New Day? (Vista and Office 2007 Launch)
I attended Microsoft's launch of their new operating system (Vista) and their new version of their Office suite (Office 2007), in the LA Convention Center. Both products look shiny. I had participated in the Office beta, and like what they have done. None of my machines have the horsepower to run Vista in a proper way (i.e. a way that puts the operating system into the background and lets me focus on my work), but it too looks like it has some interesting enhancements. It will probably be really really great in a couple of years, after the hardware catches up.
But overall, I was somewhat disappointed by the event. I would have thought that Microsoft would be smoother at running big events like this, but there were a number of unprofessional annoyances. First, I waited in the registration line for about 40 minutes, only to be told that by the registration desk that I should come back after lunch, as they didn't have time to print out the badge. (Later, registration took about ten seconds.) The keynote speech started late, and ran over 30 minutes late. People were walking out near the end, so that they would have time to register (ha!) and go to the bathroom. I attended the developer track, and all they wanted to talk about was SharePoint (a server component that I'm not really interested in), rather than all of the cool new things within Vista and Office. The new stuff DOES affect development, and it DOES affect the kinds of projects that we can undertake now, and I didn't feel like I really learned anything about it. I was kind of neutral on SharePoint before, but after having (somewhat boring) demos and speakers on it for most of the day (when I really wanted to see other content), I kind of dislike it now. The food choices ran out during lunch, as did the drinks. Even the swag was substandard... They gave out license keys to Office Professional (nice!) but they didn't include the media, thus requiring a massive download. (I'm at 15% now, and have about three hours to go.) I expected better.
The most interesting speaker was a gentleman from InterKnowlogy (in San Diego), who used the new presentation framework (WPF) to create a 3D molecule visualization tool for medical research. He was the only speaker that I heard that was even slightly challenging... He asked a question of the MS folks: WPF is something like the 4th presentation framework recently. Why was it, again, that we need another one?
Another interesting demo was how to develop gadgets for the Vista sidebar. I have a couple of interesting ideas worth pursing, I think. There is a danger to those gadgets: They could easily become the next target for crapware. The Vista sidebar is a place where small apps can run and be displayed, and is always on top of the desktop. Things like task lists and note-taking areas are fine areas for this. The demo was of pictures of houses, linked to a realtor's site... IMHO such a gadget is an amazingly poor choice for user-interaction (as people aren't going to want to have pictures of other people's houses rolling by as they do their work), but I'm sure that there will many companies, starved for attention, will try similar crapware apps.
Disappointing overall, but such events are still worth attending. It gives a sense of what issues Microsoft thinks are important, an opportunity to meet some of the other attendees that may have similar interests, and a chance to dream up some new ideas for my own business area.
Comments
Jeff, firstly, the important thing here is that microsoft does read your comments (and others) and takes them to heart. i got witness to your blog entry from someone high up the chain on the dev side in redmond.
As a speaker, there's nothing more disheartening than a launch event derailed by the event company and the convention center staff. unfortunately, the best video microsoft has ever done, was cut from that keynote too. it was the one of the scripps research institute fighting cancer and using msft technologies to do it. A bad call was made to cut that one.
in any event, i apreciate the kind comments about my session. it seems like you enjoyed it. one clafification, i was talking about xaml forms. i still don't know why we need another tag based forms technology. :)
Posted by: Tim Huckaby | January 29, 2007 07:01 AM