While there are smart tech people all over the world and all over the U.S.,
it's clear there are pockets where these types tend to congregate: Silicon Valley;
Redmond, Wash.; Austin, Texas; Raleigh, N.C.
But do you know where the spreadsheet was invented (by VisiCalc) and then reinvented
(by Lotus)? Where the minicomputer was born (remember Data General, Wang and
DEC?). Good, old Massachusetts, my home state.
Microsoft bought a bunch of Massachusetts' best brains by buying Groove and
Softricity, and got some bright New Hampshire bulbs when it bought Desktop Standard.
Now, Microsoft wants to tap into New England research minds by creating
a lab in Cambridge, Mass.
The Massachusetts tech economy fell on hard times after 2001. It's already
on a comeback, and with Microsoft in our back yard, things should only get better.
Posted by Doug Barney on 09/24/2008 at 1:16 PM0 comments
Unlike Doug, readers don't seem too sad to see the Seinfeld ads go. But at least
one of you thinks the new ads are a vast improvement:
The Seinfeld commercials were an abomination (I can't say what I said
when I first saw them aired). I'm neither a PC apologist nor a MacManiac;
I'm a user of the Wintel consortium products. Those commercials should never
have made it off the storyboard, and the agency who created them should be
immediately cuffed and tossed in jail for abuse of our sensibilities.
-Benjamin
To heck with the Jerry Seinfeld TV spots. I think that Microsoft is onto
something with its new 'I'm a PC' campaign that gives us quick cuts to some
pretty cool people, both famous and un-famous, that all claim, "I'm a
PC." This is a subtle yet powerful way to steer consumers away from the
attitude that PC users are "squares," which was brilliantly depicted
in the original Mac spots.
I saw this 'I'm a PC' spot a couple of times over the weekend, and was
more impressed the second time I saw it than I was at first look. I think
Microsoft is right to have a campaign that, unlike the Seinfeld spots and
the "Seinfeld" show itself, is actually about something.
-Ken
On
Monday, Doug asked readers whether they've come across any sites that cover
cloud computing. Here are a couple:
Here are some sites: Enamoly
Elastic Computing and Enterprise
Cloud Computing: Build Your Own With Cisco VFrame -- Why Wait?
-Hermine
Here's an interesting cloud blog: The
Wisdom of Clouds.
-Anthony
But Ari, for one, isn't buying into this cloud computing
business:
I'm surprised that you don't see cloud computing for what it is: a return
to the tyranny of the mainframe/dumb-terminal paradigm, and the loss of jobs
for hundreds of MCSE/MSCAs. Most, if not all, of our tech support is outsourced,
and most, if not all, of our manufacturing is outsourced as well. The United
States doesn't really produce anything, with the notable exception that we
keep finding new and wondrous ways for us to murder each other. The latest
and greatest innovation to come out of the dot-com disaster -- and now cloudware
-- is that today, your cab driver is likely to be an MCSE.
Then, there is the issue of downtime. With a server and smart workstation,
even a company of 15 employees would not notice a problem on the local network;
when setting up the network, you run two servers in parallel topography for
redundancy. When properly configured, if one server fails, regardless of the
reason, the secondary server automatically switches to the primary server's
role and sends a notification to your MCSE and your hardware vendor.
By contrast, a slowdown or drop-off of a cloud system places you, as
an employer, in the awful situation where you now have 15 to 20 people drawing
their hourly wage while sitting around and making paper airplanes or stringing
paper clips together, and you don't have a backup server, so you are stuck
behind the eightball and dead in the water (pardon the mixed metaphor). This
is exacerbated by the fact that you have no idea how long it will take for
the cloud to recondense (besides, with cloud computing, you always pray for
rain and that doesn't mix well with electronic components).
-Ari
And Mitchell shares his thoughts on Chrome:
I find it buggy, which is not surprising as a beta. It also tends to
be jumpy when scrolling through pictures and graphics on large pages. Also
have found problems with Flash and other multimedia. After using it for a
day, I went back to IE 7.
Now, IE 8? Many problems, as well. Oh, well -- betas are betas.
-Mitchell
Check in tomorrow for more reader letters! In the meantime, share your thoughts
by writing a comment below or sending an e-mail to [email protected].
Posted by Doug Barney on 09/24/2008 at 1:16 PM0 comments
Microsoft's stock is not the high-flier it was throughout the late '80s and
early '90s. Many investors earned their yachts, Porsches and retirement homes
on the backs of this baby. And thousands of employees became Microsoft millionaires,
driving the prices of homes in Redmond to near-Silicon Valley heights.
Since the tech crash of 2001, the stock has been stuck. Like a rocking chair,
it's going nowhere. But Microsoft thinks its own company is a pretty good deal
and is buying
back $40 billion in shares. That's like buying a Yahoo's worth of stock.
And that's on top of the $40 billion buyback already completed.
I'm no Wall Street whiz (and neither, apparently, are they), but this seems
like a good long-term move. It acknowledges that Microsoft is now a mature,
less volatile stock. It means there's stability and sound financial underpinnings.
Oh, how I wish Steve Ballmer and Bill Gates had been running Lehman, AIG and
Merrill Lynch!
During the tech crash in 2001, there were no federal bailouts -- and our business
came through just fine. Investors (like you and me, I'm sure) who lost money
took our lumps and went on. What lessons should we have learned from the tech
bubble burst that we can apply to today's Wall Street meltdown? Thoughts welcome
at [email protected].
Posted by Doug Barney on 09/23/2008 at 1:16 PM0 comments
Microsoft's play in the world of high-performance computing doesn't get the
same attention as Vista, Bill Gates' wealth or attempts to buy Yahoo. And that's
a shame because Microsoft has been doing some rather exceptional work in this
area, with much of the innovation coming directly from the geniuses at Microsoft
Research.
The core product here is Windows High Performance Computing (HPC) Server 2008,
which was just
completed.
Tools like these have been mostly used by scientists and engineers, and for
massive data-mining-type apps. But as the world starts thinking more about cloud
computing and IT thinks about building internal clouds, what used to be the
domain of the supercomputer intelligentsia could become standard datacenter
fare.
Think Windows HPC doesn't have the juice for this kind of computing? Think
again. Cray thinks the software is good enough to drive its supercomputers.
Not too shabby.
Posted by Doug Barney on 09/23/2008 at 1:16 PM0 comments
Doug may be sad to see the Gates-Seinfeld commercials go, but James thinks the
whole endeavor was a failure from the get-go:
I saw the first commercial and thought, "Wow, that has to be the
lamest commercial I have ever seen! They should fire whichever agency sold
'em that load of crap." Then I saw the second commercial and I realized
why Vista sucks so bad. It's because Microsoft has a bunch of morons working
for it. If it can't see how lame those commercials were, they should all be
fired and bring in some people with enough sense to say, "Hey, those
commercials suck, let's go hire that company that made the Apple ads. At least
they have a sense of humor."
Now I hear that Microsoft is scrapping the Seinfeld commercials because
they "accomplished what they wanted," which I guess was proving
that MS is out of touch with reality. OK, so tell me another one. More like
Microsoft finally saw that people were only laughing at how ridiculous its
commercials were, especially compared to the Apple commercials (I thought
the latest one with PC in the pizza box was the best one so far). If MS doesn't
pull their collective heads out of their behinds, they are going to end up
digging such a deep hole, they will never be able to climb out of it.
-James
Tell us what you think! Leave a comment below or send an e-mail to [email protected].
Posted by Doug Barney on 09/22/2008 at 1:16 PM0 comments
I admit I was
pretty
rough on the first Gate/Seinfeld video. In fact, I thought Bill was way
funnier than Jerry. I hope the ad whizzes at Microsoft didn't take too much
of that to heart and that critics like me aren't the reason there will be
no
more episodes of the Bill-and-Jerry show.
That's right: After three installments, Microsoft is shelving the Jerry commercials
in favor of a new batch starring a guy that looks like the PC guy from the Apple
commercials.
I'm actually pretty bummed. The second and third installments were darn good,
and way different from your average TV fare (with four kids, I know a lot about
average TV fare). Just as there have been petitions to bring XP, how about one
to bring back Jerry?
Posted by Doug Barney on 09/22/2008 at 1:16 PM0 comments
To make its products safer, Microsoft programmers have
designed
a Software Development Lifecycle (SDL) process that makes security a part
of every stage of development. Microsoft wants ISVs and corporate developers
to be equally safe and is packaging up its internal tools for outside use.
There's the model for development itself, which is free. On the paid side,
Microsoft has SDL-trained consultants you can hire and a Threat Modeling Tool
for sale this November.
As problems with Chrome, VMware, the Mac and Linux have shown, all software
can be subject to hacks. It's clear that Microsoft is trying to do something
about it.
Speaking of Chrome, are you using it? I'm writing an article about end user
experiences and would love to talk to you. Shoot me a note with your thoughts
and impressions to me at [email protected].
Posted by Doug Barney on 09/22/2008 at 1:16 PM0 comments
Cloud computing is supposed to save us all tons of dough. You do away with your
servers, disks, interconnects and air conditioners, and run all your software
over the wire from a cloud. You presumably save on hardware, energy and management.
But cloud services don't magically configure themselves or keep themselves
up-to-date. Some, like BitCurrent analyst Alistair Croll (I imagine Alistair
with a pipe, a smoking jacket and a shelf full of dusty old books), believe
it can actually be more
difficult and expensive to manage this remote software. Not only will admins
have to administer this software, but their companies may add more and more
applications to the mix -- increasing complexity and admin time.
Do you care about clouds? Have you found any good Web sites that cover cloud
services or teach you how to build your own clouds? URLs welcome at [email protected].
Posted by Doug Barney on 09/22/2008 at 1:15 PM0 comments
All week, the financial news has been bleak. Lehman Brothers saying uncle,
stocks falling faster than a base jumper, the doom-and-gloom analysts getting
unlimited air time...
But I was living in a different world. At VMworld, there were some 10,000 customers
looking to transform their shops, over 200 third parties creating a brand-new
and vibrant market, and a company, VMware, looking to do revolutionary things
-- doing it all with a fair bit a class and savvy.
Virtualization also offers us a way out of this economic and even energy mess.
Through the massive centralization of servers, PCs, networks and storage that
virtualization allows, we can save mega megawatts. The energy saves are stupendous,
as are the hardware and management economics.
Posted by Doug Barney on 09/18/2008 at 1:16 PM0 comments
Everyone, it seems, is trying to crash VMware's big VMworld party. Microsoft's
shenanigans this week are well-documented, but Citrix (also a pioneer in thin
client computing) made some noise, too -- right in VMware's back yard: Citrix
unveiled
server virtualization tool XenServer 5.
Some have questioned Citrix's commitment to XenServer given that the company
is so close to Microsoft and such a fan of Hyper-V. Perhaps XenServer 5 will
help answer that question. New features focus on monitoring, disaster recovery
and more options for third-party programs.
Where do you see Xen going, and is Citrix truly committed? Send conjectures
to [email protected].
Posted by Doug Barney on 09/18/2008 at 1:16 PM0 comments
Sun is one of the pioneers, if not the pioneer, in thin client computing. While
the "Network Computer" that Scott McNealy and Larry Ellison talked
about for years never quite materialized, the Sun Ray line is a very effective
thin solution.
But just as Sun made up with Microsoft, it apparently isn't religious about
thin client and other virtual tools. This week, in fact, Sun agreed
to sell and support VMware's Virtual Desktop Infrastructure and Virtual
Desktop Manager.
This software can be used to drive Sun Ray devices, or customers can opt for
a purer Sun solution. Sun has a pretty cool strategy of pushing its unique technology,
such as SPARC and Solaris, as well as a full complement of industry standard
(read: Wintel) tools.
What do you think of Sun these days? Opinions accepted at [email protected].
Posted by Doug Barney on 09/18/2008 at 1:16 PM0 comments
One reader is optimistic about VMware's
virtualization
ambitions:
A Datacenter Operating System? I think that'd be wonderful if implemented
correctly. From my experience, most datacenters have a tendency to have a
server per application to ensure the reliability of that application and that
multiple applications won't tread on each other's territory. It also makes
it easier to plan upgrades, patches and new releases.
With everything running under a virtual environment, we open up a new
possibility. If all you are going to run is a Web server, then why not have
an OS that is designed from the ground-up to be a Web server? You could have
the same for a file server or a print server. I know that Windows Server 2008
has headed in this direction by only installing the roles needed, but there
is probably still a LOT of unnecessary code that allows this one OS to be
everything to everyone. Without this extra code, the OS would run much faster
and would be much easier to secure. I think the time is right for someone
to develop operating systems that are designed from the ground-up to maximize
the benefits of a virtual environment.
-T.W.
The second
installment of the Gates-Seinfeld ads is out, but the response hasn't changed
much (read: lukewarm):
The second ad had funny parts to it, like the grandmother and the setup,
but there were many moments where the ad was too lame (like the bedtime story).
The ads need work. They lack and need a certain je ne sais quoi. I'm disappointed
in the ads because MS is spending so much money on them and they're not as
entertaining as Apple's Mac and PC ads.
-Christian
The first commercial seemed really bad, but it did set the tone. The second
one IS better. Obviously, it's like all the foreign car commercials, where
you know absolutely nothing about the car when it is over, but in this case,
everybody in the target audience knows what the product and message is, regardless
of how bad the delivery may become. I think at this point, we just miss Bill,
and are glad to watch him in mini sitcoms on TV.
-Mel
I have no idea why Bill Gates is in a commercial; as a business person,
I don't get it. Why would I care if he became a normal person or an oddball?
All I want is for Vista to work quickly, correctly and with zero maintenance!
The average consumer has no idea what should work or should not on their PC;
if they get a Blue Screen of Death, then they think this is normal.
The Mac commercials are very accurate and, sad to say, Microsoft really
doesn't care; it's all about marketing. In fact, Microsoft reminds me of Ford
and GM: They have made cars which fail after so many years and now they are
paying the price for this inferior "marketing" quality.
-Mike
I guess I'm thinking that these Gates-Feld commercials are going to take
folks somewhere and when we get there we'll all be converts to Microsoft.
I know that we'll all end up in Vista-ville down the road, though I'm dragging
my feet like everyone else. Often, the changes that end up being "for
the better" are often the ones that are uncomfortable to wiggle into
-- maybe like the "conquistadors." The ones that are comfortable
in the store end up being loose and sloppy.
Vista SP1 fixed some issues I had with one of my customers whose "dollar-store
laptop" didn't want to participate in their Windows Domain. If Microsoft
can continue to chip away at the nuisances and annoyances to provide a secure
and stable platform, we'll move on.
-Dan
But unlike the ad, Doug's
crack about the difference between a VMware CEO and a pitbull was unequivocally
funny...to one guy:
I laughed at your joke.
-Anonymous
Thanks for the support, Anonymous. Everyone else, feel free to chime in! Leave
a comment below or send an e-mail to [email protected].
Posted by Doug Barney on 09/18/2008 at 1:16 PM0 comments