« Thoughts on the 'hung' parliament in the UK, and what the LibDems should be doing with their new-found influence | Main| Hyperion Records launches new classical music search »

SharePoint handcuffs?

Category sharepoint microsoft

I've just spotted an article by Matt Asay that CNET published a few days ago. It highlights that SharePoint is as much a strategy for dominating the market as it is a technology.

Steve Ballmer calls it the next big "operating system" from Microsoft. It is designed to bind enterprise customers to Microsoft's processes, just as Microsoft is starting to lose its grasp on file format lock-in. Microsoft could give away its file format lock-in if it can just get content into its proprietary repository (i.e., SharePoint). At that point, it won't matter whether the files are JPEG, Open Document Format or PDF--Microsoft will own that content and, hence, the customer's future.

SharePoint is the future of lock-in, and Microsoft is doing everything it can to enable its partners to bind companies with it.

I've nothing against somebody investing in SharePoint ... as long as you know what you're getting yourself into...