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Microsoft Office 365, the cloud-based service from Microsoft (read our take on it here), already supports Outlook/Exchange, SharePoint, Word, Excel, PowerPoint and Lync. We've reported that BlackBerry Enterprise Server is coming to 365 as well. What else can you expect to see in Microsoft's cloud in the future?
According to Mary Jo Foley, Dynamics CRM Online and Windows Intune have already confirmed. And Microsoft Business Solutions Corporate Vice President Michael Park let slip that Project and Visio are on the way as well.
There's still no word on when or if Microsoft's enterprise microblogging product OfficeTalk will ship, but Sonoma Partners is already bringing microblogging to Microsoft Dynamics with its Vibe product. And today Sonoma launched a free community edition. The community version is a fully featured version of Vibe for free, but Sonoma isn't offering any support for it.
Sonoma is an official Microsoft partner that was hired to write documentation for Microsoft Dynamics.
Microsoft announced at its Worldwide Partners Conference today that it will launch a CRM SaaS service and an app marketplace as parts of CRM 2011, itself a part of Microsoft Dynamics. CRM 2011, formerly codenamed CRM5, will be available for beta testing in September, starting with the online CRM service and Dynamics Marketplace. The announcement comes as Microsoft is embroiled in a patent battle with CRM competitor Salesforce.com, which has been offering a CRM SaaS and app marketplace for years.