Jared Spataro, head of Microsoft 365, explained in an interview with The Verge "Imagine that you will take these Lego pieces and place them where you wished to be: emails, conversations, other devices." "They are always updated and contain the latest information as people work on them."
The Fluid Framework of Microsoft sounds a lot like Google Docs, but Google Docs actually are steroids. Microsoft is so confident that it has built the future of productivity that the Fluid Framework is now open-sourcing, so that the rest of the world can help shape it. In the coming months, certain Office.com users can even start looking into this fluid future at an early stage.
Microsoft's effort to step away from the decades-old concept of generating and storing documents is central to the Fluid Paradigm. You usually find the app to build a table, a chart, or a task list, and then produce a paper, save it, and share it, so that people can cooperate. Google Docs functions so that many users can hop into and edit a document in real time. This is something that we see in new web-based applications, and at a time that Microsoft was still focused on desktop-oriented apps helped make docs a success.
“It’s about helping people achieve a particular task,” explains Maya Rodrig, a principal program manager on Microsoft’s Fluid Framework. “It’s not about requiring them to decide ‘Which app do I go to?’ or ‘Which document do I get back to?’”
Fluid is designed to make those tables, charts, and lists feel alive and editable, no matter where you create them and no matter how you share them and copy them to other apps. Instead of getting a static and dull chart that you copied from Excel, you 're going to get a chart that can be edited anywhere you paste it, and you're going to see everyone making the edits as they happen. It could be in the middle of an email chain, a chat app like Microsoft Teams, or even third-party apps.