Microsoft
has quietly postponed its
Professional
Developers Conference that was scheduled to take place in early October in
Los Angeles.
The company updated its website for the event on Thursday, claiming that the
show would overwhelm developers as they prepare for forthcoming Microsoft
launches.
Microsoft is currently preparing products including
Windows
Server 2008, SQL Server 'Katmai', Visual Studio 'Orcas' and the
Silverlight
rich internet application programming platform.
The software giant is to "reschedule" the Professional Developers Conference,
but did not disclose a new date.
Microsoft uses the conferences to present major platform changes that will
arrive in one to two years.
Previous shows have unveiled the .Net platform, the failed Hailstorm identity
project as well as future versions of Office and Windows.
Greg DeMichillie, lead analyst at
Directions
on Microsoft, doubts that the company is giving the true reasons for the
delay.
"This does not make sense," he told
vnunet.com.
"They knew that it was poorly timed when they put [the show] together six months
ago."
DeMichillie speculated that Microsoft is preparing to unveil a major new
technology but failed to meet internal development deadlines.
The company could be preparing a development platform for its Live internet
application platform, for instance.
Live currently offers about 15 services including online messenger, maps and
email, but they lack integration, common APIs and development tools.
A common development platform would attract developers and help Microsoft
compete with
Google and
Yahoo.
Microsoft may also have delayed the show to avoid distracting developers from
rolling out Windows Vista.
Several companies have stated publicly that they will delay rolling out the
operating system until the end of this year, when Microsoft is expected to
release its Service Pack 1 update that fixes early bugs and contains additional
device drivers.
DeMichillie suggested that it is less likely that the postponed conference
would have delved into a future version of Windows because Vista was launched
only this January.
"It would be unusual for [Microsoft] to pull together any plans in eight
months," he said.
Microsoft has stated that the next version of Windows is
scheduled for
2009, but has not issued an official timetable.
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