Succeeding the 18-year-old veteran Rick LaPlante was
Andrew Kaas, recruited from S1. A year later, Kaas feels at home inside Microsoft trying to fill the vacuum left by LaPlante.
For him, Visual Studio Team System (VSTS) is not just a solution. It's a way to change the culture of how to do IT.'
Ask him about Microsoft, pat comes the reply: 'We are here to change the industry.'
Before joining S1, Kass was with PeopleSoft and Oracle Corporation. He was also the founder and CEO of the privately-held Omniscient Software.

Touted as Microsoft's answer to IBM's Rational, VSTS took six years to develop before it took off in 2005. The application lifecycle management solution is yet to overtake Rational yet Kaas has no qualms about its future.
The final release of its next version of the solution code named Orcas is likely to be available by the end of this year. The first beta release was made public last month. Meanwhile, the company is also working on the release succeeding Orcas, which is named Rosario.
The VSTS team is spread out between two main locations in the US. It also has teams in the UK and China besides another one at the Microsoft India Development Center (MIDC) in Hyderabad. The 40-member VSTS team at MIDC, which is expected to increase in the next 12 months, primarily works on the testing and verification components.
Kaas explains more about VSTS in a tête-à-tête with
Kishore Kumar from
CyberMedia News.
Thus far
I think it's been absolutely fantastic. Team System's first version – the Visual Studio 2005 - was released in November 2005. In that time frame, I think we've seen a lot of positive response. In general Team System is regarded as number two spot in entire second only in volume to Rational software, which has been there for eighteen past years. But the response from both the existing customers and as well new customers has been really astonishing. Customers who had used have seen a lot of ROI.
Recent leaning
We are seeing a lot of work being done more holistically at development in application. There is a bit more up leveling. The up leveling is in terms of thinking of developing an application. We have been talking to a lot of CIOs. Their main concern is around development in application, not around development tool. They want to make sure that what they invest in IT is going to impact the business. Business alignment of the work is a big focus.
There has been much stronger focus on quality and things like a security as well as usability.
We need to be more responsive and flexible. The days of massive projects taking three years to complete are gone. Business are finding hard to justify that. Businesses are evolving so rapidly. They want developers to be flexible.