I’ve just read a post by The Other James Brown entitled “S+S – Lifeline of SaaS?“. As you may well imagine, I’m not a happy bunny with the implications in the title. Nevermind the content.
For anyone not familiar with the S+S concept, check out this Microsoft video on youtube that James linked to:
Essentially it seems to mean “We’ll still sell you software to install on your computer, but it’ll make use of some web based services.” OK, fine. Nothing wrong with that as a concept. But I don’t get how it has anything to do with Software as a service. It’s just not related.
It’s just a similar-sounding acronym designed by the old guard as a way of looking like they’re doing something to embrace, address or adopt SaaS.
As James implies on another post on his blog, S+S isn’t anything new – it’s just being pragmatic.
His closing paragraph on that post says
The future of Cloud computing is very bright, but it will only really shine when we bring together examples of how it can be used across multiple devices consumed by multiple applications.
I can’t disagree with that. If we’re talking about providing a local app to read/write data offline to later synch with the cloud when you are back online, then great. There’s plenty of times we’ve been asked if we can do something like that for users of our online accounting software. But to make the locally installed software central or essential to the online offering is a complete nonsense.
Tags: Cloud Computing, Microsoft, S+S, SaaS
This entry was posted on Sunday, February 1st, 2009 at 9:08 pm and is filed under Cloud Computing / SaaS, Technology, Uncategorized. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

I suppose the correct acronym for S+S should be S+SaaS. It is not trying to replace SaaS, it is just trying to say there is also a place for Software consuming those services and running components locally. Do you want to write emails in a browser or use something like Outlook? – Depends on what I am doing. Do I want the email server in the cloud – again there are pro’s and con’s for both. The title of the post was in response to another post I mentioned called ‘Google Gears – A lifeline for SaaS?’, I think that getting a browser to run offline is OK for some apps, but others would do better with a dedicated client app. Microsoft now has quite an extensive range of SaaS – http://www.microsoft.com/online and http://crm.dynamics.com and I think it is made a more powerful proposition with the integration with software running locally. Thanks for the comment!
[...] of the software. This was quite a neat implementation of their Software + Services strategy that I was dismissive of back in February. So the accounting software is locally installed but the Payroll calculations were done externally [...]