave New World. Content providers were shown a full range of tools for developing custom applications for MSN. Applications for that platform are hosted by a Windows 95 intelligent browser that dynamically retrieves both program code and information from the service’s severs to the desktop PC. Online MediaView, an enhanced version of the current MediaView authoring tool, was presented as a cross-platform authoring solution for both CD-ROM and MSN based titles. Attendees were given beta copies of another, more forward-looking product : “Blackbird" the code-name for Microsoft’s new tool for designing, authoring, distributing, viewing and searching online applications. Blackbird and OnLine Media View communicate with MSN via a set of OLE interfaces and OCX controls that enable functions such as connecting to MSN, activating file transfers, and enabling chat and mail services. Since “Blackbird” is a true client/server architecture, net-aware titles written using the tool will require a “Blackbird” server on the back-end. At its initial release (Q4 ‘95) only MSN will have that server platform. However an extended version of the server, scheduled for release in Q3 ‘96 will support the authoring of Internet applications. The company’s solutions for electronic commerce shared equal billing with development tools and operating systems. Demonstrations of the MSN order capture and billing systems revealed a well-thought out plan for technology and services supporting the implementation of mission-critical business services. The privacy of transactions between subscribers and electronic merchants on MSN will be enabled using a “Public Key/Private Key” encryption technique. Those transactions, initially processed using MAPI (e-mail) protocols will eventually be supported by a network pipe to database servers. In late 1996 enhanced authentication and processing of transactions is scheduled to go live with bi-directional, realtime order generation and placement, integration with merchant order systems, and a bullet-proof charge card authorization process co-authored with Visa. While the first round of MSN applications will run from Microsoft’s own data center, the company’s longer-term strategy is to provide MSN affiliates with the ability to provide network services from their own sites. At that point in time, Internet access to and from MSN will become more seamless and the distinction between MSN and Internet/WWW applications will become nearly transparent. If Microsoft can deliver on this vision, their solutions will put them well on the way to establishing their back-end platform and front-end tools as the standard development environment for our industry. Steve Mintz is Technical Director of Technology/Systems Advisors Ltd -- a Manhattan-based consulting organization specializing in technology planning and the implementation of networked business and personal computing systems. ******************************************************************************* Be sure and visit the NYNMA site at. http://gate.okc.com/nynma/news/news.html T/SA Ltd. delivers technology briefings, Windows programming, and client/server architecture solutions. tsaltd@panix.com (212) 343-0209 ********************************************************************************
Received on Friday, 1 September 1995 02:31:15 UTC