Why is Microsoft buying Skype?

Steve Ballmer and Tony Bates explain, in a video-teleconference that took place late this morning. While this sounds cliché, the deal is about synergy around personal communications — for work and home — and the direct sales and potential advertising possibilities, particularly video.

Additionally, and this is something Ballmer only alludes to: Skype fits nicely into Microsoft’s three-screen strategy around the TV, smartphone and PC.

 

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As previously reported, Microsoft is spending $8.5 billion — all cash — to buy Skype from investment firm Silver Lake. When the deal closes, assuming regulatory approval, Skype will become a separate division of Microsoft.

The acquisition, which was unexpected, is groundbreaking for Microsoft and perhaps in some small way rectifies a past mistake. In early 2005, Microsoft passed on an opportunity to buy YouTube for $500 million. Google snatched up the video service for $1.6 billion in October of that year. Microsoft chose to build rather than to buy a video service, which later proved to be a huge mistake.

Now video is front and center again, but instead of impersonal content posted for the world to see, Microsoft is betting on intimacy — whether personal or professional communications. Sometimes you build and sometimes you buy, Ballmer, Microsoft’s CEO, says. Advertising will be one of Microsoft’s core objectives for monetizing Skype.

“We think advertising is a very powerful monetization stream for us,” says Bates, who is Skype’s CEO and will be president of the Microsoft Skype Business Division, when the deal completes later this year (timeframe given by both companies, again, subject to regulatory approval).

Microsoft device strategy

Microsoft and Skype had already been pursuing an advertising deal, which helped precipitate the acquisition. “We have even more to do together as a single company.” Ballmer says. He describes the offer to buy Skype as unsolicited. The companies agreed on the price in mid-April and signed the definitive agreement last night.

Microsoft is using overseas cash to make the purchase — and, yes, the $8.5 billion is all cash. Ballmer says this isn’t so unusual since Skype is based in Luxemburg.

“I’m excited about the Skype business,” Ballmer says. “Skype is a great business.”

Ballmer and Bates both emphasize Skype’s business potential, noting:

* 170 million connected users
* 600,000 new registrations per day
* 30 million average concurrent users
* 40 percent year-over-year EBITA growth
* 20 percent year-over-year revenue growth in 2010
* 45 percent compound annual growth rate for video ads
* 207 billion minutes of voice and video calls made during 2010

Both men emphasize the importance of video, with Bates boasting: “Video is in our DNA.” Video accounts for about 40 percent of calls now made using Skype, regardless of device. Again, video advertising will be a priority, with Skype already claiming to display 5 percent of U.S. video ads.

Bates describes Skype as an “engaged user base” — or what he calls “hundred-hundred club.” That’s 100 million users a month and 100 minutes average on Skype a month. Skype’s  priorities related to its users: core communications, subscription premium services and advertising.

Skype Trends

From Microsoft’s perspective, integration will be a top priority, as Skype functionality connects to Lync, Outlook and Xbox Live, initially, and also to Windows Live Hotmail and Messenger. Skype is better known as a consumer product, while Microsoft’s Lync is about business communications. Lync is “off to a fantastic start.” Ballmer says, with Lync revenue up 30 percent in fiscal third quarter. Skype will become part of that, he emphasizes.

The theme for Skype is similar to Office — providing tools bridging overlapping personal and professional lifestyles. Microsoft wants to offer “tools that help you communicate to everybody in your life,” Ballmer says “Skype joins quite naturally. It fits in with work and home.” Stated differently: “People do have one life.” Microsoft wants to “stitch together” home and work lifestyles.

In my earlier analysis of the Skype acquisition, ahead of the video conference, I identified five benefits to Microsoft:

1. Brand affinity and global reach

2. Extending Microsoft’s real-time communications investments

3. Video on Nokia handsets running Windows Phone

4. Keeping the PC relevant

5. 4G networks boosting video’s appeal

Steve Ballmer at Skype announcement

Ballmer’s and Bates’ emphasis on video advertising and bridging work and home lifestyles add two more to the list. But there is another, and this relates to Microsoft’s three-screen strategy: Television. Ballmer describes a situation where someone could participate in a family event from afar, on the TV connected to Xbox using Kinect. While not the same as being there, the video chat would be much more like it before a big-screen TV and motion-response from Kinect. “We’re already on 50 million TVs today,” Bates emphasizes. Kinect and Xbox would be a big next step.

I ended my earlier analysis with two unanswered questions. The first: whether or not Microsoft would continue to offer Skype on multiple platforms or not. “We’re committed to the Skype user base” — now and into the future. Ballmer emphasizes, stating there would be continued support for “non-Microsoft” platforms. Bates describes support for multiple platforms as “absolutely critical.”

The other question is about carrier conflict. Would carriers balk at Windows Phone and Skype together, offering free calls on their networks and choking bandwidth with video? Ballmer says he received calls from several carrier partners this morning, and they are “enthusiastic” about the acquisition. Oh yeah? Well, did they Skype?

Microsoft Exam 70-294 Preparation Guide

Microsoft Exam 70-294 is inevitable for assessing your ability to plan implement & maintain a Microsoft Windows Server 2003 Active Directory infrastructure. This test was published in August 28, 2003, and is more often than not conducted in English and German.

 


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Passing this test signify that you have finished the MCP (Microsoft Certified Professional) guarantee. You also get hold of credit for the MCSE on Windows Server 2003 certification. Candidates who overtake this test meet the criterion for high side view jobs like systems administrator, systems engineer, network administrator, technical hold up engineer, information systems administrator, systems analyst and network psychoanalyst.

Exam Course:
* Managing & Maintaining an Active Directory Infrastructure
* Managing & Maintaining Group Policy
* Planning & Implementing an Active Directory Infrastructure
* Planning & Implementing User, Computer, and Group Strategies
* Planning & Implementing Group Policy

70-294 Passing Tips:
To get ready for this examination, you can get learn materials from the web or bookstores. These are more often than not prepared by experienced IT professionals who are well-informed in all the areas of the exam. Apart from prepare using such study material, you must also teach yourself by captivating part in lab work. Yes, you may get stuck here and there, but you can always get assist from your seniors. This you can do by taking part in forums and group discussions on the web, where you can talk about and share the whole thing related to the test. Then, you will be in a place to learn from others’ mistakes and get better your skills slowly.

You can also make use of 70-294 training kits that are obtainable for download. Even though you may have to spend some money for this, it is yet the best way to get certified smoothly with no wasting time look for books and study fabric.

Googles Chrome OS starts to get real but still falls shy

The all-in-the-cloud OS gains polish as Google prepares for the first Chromebooks to ship, but apps remain awkward

If the rumors are right, Google will announce today at its Google I/O conference that Samsung (and perhaps others) are shipping laptops running Google’s Chrome OS this summer. There’s been a sharp increase in Chrome OS beta updates in the last few weeks, so something is up; Google may be on schedule to deliver the shipping Chrome OS this summer, giving reality to the old “Webtone” promise of Sun Microsystems in which the Web is the operating system and devices simply are portals to it — what we now call cloud computing.

Chrome OS is basically the Chrome 11 Web browser running by itself on a laptop, which InfoWorld.com has dubbed a “Chromebook.” There is no traditional OS like Windows, Linux, or Mac OS X underneath that can run other applications. Everything happens in Chrome OS, and most notions of what a computer provides, such as printer ports and removable storage, simply don’t apply.

 

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HTML5 Deep Dive

A Chromebook has solid-state memory to hold the OS, cache files for when you’re working, and stubs to the Web applications you run (essentially, glorified bookmarks), but everything else resides in the cloud, which is accessed via the Chromebooks’ built-in Wi-Fi or 3G cellular service. Google hopes a lot of that activity will be on its cloud, such as Google Docs, but a Chromebook works with any AJAX-based website (sorry, no ActiveX) or service.

In recent weeks, the updated Chrome OS beta on a prototype Chromebook has become much more responsive and smoother. The betas in December through March definitely had that beta feel and stuttery performance, but not the betas that have been coming since late April. If you use the Chrome browser, you know the Chrome OS experience: simple, spare, capable, and fast.

The Chromebook isn’t just a laptop with a new OS
But without a “real” OS underneath, you really are dependent on the cloud. Printing, for example, requires that you have an ePrint-capable printer (Hewlett-Packard makes a few models, which also work with iPhones and iPads) or route your print jobs through Google’s cloud print service, which basically means through a networked Windows PC or Mac. People print less and less, but the process is clunky and will be more complex than most will find acceptable. It’s probably a plus that fewer and fewer of us have items to print anymore.

Likewise, storage is delivered through the cloud, so you can’t transfer your photos directly via a USB cable or thumb drive to work on them in, say, Picasa. Instead, your camera will need its own wireless connection to transfer the images to a cloud photo service, and you’ll work on them over wireless from your Chromebook. When your’e not using a Wi-Fi connection, you should expect to quickly eat through 3G data plans. Of course, the advantage of cloud-based storage is that your files are available to any device compatible with that service: PCs, Macs, Chromebooks, iPhones, iPads, and Android devices. You don’t have to remember to bring the files once they’re uploaded.