Well, that's what "
people
say," anyway, according to the Bloomberg headline.
Posted by Lee Pender on 02/26/2008 at 1:21 PM0 comments
Another week, another update on Microsoft's attempt to spend every bit of the
cash it has in its coffers (and more).
Even if Yahoo isn't ready to accept Redmond's overtures, Microsoft employees
will be, or should be, ready for what seems to be an inevitable consumption
of the Internet pioneer. Microsoft executives e-mailed
the company's employees last week a guide to swallowing Yahoo, laying out
how an acquisition would affect Redmond's rank and file.
Meanwhile, Yahoo shareholders are getting more and more nervous about the company's
rebuffing of Microsoft. One group has sued
Yahoo, charging that the company's executives shouldn't be trying to get
that scary biker dude to take them to the prom when the quarterback of the football
team has a limo and a corsage waiting and ready to go. (Or something like that
-- basically, the shareholders want Yahoo to sell out to Microsoft rather than
shop around for another acquirer.)
Even if a deal is inevitable -- and we have no idea whether it'll happen --
these delays and Yahoo's apparent revulsion at the site of Microsoft don't make
anybody look very good. In fact, at this point, both companies look kind of
desperate, and Google -- the reason all of this is happening -- must be sitting
back and enjoying the drama over a big box of popcorn, or maybe sushi, or kelp,
or whatever people in San Francisco are eating these days.
This story is sure to continue unfolding, so check RCPU for more updates and
witty commentary (ahem), and keep sending your thoughts on the matter (or anything
else) to [email protected].
Posted by Lee Pender on 02/26/2008 at 1:21 PM0 comments
Next time you get a traffic ticket, take the money to pay your fine, place
it lovingly in a cheery greeting card, deliver it to city hall and declare in
the most grandiose manner possible that you're "making a donation to the
city." Then, you'll know exactly what it's like to be Microsoft.
Heck, you could even hold a press conference. That's what Microsoft did yesterday
to announce its new
openness initiatives, the basics of which RCPU managed to sneak into yesterday's
issue. The conference call, which evidently required a "War Declared"-level
media alert on Thursday morning, started brilliantly -- after waiting about
15 minutes past the start time, reporters finally heard some Microsoft official
apologize for the late start and explain that it had been caused in part by
"technical problems we had to solve." What, did Ballmer's PC blue-screen
when he tried to open PowerPoint, or something?
Anyway, the crux of the story remains that Microsoft is publishing some 30,000
pages of documentation -- don't try to take that tome on your next flight --
revealing APIs, software protocols and heretofore concealed trade secrets. Of
course, that's part of what the European Union has been demanding that Microsoft
do for a while now -- and, as you might imagine, the EU still
doesn't think that Microsoft is doing enough. After all, Microsoft has talked
openness before but thus far hasn't really seemed to make it a corporate
priority (understandably enough, given that the interaction between Microsoft
applications is one of the company's key selling points). Now, with the EU's
constant prodding, Microsoft is all about sharing...again.
This time, though, it's different. This time, Steve Ballmer was doing the talking.
And Ray Ozzie. And the top lawyer, Brad Smith. This time, the announcement merited
a "Victory in Europe"-style media alert. This time, Microsoft is serious...right?
Well, more serious, anyway. Some of the documentation posted will let open source
developers go beyond just creating programs that will work with Microsoft applications
to actually extending some of the functionality of Microsoft's wares.
As long as it's not done for commercial purposes, of course. As far as software
for sales goes, the open source folks are ostensibly under the same patent pressure
that they've always been under -- except that now, Microsoft says that it's
going to reveal exactly what patents it has and license that intellectual property
for low fees. The company's promise not to sue developers working for non-commercial
purposes also seems to open the door to let customers (and partners) use open
source apps in their Microsoft shops without fear of recrimination.
For partners, the announcement is likely to have relatively little impact,
except for those partners who now have access to APIs they might have needed
in order to develop for or extend Microsoft applications and previously didn't
have. Other than that, the announcement will probably serve to make Microsoft
look a little less proprietary and a little more open than it has looked in
the past, and with open source applications spreading in corporate IT departments
-- especially in data centers -- that can't be a bad thing.
We've said many times before in this space that the EU should just leave Microsoft
alone, and we suspect that EU regulators aren't finished with Redmond yet. But
if pressure from the EU led Microsoft to open up a bit (and, apparently, it
did), and if Microsoft's opening is positive for customers and partners, let's
call yesterday's announcement a little bit of good news and wait and see what
happens from there. This story is still far from being over.
One thing we could do without, though, is the faux self-sacrifice on Microsoft's
part. Listening to Ballmer and Co. yesterday morning, we half expected a fake
crying jag (not unlike the one Will Ferrell's character delivers at the end
of Blades of Glory) and an emotional speech about the lengths Microsoft
will go to in order to please its customers. Whatever. Just pay your EU traffic
fine, Redmond, and don't pretend that you're publishing your APIs out of concern
for your customers, support for open source or the goodness of your heart. Please.
It's just kind of embarrassing. We all know the real story.
What's your take on Microsoft's new openness? Drop a line to [email protected].
Posted by Lee Pender on 02/22/2008 at 1:21 PM1 comments
It turns out that a bunch of stuff
isn't
working with Vista's first service pack -- which seems appropriate given
how much stuff never worked with Vista in the first place.
Posted by Lee Pender on 02/22/2008 at 1:21 PM0 comments
The big distributor is keeping it real in the virtual world by
offering
to VARs the most popular virtualization apps on the market today.
Posted by Lee Pender on 02/21/2008 at 1:21 PM0 comments
Recession? What recession? Strictly speaking, this isn't channel news (for
Channel News Thursday), but it is interesting. HP had a blowout quarter in its
last quarter, and things are
looking
positive going forward. Let's have more news like this, please.
Posted by Lee Pender on 02/21/2008 at 1:21 PM0 comments
The provider of wireless LAN infrastructure systems has a new partner program.
Check out all the details
here.
Posted by Lee Pender on 02/21/2008 at 1:21 PM0 comments
We're as excited as you are about Windows Server 2008. Seriously. After Vista
failed to impress last year,
the
buzz around the star of this year's crop of new Microsoft products has grown
steadily.
And why not? Windows Server 2008 has blockbuster sales potential for partners
and already has
customers' attention. And now, it has an added bonus: a built-in
service pack.
Oh, yes! Not only will you get Windows Server 2008 when it ships, you'll get
its first service pack built right in! But wait, there's more. Actually, there
isn't anything more -- we just got a little caught up in the old-school TV ad
script. Seriously, though, when is a service pack not a service pack? When it
ships with a brand-new product. What, did Microsoft screw up Windows Server
2008 so much that it's having to ship a service pack as soon as the product
debuts?
Probably not. In fact, Microsoft says that since Windows Server 2008 has the
same code base as Vista, and since Vista is at the SP1 stage, it makes sense
for Windows Server 2008 to be at the SP1 stage, too.
Whatever, Redmond. We all know that customers are often leery of new Microsoft
products and tend to wait for service packs before investing in them. Microsoft
isn't fooling anybody here; by shipping SP1 right off the bat, Redmond is trying
to get customers to sign up for Windows Server 2008 without hesitation.
But why this product? And why now? Unlike Vista, which came out to a reception
flatter than the New England Patriots in the Super Bowl, Windows Server 2008
has customers both buzzing and budgeting. Wethinks, in this case, that Microsoft
doth indeed protest too much. But we're still excited.
What's your take on SP1 shipping with Windows Server 2008? How much will it
help you sell the product? Sound off at [email protected].
Posted by Lee Pender on 02/21/2008 at 1:21 PM0 comments
Microsoft made a big kafuffle today to announce yet another "openness"
initiative. This time, it involves
publishing
tens of thousands of pages of software protocols, something European Union
regulators
have
been demanding for some time now. Not surprisingly, the EU -- so far, at
least --
still
isn't happy.
Redmond also pledged not to sue for patent infringement open source developers
who develop software for "non-commercial distribution." (So, that
includes Microsoft's own customers...right?) Microsoft is also going to let
us know once and for all which of its protocols are patented, and then license
those patents at what it calls low rates.
The whole Microsoft spiel is here.
Also, look for more coverage of this announcement -- and maybe a snarky comment
or two -- in Friday's RCPU.
Posted by Lee Pender on 02/21/2008 at 1:21 PM0 comments
Just in care you were confused by Microsoft's server offerings for small and
medium-sized businesses (does anybody not know what "SMB" means?),
Redmond is here to make things clear. (Yes, that last part was supposed to rhyme.)
Microsoft announced today the Windows
Essential Server Solutions family, which we could call "WESS"
but won't. The concept behind this is simple. There are two versions of the
aptly named Windows Small Business Server 2008 -- Premium and Standard -- for
small businesses, and two versions (yup, Premium and Standard again) of the
Windows Essential Business Sever 2008 aimed at midsize companies.
By the way, yes, you used to know Small Business Server as Cougar. Along with
Longhorn, Cougar was apparently part of Microsoft's server-codename tribute
to the mascots of the extinct Southwest Conference. We fully expect something
to be codenamed Horned Frog any day now -- in fact, we demand it.
Anyway, there's a graduation from SBS Standard through EBS premium: SBS Standard
includes one server, SBS Premium two, EBS Standard three and EBS Premium --
anybody following the pattern here? -- four. Starting with SBS Premium, IT folks
can run the second server virtually on the first one and then, if they'd like,
transfer it later to a physical box at no extra cost and with no licensing hassles.
And, yes, the idea is for a growing company to move from SBS to EBS at some
point.
All of these offerings are built in Windows Server 2008. There's other stuff,
too, such as a Forefront Security for Exchange bundle and SaaS-like connection
to Office Live Small Business.
The new servers are much easier to set up and install than previous models,
said Steven VanRoekel, senior director of the Windows Server Solutions Team
at Microsoft, who chatted with RCPU this week. "Partner models are shifting
to more downstream stuff and less about the initial install. They've told us
they don't want to do that stuff anymore," VanRoekel said.
Microsoft is going to kick off some marketing around the new server family
soon, using the tagline "Multiply Your Power," which sounds like something
from an '80s action cartoon or an old videogame. As such, we at RCPU heartily
approve.
Posted by Lee Pender on 02/20/2008 at 1:21 PM0 comments
OK, we know. It's right up there with the news that the earth is round and
the shocker that the sun rises in the east and sets in the west. Still, if you
were curious, a new survey "reveals" that half of all IT managers
have
no plans
to deploy Vista.
Well, they have no plans to deploy Vista "at this time," according
to the survey. Don't let that bit on the end slip away. What happens when a
company undergoes a hardware refresh and can't get anything but Vista for new
machines? As we've suggested
before in RCP, that's when Vista might finally make a break for enterprise
pay dirt.
Or, if this survey is any indication, a hardware refresh might be the moment
when mundane office workers in drab cubicles (hey, that description sounds familiar)
might suddenly become hipsters with Apple logos on their machines. Does that
mean that we'll also have to listen to obscure pop bands and stop watching big-budget
movies in favor of indie "films"? The cultural ramifications could
be massive. To the copy and paste from the RCPmag.com
story:
"The survey asked participants if they had 'considered the possibility
of deploying any non-Windows operating system as an alternative to adopting
Windows Vista.' It turned out that 44 percent of participants said that they
were indeed considering a non-Windows alternative....The Windows OS replacement
that respondents mentioned most was Macintosh (28 percent), followed by Red
Hat Linux (23 percent), SuSE Linux (18 percent), Ubuntu (18 percent), other
Linux (nine percent) and not sure (four percent)."
Somewhere, Steve Jobs is laughing with delight. OK, so maybe there's some wishful
thinking going on here in IT world -- it seems unlikely that companies would
jettison major investments in Microsoft simply out of disdain for Vista -- but
the survey numbers, for what they're worth, confirm that Vista still looks like
a dud in the enterprise. If it does ever make a serious dent there -- and we
still suspect that it will -- it'll be more because IT folks have little choice
but to deploy it than because they actually like it.
A Mac in every cubicle? Really? Share your vision of this brave new world at
[email protected].
Posted by Lee Pender on 02/20/2008 at 1:21 PM2 comments