Microsoft plans to make a substantial showing at the upcoming Open
Source Business Conference, in a continuation of the software giant's
campaign to make nice with open source and support open-source projects on
Windows.
In a blog post, Peter
Galli, open-source community manager at Microsoft, laid out some of what
the company will do at the OSBC event that
runs March 17 to 18 in San Francisco.
For starters, Microsoft will be a Platinum sponsor of the event and will
call on one of its emerging stars to keynote. Stuart McKee, Microsoft's
national technology officer for the United
States, will deliver a keynote on March 18.
According to Galli:
"In his keynote, titled
"Open Source at Microsoft: Meeting customer, developer and partner needs
through a diversified ecosystem," McKee will talk about the opportunities
for open source applications running on and with Microsoft platforms—from
Windows, to SharePoint to Azure—and how increased flexibility and choice for
the consumers of these technologies is good for everyone involved."
Galli added, "As U.S. national technology officer, [McKee] is
responsible for driving a comprehensive set of technical and business
strategies for the U.S. Public Sector State and Local segment."
In short, McKee is something of a big gun for Microsoft. Galli said,
"Prior to joining Microsoft, [McKee] served as the director of the
Washington State Department of Information Services (DIS)
on Governor Gary Locke's executive cabinet. ... [And he] also worked as the vice
president of Global Internet Operations for the Walt Disney Company, where he
directed operations for a number of the Internet's most visible sites,
including ESPN.com, Disney.com, ABCNews.com and Go.com."
Also on March 18, Brian Goldfarb, Microsoft's lead product manager for Web
Platform and Tools, will take part in a panel called, "The Web Is the
Platform," as will Chris Blizzard from Mozilla, Dion Almaer of Palm and
Dave McAllister of Adobe, Galli said.