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Microsoft folds interoperability team into open-source subsidiary

Company has created a new wholly owned subsidiary, Microsoft Open Technologies, that will focus on working with the open-source community.

Mary Jo Foley
Mary Jo Foley has covered the tech industry for 30 years for a variety of publications, including ZDNet, eWeek and Baseline. She is the author of Microsoft 2.0: How Microsoft plans to stay relevant in the post-Gates era (John Wiley & Sons, 2008). She also is the cohost of the "Windows Weekly" podcast on the TWiT network.
Mary Jo Foley
2 min read
Jean Paoli

Microsoft is moving its Interoperability Strategy team into a new, wholly-owned subsidiary, the company announced on April 12.

The new group, known as Microsoft Open Technologies, will be headed by Jean Paoli, who is currently the general manager of the team. It will be comprised of about 50 to 75 full-time and part-time employees and contractors. A board consisting of Microsoft managers from other business units will oversee the new entity.

Paoli said in a blog post on the Microsoft Port 25 blog that the idea behind the creation of the new subsidiary is to facilitate Microsoft's relationships with the open-source community and developers. He said the new structure will make it easier and faster for Microsoft to iterate and participate in grass-roots efforts and work with the community.

At the same time, Paoli emphasized that individual teams at Microsoft will continue to work with open-source vendors and developers; Microsoft Open Technologies won't be the only conduit for Microsoft's relationship with the open-source world or with groups like the Outercurve Foundation (the former Microsoft Codeplex Foundation subsidiary) and the Apache Software Foundation.

From Paoli's blog post:

The (Open Technologies) subsidiary provides a new way of engaging in a more clearly defined manner. This new structure will help facilitate the interaction between Microsoft's proprietary development processes and the company's open innovation efforts and relationships with open source and open standards communities.

A Microsoft spokesperson said that this is not a first or an unusual arrangement and that Microsoft has many wholly owned subsidiaries. (I'm trying to come up with a few to offer as examples. Anyone?)

Update: It seems some of Microsoft's acquisitions, like Great Plains, Sybari Software, and PlaceWare, at least at some point in their history, also have been wholly-owned Microsoft subsidiaries.

What do you think of this latest move by Microsoft? Any additional thoughts/guesses as to why it might be advantageous for the Redmondians to make its Interoperability team a separate entity?

This story was originally published as "Microsoft folds its Interoperability Strategy team into new subsidiary" on ZDNet's All About Microsoft blog.