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Microsoft touts new online store as a netbook complement

By | November 14, 2008, 5:01am PST

Microsoft launched in the U.S. this week its online software store and is touting it as one way for netbook PC users who don’t have optical drives to more easily obtain software.

The Microsoft Store, which opened for business here on November 13, allows users to purchase and download Microsoft hardware and software — games, keyboards, games and gaming consoles, Windows (client and server versions), Office and development tools. It doesn’t stock business applications like SQL Server, System Center, SharePoint Server, etc., which tend to be products purchased via resellers and/or volume-license agreements.

Microsoft Senior Program Manager Trevin Chow highlighted the appeal of electronic software distribution (ESD) — especially for the growing number of netbook users — in a November 13 entry on his personal blog:

(I)n a world where lighter weight laptops, such as  netbooks, are becoming more common, ESD makes things easier when an optical drive isn’t easily accessible. The first thing I do when I setup a new machine at home, is to run Windows update, and download all the freeware I use such as 7-zip. By extending ESD to Microsoft software, we’re able to increase convenience across the board for a variety of customers, regardless of whether they are using a speedy desktop gaming PC, or the latest netbook.”

The Microsoft Store didn’t materialize out of thin air. Microsoft has been operating electronic-distribution sites in the UK, Germany and Korea for some time now.

Microsoft also has been testing the electronic-software-distribution concept for several years via its Windows Marketplace effort. Windows Marketplace is an online store that relies on Microsoft’s “digital locker” technology to “purchase & download hundreds of software titles from multiple resellers.” The digital locker stored customers’ product keys and purchase information so they could backup and reinstall software from a single location.

I’m not sure whether the Microsoft Store will replace Windows Marketplace. (Currently, the Marketplace site is still live.) I’m also not clear whether the Microsoft Store uses the same digital locker technology as Marketplace. I’ve asked Microsoft for more information on these two questions and will update this post once I have answers.

Update: The short answers: Yes, Marketplace is being replaced by the Microsoft Store. And digital locker is going away, too. See the end of this post for full details.

The new Microsoft Store also allows users to re-download and reinstall software they’ve purchased until mainstream support for the product ends. “Typically this is 5 years after the product is released,” said Chow in his blog entry.

Would you be willing to buy Microsoft products via an online store? Any Windows Marketplace users or Microsoft Store users overseas have any previous experience with Microsoft ESD to report?

Here are Microsoft’s answers to my questions, which I received at the end of the day Friday via a company spokesperson:

Does Microsoft plan to do away with Windows Marketplace now that it has launched its own online software store in the U.S.?

With the launch of the Microsoft Store, Windows Marketplace will shut down as an ecommerce site.  Marketplace will transition from an ecommerce and referral site to a static web page that will refer customers to sites such as Microsoft Store, Windows Vista Compatibility Center, and other appropriate destinations.

Does the online store use the same Digital Locker technology that Windows Marketplace pioneered? 

We will keep the Digital Locker service running for at least 9 more months.  In that time, we will send out email and web communications to help customers transition away from the Digital Locker.

Is it fair to call the new Online store the successor to Windows Marketplace, or the next gen of the marketplace?

Yes

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Mary Jo has covered the tech industry for more than 25 years for a variety of publications and Web sites, and is a frequent guest on radio, TV and podcasts, speaking about all things Microsoft-related. She is the author of Microsoft 2.0: How Microsoft plans to stay relevant in the post-Gates era (John Wiley & Sons, 2008).

Disclosure

Mary-Jo Foley

Freelance journalist/blogger Mary Jo Foley has nothing to disclose. WYSIWYG (what you see is what you get). I do not own Microsoft stock or stock in any of its partners or competitors. I have no business ventures that are sponsored by/funded by Microsoft or any of its partners or competitors.

Biography

Mary-Jo Foley

Mary Jo Foley has covered the tech industry for 25 years for a variety of publications, including ZDNet, eWeek and Baseline. She has kept close tabs on Microsoft strategy, products and technologies for the past 10 years. In the late 1990s, she penned the award-winning "At The Evil Empire" column for ZDNet, and more recently the Microsoft Watch blog for Ziff Davis.

Got a tip? Send her an email with your rants, rumors, tips and tattles. Confidentiality guaranteed.

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RE: Microsoft touts new online store as a netbook complement
jackson1984-24316069205748857739440257893812 10th Oct
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computer
loyddd 14th Nov 2008
forum

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this is good
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Live Mesh App Catalog
odenni 14th Nov 2008
I'm waiting for them to do something like this with the Live Mesh Application Catalog, or perhaps just tie it into this store. Buy your apps once and have them synchronize automatically to every device in your mesh.
"allows users to purchase and download Microsoft hardware and software"

But, it is funny that it took MS so long to figure out that the way that software is distributed is changing.
0 Votes
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Microsoft on line HW, SW store
Brian6 15th Nov 2008
It has been about 14 years form the first windows 95 market distibution. I am following up with Microsoft HW online store. Good for consumers, Good luck
0 Votes
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Another great place not to shop
Ole Man 16th Nov 2008
We can thank Microsoft again for nothing..... unless you happen to love product keys, activation, WGA, SPP, DRM, secret forced updates and/or system configuration changes (like sneakily turning automatic updates back on), sky-high prices, BSA, outrageous EULA restrictions and Mafioso methods of enforcement, and/or other Microsoft malfeasance. THEN you have a LOT to be thankful for.

Aren't you glad it's time for Thanksgiving?
Less stress on your part.
0 Votes
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you can always go to Windows Live
tech_walker 18th Nov 2008
Its all free and better than anything available on Linux. I know secretly you can't wait!
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Not only Microsoft online store!
Apparelady 27th Nov 2008
I can recommend you and your readers taking a close look at FastCommerce.com. It is a complete e-commerce platform that functions as an easy to use, low cost, high performance e-commerce application.

It puts together so many features for a non-techie. Automatically secured shopping cart, for FREE. Automatic submissions to Google Shopping, for Free. In fact, it is entirely free for the first fifty products.

http://www.fastcommerce.com

Great templates (free) full back office management for customizing shipping, payment and more. By simply signing up and signing in, you automatically generate a professional webstore, and back end tools to run it.

http://www.fastcommerce.com

And when your business grows, it is only $30 a month for two thousand products and no contract. You don't have to sign up and spend money to get your business going.
I can recommend you and your readers taking a close look at FastCommerce.com. It is a complete e-commerce platform that functions as an easy to use, low cost, high performance e-commerce application.

It puts together so many features for a non-techie. Automatically secured shopping cart, for FREE. Automatic submissions to Google Shopping, for Free. In fact, it is entirely free for the first fifty products.

http://www.fastcommerce.com

Great templates (free) full back office management for customizing shipping, payment and more. By simply signing up and signing in, you automatically generate a professional webstore, and back end tools to run it.

http://www.fastcommerce.com

And when your business grows, it is only $30 a month for two thousand products and no contract. You don't have to sign up and spend money to get your business going.
Microsoft is using the ?Titan? name to refer to a forthcoming CRM application-development platform that it is building out. Developers sexy lingeriecan build customized apps on top of this platform ? even apps that will run on Microsoft?s own servers.
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Microsoft is using the ?Titan? name to refer to a forthcoming CRM application-development platform that it is building out. Developers http://www.dear-lover.com can build customized apps on top of this platform ? even apps that will run on Microsoft?s own servers.
0 Votes
+ -
Microsoft is using the ?Titan? name to refer to a forthcoming CRM application-development platform that it is building out
0 Votes
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RE: Microsoft touts new online store as a netbook complement
jackson1984-24316069205748857739440257893812 10th Oct
Without doubt... i also definitely want to take a look at out this new locale, your idea is g nfl jerseys ood.

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