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4/15/2008
In a shot across Microsoft's bow, Google and Salesforce.com have integrated some of their hosted solutions.
Customers using Salesforce.com's customer relationship management (CRM) solution now have access to the Google Apps office productivity suite within the Salesforce.com platform. The new combined solution is called "Salesforce.com for Google Apps." It's available free to Salesforce.com customers.
This integrated solution now squares off with Microsoft Dynamics CRM Online, Microsoft's own hosted platform. Dynamics CRM Online is already integrated with Microsoft Office productivity suite applications, including the Microsoft Outlook scheduler and e-mail program.
A New York Times story today quoted Microsoft's CRM General Manager Brad Wilson, who indicated that the Google-Salesforce.com integration just "validates" Microsoft's approach.
"Salesforce has belatedly recognized that it is important to link CRM apps to productivity tools," Wilson added, according to the Times' account, titled "Google and Salesforce Join to Fight Microsoft."
Salesforce.com's CRM application integrates with Google App's calendar, e-mail and instant messaging applications. Users can have their e-mail activity automatically tracked within Salesforce.com's CRM application, preserving communications associated with sales activities. Documents and proposals can be shared using the collaborative aspects of Google Apps.
Sometime in the summer of this year, Salesforce.com plans to offer a supported version of Google Apps along with a supported version of Salesforce.com for $10 per user per month, according to an online presentation given by Marc Benioff, founder and CEO of Salesforce.com. The presentation, officially unveiling the new integrated application, was available on Salesforce.com's home page.
Benioff said that Salesforce.com customers have been requesting integration of Google's applications, such as its mapping capability, since as early as 2006. He added that the "standard bearers of the industry" have not come forward to meet such demands.
Eric Schmidt, Google's chairman and CEO, also provided comments during the official Google-Salesforce.com announcement. He added some context, describing how "cloud computing" is supplanting "the old model that all of us grew up with." He noted that while the software-as-a-service concept has been worked on for more than 20 years, "we now know what it takes to build this next generation of services."
Salesforce.com -- founded nine years ago -- has been at the forefront of this cloud computing effort, Schmidt added.
"They figured out first with Salesforce automation, and now with the broader platform play, how to actually self-service and even do the traditional service level agreement," he said. "That model is the defining model of the cloud computing age because it's how people will make money."
Microsoft's Chairman Bill Gates spent a lot of time Wednesday talking about "empowering the workers" at the Microsoft's 12th annual CEO Summit 2008 in Redmond, WA, where he gave a keynote speech. However, Gates wasn't talking about political revolutions or even pay raises for office workers before the CEO crowd. Instead, he was referring to new software technologies that can better enable collaboration, social networking and decision-making on the job.
Microsoft and some independent security researchers had the blogosphere buzzing Wednesday over a series of denunciations after one company claimed that the Vista operating system was more vulnerable to malware and other exploits than previous operating systems.
Blackboard Inc. today announced Blackboard Sync, an application that allows students to receive course updates and communicate with classmates while logged on to Facebook.
Technology solutions work best when they well together. That is why the nonprofit group IMS Global Learning Consortium is developing learning tools interoperability standards for the education technology community...
A consultancy to the U.K. government has forwarded complaints about Microsoft's licensing and interoperability practices to the European Commission (EC), according to an announcement issued by the Becta consulting group Monday.
The JavaOne conference, held May 6-9 in San Francisco, brought together developers from industry, education, and other markets, filling the Moscone Convention Center with a wide array of sessions and exhibits for the open source Java developer community.