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July 2008

What You Need to Know About Microsoft Live Mesh


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In its beta form, however, Live Mesh offers only a small subset of the projected functionality. Three basic services are available:

Web-based desktop. Exposed as a device in your “mesh” of connected devices, the Live Desktop is a Web-based version of the Windows Vista desktop that you access from any Web browser, complete with RSS-style “news” updates (really an ongoing stream of information about any updates to your mesh), ways to remotely connect to your linked PCs, and access to the contents of your shared folders.

Folder sharing. As with Microsoft’s FolderShare service, Live Mesh offers folder sharing capabilities between any and all linked PCs (and, later, other devices) and the Live Desktop. As documents and other files in these shared folders are changed (or added or deleted), any other PCs and devices that are linked to the shares are updated as well, automatically and almost instantly. These synchronized folders reside online, in the Web-based Live Desktop, and on linked PCs in your mesh.

Remote PC access. Utilizing a browserbased Remote Desktop-like experience, Live Mesh lets you remotely access the desktop of any linked PC, assuming it’s on and connected to the Internet. It does this without any configuration of any kind on either end of the connection, and it even works with non-business versions of Windows, including XP Home and Vista Home Premium, which don’t natively include Remote Desktop functionality.

As noted previously, Microsoft intends to be aggressive about supporting non-Microsoft devices. The theory here is that most individuals today don’t actually use just a single device. Instead, people increasingly use multiple PCs (and Macs) both at home and at work. They own and access desktop PCs and laptop computers. They have smart phones, MP3 players, digital cameras, and other mobile devices. And they have a host of online personas via email and IM services, social networking memberships, e-commerce sites, and other online communities. As users, we manage these disparate components separately and with great difficulty. Microsoft is seeking to take this heterogeneous computing environment and make it centrally manageable.

Live Mesh and Businesses
Coming as it does out of the Windows Live group at Microsoft, the initial beta version of Live Mesh is indeed somewhat consumer focused. But don’t let that dampen your expectations for its future. In October 2008, at its Professional Developers Conference (PDC) 2008, Microsoft will release the first version of its Live Mesh Software Development Kit to developers, and the company expects Live Mesh to form the basis for a new generation of software services that will provide value across all of its customer segments. Most tellingly, perhaps, Live Mesh is seen as a major platform initiative, akin to Windows, Windows Server, and Office, which will drive users towards cloud computing in the coming years.

Even now, Live Mesh’s remote desktop and folder sharing functionality is sure to prove interesting to small and mediumsized businesses. And though true enterprise management of these and other coming services is currently only on the horizon, it’s not hard to imagine that Microsoft will begin incorporating Mesh-based services in all of its product lines.

Recommendations
Live Mesh is, perhaps, the most forwardlooking project to emerge out of Redmond since the first version of Windows NT back in 1993. As with NT, Live Mesh is a repudiation of past software initiatives at Microsoft and a chance to start over with a modern platform that’s unburdened by the compatibility issues facing its mainstream computing platforms of the day. Live Mesh works with and integrates into core Microsoft solutions such as Windows, of course. But it also can stand alone as a cloud computing platform that offers value far beyond the confines of the software giant’s core markets. In the enterprise, Live Mesh is currently more vision than reality, but developers especially should become familiar with the platform as soon as possible. Stay tuned: As Microsoft evolves this platform into something more applicable to IT needs, I’ll keep you informed.

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