Microsoft's Ray Ozzie Envisions a 'Post-PC World'
        
        
        
        		What will a "post-PC world" look like? Ray Ozzie, renowned for jumpstarting Microsoft's move to the cloud, described a new vision for such an environment in a memo posted this week.
Ozzie is the former chief software architect for Microsoft,  having moved on to an unspecified transition role at the entertainment side of  the company. Ozzie's semi-retirement was announced  last week by Microsoft, along with the elimination of the chief software  architect position (a former Bill Gates role). Ozzie is perhaps best known for  his 2005  Microsoft memo outlining a services-connected world. Microsoft has embraced  that view, as signaled by Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer's speech  in March that the company is "all in" when it comes to the cloud.
Ozzie's  latest memo, posted earlier this week but oddly dated in the future (Oct. 28, 2010),  asked a question that might not be music to the ears of Microsoft with its  near-monopoly on the desktop PC operating system market. Ozzie said he sees a world of multiple,  appliance-like "connected devices" that sync with the cloud, perhaps  implying that there might be less of a need for, or interest in, PCs. 
"And so at  this juncture, given all that has transpired in computing and communications,  it's important that all of us do precisely what our competitors and customers  will ultimately do: close our eyes and form a realistic picture of what a post-PC  world might actually look like, if it were to ever truly occur."
However, Ozzie  did note an exception, citing the rise of low-cost netbooks. When they were  first launched, netbooks ran Linux-based operating systems. But a year later,  Microsoft's Windows XP became the predominant OS distribution for netbooks.  However, shadowing that accomplishment is the possibility that users might  connect to the Internet on laptop-like devices without Windows at all. Google  has laid out such a vision with its Chrome  OS concept, but it is yet to come to market.
Of course,  Microsoft is already positioning itself for a consumer device-connected world,  having unveiled  Windows Phone 7-based devices this month. The company currently trails in  the consumer mobile OS market but dominates in the commercial device operating  system market with its Windows Embedded product line. Windows Embedded  operating systems are currently used in equipment such as ruggedized field  devices, kiosks and digital signs. 
Ozzie also said he sees a  role for social networks, for both individuals and businesses. The next killer  apps will find a role there, tapping "continuous services." He also  predicted some tension associated with the cloud and privacy issues.
 "Our  personal and corporate data now sits within these services--and as a result  we're more and more concerned with issues of trust & privacy," he  wrote.
Microsoft has a  whole Trustworthy Computing effort devoted to this cause, and the company has  sometimes publicized its efforts on privacy, such as with its search and  browser technologies. But the company will only go so far. Microsoft did not  join Google's strong stance against Chinese government censorship of search  results, for instance. At the same time, Google has been criticized for  sampling WiFi networks in drive-by polling. In Germany, Google's practice of  photographing neighborhoods has met with strong public disapproval.
Oddly, Ozzie's  brainchild before coming to Microsoft, a peer-to-peer collaboration application  called Groove, was used as part of a United States intelligence-gathering  prototype for the infamous Total  Information Awareness program, according to a 2002 New  York Times article. Groove is  now renamed as Microsoft SharePoint Workspace 2010 and is offered as part of  the Microsoft SharePoint 2010 product.
Ozzie's latest  memo is worth reading as a signal that Microsoft may be putting even greater  emphasis on the mobile devices world. Possibly, that focus is part of Ozzie's  new role at Microsoft's Entertainment and Devices Division, but so far that's  unclear.
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Kurt Mackie is senior news producer for 1105 Media's Converge360 group.