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Innovation @ the speed of thought In his keynote address to the Comdex computer trade show, Microsoft's Bill Gates unveiled an ambitious plan for innovation and demonstrated why one company remains the undisputed flag-bearer for the entire technology industry. Assureconsulting.com brings you excerpts from the speech…
During the course of the Digital Decade, we'll think about personal computing in a different way. It's not just sitting in front of that desktop PC. That's very important, but that's just a piece of what we'll do. After all, the magic of the chip that brings intelligence and the magic of software are now spreading out to all different devices. Those devices are connecting up in very flexible ways. And so, small devices, whether they're pocket-sized, or wrist-sized, tablet-sized, wallet-sized, all of these things will come together. The TV experience will be a deeply changed digital experience. Even in the car, when you're interested in information, or being notified, that will be deeply digital. The way we think about phone conversations, how we set them up, find somebody, how we share information during that phone call, all of that will be completely reshaped during this Digital Decade. We can say that the idea of personal computing is far broader than ever before, broader in new experiences, broader in ways that systems connect automatically, and broader in greater productivity. Last year had a lot of highs and a lot of lows in it. A tumultuous year, a tough year, a year to test the people with the long-term commitments, a year to test which innovations really meet the demanding requirements that customers have in this kind of environment, a requirement that new advances deliver in both the dimension of improved cost, and the dimension of improved capability. And when you think about the developments over this past year, there were some things that I think were a big surprise on the positive side. The continued improvements in price and performance. You know, Moore's Law is still hard at work. For the next decade, the things that allowed the chip to improve so rapidly still are there benefiting consumers. It makes it a very competitive business, because all of that extra capability improves price/performance. Not only is Moore's Law active, but even faster exponential improvement in optic fiber data capacity, or storage capacity, where disks have moved from a megabyte, to 10 gigabytes, to the end of the decade a terabyte will be the typical storage on a personal computer device, portable storage, literally, will be in the tens or hundreds of gigabytes. So, on price and performance, we did super well. And the arrival of wireless, particularly the 802.11 WI-FI wireless. It's getting to the point where we will be able to take that as granted as part of the home computing experience, part of the office computing experience. Even when you're out in convention centers or airports, or anywhere that business people spend much time, there will be easy, inexpensive connections to get the high-speed capabilities that WI-FI provides. WI-FI has succeeded partly because it's low cost. It doesn't have the per minute charges. Installing WI-FI into the home is now just a bit over $100 of investment, and it's getting easier to secure, easier to set up. The whole world of hardware has been delivering at a quite phenomenal rate. Look at LCD resolution. You can find that resolution with proper font advances, particularly Clear Type: the idea of readability of the screen has moved forward in a major way. The digital camera: now new camera sales have shifted to where digital is the majority of what's being purchased, and that means that this flexibility of organisingand communicating around photos is beginning to take off. And then I mentioned storage, both the storage in the PC and the portable storage allow us to think about scenarios like entire movie collections or video collections, whether prerecorded or a home video being easy to deal with, easy to share with the low cost storage. A final two points I think haven't been noticed as much as some of these others. First is the progress that has been made around the Web services architecture. A year ago, there was no industry organisation focused on this. And although there were strong commitments and lots of R&D around it, the idea that there would be a clear profile to bring together all the elements of Web services that still hung in the balance. It was unclear. And so, this year the creation of the Web services Interoperability group was a huge milestone. We've seen virtually every company in the industry join up for that. The protocols being developed there are standard across all platforms. And they represent some of the very best R&D work that the companies involved are doing. Microsoft, IBM, many other companies are jumping in and saying, yes, we'll put our best people on it, because we need Web services to enable so many of the scenarios that will move the industry to the next level, to enable E-commerce. Internet connectivity alone was not enough, we needed that advance. And so Web services, I'd say, is a huge plus of this last year.
Server performance, some pretty incredible investments where the Itanium architecture, which has been pioneered by Intel and HP, is making huge progress. Some of the benchmarks there are really quite phenomenal. And the partners are being drawn in to show off what can be done there. The number of processors built into systems, now moving up to 32-way, and next year 64-way; server performance is clear, now that you can buy industry standard Intel-Windows type servers and get performance that in the past you would have had to pay five or ten times as much for. Even the most demanding computer loads are now met by those standards-based servers. And that can simplify things, ease development. It's a milestone that we've waited for, and was just achieved this year. Page 1 | Page 2 © Microsoft Corporation Email this article | Respond to this article ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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