Microsoft.community - RC Almost Baked
After several months of work, changing dependancies, a couple designs, and a handful of UI attempts, we are getting ready to release a Beta of the community platform we have been working on (Codename: Athens Microsoft.community).
Athens Microsoft.community is made up of three pillars, Discovery Services, Rapport Services, and Discussion Services.
Discovery Services enable the discoverability of useful content. One of the first forrays into this territory is by enabling social tagging and bookmarking. We have built a frontend for this service called Tagspace.
Tagspace allows you to tag and book mark web-based content. For our beta it is limited to Microsoft content, and a few select others. Over time we will open it up to enable you to tag more and more content across the Wild, Wild, Web. The original Tagspace beta, launched a few months ago, is up currently, and will be replaced by the new beta soon.
Discussion Services is a service platform to enable threaded discussion. We are currently building two frontends for this, Forums and Blogs, which will ultimately replace the current forums.microsoft.com and blogs.msdn.com / blogs.technet.com.
Both Forums and Blogs are clients of the Discovery Services (Tagging), enabling the sytem, the publisher, the author, and the community to tag content. Additionally, we will eventually be enabling toggling between threaded view and flat view of the conversations, as well as offline views of the content. Currently we are enabling RSS feeds of all threads, enabling you to subscribe to virtually anything.
Through the use of tagging you will eventually be able to create views of virtual forums - forums that only exist in the context you define. This really changes how you can use forums. Instead of being stuck with the forums we define, you can define your own to pull in messages from all appropriate forums. For example, you could build a forum view of "SQL", "C#" and "Beginner". You would see all threads that have been tagged with these three tags, which could include messages from any of the C# forums, any of the SQL forums, beginner forums, or others. You no longer need to figure out where to look; you tell us what you want to see...and you can susbscribe to an RSS feed of the virtual forum.
Lastly, but certainly not leastly (real word...it is now) is the Rapport Services. This is really one of the foundation blocks for the rest of the platform. The Rapport services enable a consistent user experience across all of the Microsoft.community platform. The system is authentication agnostic (i.e. not tied to Passport or ASP.NET Forms authentication), but can support nearly any authentication system. Regardless of the authentication entry point we can support a single user entity accross the system.
Additionally, we have built a frontend for the reputation aspects of Rapport Services, Claimspce.
Claimspace enables you to make a claim that you can use anywhere on the Wild, Wild, Web. The claims can be embedded anywhere using an IFRAME (in Forums and Blogs we have tools to easily enable this). For example, you could make a claim to go along with an answer you provided to a question on a forums. You maight claim "This is a technically accurate answer." Other members in the community will be able to agree, disagree, or vote that your claim is irrelevant. Over time you will develop your community reputation by making claims that others agree with. If, for example, you have claimed "This post is technically accurate" 50 times, and 1,000 people have agreed with you, that adds to your credibility when people see your posts.
I want to thank the entire Codename: Athens Microsoft.community Team. They have all contributed greatly to this project. We have a great team - if you come across them, thank them too.
We should have the beta live by the end of next week, or early the week after. I will post the URLs when we are live.
The Codename: Athens Microsoft.community Team:
Alan Griver, Ben Martin, Bill Long, Brent Serbus, Brian Hsi, Carl Prothman, Dave Morehouse, David Waddleton, Don Tan, Eric Mahlberg, Hua-Tao Zhang (Worksoft), Huong Nguyen, Jana Carter, Jason McCullough, Ji Zhang, Korby Parnell, Krishnavenamma Kailasam, Lisa Ambler, Marshall Lin, Mike Barta, Robert Rebholz, Russ Nemhauser, Sandy Khaund, Syed Sohail, Taylor Parsons, Tim Shakarian (TSHAK), Vikas Ahuja, Xander Sherry.
Comments
Anonymous
March 29, 2007
Is this built on top of Community Server, or are you guys moving away from that platform?Anonymous
March 29, 2007
The comment has been removedAnonymous
March 29, 2007
The comment has been removedAnonymous
March 29, 2007
Codename: Athens is not built on Community Server.Anonymous
March 29, 2007
The comment has been removedAnonymous
March 29, 2007
Joe: There are currently no plans to make Codename: Athens a boxed product. When we designed Athens, we intentionally made it a service-based platform so that we could open up the services. We haven't decided yet how much we will expose them - other than we are not exposing the services during the beta. I wouldn't expect that we will ever make this a hosted solution for the public. It will likely be limited to Microsoft properties and select partners/3rd parties, but you never know...Anonymous
March 29, 2007
its some time ago where i lost Doug Sevens track (CodeZone). But now he seems to be back. A team of 30Anonymous
March 30, 2007
How is this different from C9? and the promised next version of Channel9?Anonymous
March 30, 2007
Doug Seven (someone I actually interviewed with at one point. Really cool guy) has just announced...Anonymous
March 30, 2007
It appears that there is a new community platform from Microsoft on the horizon. A beta of the product,Anonymous
March 30, 2007
When I left the developer division a number of months ago, people were curious as to why. I explainedAnonymous
March 30, 2007
Alan posted a comment to my post, pointing me to his blog, where he provides a great detailed explanation...Anonymous
March 30, 2007
I was informed that I must refer to this project as Microsoft.community (the real name for it). Apparently Codename: Athens was already in use (even though we still call it that around here) :) Edits have been made above to reflect this.Anonymous
March 30, 2007
Microsoft now wants to go against one of their biggest supporter, Telligent has always been a top supportedAnonymous
March 31, 2007
Does this also support NNTP clients?Anonymous
April 01, 2007
As many of you know, I joined the Microsoft Community Technologies team a few months ago. In particular,...Anonymous
April 02, 2007
blog bits Telligenti Adonis Bitar with a Golden Nugget on how to increase the number of item displayedAnonymous
April 02, 2007
Lots of chatter about Microsoft's Athens-renamed-Microsoft.Community community platform announced byAnonymous
April 02, 2007
The comment has been removedAnonymous
April 03, 2007
A lot of things happening in the .NET world these days. While going through my unread RSS Feeds I summarizeAnonymous
April 09, 2007
After having a look at the main page of the site and the relevant site overlays on Google Analytics IAnonymous
April 13, 2007
There is a strong feeling about NNTP, personally that argument is mis directed as one for NNTP, whenAnonymous
April 15, 2007
There is a strong feeling about NNTP, personally that argument is mis directed as one for NNTP, when...Anonymous
April 19, 2007
In early June, we will launch a new social software service for technical professionals called ClaimspaceAnonymous
April 20, 2007
Korby has posted a great deal of information about our xClaim effort (part of the Rapport Service I bloggedAnonymous
September 07, 2007
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