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Microsoft Migrating Live Spaces Users To WordPress

An anonymous reader writes "Microsoft has decided it can't compete with the established blogging platforms out there and will instead embrace one of them. Talking at the TechCrunch Disrupt conference, Dharmesh Mehta, Director of Product Management for Windows Live, announced that all existing Windows Live Spaces users will be migrated over to an account at WordPress.com. This decision is one Microsoft has prepared for, and the CEO of Automattic, the company that runs and develops the WordPress platform, was also present on stage with Mehta. The two companies have worked together to ensure Spaces users will take all of their data with them when migrating and have visitors automatically forwarded to the new URL associated with their blog."

2 of 145 comments (clear)

  1. Re:IIS and ASP.NET can’t compete with Wordpr by Richard_at_work · · Score: 4, Informative

    It simply boils down to "was LiveSpaces paying for itself?". And the answer would be no, so now MS gets to have a PR day while dumping a cost centre onto someone else. Double win for MS - doesn't say anything about IIS, Asp.net or MSSql one way or the other tho.

  2. Re:IIS and ASP.NET can’t compete with Wordpr by grcumb · · Score: 4, Informative

    What is good for an enterprise is not necessarily good for your average blog. Well, there you go, that was pretty easy to spin (if you insist on calling a rational statement 'spin' anyway).

    It's spin because it's plausible, but factually incorrect. From the Wordpress.com website:

    There are over 27 million WordPress publishers as of September 2010: 13.9 million blogs hosted on WordPress.com plus 13.8 million active installations of the WordPress.org software....

    According to Quantcast, over 260 million people worldwide visit one or more WordPress.com blogs every month, and they view over 2.1 billion pages on those blogs each month....

    (Bolded for your convenience.)

    A chart showing Wordpress performance vis a vis Blogger, Movable Type and Typepad.

    Smells like enterprise to me.

    --
    Crumb's Corollary: Never bring a knife to a bun fight.