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Google Apps for Education Loses Ground to Microsoft's Live@Edu
After trumpeting a chain of highly publicized victories for its Google Apps for Education suite of online
applications, the Mountain View search giant lost ground to its latest arch rival: Microsoft. Live@Edu,
Microsoft’s competing product against Google Apps for Education (which rolled out in Los Angeles in October
2009 and Oregon in April), has become the cloud-based solution of choice for the Kentucky Department of
Education. Live@Edu brings streamlined, low cost, scalable computing services for the state’s 700,000
students and faculty. That includes cloud-based email accounts and calendars for each user, 10 gigabytes
of mail storage, 25 gigabytes of file storage and access to online collaboration tools, such as document
sharing, video chat, instant messaging and mobile e-mail. And the price for all of this? Zero dollars.
In fact, the Department is stating that the move to Live@Edu is saving them $6.3 million in costs. Not bad.
But why are these two tech giants battling it out so fiercely for the opportunity to give away free services?
Both Live@Edu and Google Apps for Education are advertising free, which means there is no means for directly
profiting from the move. But even if advertising revenues were on the table, they’d be small potatoes
compared to what’s really at stake here: the hearts and minds of the next generation of web users. The battle
for tech loyalties is as ideological and hard fought as the Cold War between communism and capitalism and the
currencies by which victory is won are much the same. Namely, spheres of influence and indoctrination. By
giving 700,000 students and faculty a free Microsoft Live account and an educational directive for becoming
familiar with Microsoft’s cloud computing products, Microsoft has all but solidified those individuals as
lifelong Microsoft users. Three, five or ten years down the road, it’s far more likely that citizens of
Kentucky will Bing before they Google.
Aside from that, the smooth operations in Kentucky accomplish the increasingly difficult task of making Microsoft
look good. While Google and Apple have experienced their own share of public embarrassment (Job’s network
difficulties during the iPhone 4 presentation and Google’s admission of a privacy snafu regarding Street View),
as the incumbent king of software, Microsoft regularly runs the risk of seeming irrelevant. By rolling out what
is being called the largest cloud deployment in the U.S. over a single weekend, Microsoft proves that the old
man’s still got it.
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