This morning is the kickoff for Microsoft’s annual developer conference, with keynotes highlighting the next year in Microsoft. In the last several years we’ve seen the Redmond based company highlight upcoming technologies and platforms that it is hoping developers will target, from bots to personal assistants, but 2018 is a different year, and we’re seeing a different Microsoft. With the recent demotion of the EVP for Windows and Devices, Terry Myerson, we’re seeing a push from the company to develop around Windows, rather than for it.

Microsoft’s new mantra is “Intelligent Cloud and Intelligent Edge” which focuses on the emphasis of leveraging cloud computing for much of our needs now, but also with the emphasis on IoT powering the Intelligent Edge. There’s little doubt that Microsoft was too slow to react to the move to smartphone computing, but they are determined to not miss out on IoT, and it’s hard to blame them. Microsoft is quoting the expectation for there to be 20 billion smart devices around the globe by 2020. To put that in perspective, Microsoft stated today that they’ve reached the 700 million level for Windows 10 active devices, which is below their original targets, but still a huge number, but it’s dwarfed by what’s coming with IoT.

Microsoft announced today that they will be open sourcing their Azure IoT Edge Runtime allowing their customers to “modify, debug, and have more transparency and control for edge applications”. They’ve been a big supporter of open source in the last several years, so at this point it shouldn’t be as big of a surprise as it is, but they clearly see the future of this market and want to ensure they leave no barriers to uptake.

They’ve also announced that Custom Vision will run on Azure IoT edge, bringing the Azure Cognitive Service for vision to the edge, so that devices on the edge will be able to use vision to make decisions and take action without a cloud connection. They’re expecting to bring more Azure Cognitive Services to IoT in the next several months.

Microsoft is also partnering with Qualcomm to create a developer kit for Vision AI running on Azure IoT Edge, to make it easier to develop IoT products which rely on the camera. They are also partnering with DJI, which is the world’s largest drone company, to create a new SDK for Windows 10 PCs.

The other side of the coin is the Intelligent Cloud side, where Microsoft is promoting new features coming to Azure, such as Project Kinect for Azure, which packages several sensors, including their new depth camera, with onboard compute. There’s a new Speech Devices SDK which builds on what you’d see in Cortana for speech recognition, and they are showing off a preview to Project Brainwave, which is an architecture for deep neural net processing which is now available on Azure and on the edge.

While much of what they are talking about has little to do with lowly PC, there are still a few nuggets of interesting information for Windows 10 and the PC. Microsoft is developing a “Your Phone” experience which will allow you to access data on your phone from your PC, so you’ll be able to access your text messages, or quickly drag a photo from your phone to your PC as well. This is something they tried to achieve with Windows Phone, but with the limited uptake of that, it never made it very far.

Microsoft Launcher, which is an Android launcher, will now support Enterprise customers for access to LOB applications via Intune, and users of Microsoft Launcher on Android will be able to leverage the new Windows 10 Timeline feature to access your recently used data from your phone on your PC. This will also be coming in a more limited form to iOS if you use Microsoft Edge on iOS, which I would assume is a pretty small percentage of iOS users.

Windows 10 is also getting an official name for the new tabbed applications we’ve seen in the Windows Insider Program. Sets will allow you to open multiple instances of your apps in tabs, just like you would use your browser. This seems like a great idea and it’s amazing it’s not come already, but in theory it will be in the next update for Windows 10 due this fall.

This is the new Microsoft. They have seen great success with their cloud products, and are not so subtly transitioning away from their legacy products, and as such, there’s less to talk about on the PC side than there used to be. It’s definitely helped their share price.

Source: Microsoft Build

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  • plopke - Monday, May 7, 2018 - link

    At this point why does Microsoft not fork android like Amazon does for their platforms and keep android compatibility. They have a store, their core programs are offered for Android but nobody is selling a Microsoft Services orientated phone , since they chickened out again.
  • ಬುಲ್ವಿಂಕಲ್ ಜೆ ಮೂಸ್ - Monday, May 7, 2018 - link

    "why does Microsoft not fork android like Amazon does?"
    --------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Why?
    Google just lost their Android appeal with Oracle and might now owe $BAZILLIONS$

    I think Microsoft would rather use a Legitimate O.S. and then saddle it with illegal Spyware
    and malware they call DRM with a License that is Null and Void!

    The Courts will continue to go along with the Microsoft scam as long as they get a piece of the take

    Not so much with Android
  • zeusk - Monday, May 7, 2018 - link

    I'll get some of whatever you're smoking.
  • smilingcrow - Monday, May 7, 2018 - link

    Injecting more like, directly into the part of the body where the brain 'usually' resides.
  • StevoLincolnite - Tuesday, May 8, 2018 - link

    I too enjoy walking through quantum mirrors to see what is happening in various parallel universes.
  • wumpus - Monday, May 7, 2018 - link

    Why would anybody want Microsoft Android? It isn't like they can "embrace, extend, and extinguish" in the mobile market.

    Microsoft has released its Linux distro. Presumably used by anyone developing for Azure and wanting a "backup for the cloud".
  • nikon133 - Monday, May 7, 2018 - link

    Sadly, Android still doesn't play well with Outlook.com. Outlook app works fine but syncing contacts and calendar to Android's native contacts and calendar is broken. I'm presuming this is still because of Google dropping EAS support from Android for personal email (O365 should be working fine)... however, I've been using Hotmail/Outlook.com as my personal email for over a decade and it really works fine with all my other Windows tablets/laptops/desktops, so I'm not dropping it just because Google would rather I use Gmail.

    Thus I'd rather MS gets closer to Apple, since it looks like it is iPhone for me, once I give up on my Lumia.
  • smilingcrow - Monday, May 7, 2018 - link

    Moving from using my own domain for email to outlook.com email addresses is the biggest IT blunder I have made for ages or ever.
    Their spam filter is terrible and you can't turn it off.
    I hardly get any spam but get so many false positives with Outlook.com that I have to manually check all the spam folders weekly.
    I made the change about 3 years ago before it was so clear how much MS have lost the plot as otherwise I wouldn't have trusted them.
    Terrible company but my only other options for DAW usage is Apple which is a non starter.
  • StevoLincolnite - Tuesday, May 8, 2018 - link

    Outlook is great for me.
    My main email, fire fighting email, work email, emergency services email... All neat and tidy and just works.
  • Alexvrb - Tuesday, May 8, 2018 - link

    This keeps coming up. Let me ask you a couple of questions. Why are there so few successful forks of Android these days? What killed most of them off? Does Amazon's FireOS have Google Play? Why not?

    Look up Google licensing for GMS. If you fork the OS you don't get crap for apps. Even FireOS falls well behind, and that's with all Amazon's muscle establishing a second storefront. Better yet they built that LONG before Google went iron fist and made things even harder. But again, it's still inferior.

    The only thing that might enable a future competitor from MS is if PWAs are universally embraced. Then they won't have to convince devs to write apps that are capable of targeting Windows. They can just submit their PWAs. I would love to see that happen, WM10 was my favorite platform, but a lot of people needed access to "must have" apps and thus would not touch it.

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