Microsoft exec touts ALM platform's value

07.02.2006
S. "Soma" Somasegar is corporate vice president of the Developer Division at Microsoft. This division is responsible for the various developer tools projects at Microsoft such as Visual Studio and the new application lifecycle management platform, Visual Studio 2005 Team System and Visual Studio 2005 Team Foundation Server. Somasegar also is a frequent blogger and has been at Microsoft since 1989.

InfoWorld Editor at Large Paul Krill spoke with Somasegar about Microsoft's developer platform and blogging, following Somasegar's keynote presentation at the VSLive Conference in San Francisco last week.

InfoWorld: How critical is ALM (application lifecycle management) to Microsoft? You just discussed the Team System and Team Foundation Server products, which provide that.

Somasegar: ALM is sort of a big thing that we are focused on. The reason why we started with Team System is, if I had to sort of summarize it, it's as follows: Historically we've been focused on the professional developer, the individual developer, and we want to make sure that the individual developer is highly, highly productive. But the kind of problems that we are trying to solve in software [and] applications is becoming more and more complex.

We really see teams of people having to come together. Sometimes, we are all in one location, sometimes we are spread across parts of the world. When these teams come together, they need to work collaboratively so that they can have an automated workflow and they can be highly productive as a team, not just [as] individuals. So in addition to making the individual developer productive, we also wanted to focus on the entire team, the different roles within the team, starting from design all the way to delivery of the product and deployment. How do we think about the entire lifecycle [and] employ the set of tools that work together well in an integrated fashion? That's sort of been a big thing for us and that's the reason we started Team System and Team Foundation Server.

InfoWorld: Other companies are providing ALM tools, such as Rational and Borland. What are you going to be doing that they're not providing? Would you say you have more of a Windows focus than they have?