By Ina Fried, 17 May 2005 09:30
NEWS Microsoft is putting more emphasis on collaboration in the next version of Office, after getting some help from Groove Networks - the Ray Ozzie-led company they acquired earlier this year - to recognise a shift in the way people work, according to Microsoft's director of platform technology strategy, Bill Hilf, speaking at the Gartner Symposium/ITxpo on Monday.
One of the first steps in working with colleagues is finding out which co-workers are actually available. In that regard, Microsoft plans to expand its current work on corporate instant messaging and also add support for internet telephony.
The ability to handle voice over Internet Protocol technology is "one of the core features [Microsoft is] building into the next version of Office," said Hilf. The company also plans to continue adding more server-based products to the Office family of products, he said.
Microsoft has said that Office 12, the next version of its flagship productivity software, will ship next year. However, the company has yet to discuss most details about what will go into the software.
The company has said it plans to significantly expand its use of Extensible Markup Language, or XML, as a means of exchanging data.
One of the reasons that Microsoft continues to eye new server products, Hilf said, is the fact that many companies use Office for far more than the kind of general productivity tasks originally envisioned for the product.
"I can't tell you how many shops I got to that use Excel for everything - accounting, payroll," said Hilf.
Hilf declined to say whether an Excel server would be among the new software additions.
To get a good understanding of where Microsoft is headed with Office, Hilf suggested taking a look at Microsoft Office Communicator 2005, an instant messaging add-on to Office that is in beta testing.
The desktop program, which connects to Microsoft's Live Communications Server software, helps people to get a variety of information about how best to communicate with co-workers. For example, out-of-office messages pop up automatically, as does a user's IM presence information. If companies integrate the software with their traditional or internet telephony gear, workers can also start phone calls through their PC and redirect incoming calls when they are going to be away from their desk.
The final version of Office Communicator 2005 is due for release by the end of June. Pricing and other details have yet to be announced.
Ina Fried writes for CNET News.com

Comments
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1. Nick Cole
What about that vast majority of users who are more than content with Office97/2000? Why does everybody have to take what they don't want just to provide Microsoft with payments for the development of things they never asked for?
People use the tools they are comfortable with and know, they do not have the time to keep relearning complex systems, hence continued use of Excel, which is an intuitive, straightforward and infinitely flexible product.
Most people hardly use more than 20 or 30% of the capability of the product yet are still expected to pay the same.
A significant number of people are not in the slightest bit interested in collaboration especially web based. I know of several who are quite happy using WordPad instead of a typewriter for example.
Collaboration is only of use if a team of people are working on a single document together. Come-on in reality how often does that occur? And if it does do people not send it on after amendments have been made?
And how many years has such collaboration been touted already?
2. anonymous
If you're happy with Office 97/2000, don't buy Office 12. Maybe most people don't use MS Office to its furthest capabilities, but even if that's the case, there's no reason to put the rest of us that do at a disadvantage. I work at a Fortune 500 firm, and most of the documents I work on are collaborative in nature. I don't understand your reasoning; that since you are satisfied with current or obsolete software, everyone else should be to...