June 18, 2009 at 5:21 PM
Salesforce.com was in Seattle on Thursday promoting its
cloud-computing product ahead of Microsoft's anticipated
announcements this summer about its competing product Azure.
Chief Executive Mark Benioff gave a speech at the Grand Hyatt in
downtown Seattle to customers in an event called CloudForce,
which is touring the globe.
While better known for its Web-based software that helps
sales teams track and close deals, Salesforce.com is moving
aggressively into cloud computing and creating a platform where
software developers can make applications and deploy them from
servers that SalesForce.com runs, rather than on the PC or a
company's server. It has beaten Microsoft to the market and is
already selling developers on the cloud product.
For instance, Starbucks approached SalesForce.com shortly
after Christmas with an idea: Create an online campaign and Web
site called Pledge 5 to encourage community service, launching
the same day as the presidential inauguration. Also, Starbucks
CEO Howard Schultz was scheduled to be on Oprah to promote it,
so the site had to be built tough enough to withstand hundreds
of thousands of visitors. Systems integrator Apperio built the
application, which allows users to seek out volunteer
opportunities in their neighborhood, in three weeks.
In another example, a small Bay Area company that
manufactures kitchen countertops from recycled glass, Vetrazzo,
talked about how they managed their supply chain, each
countertop slab and travel expenses with custom programs that
one developer built on Salesforce.com's cloud platform.
Amazon.com is also a player in cloud computing. Microsoft is
expected to make announcements about how it will charge people
to use Azure, its cloud product, this summer.
Sharon Chan
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/microsoftpri0/2009356866_
Salesforcecom_pitches_cloud_computing_in_microsoft.html