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By Ina Fried
Posted on ZDNet News: Mar 16, 2004 9:00:00 PM

LAS VEGAS--Security concerns are slowing things down at Microsoft, but the company is still chugging along with its more ambitious projects including Windows Longhorn, a company executive said on Tuesday.

The need to make its current software more resilient to attack is part of the reason that several projects have fallen behind schedule, Senior Vice President Bob Muglia said in an interview.


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"It's absolutely slowed things down," Muglia said at the Microsoft Management Seminar here. "This work is making our software come out not as quickly."

Meanwhile, CEO Steve Ballmer, who was slated to address the crowd tomorrow, will now not attend the show. Ballmer was in Europe meeting with regulators in an effort to settle antitrust charges.

Notably, Microsoft said last week that key updates to its developer tools and to its SQL Server database will be postponed until next year, a move that has the potential to delay a number of other Microsoft software programs whose development is linked to those programs. There is also concern that Microsoft's work on Longhorn-- the next version of Windows--will be further delayed or scaled back. Muglia said the company has not lost its drive to take on big projects like Longhorn.

"We're still pretty ambitious," he said.

Muglia said that more than half of the resources on the Windows team are still going toward Longhorn, though more effort than originally planned is going into improving existing versions.

"We have definitely taken a large percentage of our resources that would be working on new things like Longhorn and are dedicating (them) to security," Muglia said. "It has an impact on those (ship) dates."

However, Muglia said that customers seem in favor of the shift. "The response I get universally is that's the right thing to do," he said.

Along with providing patches and security enhancements with Windows XP Service Pack 2, Microsoft has said it is exploring ways of further updating both PC and server versions of Windows XP prior to the arrival of Longhorn, which analysts say may still be several years off. Microsoft originally planned to ship the software in 2005, but now offers no specific timeframe for when it might arrive.

Muglia said it is too early to say exactly what form the server update will take, but said a series of feature packs is more likely than a full interim release of the operating system. The update, targeted for 2005, is likely to include mostly features that were already planned to arrive ahead of Longhorn, Muglia said.

"We're looking at all of the things that have been under development for a while and that are either complete and available in the market and are in stages of competition that we can bring out in the 2005 timeframe," he said. "There's a lot of value there frankly that we'd like to deliver as soon as we can get it out there."

'More targeted attacks' ahead
Muglia said Microsoft is also still deciding how it will distribute the update and what, if anything, will require a separate fee. "In terms of packaging, I don't think we've figured out how to package it yet. We're still thinking that through," Muglia said.

In his keynote speech earlier Tuesday, Muglia said he did not expect security to wane as a concern for the industry, though he did expect a shift from generalized widespread problems to more narrowly aimed threats.

"We will see more targeted attacks," Muglia said. "That's sort of unfortunately the future we see over the next couple of years."

Muglia said the best way Microsoft can arm companies is to create software that gives IT managers more data on their systems and how they are running.

"The truth of the matter is a lot of the security problems that have happened are associated with areas which could have been prevented with the right tools."

"Now, it's our job to give people the right tools, and we haven't always done that...But if we can get the tools in the hands of IT (managers), they can then take the steps that they need to mitigate things."

  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 25 Talkback(s)
The real reason IT jobs are being outsourced...
is because of the know-it-all techie snobbery with its rtfm and "you're just a dumb user" attitude. See ya later in the breadline.... (Read the rest)
Posted by: boomslang_z Posted on: 03/18/04 You are currently: Logged In as: a Guest  | Login | Terms of Use
Reading between the lines...  Fred Fredrickson | 03/16/04
Whatever.  d_jedi | 03/16/04
you idiot!  stephen732@... | 03/16/04
Insults get you nowhere.  d_jedi | 03/17/04
What does that mean?  Patrick Jones | 03/17/04
Not the consumer desktop  Suicida| | 03/17/04
I have the same point of view !  chawly | 03/18/04
finacial guns...  ryusen | 03/16/04
Unfounded concern?  d_jedi | 03/17/04
are you sure?  ryusen | 03/17/04
Weel, that's certainly the opinion of the ABM crowd.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 03/16/04
Money for nothing...  bjbrock | 03/17/04
Must we be nasty to the folks at Microsoft ?  chawly | 03/18/04
Blame it on the red wine...  spinit | 03/16/04
Numbnuts  nikoli | 03/16/04
Well...  spinit | 03/16/04
A little 'club soda'  E=McSquared | 03/16/04
The real reason IT jobs are being outsourced...  boomslang_z | 03/18/04
Whew, and I thought it was that Linux thingie  Xunil_Sierutuf | 03/16/04
They have slowed down  michael-t | 03/16/04
Change of mentality  d_jedi | 03/17/04
Public Speaking  michael-t | 03/17/04
Stop ! Stop ! the maiden cried  chawly | 03/18/04
more secure form competing applications  JWatson77 | 03/17/04
WAIT!!! i have a brilliant idea!!  ryusen | 03/17/04

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