Microsoft is to offer free and paid-for products in a move that is likely to
help nudge enterprise search programs away from being the dominion of premium
providers such as Autonomy and FAST and instead become mainstream corporate
tools.
Microsoft will today post beta versions of its Search Server 2008 software
and is aiming for general availability of full products in the first half of
2008. One version will command a yet-to-be announced fee, even for buyers on
licensing agreements, but the other Express version will be free. Further out,
in the next version of Office, Microsoft plans to add high-end search and
content management capabilities.
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The releases are intended to make searching for information, people and
skills easier through tools that can be quickly configured, said Rob Gray,
Microsoft SharePoint product manager.
“Searching the internet can be like searching for a needle in a haystack but
enterprise search is like searching for one [specific] needle in a haystack full
of needles,” Gray said.
“In internet search, you want people to find information and you have people
to do search engine optimisation and tag content, whereas in the enterprise you
might not want certain people to find certain content at a certain time, and
people aren’t commercially incentivised. We feel enterprise search is still in
its infancy but people have started questioning why they’re paying [large sums]
for these products.”
Microsoft will use capabilities from Site Server for its search tools and
will support the OpenSearch format
for federated search to aggregate results from several internet search engines,
as well as searching internal intranets and file systems. A dedicated server is
not required but systems must be running Windows and either SQL Server or its
free Express sibling.
The effort will take Microsoft up against
Google’s Search
Appliance and Mini, both of which wrap Google search software in a dedicated
server. Another key competitor will be IBM, which last year began offering a
free version of its OmniFind
search software, in partnership with Yahoo, that limits the number of documents
that can be searched.
Like IBM, Microsoft plans to focus on software but will remain open to
hardware vendors that want to create appliances based on its program. Microsoft
said that if customers want on-demand pricing it will react, but it has no
current plans.
Ovum analyst Mike Davis predicted Microsoft will cause “disruptive” change to
the market.
“It’s going to be a very powerful proposition and it’s going to lay down a
challenge to IBM and Google,” he said. “This knocks the bottom out of the
appliance model. It’s a full-function product and, whereas 20 years ago nobody
got fired for buying IBM, today nobody gets fired for buying Microsoft.”
The move comes as analyst firm CMS Watch said enterprise search delivered by
the software-as-a-service model is not breaking the grip of traditional
deployments. Pioneers such as Blossom and Pico “have remained relatively
obscure”, the group said.
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