MICROSOFT LAUNCHES SOCIAL LEARNING NETWORK
Microsoft has attempted to get into the social
networking space by launching its own: So.cl, which is specifically
aimed at students.
According to the firm, So.cl combines social
networking with web browsing and search in order to improve the way
students learn. It intends to help students better search for
educational information and share the results of their findings more
quickly, with others.
The network was created by Microsoft’s Fuse labs in
conjunction with the University of Washington, Syracuse University and
New York University. It has been tested within the universities in a
closed beta trial but has now been launched publicly.
Eden Zoller, principal analyst at Ovum, explained
that So.cl is not a fully-fledged social network and although it is too
early to suggest it could rival to Google+ or Facebook, the chances
are it never will.
“The fact that So.cl is targeted at students echoes
Facebook’s beginnings and has made many assume it is a Facebook clone.
But So.cl is, as Microsoft stresses, an experiment and designed to be
layer on existing social networks,” she explained. “Microsoft is being
sensible in positioning So.cl in this way. The opposite approach of
Google, which entered social networking all guns blazing with a full on
service, is having modest success.”
Zoller added that So.cl is powered by Bing and is
about social search and sharing, with little value add beyond this and
nowhere near the kind of features offered by Facebook or Google+.
“If So.cl gains significant traction, which we think
unlikely, then Microsoft might well ramp up the service with
additional features, particularly mobile where Microsoft can tap into
the Windows Phone platform. But for now So.cl will most likely remain
an experiment at heart, which is no bad thing and Microsoft will still
walk away with valuable insights and experience that can help improve
its overall search capabilities, which is its major priority.”